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MtATB. rATII. be... , .., , ...... p. VI ZI Partly CIoucIY ---, , ••d Ih, ••• h '.pl. 101 0\1 11" •• ,11 CI ••11t "'M,' 1Il,•• ,1I 0.1. 311 t' l Ih, ••,b Xl •••• 11" •••11 M... N, ••• Ll Ihr ••,h QI ••11. 11I".,h 11001. 31. 'UP"" ..., ,. ,ood throurh 0 • .,. 8t '.r '1 •• 1•••••. flHO •• , It •• k IOWA: Today..n17 Itl..., Ibr•• alrplaao .I.mpe I, •• I .a. .,. ,'M 1... fI.II.I,. THE DAILY IOWAN aM coeUaHI cooL Iowa City's MornIng Newspaper - " ?IVE CENTS T., A'SOC~T.II pacs. IOWA CITY. IOWA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1945 nrc AIIOClATU ..... VOLUME XXI NUMBER 305. • • to Remove. . a:pon's I to ar To Supreme Court. 8·29's Land Jap Cabinet to Purge Pre-Flight VA W ·Pre~ses Wage Demands Economic, At (hicag'o; More War Leaders , . I Under U. S. Prodding To Continue 205,000 Idle Now * * * * * * Social 'System As Unions, Industry Miss Record U. S. Plans to Issue Local Navy Officials Clash Throughout U. S. To Be A'ltered New, Longer List Deny Washington DETROIT (AP) - The labor Of Nippon Suspects Report on Closing troublet of the naLion's automo­ Winds Force rlanes tive capital mounted yesterday as MacArthur's Intended Down 650 Miles TOKYQ (AP)-The Japan_ An Associated Press report the United Automobile Workers Slash Doesn't Agree cabinet will lOOn ~lean more .of from Washlngfon, D. C., last (CIO) continued preparations for Short of Nonstop Goal Its war time leaders, reliable in- a head-on collision with the car With State Dept. Plan night. saying the Iowa Pre-Flight . d t 30 t formants predicted. In keeping In us r1 over a percen waKe WA'IIINGTON ,(A P)­ with the hardfisted Allled oceu- school would be closed soon, was increase demand. WA HINOTON ( AP)-The Thl'oe arm y SuporfortJ·cssos Ipation controls which temporarilY vj,orously denied by local navy Meanwhile the national total of tate d partm nt . t rday re­ reach d the capital tonig-ht from shut down another Tokyo news- officials. strike idle inched above 205,000 ve8led a decision for ocial and paper. last night as new stoppa,es offset Japan after headwind8 forced I The navy department report returns to work. economic revolution in Japan them down at Chicago to refuel, American headqUarters mean- from Washington mentionin, c1os- Threatenln/l to add to the 80,000 and empha ized that it would 00 650 mil s short of their nonstop Iwhile announced that a new and in, "as rapidly as possible." was already idled In the Detroit area carried out r gaNU . of what goal hcl' . longer list of Japanese to be ques- called very improbable by otti- by work stoppa,es and shutdowns Gilneral Douglll8 MacArthur IIigh milital'Y and govern­ Itioned on war guilt charges would cia1s here. was a spread In, strike in the 011 say about la bing th Am ri­ ment dignitarics, plus a brass be issued soon, supplementing the Omdr. G. D. Fitzhugh, com- industrY by the Oil Workers union can army of occupation. first list which contained mandlng ofticer at the- pre-f1i'ht (CIO) and a curtailment of electri- band, wclcomed the flyct'l> to SEN. HABOLD H. BURTON \7 In a tatement that was more Washington: Th gala reception names. school. believes that it will be im- cal equlpment to three divisions of pugnacious than diplomatie, cheercd the disappointed men. . Good news to American service possible to close before at least General Motors corporation. Acting retary Dean Ach son WASHINGTON* * (AP)-The* sen­ men In the Pacific with sufficient December because of the closing of Two PlaDts Cl_ said that th nited 'tates gov­ Intense, adverse winds encoun- discharge points came In a Pearl Georgia Pre-Flight and the ex- At the same time the CIO oil tered over Canada caused the top ate brushed aside its rules yester­ ernment and not th 0 upatiorl day to confirm Senator Harold H. Harbor navy headquarters an- pected close of North Carolina workers' drive for a 30 percent airforce generals at the helms of Burton to a seat on the supreme nouncement that hUle "carrier dl- Pre-night within a short time. wale Increase closed two more force under 0 n ral MacArthur the three planes to cut short their court. visioh 2..... composed of the navy's With the closinK of these two plants In the Chicago area and are d termining American pol­ . sc heduled 6,500-mlle direct flight icy toward ,Japan . to the capital. President Trull)an announced tl)e biglest nattop, the Saratoga, and bases. the cadets stationed there broulht to 4,730 the number of 25 escort carriers, Is being formed will either be shipped to the local Idle in that Industry. It was the second statement that Fuel burned fighting the high appointment late y,esterday. I). to transport 20,000 or more man navy b1l3e or St. Mary's Pre-Flight Plants which CI05ed yesterday Acheaon had made as a result or altitude gusts would have enabled few minutes after noon Burton's MacArthur's prediction that t.he the B-29's to finish their scheduled colleagues had waived fQhnalities home each month. in Cali!orola. Over 135 cadets ar- were the. Sinclair Refining com- Clamp OD Paper rived yesterday and 450 more are pany, employlnl 1,800, and the MORE THAN 210,000 WORKEjl are lelle be()allie of labor dlspules Iu occupation army would be cut to runs from Sapporo, Hokkaldo Is- and approved him tor the post. .. American army censorship au- expected ~o swell the rankG to over Shell Oil company, with 100. both various sia&es with 88,000 Idle In Mlchlr.n eIther by ahUWOWM or 200.000 in six months because the land, for a new American air dis- The 57-year-old Ohio ' Repub! thorities clamped down on the 1,000 men-regular war time at east Chlc,go, Ind. Other oil strikes. Three week-Old Kelsey·Bayes Wheel company strike In De­ thinl was workln, out so well in­ tance record. lican strolled on to the senate Tokyo English language news- quota-by Monday. wQrkers were out In Ohio, West troit. whioh forced the closlnr of the Ford Molor company pia n ts. side Japan. 12-Man Crews f100c after the approval and te- paper Nippon Timet!. forbidding it Vlrlinia and Texas. lun couunanded the spOUlchl AI top International United Aulo Acheson ouUlned threll main The ships. each carrying 12 men ceived the congratulations of , lii:s to publish this morning's edition William S. Bullock, general Workers-C. I. O. ofrtclals prepared to III e notice of strille a c , Ion points ot American policy toward and stripped of their war-time associates.· " .' the Pacific enemy: because it had fail~ to submit an Aftlee Proml"ses Indl'a manager of Detroit's municipally &fainst General Molors and others. they faced dillenslon amonr both equipment to make way for gaso- Senator Taft (R., Ohio) said he editorial for the cellSQr's scrutiny. owned public transportation sys- rank and file workers and presidents of tht. union. The' K e I. e J­ Three Main Point. line space. reach cd national air- knew no man with ' higher id.eals The ~ltorlal dealt with the change F II SIf G tem, said only a four days supply Hayes workerS. out since Aur. ~3 In protest araln t a redonal War 1. That the surrender will be port across the Potomac from of government. Senator Austin of foreign minl.ters.. U e _ overnment of gasoline remained for the city's Labor Board directive, continued their defiance 01 return-Io-work or­ carried out. This covers capitula­ Washington three minutes apart I (R.. Vt.), who had Deen mentioned Reliable Nipponese sou r c e s approximately 1,400 buses In dally der and some picketed the UAW executive board In FUnl, M I c h., tion of the enemy country and aU the first landing at 8:53 p. m: himself for the judicial poJt. which forecast more resignations operation. ..Iown above. prolestln&' araln t delay of the UAW national conven­ its armed forc -a process which CWT. wished Button "a great career." from Premier Prince Hlgashi- Group to Be Selected A union spokesman said gaso- l.on unUl next year. In some respec is sUIl going on. The leader of the lIight, Lleut. Majority Leader Barkley added bis Kuru's cabiet placed Vice Premier line and 011 would be provided 2. That Japan will be put into Gen. Barney M. Giles. commander compliments. _ ' po Uion where It cannol renew ag­ Prince FuJbinlaro Konoye's name After Election to Form city buses as well as hospitals, tor mayor of Detroit at the No- 11II policy 01 sUence concerning the of all army airforces In the Pacific, Burton, who was ,serving . his I • loveromental agencies and other gressIve warfare. This evidently stepped out here and told report- first term in the .senate, suc'ceeds at the nead of the list of those to New Constitution essential services. vember election, reported progress 30 percent wage demands, word refers to strippln, the Japanese of ers the fllght was "very fine." Associate Justice Owen J. Roberts. go out. Konoye, twice premier of Strike &t Packard 10 per, onal crforts to get ".500 came from the UAW-CIO that th both their militaristic leadership It Wag -valuabh!;' he .ald as an retired. Japan. headed. the IOV~me?~ LGNDON (AP)-Prlme MInis- Induatry clrel.. "'ard reports Kelsey- eel company em- first peUtions to the naUonallabor and their material torces lor war exploration flight along the great when Japan Invaded China In ter Attlee told the people or India 'that as many as 25,000 worker:s in Iployes back at work. The Kelsey- relations board lor a strike vote­ makinl. , .. 3. That the pre ent economic circle route and weather informa­ 1937. last night t~at pos!tlve s,teps woul~ the Chevrolet, Buick and Oldsmo- Hayes strUte. belun Aug. 23, prc­ that among the 32~ , OOO employes tion had been gathered. Others mentioned were Lieut. be taken Immediately after the bile divisions of General Motors clpllated the closing of the Ford in General Motors' 135 plants - and social "stem of Japan "which 1 makes lor a will to war wlLl be For the most part they held an Navy Wants Huge , Gen. T".hlllhiro Obata and Take- f~rthcoming Indian elections to might be forced Into idleness this plants and the laying off of 50.000 might be !lied this week. tora Ogata, mihistera wlt~out glve tllem full self-government. weekend by a strike at the War- workers. Up to date the strikes and re­ changed so that that will to war altitude of approximately 20.000 wlIl not continue." feet-nearly lour miles up. portfolio. Og~ta, also chief cabmet I He spoke by radio to both India ren, Ohio. plant ot the Packard The Fotd company listed the lated shutdowns have not serlous]y Peacetime Fleet secretary. wliose name w.as among snd. Great Britala. ampllfying an Electrical company. The company Socony-Vacuum company oil strike lmpalred the actual reconversion Under this list point Acheson Major DlsaPl)Olnted was 10recasting tevolutlonary Maj. Frederick B. Schaeffer of member:s ol the Jongolst Black earlier broddcast by Lord WaveU, supplies wiring systems tor the nmonl 15 other labor disturbances work of the industry. They have pragon society listed among Gen- Viceroy of India, who recently re- three General Motors divisions. In supplyin, plants that Impeded stopped car prodUction at the Ford changes In the economic and social New Cumberland, Pa., a pilot in Peace Without Power .,tructure of J apan which, it was Giles' ship, was keenly disap­ era I MacArthur's selection of sus- turned to New Delhi alter conler- General Motors officials here car production. The gasolfne plants and at the Hudson Motor 'Is Simply a Dream,' pected 'fiar criminals. ences with the British cabinet. would not comment. shortage also was reflected in the car company factories here. But learned. center around breaking pointed in failure of the flight to down the economic power of the go through as scheduled. Submit Resia'nations Elections of central and provin- The new threats to the automo- empty tanks of many gasoline the work of preparing ,as embly Forrestal Declares Mamoru Shlgemitsu, foreign cial legislators this winter. Attlee bile industry's reconversion eflorts service stations. Many oC them eight great families which domi­ "If it hadn't been lor those lines and restoring conveyor sys­ minister in two of Japan's war said. will be followed by "positive came as Richard T. Frankensteen, posted signs. "no ga oline." tems yesterday was reported on nate the lilood. damned headwinds we'd have WASHINGTON (AP) - ' T h e cabinets. resigned from that same steps to set up a constituent as- UA W vice-president and candidate While management maintained Acheson Implied that MacArthur made it," Schaeffer said. "We had schedule. navy asked congress yesterday to post on Premier Higashl-Kuni's sembly of Indian-elected repre------,f..------by thl statemel1t we somehow planned things so we would ar­ authorize a one-two punch, atom government two days ago, his sentatives charged with the task I eekJng to modify thls govern­ rive with a large gas reserve. But bomb fleet for peatetime. ment's Japane e policy. He said place being taken by Shlgeru Yo- of a new constitution." House Group Endorses ·Plan to Discharge we usen \\ nesr\y an up when the Peace without pOwer "is simply shida. a peace advocate. "Theframin~ first step necessary," he Wllllliam Joyce hat the policy would not be predicted tail winds failed to turn a dream." Secretary Forrestal told changed and that it would be car­ out and headwinds developed in­ the house naval affairs committee. i ried out regard less of cost. His stead ." He and Admiral of the Fleet EJ;n­ mentpr~~g~~~f!~~~~ Intended to ~~~tt~~~ accuse ~::~~try and the::i~,e~~:~a~~t·aa~:;~~ea;~: Indian peoples as possible." b: Se·ntenced Fathers, Veterans With'sTibwleoroYr emaOrresAm'Seerlrv caniCbeOYS .vords were: "Whatever It take3 to The other two ships were com­ est J . King outlined their postwar ------'---_ The prime minister said his neW carry this out will be used to carry manded by Maj. Gen. Curtis E. ideas. (See OCCUPATION, page 5) labor government was following WASHINGTON (AP) _ The to it out." LeMay and Brig. Gen. Emmett The committee started hearings SPGke With uppOri D'Donnell. on the size of the peacetime fleet • • the spirit antd intention of the self1- To Be H~nged house Republican steering commit- come home sooner," he com- Acheson was understood to governmen proposal which S i' tee yesterday endorsed proposals men ted. The planes flying together after amid some congressional assertions Few CI ou d s To day, . I Stafford Cripps made to India in to discharge fathers and two-year lpeak with the support 01 the war their enforced hal t. were in the air that the atom bomb may com­ 1942 d · hId' . t d Questioned as to the committee'! jepartment as well as the state No Great C ange an W hIC n la relec e . veterans rrom the armed forces the second time lit 6:37 p. m., at pletely overshadow Ufe importance •I h •I CriPPS' proposal was that a new _____ Immediately. views about ending the draft, :lepartment. But It was a question Chicago. They landed there at the of naval strength. That isn't so, Indian union be established, con- LOflfDON (AP)-William Joyce. Martin said "We feel we ought tc ..vhether his implicd criticisms of municipal airport one by one less Forrestal said. It was clear and cold last night stltuUng a dominion equal in every Minority Leader Martin of General MacArthur were made than two hours previously. Failure of the enemy to win con­ but the mercury didn't quite make respect to other British dominions, the scarIaced llttle Lord Haw Haw Massachusetts told newsmen that know more about the objectivet Nith the fuU backing of President trol of the sea in both world wars It to the freezin, level. At 12: 15 and that steps be taken after the who broadcast Nazi propaganda to it "is the general sentiment of the of the army before we make a de­ truman. At a ne~ con.ference cost them the deCision. .E·orrestal this morning it was 47.5 and It is war to set up an elective body the British throughout the war, committee" that such aclion be clsion on this matter." yetterday Mr. Truman accepted. said. He envisaged a three-way likely that it didn't get any colder charged with framing a consUtu- was convicted of treason in Old taken. The Rcpublican leader also re- General MacArthur's 200.000 IiK­ <.lJ'e and said he was glad that It Most of Third Fleet task for the postwar American than 40 this mornihg. There will tion. Martin also said the commlttce ported selection of a seven-mem­ fleet: WaveH, speaking from New Bailey yesterday and sentenced to favored: ::auld be made so small. be a few scattered clouds around ber house group to draft a part) 1. Defense of the United States. today but what might have been Delhi on the AU-India radio, Hid be banged. 1. Putting "a little more spur" on Today Mr. Truman issued a Sailing Homeward 2. Defense of the western hemi­ bad weather has pissed. he had been authorized to conter Not a f 11 eke r of expression the army and navy to speed the program lor the 1946 congressional ltatement which seemed to agree sphere. ! Yesterday's hl'h temperature with representatives of provincial crossed the ruddy face ot the thin- demobilization program. elections. 'Nlth Acheson's assertion that no­ TOKYO (AP)-A large portion 3. Maintenance of world peace was 78 Imd the low yesterday assemblies to find out whether the lipped d~tendant as Sir Frederick 2. Use of Chinese and Philip­ Senate members will be asked tc body could say just how many men .vould be needed tor occupation. of the United States Third fleet by contributing a big carrier task morning was 56.3. Today's tem­ Cripps offer was acceptable now Tucker. the presiding judge. had pine forces to help occupy Japan. join in this eflort, he said, add in, weighed anchor in Tokyo bay at force punch to the interna}ional peratures will probably range in "or wllether some alternative or a bla<:k cap placed on his wig and Such action would "make it pos- The president noted that MacAr­ 12:45 p. m. (10:45 p. m. yesterday :;security council. that same general territory. modified scheme is preferred." pronounced the sentence. thaI. "many suggestions" are com­ thur had liven the 200.000 figure ing in from people throughout the this week which wall halt of the central war lime) and started on a As he descended to his cell, Victorious return to the United country about the program. size force he estimated onl,y a Senate Overrides Truman- however. Joyce turned toward ac- Big Five Ministers An army buck private got his month ago, States. Iquaintances In the courtroom and Including such balUeshlps as the chance meanwhile to advise con­ "No one." the president said, gress on how to speed up demobili- "now can accurately forecast wbat Iowa, Alabama. WisconsIn. South Agree· on Boundary Dakota, Colorado and West Vir­ · Pia-n Crushedl ga~e ~r~;~-~~tI:~u~~tslde the zation. • those needs are lolng to be." bomb-scarred law courts cheered $25 Jobless Pay Pvt. George L. Mark who was a lIinia, the lIeet sailed lor Oklh­ __~ ______~ ______. the news. It took the jury of 10 barber supply salesman In Cleve­ • awa. There it will pick up liber­ men and 2 women. who had 1Is­ Of Italy, Yugoslavia ated prisoners .of war to speed $23 a week maximum pay to the [mum payments which vary from tened lor three days to arguments land, OhiO, until he was drafted WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi­ last May, appeared before the Eric Johnston to Fill them home. Tllel'c, too, the battle­ jobless. $15 to $28 a week. over Joyce's nationality, only 20 ships Texas, Arkansas and Ncvada dent Truman's $25-a-week jobless LONDON (AP)-Foreign min- senate military committee and ad­ But Senator Vandenberl (R.• minutes to reach a verdict. isters of the Big Five nations said milted "f am sticking my neck way wlll join the fJeet. pay plan was crushed by the sen­ But he could not keep his party Mich.), on the other side. con­ Will Hays' Vacancy The blond, five-loot-four de­ last night they had reached sub- out. II in line. Nineteen Democrats. most tended that the obligation was to In charge was Rear Adm. John ate yesterday under a top-heavy fendant, whose face is scarred stantial agreement on tbe trou- But when he had completed his Shafll·Qth . At Pearl Harbor, the of them from the potton states, left extend tile duration rather than NEW YORK (AP) - Eric A. 51 to 29 vote. from mouth to ear as the result blesome Italo-Yugoslav boundary story Chairman Thomas (D., Utah) Johnston, 48-year-old head of the lleet proba biy will pick up Ad­ him to join 32 RepUblicans in pil­ the amount. Overriding another of his rec­ of a street brawl, sought to evade dispute and had turned over to and Senator Johnson (D., Col.) Chamber of Commerce of the miral Halsey and perhaps Admiral ing up 51 votes alalnst the plan. Senator George (D., Ga.) told punishment by claiming Ameri­ ommendations, the senate also the senate that as chairman of the their deputies the drawing of the agreed that something must be United States, yesterday w a a Nimitz. can Citizenship on grounds that he voted ~o return the employment Three Republicans-Aiken, Langer finance committee he "felt bound" actual boundary line. . done to hasten the return of mil- elected president of the Motion From there, the fleet will go to was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., 39 San Francisco. service from federal to state su­ and Tobey-voted with 25 Demo­ to report that 28 states had ad­ A communique issued aiter two lions of soldiers, sallors and ma­ Picture Producere and Distributors pervision. crats and Senator La PaUette vised their laws would not permit years a/l9. sessions yesterday of the Big Five rlnes to civilian status. of ~lca, Inc .• succeeding Will Others in the returning fleet In­ Justice Tucker ruled yesterday, clude the aircraft carrier Tlcon­ That cleared the way for a prob­ (Prog., Wis.) for It. acceptance of federal funds. council said it had been decided Mark testified that he and others Hays. ably final vote today on a whlt­ Barkley had opened his fight McClellan's amendment was the however, that Joyce owed allegi­ to make Trieste, now in Italian at Fort Belvoir had cut "graas with Haya, 66, resigned altar servlIll derOlla and the cruisers Amster­ ance to the British crown when he hands. an international port, and bayonets" and done similar Job3 dam, Vicksburg and Tuscon. . t1ed-d 0 w n administration bill by offering an amendment to the first move to pare down the meas­ nearl,y 24 yeare in the post dur­ which would lend federal aid to bill as reported out of the senate ure reported by the committee. went to Germany "wrapped up in to give each nation sovereignty "just to keep busy." His officers Ing which time he became known extend the duration of state unem­ finance committee. This amend­ Heretofore, the figh t has all been the Union Jack"-under the pro­ over peoples speaking illl lang- restricted him to quartere. he as the "Movie Czar." He will con­ Cruiser Suffers Heavy ployment compensation payments. ment, embodying the president's over adding to its main provisions tectlon of a British passport ob­ uage. added. when he informed Wuh- tinue 10 advise the film organiza­ But It faces a further fight first. recommeodations. would have let which include: tained by pollnl as a British sub­ This sO,lution. giving YU/losla- ington newspapers about "hard­ tion. .Casualties at Iwo Jima Just before the senate recessed the states have federal funds, If 1. Federal aid to extend the du­ ject-just before the war broke via less than he had asked and ship and idleness that ex.ists at While there was no official ----- for the day, Senator McClellan they wanted them, to supplement ration of payments in aU states to out. taking from Italy more than she camp." statement Bli to saJaries involved, WASHINGTON (A P) - The (D., Ark.) proposed an amendment payments to jobless workers- 26 weeks. ~fense IOlIcltore. whose con­ wanted tol give up, apparently was The private said he had lonl It was reported that Johnston', PensaCOla, the navy's oldett heavY to strike out a provision for ted­ "By any amount which, to­ 2. Unemployment compensation tention th.t Joyce was an Ameri­ In line with the formula proposed lists of soldiers with dependenlll, five-year-contract called for ,150,- cruiser, suffered 17 men klUed and eral aid-up to a maximum of gether with his weekly benefit for all federal employes and mari­ can citizen won dismissa\ of two by Soviet ForeiKn Commissar V. "some with eight and 10 chll­ 000 Yearly and HaTi would receive 120 wounded In the battie for lwo ,200-to help milratory war work­ amount under the Itate law, does time workers. other counts. said they would ap­ M. Molotov Tuesday. dren," who had been denied dla- ,100.000 annually u a consultant. Jlma, the navy reported yesterday. ers return home or to places of not exceed ,23 and does not ex­ 3. The travel payments. peal. The appeal probably will be "Territories Which belong to charles under hardship pleas. He In acceptinl the post, Johston During the pre-Invasion naval .new employment. ceed two-thirds of his prevloUll Little oppasition is In prospect heard before the court of criminal Croats and Slovenes should be re- said veterans from overseas w4re said. "I have been attracted to the bombardment of the laland, Japa- Democratic Leader Barkley weekly wa,e." to points one and two. appeal next month. tllrned to them. Those which are beiDl instructed on parte of the motion picture induatry bec:8UI4t It nele ahore blltteries Icored .Ix hits (Ky.) took over from Senator KU­ Barkley arlued to hie colleagues The aenate's mood was appar­ . The jury'. task was to detennlne Italian in character. it will be rifle even thoulh they had uaed oHert unlimited opportuniU.. to on the Pensacola and several nedr ,ore (D., W. Va.) the leadership of that the lovernment "owed an ob­ ent when the administration 101t /whethet Joyce adheted to the proper tor Italy to take," Molotov I the same guns to kill in actual work for peace and prosperity at • milies. a flabt to AVe the proaram for Uption" to increase the state max- ita first test. kini'5 eoem1C1i in his bloadcasta. told a press conference. combat. home and ~roId." PAGE TWO THE D AlL Y lOW A N. lOW A CIT Y. lOW A THURSDAiY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1945 Dixon Writes From Honolulu- NEWS BEHIND OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN THE DAILY IOWAN IM...... Vl'!IVIUITI 04J,INDAa ... HII...... I. , ...... tI ....'. 6",", olt C.... 'oL oa"la".. NOTIOI. • .,. Published eve~ mornln, except Monda,. by Student PubUcaUolll J_. ,., .... f~".IIe' wll" 11M ",.,.t .. I" ... Th. J\aII, I •••• or _. -. Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa CIty, Iowa. THE' NEWS- I plal.a ID lb. b.,. , ••vla •• I •• Ib.l. depoII. I...... 111 .... , !'IIi New Pacific Peril Disclosed ~• ' ».u, I ••••• oaNBB"L NOTI018 IDUI' b ..., T ... P .. II, ..... " By PAUL MALLON ,~ 4 ... , .•. lb. 4&, pro •• 41.1 llrol ,ubll... U .. , .0U ••• will HOT .'I Board of trustees: Wilbur Schramm, Kirk H. Porter, A. Cral, 'II, ...... pl .....~l' 1.1'1'110." ... IDUI' b. TYPID oa LIOlB ..I " ..nu By KENNETH L. lllXON - l boreso~e and have no intention lie~e the motorists are takini WA.SlUNQTON-TI\e big faur • u. IJO .. ID ~" ...... ~ ...... Baird, Paul R. Olson, Donald Ottme, MIU'J Jane NevWe, Marl BeUl HONOLULU (AP)-Historians ot lettmll Hono)ulullns take them them for tl l'anted, 80 they PUmer, Karalln Keller, Jack Moy.... \ ~wn congressional leaders came away Vol. XXI No. 2043 ThurllClay, September 20, un . setting out to chronicle the perils tor Itl'anted. ,. and amble over to the curb whete from their confidential confab Fred M. Pownall, Publisher of the Pacific during the past 'nT~US-:-but let s stal t at the be- they stand in the shadow of some with Mr. Truman, talkinll privately UNIVERSITY CALENDAR emll1'gency will be guilty of a ' I nang. palm frond and smugly assume 10hn A. Sticbnotb, Editor. Wally Strll\lham. Ad". M .... grave omisaion If they fail to in- ~n the old pre-war days w~e.n the role ot a simple spectator. about the irrespOnsibility ot labor, Wl!IIIaesday. Sept 19 Monday, 8epte.. ~r !t how the discharge of three men in Entered as second claa mltll SubscriptioD ra __By !UiI $5 clude Hawaii's greatest hazard- this so-C~lled pea.rl of the PacifIc, Then the fun begins. Down from 7:30-9:30 p. m. J'lay nlsh., 7:45 a. m. IndUction clllt. matiel' at the DOsroHlce at Iowa per year; by cll'l1er, 111 cat. the daily HonolulU traffic tourna- was gettang consIderable locally- the north wheezes a 1819 jalopy a wheel pllll\t caullfd the \Vhole Women's gymnasium, play field mony, west approach, Old Capjlol ment. spollllOred publicity as. the p~aoe with six Japanese and a lone Kor- campus. Clt7, lowe, unDer the act of COD­ weekl" p8I'I year, ~rd ~mpire to shut down, how and River room of Iowa Union. *' . . ' where mainland tour lilts wit h ean jammed into its creaking 8ept. gress of March 2, 1879. some little pdaet-maltlng .actor)' Thu"'y. September %0 Th\U'~Y. .7 The Auoch,ted Pre.. II aclu­ Strlotly a sportang event pre- plenty of mazuma could find rest, Crame. SiJ1lultaneously from the 75th Anniversary of Coll,g. of alvely entitled to IlIe for repubU­ ~ented on a 24-hour a day ba~ls, romance, peace and a placid Ute, west a 16 cylinder custom built strike upset another 1ndustry, and 7:30 Freshman assembly, to In- Medicine. TELEPHONEs Jation of all new. dIspatches It somehow ma.nages to ,combme there come to pass a law for the convertible slides smoothly up to how the government had to take troduce stuclent lead8.l·s, Macbride Friday, Sept. 21 ~ molit. excJhng teatUles of a protection of pedestrians. the intersection with a stateside over the Illinois Central railroad auditorium. Edltoria1 Office _ ...... : ...... 4192 credited' to it or not otherwise because of some fool walkout, 75th anniversary of colleS' .t Society Office ...... ·UUS credited In thli paper and also slx-d.ay bIcycle race! a B~rcelona Around the world was adver- industrialist at the wheel. With a Medicine. bullfIght and an African big game Used the fact that people crossing haughty deep-throated honk the '!'hey saw no possibility of lealsla- Prid." 8eptember It Business OUSce _ ...... _...... 4Ull the local uew. published herein. tion but thought Mr. Truman 7:3() p. m. Variety ahow, Mac- 4 p. m. Mayo lecture by Dr. hunt . HI'ono ulu s streets on shanks po- convertible" starts to cut across bul Ralph Major, chemistry auditorium miaht ~Ive the labor leaders a 'briM audlto111um. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20,1945 It has everylhing, folks, every- nies need have no fear as long as lhe arrogance ot that cocky klaxon (open to public). thing-special around rules pre- they stayed between the white angers the jalopy jockey who talkloa-tg...... " I ...... "' n 7:45 p. m. Introductory Baconlan sumably lor thl! protection of lines of "pedestrian lanes." promptly s Qua w k s a w~rning Th\ls, lightly, ~Id they view the 7:!O-8 p. m. Info.rmal CODceft by radio lecture by Dean Carl l (Jeveloplnlr cklu!f8, a.thouah Olle treshanaa band lOut" lawn ]owa pedestrians; the most motley mess * * * blare and steams ahead. The con- mentioned the condition as "a na- IUruon. ' , Seashore, senate chamber, Old Intercepted LeHers: War and Peace- of autos ovel' setm on any traffic There they always have the verUble driver starts to ignore Capitol. ha&ara course; special evenU! pit- right - of - way. Motorists must him but suddenly realizes whict) t~onal outbreak" and. another con- • p. &n. ()ptft house Iowa Union. 8aturdaY', Sept. If JuLy 8, 1941! sldered the possibIlity th.t the ' D eal' AI, ting !Ticky. OlJiental against stub- shriek to a rubber-burning halt vehicle nas the 1I10st to ]08e in a wheel plant was pulled out to put ~, .....-er n . 2 p. m. i'ootball: Bersst{,om fil1d b 0 r n Occidental drivers, and because to a pedestrian be- co lli sion . Both cars s\cid to a halt. " So you're going to become one of us. Ford in II 'defen.lye rpooQ while 3 p. III. J'rllMllun orlentatLOn v~ . IOWD , Iowa stadium. countless "spo~ting cor n e I' S" twilen those lines is like shooting * * * the UA W deal~ with hii r,val, Gen- maas meeting, MacbrIde aOOltor- 7:30 p. m. Business meeting, Tri­ Well,Al, he army isn't so bad . . or course, it'll a far cry where nlilbody has the I'illht-of- deer out of season-but nowadays angle Club. fi-om Iowa City and the univer jty. . but you'll get along ... From lhe south comes a Chinese eral Motors, and all recognized the ium. , way and it's every man :for him- Honolulu is chock full of six cyl- taxi driver and from the east symptoms ot spreading unIon de------just as I did. • seU. inqar pOllchers. thu\1ders an a.rmy six-bY-Six, mands for tne greatest W8Be in- C.. ..,.,...... '1, ..... date. "'OIl..... ee ...... _ I'm glad you decided on ,thE! air corps, pal .. . ilJ beatil sleep· .. * .. Then too, local pe<\estrians have dl'iven by a i leepy, short telI\~ cre&ee of all history...... Ge ..... of .aae Prealdeat. Old C.»I&8I.) ing in the mud with whistling s-h e 11 s singing lullatiys. You'll Add to thisJDystii),ing melee of their sharll of sporting blood and pe~ed ser6(ea"t. They joll'\ tlw • • • yrobably do aU right too. man and machine a few thousand believe in gNing the motorist an happy circle and as it by a signal ' lioon developmenta wll1 plainly INIIAL NOTSC!S American Gt truck and jeep even break. So many of them every type of vehicle in the dlaclocM it ail well financed and I hope we'I] be sta.tioned, cl se to eaoh other, Al ... it'd be jockeys who placidly powerhouse skitter IIcross streets in midblock fun to get toge1 her and rehash" The good old days" . . . r naveD downpour 01 Honolulu convergel\ mana.1Id oampallIl, strongest since OUKS-Tn. ,1H5 TRAN TER STUDIN'18 their way through, iKnol'ing ev- where it's always open season. ACHIEVEMENT will forget that night we rented, the tuxedoll to take thuHe two .'l1ri. on thiS o~e corner. Leave us d.r@w t)le lit-down Itrlke, and expertly ill_Sa. SDD 'Ila el1)'Uiin, but army and navy driv- That I\lways creates delightful It EXAMINATIONS IN I'OallON Delts to the dance ... and halfway to the union, 0Il1' we bor· the curtain. timed for the reconversion period Cdades fa.. Term ot the 1945 the ing rules, and you begin to get the confusion because some motorists LANGUAGES rowed broke down ... it was raining like the djckelUl, remember Eventually, with a carele>8 when all manufacturef& are tryina lumJller Mlntster for .tudents in idea of what a thrilling, chilling,' realize it's a great game while tile 40118gn 01 Iibera1 art. and Transfer students in the Collett ... we must hove pushed fhat car three blocks in. that rain ... spUlln, spectacle is presented others don't. The former jam the glance to count h~e and see if to get a ~urnP on compemors. every balcony is full, the lQuflI[illf Behind it is CIO, and behind cOrAlllen!t and the IP'lldua~ 001- of Liberal Arts whose fortlp but the girls clidn't even get damp ... coune by intemriSliion we here daily under the peaceful foot feeq \0 the floor, unleas\'! Ieee are available at the ottice of languDge reQuirement is not com· 'palms. their fllnciest fOllrwheeled foot- maestro of law and order IT\OV8S CIa lie lhese followin~ inner con­ looked like we'd been compressed against a. wash board. ... and nonchalantly bac, to midstream ditions: the' rqla$r8t' uPDft. presentation ot pleted mDY qualify under either the guy wouLdn't give us back our ten buok deposi wHen we re­ Even rin,masters add to ·the work and try to lead the dodging the ,rudenf Identification card. the old plan (I. e. In course) Dr the general riot. Nowhere In the world pedestrian enouih to pick hilll olf and waves his wi\ntl, If its maiic The public, congress and even turned the tuxes ... I thought you were going to bit! that guy, AL, is working well, soon IW wlU have (overnment has come to look upon l'rq.feaa\anal ooll\!(II! Fades will nevv plan. Those who wish to take al'e there trattlc cops like those just as he almost reaches the be distributed as announced by the Achievement Examlnatioa 01 you were so mad. in. Hbnolulll. Theil' special sport- safety ot the curb. But the latter tl\e trllH(c flowini with its cljs- CIO as the most powerful political the dean ot the . college. the new plan may do so durlns 011 Yeah, we had a lot of iUlI . • _ . ina blood' stems from the (act that jam on the brakes erroneously, tomary smoothness (hah) aiain. and economic force of the country. HARln: O. BAKNES o[ the following ~rlods: Let me hear from you , Al, just. as 800n as you find out ",ber~ several of them are members of thinking it's still ollt of season. If it isn't apd he has tr04bl!! hI! It is not. CIO claims 5,000,000 Rea1slrar Wed. Sept. 19; 4:00-6:00 p •. you're going to be. the 1941- San Jbse, Call!., football . The result, 01 course, is atraffic takes i~ out with ticlteta. membership, but has a lJttle more· Fri. Sept. 21; 4-:00-8:00 p .•. Lots oj luck, U!am who joined the police force tieup for blocks. The same situa­ The" he turns them lOOlle. Horns than halt that many dues payers. The standard 01 performance $or , Jeff; 'when stranded here by the war tion occurs on "sporting corners" Of 30 different YBIIl's vin~age ~nk 'f\'om the start It has concealed IOWA MOUNTAINEERS I madly. Pleali and profanity in 10 all dllta on its membel·' hip. To Iowa Mountaineers will go on a these examinaU n is set at a It'It! .. . . foUl' years ago. where there are no 10 command- which can be attained by most col­ J varied \ong4eS mix witl\ ias give it 3,000,000 would be ,en-I canoe- outing Sunday, Sept. 23 . The Sep . 12, 1946 They came to playa police ben ments and a Ford can scrape a lege atlldents In a seml-Intenslvf em game. They still are. hearse. It is. on these corners lhat fumes in the air. Stouth~ted erous. Its power lies not in I'\um- group will take the 7:50 O. m. In­ near AI, eight semester hour course ~ Other members of the force-of the Honolulu police pursue iheir pedestrians who clareq riSk cross- bers but in riches, which it Is able Iterurban to Norlh Liberty from 1. ~~\\.'\ t~\\ "y<.)\l ",'il'R glad. \.0 n.ea.\' \ha.t Y<:)\1'\,e get till ~ dis­ rected at either the reading m Hawaiian, Chi n ese, Japanese, philosophy of life. ing open range leap frantically or to spend in volitical campaigns. where they will hike two miles to AfL really has about 5,000,000 the river. Canoes will be tUT­ the speaking adaption. Examina­ charged and are coming back to the university this fall. Korean and various other extrac- }'or a while they stand at the futil!!ly for the Cl.\rb. Th~ ir~t dues payers and proves i* by pub~ nlshed. The ol.\ting wiU continue tions may choo e between exami­ I'm back h 1'e now, Ai. . . sort of looking the place over. . . tlons-believe that life should midlnteresectiOl1, directing traftic. things havc chunged or maybe it's that I've changed ... I don't Hawaiian gas1:\ujiY I18me ill on lished bank and certified account- until 5 p. m., and members will tions mDy be taken In French, never be permitted to become But soon they get bored or be- again. ant figures. Indeed it bargains brina a l\lm:h. Member or In\er- know ... it aU seems so different now . . . having you back here German, Latin or Spanish. Candl· for 2,000,000 additlon, but it does ested persons may make reserva­ will help a devil of a lot. dates may choose between ellaml· Stinnett Explains Reparatiqns- not try to control national econom)" tions by calling 9797 by Thurs­ nations emphasizing speaking or And you needn't wOl'ry about your leg ... that is, as long 8S or uae its money mainly lor po- day-night, Sept. 20 . reading, but no student rna), tIIIt you, wear 10110' pan.ts .. . I bet you can really kick my teeth 0 u t ljti~ action. BOB GROW both types. now with that bunk of knotty pine. Now in an organized campaign Leader Student who d ire to consult And helle's good news ... Dgot our old Nom back for us . .. Is Germany Going Pay? to spearhead a SO percent waae in­ with members of the language de­ they had some girls in it whil we were ott; to the wars and rig'bt '0 crease and thus control economic iCHIilDULS partments involv d may do so at now the place is disgu tedly weet and dainty ... but we'll mess policy of the country. CIO actually UNIVERSITY LIBRARY HOUl'S wal' factories, real and converti­ one ot the following per\ods~ back into shape in no time. By JACK STINNETr Reparations council yet to be es- represents about five percent of All., 9-Se»t. %2, 1H5 it ble, taken away from her. We Fl'ench and Spani, ll : Schaetter It j'eminds me of that room we had in Paris, with Madame (Last Of Three ArtIcles) tablished does its job. the workers. Are not all economic Malo reading roo Macbride Hall, Room 307. AI, know that she will have to turn authorities aifeed (Mesllsrs. Wal­ hall. • German: Schaeffer Hall, RooM 'BeIlUCOUP Stew' ... remember you were CIIS, ing her for having WASHINGTON - Reparations over a portion of what industri\ll Pauley says he considers his llice and the manufacturers) that Periodical reading room- Llb- $uch lumpy pi1low~ when she left that champagne for us the last -what Germany is go log to pay production is left for perhaps six job 90 percent finished. Whether there are in hand and prospect 106. for the damage it did to the nati- thousands of minor war criminals rary; annex. Latin : Schaeffer Hall, Room night' we were ther .. '. 'course we pai4 her enough for the room years. about 60,000,000 peacetime jobs for Government documents depart­ 11'. ons it overran-have hardly made • .. • are to be sentenced to hard labor T£PD N H. atJSH to buy a case of the stuff, but she had n heart of gold . . . Sneak. that number of wQrkers? (Best ment-Library. annex. daily headlines. We know illai RlIssla is to g;t inside or outside Germany and ERICll FUNKI sources say 53,500,000 plus army, Education - philosophy - ~ s y- ing of champagne, you know, Al, I had a devil of a time getting OSCAR E. NYBAKKIH used to water again wh n J: got back llere. The reasons for this are many. approximately 50 percent of all t,OOl other exploslve problems making nearly 60,000,000.) chology library, East Hall. The deliberations of the Moscow replIrations and will divide with wlll have Lo be "neutralized" Enough of that . .. 1 '11 see yon next week. • • • MOM y-Frlday conference, at which Edwin W. poland; that England, France and later. Together eiO plus AFL have N1VER 1Tf' BANDS And, Al, when you get ofi that train ill your new ei\\iliall uni. 8:30 a. m.-12 M . Pauley headed our commission, tl\e United States will get the • • • less than 8,000,000 d\les payers 1 p. 10.-5 p. 10. Individual and iroup auditions form, I want to see that Si lve)' Star pinned right on the seat of were secret until they reported rest and take cal'e of 13 or 14 In any consideration or repara- (t\,!ese ligures have been obtained Saturday for member hip in the Concert, your pants. their eijtht points of policy to the other nations. lions, it is w~ll to remember froro the best objective authority) 8:30 a. m.-12 M. Varslty and Football Bands will Kindest regards, .Potsdam meeting. When these When Pauley returneq toone thing Pauley said: It isn't and \Ibol.\t 10,000,000 for whom Reserve reading room- Library be held daily from P:OO a. m. 10 Jeff eight points and further results of Washington the other day, sev- always easy for us to remember they bariain. The farmers are annex. 5:00 p. m. in Room 15, Music Sro­ . , , horse-trading by the Big Three a1; eral who attended his press con- that those nalion!i over there just as powerful a political and Closed Aug. 9-Sept. 22, 1945 dlo Building, beglnn[na Mondt1. Potsdam finally were made pub- ference complained that he didn't aren't like the United States. economic force, ll.ull}erically. Their Schedules of hours for other de­ Steptember 17 . Call ExtenliOi lic, they were almost immediately throw much light on the subject. They have needs, great needs. All 1943 census showed 10,263,000 at partmentaillbrarle" will be posted 8179 or apply in person for audio Lady, Don't Steal My-Pants- overshadowed by the shattering After tlliking with Pauley, I'm that the United States needs-and work on farms In the country, at a on the doora of each library, tion appointment. Ladies, Please t" news of the atomic bomb, the col- convinced that if the complaint wants-(out of reparations) is time when help was depleted. B. E. BLLSWORTB Freshman and sophomore IIItI\ We've been heal'ing a lot of gripes lately from working men ljlPse o~ Japan and the (inal sur- was a personal one, it wasn't not to be burdened with a desti- Yet greater than both unionist Director may substJ lute band tor required of OUI' Ilcquaintanc. Yon'rc. tealing their pants-and we mean fender 10 Tokyo bay. justified. There just isn't much lute and starving Germany." and farmer are the 40,000,000 or military training. Other,.....i>o* that literally. . Then, too, because the disas- more to tell. That, apparently, has been and so workers ol.\tside both. While I UNIVtlR ITT CHOIlUS men and women-may register fer Fellows who work at dirtyl jobs are in a bad spot. They jUilt trous Versailles dollars-and-cents Like the United Nations 01'- wiU be our repaT;ltions policy- the unions are rich (lheir war In- .. 1 S. h. credi t in M u Ic 01' may !alai band without cr dit. can't buy denim work pants anymore because their gay campus reparations levies were to be ganization, with its charter, the not to take much of anything comes were completely free from Chorus tryouts WIll be held 10 avoided, there is no yardstick l:iy Big Three (or Four) has its eight but to try to see to it that Ger~ taxation) and the farmers have Room 103, Music Studio buildlni Hany in truments are avail· sisters are hogging the supply. which we can measure. We know pOints and the Potsdam agree- many suffers a justly hard peace three modestly financed lobbies begi~nl~~ Wednesday mbrning and able for loon wilhout cost to stu· Grease monkey'!, shop work~rs, farmers and machinists are on that Germany is to be stripped ofi ments. Whether they can be made withQUt becoming the nest for which do not try to dominate the contmulng through Saturday from dents. 5 the verge of wearing their" Sl,nday-Go·'l'o-Meeting" clothes for her war potenial by having her to work will depend on how the another litter of Nazis. country, the 41>,000,000 nave no 9 ~h dally. be t k t ed·t Each unit r hearses three· t1111t1 work hO\lrs. A nd they dOll 't li!te the prosp!)ct at all. ______organized money or representa- orus may a en or cr I . weekly. tion. S.ee Prof. Herald Stark for permis- We know you didn't meanlto be selfish · about it. You just C. B. RIGIITII least, still do not consider pris- Yet their economic Interest is SlOn to register on a credIt bo Is. Director ., Ba_ 1iked the oasual look of a plaid shirt and denims for sports wear. oners worth mentioning. paramount and their well being Choru rehearsal_. are Tuesday But couldn't just ca uaL (and far more appealing) in iii the you be as Interpr 'eting News Tha~ is going- to be chan~ed, say can make or break the country, and T~ursday eveOl~g 9 from 7:10 good looking, welL·tailored slack fuitY Or the new ski r t length IIIGlILANDERS By JAMES D. WHITE ful entering wedge to get across American officers, and the Japa- while CIO's 3000000 is merely 9 0 clock. The flrst rehearsal Tryouts for Highlanders will pants which Were designed esperiaHy to flatter yon Y Or even a '0 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ A the important idea that the Japa- ne~ press will be asked tQ help equal to the n'\.\mber of normlllly will be Tuesday, Sept. 25 in outh take plDce at the Field HOUN skirt' U\1employed. I' the 30 percent Music hDIJ. first and great step has been taken nese nation. was defeated and did prepare the Japanese public to • , n"'a .. rD TARK Armory at 7 p. m. Thursday, Stpt Leave ihe denims to the peqple who really need them. vv~ie increase is forced, tIlost of D ruu 27. Minimum height requirement in the. re-equcation of Japan. not stop fighting purely because I welcome prisoners when they come 40,000,000 will pay In increased Conductor is five teet tour inches. PreviOlll ing Com' 'mercl"als-, What Nextll- The American army of OCCUP{!- of the graciousness of H. I. J. M., back instead of ostracizing them. prices forever, Without a wage In- musical experience de ired but IIdt tion is setting out tQ convince the Hirohlto. crease for them$elves, but with a UN,VERSlTY ORCHESTRA neces ary. Singl J I th h At,ican religion is based on 't t th di d t" Th apanese peop e at t ey should The Japanese press had said A " 'h b Ii f th he<\vy cut ill their savings, because Orchestra tryouts will be held Highlanders who received invi­ Y ou h ave t 0 h 1I 'nd j , 0 qse ra 0 a vel' Ismg men. ey welcome b<\ck thei~ men who were rumlsm, • e e e at. spirits every price increase cuts the value be,inning Wednesday morning and tatiollJ to return to the HI(lhland· may have radio fans on the bri$k of insanity, but they certainly captured by Allied fo\'ces durini nothing since the surrender about are all-powerful, that the 1ajth~ of the doUa, in every bond they col\tinwn. throuih Saturday from ers are requested to draw unl· put their point acrOIiS. I the war. Japanese captives, thus leaving tile ful must pay them constant wor- nold. 9 to 5 daily. Report to Room ltO, forms Dnd equipment at the Arm· The fellow vvho started" I .. ucky Cltrike "reeD haS aone to war" The barrier that has to be . I J ship, and propitiate them with The CTO unions, b" ch"''''" "C- l\I{uliic Stl.\dio bll\lding to be as~ ory Monda), from 3 to 5 p. m, I!Id ' '" M" j. '¥, ¥ 10 erence that apanese editors, at oUerings and sacrifice!. . ,,~., ,,-..,..... and 'L~- i1'" apparently WOr ked on tht: principal t.hllt if you broken down is one of the sm~st ivity, have thus gone far !leyond sillned an aUdition time. for Tu day from 3 to 4 p. II., got your atldience infuriated enough, they'd never forget the pro- ot the ideas which underly the a position \IS simple ba,.alnlni Orchestra may be taken for Sept. 24-25. duct you It certair¥y worked. Japanese conception of honor, agents for themselves. Througtl credit. See Prof. P. G. Clapp for Practice schedu Ie: Sept 24 te advel'tise~. JACKASS THE GIANT KILLER permission to reilster on a credit Thousands of American!! gnashed their tpl'th 'a\1(1 tore their bravery and what make a man. st\'ike campaigns, bills pressed 29 including Tusdoy, ThurllilJ 11 • That Is the idea that it is a mo\,- / ./' rJI O~ through congress and pressure basis. and Friday from " to 6 p. m. III~ all' and muttered to themselves. -Whether his tactics got results, tal disgrace to be cap~red, and I/'rJ '- "-.. /' , t11ActC ,.,,-( upon politics through the political Orchestra rehearsallil ore Tu - Saturday rrom 9 to II O. m. we'll never Imow.· Cigaret1e shortage, YOIl know. that a Japanese who let this hap- v IIA_ ..... Ji' ~ acUon organization, they are di- day and Thursday even in, from ct. 1 to Nov. 17 Ihcludllll And then ca-me the "sound experiment" phllse. Fog llOrus pen tollimsel1 has no place in' so- (OL7.t~·vn~ -:- l'!~t.. ' at% Ft .. ;),! rectll\i the economic. and politics 7: 15 to II: 15. The first rehetll1lal Tu day, ThursdDY lind Fridaf whistling washwomen, peanut whistles, railway trains and Qiropil ciety. ..q '~cJ' 'T"C;' 1f4l.tfltI'tSf .1 II of 13~,OOO ,O OO people, without the will be Tuesday, Sept. 25 In NOI'th (rom " to 6 p.m. interrupted the listening pleasure. But by now the public ",as This idea slems tram the belief . responsibility tor makin, the na- Music ball. WILLIAM I.l. ADUSQ" ~~ r" 1!/fJ? t~" " PHILIP GREELEY CLAPP weakened, battel'ed, and they topk the neW' addition ~ith only /I< that a Japanese soldier represents , '800 u ,,/ "I t!01l sl.\cc~sf\!1. What t1W polltlcos Conductor Pi.. "" slight frothing lit the moufh. a divine cause and therefOre can- ,., f - ..... _ . called "the wolves of Wall Street" Director ot IUfltlaacl_

At the pJ;esent ti\ne singing commercials are in the QJV\, tliriPt. noi lose. This of course doesn't " . -.... "":<' may have formerly), run the coun- ""'~ 1'1 , 'Ihe with the t"ct- of 1;1e oope try by 1heir similar money power PUSHMAN BAND SEAL PICNIC Servloomen J'ugt., returned from overseas are amaled, amu&ed and 'clally those on the"I.' battlefield, ,~ and - .. '\ (without numerical &",enath) but Additional players ar n eded to Seals club wl11 I\old a compil· bewildered by the American l'adi() ads. the custom of considering a Japa- at least they wanted to keep it complete the freshman Band. Call mentary picnic Wednesday, Sept. 26. All members wishini to •• Classic exalllples al'e the I'oot beer conga, the caller yelling hls nele "dead" who surrenders is an aoing so t)leir profits would con- at Room 15, Music Studio building, l au! to square dance rhythm and the banana SOn~. escape devioe which has been re- • tlnue. phone Ext. 8179, or attend the r - t nd ar liked to siJn the lilt .. hursal tonight at 6:.5 In the South the Women's iYrnnasllim by ¥QDo These now m~lsicaL ads are p~obably the most ridicu10ufj whjch lor\ed to with military thorough- ' • • day, S pl. 24. OUr adverti ing men have used, but by their "ery \JulicroUII- ness. The questiol\ thua raised by cur" Music hall. eve~ C. B. RIGHTER MART-liA NOL4N. n8811 they ac. hieve their point. They do -t attention. W()uld ThiS' false. I'I\ionalintiQn is. al- rent events is whether an.y eel)- ' \l l'IW qlOit cer. 1'\1 eaponaibl f nomic minority can a country DkMtor 01 Ba•• ...... ever put bananas in your refrigerator DOW t o~ ha.V8P!t YOll laad al Y ~ " . e or in these days 01 fully planned eco- ad' d 1 1 . .mlln.Y Japll,lUll\~ artocll\lIs In han- " your r 10 turlle on ate y Y lilin, the ' pr\Sonef~ they take nomlc8. Plainly \t could, if the Tiny lsland Named, land, abou~ 30 yard. 101\1 aDd • ~lIf1\~lves . Because thli Japane~e \1!.\tional respo!lSlbil\ty of the ,roup ward. wide, lind 8lC~ndlhl .... I soldier, taught io believe he is dls- was surriOr to Its selfish inter~ Th.n I, Disappears four yards obove sea level, ". leather Situation CritiCaf- graced <\n~ "dlllld1, If h~ ~urren- est-bu not otherwise. By run- d""rs and knowl'''' olhing I nlng walles "p and un, m~ch the nomed orubobo In honor ot tilt o WASHINGTON (A P) - The (New YOI'k Times) - There iD little prollpec'for.. any l·mme. "., " ,...... n e 5e, ..- naturally assumes his enemy oper- last few years, now 30 precent brlet career o! u tiny 1~land dls- Colombian unboat which diIID'" d.iat~ improvement in th~ teacbiu.g lIituatio~ for many 'lOmlDuni. ates on the sl'me principle. at a cli~ and more In years al:lead, covered oU the 008st of Columbia ered her. tJes H1 the rural areas of the natIOn, according t.o a recent state- Nner\call atflcers wpo m~qe It can utterly destroy by such In- New uerial ph()\oll~a ph8 made ~e~t by Benjami~ F. Frazier,. teacher tl:'aining specialist lP the test iptervlews with JagllneSe ~ar- (latlon every exlstin, value in a hal ended, the navy reported y - 1\ug 6 • howed the I land hid ..... Umted States Office of Education. 'ents wl'lO had thQU,,1lt their qOns nation. tertlay. dl~apPellred . Pr,eliminary reports coming .into the offica ~ow tha~ ap~ro~ 4e~d found that these Japanese I Whtlt I!\ needed is at. ov,erl\ll ob- Discovered last May '11, the Is- imately the same number as last year, 870,000 will be available to 1;lmllles seemed to be overjoyed, jectlvity in economIc motters, II A chemical battallol) 18\ 011' •• cury on education in the public school II of t h a ~.ion. Sin e e to hear that the boys were alive controllin. top pr,ssure lor th,e ilf. If It merely preten4a to serve tQn a of amok, pots ilIon" ~ • Pearl Harbor about 300 000 teachel's h&\l8 1 aft the c11S8J'O()1D8. aDd would come back. This may ,reater .ood. This Is the simple L t 69423 ' h" 'f' ., be an indication of how quickly duty Of gove~nment. I i, What YQ\.\ public interest, while (earfl,ll ot lta 111\ n hlllhway below c...-o. as year '. emergen(!y teac lDJr certl lca~e~ were Illmed m an the Japanese I>8Qple can forget the expect of ,overnment, the reaso\1 lIfQUPS, It become, unworl!ly ot flo! and produoed a 8mo~ ~:!!! attempt to flU I he gap. .Many of tbetJe certiflcatl!8 in backward artifIcial millta(y thinkinl WhiCtlj for its existence. [f lovemmlint trust, Illld will brlna the 118me re. mile. 10na lind tWQ ",LIM '"'" • areas went to persons who did not eyen ha.ve a hi(!'h I!chl)QI diplo- has been lor<;ed upon them. f~ll. to furnlah this objecUvlty, \\ suit al rmnorlty domln.lIon of na­ which w malnta~ed ,ar,­ 'HII mao But In any case it Is a mast use- has tailed its primal'), relgonllbil- tional economlc~. days. lined -or e. m, 1945 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBLR 20, 1945 . THE DAILY IOWAN, lOW A C tTY, IOWA - PAGE THREE rlN .... ~======~======~~~~~ way, placed on the curb by 8 a. m. • I. 'lit ..... , "'OTIOII- I City Women's Club College of Medicine II Final Tin Can Drive City trucks will start coll~tlllI .a .r ... ~ freshmen to Meet Goelch,'akes To Observe 75th i' the cans at that time. ."1all, ...... win NOt_ii Campus Personalities • Resumes Meetings Anniversary To Start Monday Mn_ Oathout emphasized that y ""~q ---- this will be the last tin can salva,. The Iowa City Women's club The University of Iowa's ob- drive in Iowa City. ber 20, lItl AI Macbride Tonight AdVisory Post A final tin can collection drive will resum';! its general meetings servance of the 75th anniversary will be conducted Monday, Mrs. Leavened breads were known tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 in the of the college of medicine's found­ Highlighting today's freshman Prof. Walter R. Goetch has been Alva Oathout, local salvage drive and used by the flCyptians and club rooms at the Community ing Sept. 27-28 will feature tech­ activities wiJI be an assembly at named to replace Donald Mallet in chairman, said yesterday. other early civilizations in the ller !t TO buileting. The program will be I nical lectures by noted physicians. Persons are urged to have their regions of the Eastern Mediter­ tl on c_ 7:30 p. m. In Macbride auditorium the liberal arts advisory omce. sponsored by the garden depart- Dr. Owen H. Wangensteen, .pro­ Un cans, flattened in the usual ranean at least 4.000 yean Old CaPlloi at whl,ch studen t leaders of the Professor Goetch has been work­ "0. WED ment, with Mrs. L. C. Jones serv- f~ SOl' of .surgery at the UnlVer­ campus wllJ be introduced. Gor­ ing on a project for the Veterans' ing as chairman, assisted by Mrs. slty of _Minnesota, and Dr. R_a ~ph ta, association at the University of don Christiansen, L3 of Jowa Clly Bion Hunter and Mrs. J. W. Howe, H. Major,. pro!essor of mediCine Colle.t 01 Iowa during the past year. It has SEPT. 29 Home Owned r ... l1i be master of ceremonies and On display will be flower and at the University of Kansas, will been successfully completed and vegetable arrangements by Mrs. present the lectures. In wUl Introducc thc following per­ will be put into use soon. f colieR, 01 Professor Goetch came to the Hunter, Mrs. William T. Goodwin, iO~11 Mrs. J. W. Anderson and Mrs. Edna Herbst, A3 of Newlon, university from Penn college in Military Rejections Two Wonderful ure by ~ C.leveland, Ohio, where he was Harold Johnson, Colored slides of UDI1Ierally Women's aSSOCiation; flowers will also be shown. Mem­ WASHINGTON (AP) - Mar e a uditorlun; loe Mather, A4 of Sioux City, The registrar and dean of the junior than a third of rejections for mili­ division. bers are aslted to bring a display Dally Iowan; Mary Osborne, A4 of flower and vegetable arrange- tary service sprang from mental y BaCQI\Ian of Ottumwa, Hawkeye Yearbook; He received his ' B.A. degree ills or deficiencies, draft Chief from Valparaiso university and his ments. ,·· COATS · n Carl t Marlaret Walk, A3 of Grafton, Mrs. Hunter wlll review a talk Louis B. Hershey told congress mber, O~ YWCA; Jack Fickel, ML of Hen­ M,A. from the University of Chi­ yesterday. cago, He earned his Ph.D. degree Ion flower and flower arrangements dersqn, YMCA; Betty Jo Phelan, which was given by Dorothy Bid- This cause figured in l,767,ooo '. • • • . • and both ONLY at Yeffers A2 of Mason City, Union Boord; at the University of Iowa. cases of a tolal of 4,800,000 men Professor Goetch will be in the 1 dIe of New York City. Dick Nazette, L3 of Iowa City, I A board meeting is called for turned down, the general testified University of Iowa Veterans' asso­ liberal arts advisory office in Old before a house interstate sub-com­ Capitol where he will H. _~ ___-,l 1:30 tomorrow afternoon. claUon, and Leo Cortlmigila, Col of The standing committee for the mittee considering a bill to coordi­ Iowa Clly, the student body. Clay Harshbarger in advising stu­ nate study, treatment and preven­ dents. MR. AND MRS. CUford SmUh, route 1, announce the enp,emeni and generll club program for this year Exeltl iue At Last night, freshmen attended approachin, roarri&l'e of their daurhter Betty, to Serrt. David Brenne­ fol1o~s: Etta Metzger, chairman; tion of mental disorders. J'dler another play night in the River man, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Brenneman of Kalona. The weddlnr Mrs. George Handy, drama; Mrs. room of Iowa Union and in the will take place ai 8 p. m., Sept. 29 at the Baptist church. The brlde­ F. M. Barker, home; Mrs. L. V. Goodwin, music; Mrs. C. C. Wylie, Women's gymnasium. Some Farm Workers eleet Is a paduate of Unlvenlt)' b I, h lehool and attended Brown', Dlerdorff, garden; Mrs. Harry public welfare, and Mrs. Thomas Tomorrow night, Zeta Phi Eta, Business collere. Recently ahe bas been employed by the La r e w G~<:h , literature; Mrs. W. T. Reese, social sciences. profeSSional speech fraternity, ~ilI May Leave Work Plumbln, company. Serl'eant Brenneman was craduated from Center EN'lS present a variety show in Mac­ hll'h school near Kalona. He has served In the army 17 months and T bride auditorium with Robert Ray, has recently retuq)ed from 11 months overseas lervlce In the Euro­ G of Davenport, as emcee. DES MOINES (AP)-Some farm 1'011161 pean theater. 8 Marilyn Jens, A1 of Appleton, workers who were draft deferred C. Or D. CLEANERS the Cou.. Wis., and Bob McCollister, A1 of during war now may leave the 106 South Capitol . Iowa City, will portray two typi­ farm if they wish, while others • • :eno;O:: cal freshmen. Jo Weaver, G of cannot, state selective service SUI Offers Course Pennies From Heaven I Cleaninq Pres'lnq nder either raUs City, Neb., will render "The headquarters said yesterday. \ As Mail Bag Breaks and BlocldDq Hah - r8e) or the Bird in the Gullded Cage." Rules were explained following • OUf Specialty ish to lake The spotlight will also be on an Iowa State college extension T(, Aid Physicians • BRIDGEPORT, Ill. (AP)-Pos-• ~ Leo Cortimlglio, Col of Iowa City, service report that farm hands "by lnatioa of tal and railroad workers were on the hundreds" were quitting for Pickup and delivery service du'rlnc QIe playing piano and accordian num· Past-graduate adult education in a treasure hunt over a 40-mile s: bers. Shiriee DeForest, A4 of higher paid jobs in cities. medicine to aid the physicians of course yesterday after a mail bag DIAL DIAL The shift from farm to city jobs 6:00 P., Eagle Grove, will give a reading, the state will be underway in Iowa containing $16,000 broke open as THREE DAY SERVICE Helen Huber, J3 of Clinton, will began when draft rules were by next spring. This new develop­ 4433 4433 8:00 P'III, it was tossed from a moving train. changed and farm youths were no - We lIay 10 eaoh for han,ers - rmance tot ' lilli, ment in service of a medical col:' Postmaster Fred Stoltz reported A skit wiIJ be presented under longer "frozen" to their work, lege was announced by Dean Ewen t at a ItvtI the direction of Dorothy Kotteman, Floyd Johnston, assistant extension M. MacEwen of the college of all but an estimated $2,OOO-in y ones, fives, tens and twenties- ~~5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:. most col. labor supervisor, said. A2 of Burlington. The University medicine. had been recovered, some from Hntelllive of Iowa Scotch Highlanders will Coi. Ralph A. L(1ncaster, assist­ The project, which has been course ~ the undergear of the train as far be represented by a number. ant state sele~tive service direc­ under consideration for some time, reading or tor, explained that any farm will be made possible by a grant east at Washington, lnd, Exal'llln.. worker over 26 years of age, like of $120,000 over a three-year The money was being trans­ een eX4ll11. any other man above that age, was period by the Kellog Foundation ferred fro mSt. Louis to the First In French frosh Band Meets now a "Iree agent" and might seek of Battle Creek, Mich. President National bank of Bridegport.• ish. Cnndi~ employment anywhere. Virgil M. Hancher announced the een exami. Men under 26 who were physi­ grant 'Ii·riday. peaking or Thurs.day, Friday cally handicapped might alsO Two or three doctors from the Prof. Mabie Tells t may taIr4 change employment, he said. . college of medicine would hold SLACKS' The freshman band will re­ Physically-fit men from 18 to clinics at small hospitals through­ hel\rse this week Thursday and 26 still afe working on farms, out the state a t regular intervals. New DA Students Frida,)' tram 6:45 to 7:30 p. m. The however, under an occupational Dean MacEwen explained, To eatly evening rehearsals wi11 make deferment, lind would be drafted these clinics resident phYSicians Of Forthcoming Plans You it possible for members of the by their locai boards ff they of . the locality can bring cases band to attend other regularly changed jobs, Colonel Lancaster which are puzzling them and solu­ ecbeduled Fresbman Weeks events. said. tions for treatment perhaps can be Prof. Edward Mabie, head of '. ·forty·five freshman men and Colonel Lancaster said the num­ found through consultations. Lec­ the department of speech and women met for a first rehearsal ber of men returning to farms tures and demonstrations also will dramatic art, addressed new stu­ LOVE! on Monday evening. The balance since V -J day has been less than be used. dents in the department at an in­ $49.95 ot the group was generally satis­ was expected by selective service "Physicians in practice find it formal theater mlxer in Univer­ sity theater last nigbt. factory except for basses, a num­ officials. impossible to come to the medical Season Sklpper is a wonderful coat for any hour, any climate. ber of which are needed immedi­ Many who left the farm for war college for clinics ond to learn Professor Mabie discussed plans for \he coming year and said that It's the only hand-tailored coat that heds Its lining, sleeves and ately to complete the instrumenta­ work are staying on at city jobs, about new developments in the aU-turns from topcoat to winter coot in a !lash. TaUored by tion. A few additional players of while some veterans who were field," Dean MacEwen said. "So the return of servicemen would OS make possible a more normal the same master craftsmen who make our line men's coats. In trombone, bassoon, and clarinet drafled from the farm also have we plan to bring the benefits of Ji'USitiUll CCltiCl' -HCCOll(l Ploot' auditlolll theater year. Several playwrights a range of fine qualily all wool gabardine, Continental quality are also needed and piaces can be gone into factory or other city such a procedure directly to them. Langora fleece and Heartherdown in cocoa brown. Sizes 10 to e Concm, As far as I know, a similar plan is are expected and are to begin made for players 01 any other in- work. 1;)ome of these, Colonel 18. ands will struments. • Lancaster said, have sought to used by no other state university work immediately. a. m. to The freshman band will present ulilize new skills taught them in medical college." On the schedule now al'e two $49.95 Music Stu­ a short open-air concert on Sat­ the army. The project will be in full swing original plays by Lieut. Robert l'a hum C lit r CC'o/ld INoor g Mond.,., urday evening and this group will by the spring of 1946, he said. The Anderson who wrote "Come • Extenllol (orm the nucleus of the band ~ Kellogg Foundation already has Marching Home" which was pro­ Sllicks -all wool and gabat·dine. for aucll- which will provide music for the provided the first installmeht of duced in the University thea leI' in green, brown, black apd '·rey Pharmacy Students $40,000. this summer, "Blythe Spirit" and Induction ceremony on Monday as well as navy blu. Finely more rntII morning. "Kiss and Tell" are also in the r reQ'Uu.J All applicants lor band mem­ To Fill 11 0,000 Orders Construction Contracts offing for production, There is a tailored, pleat d styles. 'izos hers--botb bership are asked to see Prof. C. possibility that "Kiss and Tell' will :Q4fa~ CHICAGO (AP)-Ncarly $5,- to 20. If' register fer B. Righter, room 15, Music studio be primarily a freshman pro­ A.l L YU,. COAf Senior students of the college of 000,000 (M) worth of construction --- .. r may l* bullding. pharmacy will dispen:se more than duction. "The department is for­ -- contracts for Illinois, I n d ian a, tunate this year in having a com­ $6.95 to $10.95 110,000 prescriptions and ward Iowa and Wisconsin were approv­ are avail· plete staff," he stated. drug orders in the U ni versity of ed by the war production board st to .... lev. Proehl Weds Jowa hospital pharmacy during ProfellSor Mabie told the new­ during the first two weeks of Sep­ comers that the theater building 1945~6. tember. it was announced yester­ E.tcltt ilJe Jiree thllll Monticello Couple According to Dean R. A. Which is now eight I years old and day. not yet completed would be In Local Church Kuever of the college of pharm­ Samuel J . Campbell, regional At 101ft'll financed and finished within the acy, the students will work under director of the WPB, said approv­ ., ..... In a simple ceremony, Claire the supervision of hospital pharm­ next two or three years. Y cUers als this month include large pro­ acists who are staff members of George Kernodle, visiting lec­ Gerdes of Monticello became the jects passed on in Wailhington, bride of James Keith, also of Mon­ the. college of pharmacy. turer of the summer session, will some of them alter previous de­ ders will Ilcello, Tuesday at 6 p. m. in the This course gives the student the teach history of lhe theater, Prof­ nials. eld MOUlt parsonage of the Zion Luth~ran chance to gain useful experience essor Mabie announced. day, Sept. chUrch, 610 E. Bloomington street. which will train him to be a more I Following the welcoming ad­ u.lrem~nt The Rev . Arlhur E. Proehl offi­ professional and belter trained courses, and by having such a dress, colored slides of the play PrevlOUl ciated at the single ring ceremony. worker after graduation. large volume and variety of medi­ "Middle of the .Air" were shown. but not Attending the couple were Donald "In doing this dispensing, the cines pass through their hands The audience also saw techni­ Nordman and Helen Gerdes, both students get a thorough review of I they are thoroughly drilled in color films on "The Winter's tale" ived invl· of Monticello. previous theorectical and practical fundamentals," Dean Kuever said, and "School for Scandal." All of Hlllhland· ------~------these were university productions draw unl· of recent years. the Arm· LINES FORM-AS-JAPS PICK UP RATIONS IN-tOKYO ' The group was taken on an In­ p. m. "wi .. ~ roductory tour of the theater • p. II" ouilding by graduates and upper ;)assmen of the department. The ~ve ning was concluded by re­ Creshments served in the theater lounge.

$49.95 nI aad. In, .... level, ".. or of the The famous coat with the removable leather lining. Wear it ch diIID"" with or without lining to suit the weather! Extra removable wind proof leather lining (with leather ph. made ITALY and Yucoslavla are DOW sleeves and snug fitting wrlstiets) - buttons in or out. had"'" presen~ c1alma to a five-power Second Floor F01Jhion Center "Leather-Liner" il fashioned of 100'70 wool. exprealy loomed council of torelJn ministers in an for thil c1auic. All new shades, sizes 10 to 20. arrument over Trieste, the an­ Long Sleeves ~ ...... $4.98 cleDt AdrlaUc port whleh for han­ dreds of years has been a pteway Short Sleeves ...... $3.98 to aouUleaa&ern Europe. Yuroalavta , clalma hira and Venezia G1ulla as shown on the _p above. Con· J THIS KINt, which Ie familiar lo the Japaneae .inee early In the war, shows the citizens ot Nippon sensus .. ,hat Italy Ia w1111na' to Yetter)j lined up on a Tokyo .treet tor mealer ration I !,!oled out dally. Latelt reporta mention rood suppllea co_de "aome measure of Jus­ tice" In the Yu,oaIavla claim. Yettef}J ~ on hand In the conquered country;' ,Jlnternation.l Soundpboto) ow~. _ . (In&ernatIoDal) • Iowa City's Own Department Store Iowa City's Own Department Store rHUR8D.I r THE I)AILY lOWAK, IOWA Cl'H'. iOWA • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1~5 . t... m -; « ------c=:m-=-c --=--e] - r , - OCCUP ~ The Big Show Fo€e ,Many Strong Foes (0<""' pUnIsh JBPor Toke' to NEW, YOR~ (AP) - Major • I • the• • Indiana team which tangles wllb liS own Hawk.s. Air sent\ltives of 25 colleges and uni­ hi~O lellgue standings including all day ~ IlI,TTYE NE AL Iowa her Oct. 20. proved, s4 games of Sept. 19. You tOQtPl1ll enthusiasts who versities. Two are Iowons, Don­ ald Blount, once halfback at rareian mini NaUoD4l 4:a~.... aJ:\l. Wlli\inlr impatiently for the Irish Green Drake; and i'red Schneider, guard and noW I Tea_ W L Ppt. flawke¥~s to s~ing Into their 1945 No ire Dame's new men tor, (rom Loras college. Others hail ~uilding a ~I Ohic:ago ...... 91 54 .6~8 grid sea on, h'lre Sept. 29 are des- Hugh Devorc, is still weepi!li at I from Arkansas, Telias A. & M. Thi~ follO St.· Lou.l.s ...... 88 57 .607 Hnel! fOI' all the excit~mllnt and the plight of his Irish aggregatl~ l Centellary, Texas university, Rlee, Hon of Tues Prep'a,re for q 'pener Brook,lyn ...... 80 64 .556 th~·ill!i for which you've bargained. 130 strong. Inexperience - o\ll¥ To Wyoming, Kentucky, Tennessee, pIIwer!ul T£ =--- P,ittsburgl1 ...... 8Q 67 .544 N9t on).Y, will postwar football Florida, Senta Clara, Alabamll, eight monogram winners from dm as pun !few Ypr.k ...... 76 69 .5~4 here at IQwa bring back some of 1944 are present-places the bur­ Nolre Dame and N~W Hampsl'\ire. tion or an aoston ...... 6~ 83 .428 the 01(1 Gold greats from previous den of the season almost entirel, QUESTION MARK Ohio Stale ,.---- By Jack Sords Cubs Push,3Over Cll')ciw)llti ...... 60 B~ .4H Hllwk teams, but home fans this on {{eshmen. Loss of Frank SZ)'j Anticipate' Phjladelphia ...... 44 ] 02 .301 Year are going to see at least three Ohio State, th'st host to the 1l1\lnski, captoin /lnd cent!!)', V(~ A~ I .aaLeacu.e enemy pow6lrhouse outfits manned Hawkeyest on 0 ·t. 6, has an im­ the greatest blow, but s\.\ch vet. ~ooks I In Tenth to Drown . Detroit ...... 85 , 62 .578 almost comp~e\ely with leitermen. pressive list ot 14 l'e~urning let­ erans as Pete Berez.ney, Johnn, WashingtOn ...... 85 R4 1 .1i70 TIw,sllI'Qe is t~ue for the live teams t~rmen in a squad of 57. Among Mastrnngelo and Fred Roval an ,.tl (,N' Enemy Passes Card Tille Hopes, 4·1 St. Louis ...... 78 68 .53. witb which, the Hawkeyes will those f£lclng the Jowons agail} are there to boister the Notl'e name .,0-11'80 (I' New YorlG ...... 74 7\l .51.' tangl~ on, fo(eign gridirons. Warren Amling, end; Oilie Cline, lino. Illinois, which meeh the "'""w •., ( Cl~veland ~ ...... 69 70 .496 S~~n i Foes fullback; Thornton Dixon, t!lckle; Irish the 29th, ,will furnish the an­ Don Bal'n Captain Billy Hackett, gu~r9; Bud Texas Team Averages Hank Borowy Gets Chicago ...... 71 75 .486 Suc;h OVerwheimiul! strength swer to Notre Dame stl'ength, and coach nt Ur Boston ...... 611 79 .466 Kessler, end ;Joe Mascio and Paul from there on the Hawkeyes cia .,viii be interl -205; Art Johnson Second Win; Scores p(oml~es tI) give Clem Crowe's new Bhiladelp/'lia ...... 51 94 , .352 team, al;\d ypu sideliners, plenty Sarringhaus, halfbacks. definitely plot th ir campaign fer or Ihe WSUi Carroll Widdocs, beginning his Looks Good in Drill Last Run on Error ' YtlSTEBUJ\l,'(S fttJ8 \.Iura to tl'\il'\ki a'QQui and anticipate' as a fourth victory over the ' So u ~ 9:15 over ! AtMritQ.Jl Le&&'1Ie . first yeoI' !IS head coach, win try t~e season's, opener with Berg­ Bend el ven, set for Oct, 27. aarnhurt, P ass olfense tactics were the ST. LOUIS (AP)-The Chicago St. Loui$, 6, 4) New Yorle, 5, 3 sl.rpm ail' fiel(l approaches. for his second consecutive unde­ Blr Bajlre\'S . Tipton ' . Boston 11, 3; Flhiladelphill 1(1, 0 feated and untied season with the order of the day yesterday as Cubs, fully exploiting a collapse Let's h~ye a look at Iowa's op­ Nine lettermen form the nucleua Coach Clem Crowe sent his Hawk by the St. Louis defense, rammed Cleveland 2, Detroit 0 ponents. A nine-game schedule, Buckeye eljlven. Lost year the Old of Harry Stuhldreher's Badgell, gridmen on the field in a slight across three 10th-inniog runs for Nationa.l League from Sept. 29 to Nov. 24, will Golders dropped their first game who will come to Iowa fqr H0ri· drizzle to prepare for their Sept. a 4-1 decision. over the Cardinals BI'ooklyn 5, New ¥ork 4 bring to the home stadium a lil­ to Ohio State, 34-0. coming Nov. 3. Ti,e Hawks took I 29th opener here against Berg- I ' before 26,888 paying fans la,st Boston 4, Philadelphia 0 tle-known service team and three Purdue 26-7 beating at MadiSOn last year, Ohicago 4, St. Louis 1 strom army air field ot · Austin, night to im:rease their National conference elevens. Purdue's Boliermaker's wiU be al1d may find a real te~t this s~ . Tex. leai,ue leaq to three full games. Berrairom Air Field looking [01' another victory over son against the Wlsconsi" ~ . The Hawkeyes will be up against The St: Louis defense came Today's Games Coached by '''Red'' Saunders, the Hawks on the Lafoyette field who average si" teet an\! 198 some fancy passing by the service apart at the seams in the 10th to NEW YORK (AP)-Probable formerly of San Jose State, the Oct. 13 . Last seasol'\'s sCore was pounds. team's Owen Price, formerly of hand the Cubs three runs and for todl\Y's major leagl\e Bergstrom field ouUit represents 26-7, and the Indiana outfit will Ve~era.n Jlllni Texas Mines, who tied Davy Borowy his second straight 4-1 games. (Won and lost recol'ds in the First Troop Carrier Command, give Iowa a real fight with a and is largely composed of former Veterans abound in the IlIll19ia ' O'Brien's record in the southwest. decision over the Cards. Living­ parentheses.) squad which includes eight major lineup, also. Among them lII'e He operates behind a line averag­ ston opened the inning with a, college stars, most of whom are lettermen, foul' minors, three veterans. Reportedly a low-pow­ Buddy Ward, Capt. Ralph Serpico, ing 205 pounds per man. walk. Schuster's sacrifice was Detroit at Clevelafld - Trout candidates who played with the Lou Agase, Bob Cunz, Art Deme· bobbled by Dockins, and the bases (18-14) vs. Reynolds (17-11) ered team, which opera~es Irom "B" squad, and jive men with pre­ Anticipating tough going on the a single wing formation, the ter, Bob Demeter, Harold R-" ground against the air force team, were loaded a moment later when. Washington at New York-Haef­ vious collel/e experience at other -macher, George Bujan and Alex ner (16-13) or Wolff (19-10) . VI!. Texan eleven tied with Southwest­ schools. The average heii\ht of Crowe this week is stressing a Dockins was late throwing to ern university, 6-6 lalit Priday. Prokopis. Coach Ray Eliot should razzle-dazzle of long and short third for a force play on another Page (4-3) the Bol1ermake.t·s is about six leet, have little trouble in shaping hill Philadelphia at Boston-Black More about its strength will be and the weight is 192.9 pounds. aerials, with quarterback Jerry attempted sacrifice bunt by Borr known after its game with the 1945 ieam around these men, most ;Niles on the tossing end, OWy. (5-9) V'S. Heflin (3-9) The 1I001fleri of which have had at least two Only games scheduled University of Texas Sat~"day. Andy Novosad, 225-pound tackle That was all for Dockins, wh9 On the 48-man squad are repre- Hoosier coach Bo McMillin may years experience. Jowa tackles II. was still on the sidelines with sore , was relieved by Burkhardt. Pinch­ NatloD,,1 Lea(ue have a few tricks up his sleeve to linois there Nov. 10. . Chicago at St. Louis (night)­ legs yesterday, but Paul Fagel'lind hitter Nicholson slashed a single make up for the loss of a big share Minnesota Powerhouse was back at his right guard spot Prim (13-7) vs. Brecheen (13-3) of his veterans to the armed serv­ to right, scoring Ostrowski, who While the presence of 171ft. after a day's layup. ran for Livingston, and Schuster. Boston at Brooklyn - Lo~n Browns.Take Two; ice, but practices so tar this sea­ (6-11) vsc. Bral;lca . (3-6) SOn have starred almost a com­ terl'llen on the University of Min­ Big news of the day was the Burkhardt then threw wide to Only games scheduled. neso'ta sq uad Ili v es one the i'l!­ ites third, trying to nip Borowy and plete roster of new men. Jack Ce'n arrival ot Art Johnson, 210-pound 6-S ~ pression that Coach Bernie Bit!\'­ 10:30 fullback from n . Dodge. Despite the Cub scored, Nicholson Spill'Yanks ' 4·3 I'jally, veteran fullback; Russ Deal, 1942 guard; Bill Stratton, quarter­ man will rely largely on vet!!r!ll 11 :00 lack of condition, John~ on iUl'ned going to third. After Lowrey back. and Charles Armstrong, material this season, approxi­ 11 :30 in a good performance and ap­ walked, Lopat~a relieved Burk­ Dodgers Jump For Unchallenged 3rd mately 25 new men are slated for ety hardt. Fafko was intentionally tackle, will be the bill guns in the pears to be one of the speedier extensive duty. Among the new­ 11 :45 giJf#lt;f passed, filling the bases, but the Hawks. Another man to draw at­ NEW YORK (AP)-St. Louis comers are Earl Bruhn wl'\o play~ inning ended when pinch-hitter 12:00 tention was John Hunter, left r i1" fllMIWS rrO ~ S~eN tightened its grip on third place quarterback in ]944 for Penn lZ:30 halfback from Wapello who is a Heinz Becker lined to second. ""l\Mrf~'Oii No1' PAlIt.. CAN Gian,ts, 510 4 money in the American league Sta te, and Dick Lutz who is vyiljJ IU5 fast and crafty runner. . I ~I\J~ lM'40'+-I'S HI6't\ S'l"IWPAIW oF Chlca,? AB R H E yesterday by taking a pair of 10- Puzzle About for lhe fullback spot with Hockl\)' 1:00 Another former Old Golder ar­ · IPtA.i' AP(~~ I4ls s-(~c~ ,.-.l ~. BROOKLYN (AP)-The Dodg­ inning ball games from the New Mealey, junior letterman. %:011 rived in camp yesterday. Roger I '" 1~ seliN'lCe. Hugh~s, 3b-2b -... - 4 0 0 0 York Yankees, 6-5 in the opener Bierman has the material and 2:10 Nicholson, rf ...... 1 0 1 0 ers strengthened their hold on Kane, 220-pound tackle on the third place yesterday by coming and 4-3 in the finale. experienced men for anoth ~r ]942 team, is back, but does not Johnson, 2b ...... - 4 0 0 0 Trailing the Browns now by Fight SeHing great Gopher team, which comel Crom behind in the seventh inning expect ts> be discharged from tl'le Sauer ...... 0 1 0 0 three full games with only eight here for Dad's day Nov. 17 . Hack, 3b .. __ ...... - 1 0 0 0 to beat their arch rivals, the army' until January, and so will Giants, 5 to 4. to play, the Yanks appear doomed Cornhu kers Come Up not be on the dealing end of this Tribe Slashes Detroit Margin Lowrey, lf •...... 3 0 1 0 to finish lower than third lor the NEW YO~K (AP)- Maybe it's Going into the seventh the just a gall, but the word Is getting Iowa's only victim last year, tbe year's team. Cavan'etta, 1b ...... 4 0 0 b first time since 1925 under the late Nebraska Cornhuskers, have, like Pafko, cf Giants held a one-run lel\d, but around that Broadway may lose With little more than a week ...... 4 0 S 0 Miller Huggins. Never before in ali other teams, profited by the Secory, Goody Rosen squared matiers by the return Joe Louis-Billy Conn lett before Iowa opens its 1945 rf ...... 4 0 0 0 the HI-year span of Joe McCar­ war's end, Eight veterans so far Becker ...... 1 0 0 0 plastering a homer over the right thy's management had they wound 'SCrap to Broad street. ".II" ..' ...... ,," ! \ season, Coach Growe is wasting no By' 2·0 .Victory Over Tigers have reported back, and a sub­ Merullo, ••••• 0 •••••• field waU. Augie Galan and Ed That's one way 01 saying Promo­ time in shaping his first learn, ss 0 0 0 0 up 04t of tbe first three. stantial n u m bel' of promisip' Livingston, •••••• u •• Stevens followed with singles ter Mike Jacobs is thinking that named Tuesday. Forty-six grid­ c 3 0 1 0 The setback also snuffed freshmen bolster the neighbor AB R n E Ostrowski ... -..... 0 I 0 0 bringing Jack Brewer to the res­ out the last flickering pennant perhaps the choice heaVyWeight men report for practice in the att­ CLEVELAND (AP)-One little Detroit state's team, making lhe o~tcol1lf Williams, c ...... 0 0 0 0 cue of Ace Adams. Galan was title bout tentatively el for next ernoon and work right on until Texas league single Into right field ------hope of the New Yorkers who of this year's contest another bi~ Webb, ss ...... 3 0 0 0 Schuster, ss-2b .... 3 1 0 0 nipped at third as a double steal now have been eliminated mathe­ June, would draw more in Phila­ after the lights are turned on. .. delphia's municipal stadium than frightening question mark . was all yesterday that kept big McHale .. •• ...... 1 0 0 0 BorowYI p ...... 3 1 0 0 failed, but Frenchy Bordagaray maticaUy . Bob FeUer from making a second Hoover, ss ...... 0 O· 0 0 singled Stevens home with the New York's Yankee stadium. Lefty Sam ZQldak, who relieved Ea~les Win Around the Gridiron- Mayo, 2b .. ' ...... 4 0 0 0 winning run. Uncle Mike won't come right appearance among baseball's no­ Totals ...... :...... 36 " 6 o Nelson Potter in the sixth inning, BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP)-Pro­ Cramer, c! ...... 3 0 0 0 • Ran for Johnson in 9th out and say the bout would be held NEBRASKA hitter pitchers as he hurled the Mike Sand lock gave the Dodg­ took the nod over Red Rufffng in fessional r~ball's oldest jinx was Greenberg, If ...... 3 0 0 0 .. Ran Lor LiVingston in 10th ers a three-run lead in the second in Ph illy, or maybe Chicago, or LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Lack­ to a 2-0 victory Cullenbine, rf ...... 2 0 0 0 the first tilt when Frl\nk Mancu­ some other large city, but one or shattered tonight as the Phlia~el ­ ... Balted for Secory in 10th with a three-run homer off Harry SO'!i single scored Vern Stephens ing a ruling on whether the army over Detroit to trim the Tigers' York, 1b ...... 3 0 0 0 his aides asserted "it's a distinct phia Eagles rolled over the Chi· .wlil let him use personnel from Feldman, but the Giants went in the fir s t overtime round. cago Bears 38-21 in an exhibitio~ American league lead over the Outlaw, 3b ...... 3 0 1 0 st. Louis AB R possibility that the light won't be the nearby Lincoln army ai ... field Washington Senator.> to one game. H E ohead in the top of the seventh by Catcher Aaron Robinson of the game here. Richards, c ...... 1 0 0 0 -h--d--'-t-lf----0--2--0 scoring four runs on two hits, held in New York." Nebraska football. Coach "Potsy" 's blooper in short Hostetler·· ...... 1 0 0 0 Sc oen lens, .... 5 Yanks and first sacker George Ph illy's Municipal s tad i urn, It was the first time since ]{\33 Clark. yestc.rday held three likely right in thl! fi(th. inning was the Swift, c ...... 0 0 0 0 Hopp, rf ...... 4 0 1 0 coupled with a walk and two McQuinn of the Browns hit home scene o[ the Army-Navy football that the Eagles defeated the Bears. candidates off his varSity lists. only safe blow l'egistel'ed off rapid Mueller, p ...... •. ... 1 0 0 0 Adams, cf ...... 4 0 0 0 Dodger errors. runs. game, has to its credit the largest Rookie John Miller, recently of They are Bob Collison, former Robert as he notched his ioudh Borom· ...... 1 0 0 0 Kurowski, 3b ...... 4 0 1 1 New York AB R H E boxing crowd in history. That oc­ Minnesota half; Ken Powell, for­ victory since being discharged the Toledo Mud Heru;, shaded Caster, p •• ••••• 1 • •••••• • .. 0 0 0 0 Sanders, 1b ...... 4 0 1 0 curred on Sept. 23. 1926, when mer Duke freshman, and Clare from the navy ll\to last month. He Maier·" ...... 1 0 0 0 Verban, 2b ...... 4 0 1 0 Treadway, cf ...... 4 1 0 0 FlOyd Bevens in the afterpiece, 120,757 turned out Cor the first Overholt, hustling guard from walked four and struck out Seven Bridges, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Marion, ss ...... 4 0 0 0 Hausmann, 2b ...... 4 0 1 0 4-3, when drove Jack Dempsey-Gene Tunney bout. Minneapolis. Yesterday's workout and the loop leading Tigers didn't Rice, c ...... 4 0 1 0 Filipowicz, 1'f ...... 3 0 1 0 home Don Guttel'idge in the 10th The next year 104,943 watched the was a brisk rehearsa I of the offen­ get a man on base in the last four Totals ...... 2'7 n 1 o Dockins, p ...... 1 1 0 1 Ott ••• ...... 1 0 0 0 fram~. Moore had entered the return Demp ey-Tunney go at sive planned against Oklaqoma in inning;;. • Batted for Mueller in 5 ~ h Burkhardt, p ...... 0 0 0 1 Brewer, p ...... 0 0 0 0 game after Pete Gray had been Chicallo, New York's larllest the opener here Sept. 29. A trio of Detroit pitchers-Les *. Batted for Richards in 8th Lopatka, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Schemer •••• 1 0 0 0 ousted by umpire Bill McGowan crowd fight was the 88,150 at the ,. Mueller, and ... Batted for Caster in 8th Garms • ...... 1 0 0 0 Gardella, l! ...... 5 0 0 0 for protesting n decision at tirst Louis-Max Baer setting in 1935 NORTHWESTBRN Tommy. Bl'jdges-cap1e within a ..... Batted for Webb in 8th E. Lombardi, c .... 5 0 2 0 base in the first inning. It wa at the Yankee stadium. EVAN~'l'ON, III. (AP)-Max whisker, of matching Feller's bril­ Totals ...... 35 1 7 3 Zimmerman. Ib .... 'l 0 0 0 the first time Gray had been The fight at Chicallo, however, Morris, end from West Frankiort, lillnt hurling. They gave up only Cleveland AB R H E • Batted for Dockins in 10lh Kerr, ss ...... 4 1 4 0 ejected from a big league game. grossed $2,658,860, larg "t in listic III., who was voted most valuable three hits but one of them was a 2b ...... 4 Chicago ...... 000 000 001 3-4 Reyes, 3b •••••••••••••• u 3 I 1 0 Oscar Grimes, George SUrn­ annals, compared to $1,895,733 for player on the North'Yestern uni­ towering homer over the right cen­ Meyer, 0 1 0 Rocco, 1b ...... 3 1 0 0 St. Louis ...... 000 000 010 0-1 Feldman, p ...... 0 0 0 0 weiss and Vern Stephens hit the 1926 scrap at Phi11y. versity 1944 football team, yester­ tet: field wall by Jeff Heath in Voiselle, p ...... ] 0 0 0 round trippers in the finale. the third whioh accounted for both Heath, l! ...... ~ 1 1 0 day was aPPOinted acting captain ~ rf ...... Kluttz • ...... 1 0 0 0 the Wildcats for their opening of the Indian runs. Trotting across Fleming 3 0 0 0 ot 3b ...... • Zabala, p ...... 0 0 0 0 game Saturday with Iowa .sfate the plate nhead of Heath was Ross, 2 0 0 0 Seerey, cl ...... 3 0 1 0 Jurges ...... 0 1 0 0 here. Mickey ~ao, who had wnlked. Angoll Scores TKO t~' til) .j Hayes, c ...... 3 0 0 0 Adams, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Coach Lynn Waldorf said yes-­ The- Indilm~ got all to ree of thei l' TODAY AND FRIDAY Weingartner, ss ...... Mead, rf ...... 1 0 0 0 terday that Steve Bennett, first hits off Mueller in the first three 3 0 0 0 Feller, p ...... 3 0 0 0 Over Champ Williams string tackle and a regular last innings. Alter that thl!'y had only T!ltala ...... 37 , 9 Q year, will be lost for the season one man on base. Don Ros$ walked Totals ...... 2'l ~ 3 • • Batted {or Voiselle in 5th PITTSBURGH (AP) - Sammy due to aggravation of an old head in tile fourth, •• Batted for Zabaia inl7th injury. Hw.tb's pay-off blow was his Detroit ...... 000 000 000-0 Angott of Washinllton, Pa., tormer Cleveland ...... 000 000 00x-2 ... Batted for Filipowicz in 7th lightweight champion, scored a The squad conllentrated on pass 15th, homer of tb~ $eason and the ...... Batted for BreweD in 9th defense in yesterday's workout. ball traveled almost 400 feet technical knockout over NBA aaainst !,he wind., MueLler hi;!d Brooklyn AB R H E champion Ike Williams of Phila- sh;uck out Feller and Dutch Meyer UHf Ha ks Build delphia in 1:01 of the sixth round ILLINOIS B1 TR "S8OCIATBD PUliS CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)­ to open the frame. Rocco's base UI )(OU, as an average baseball Stanky, 2b ...... 2 0 0 1 lof their scbeduled 10-round bout Coach Ray Eliot named Stanley OQ, balls followed. fan, are confused about the par­ Rosen, cl ...... 5 1 1 o last nighl at Foryes Cield. Power fo, Conferenc It Sprague of Belleville, m., to start ticipants in th~ ]945 , Galan, If ...... 3 0 1 o was a non-title bout. WiI­ nt right end for the Un iversity of serves prepared to be' substituted just stop loll a minuk! and think Walker, rf ...... 4 0 0 o Iiams weighed 136, Angott. 140. JIIinois for the ga me with Pitts­ as units or individul)ls. Some play­ abol,lt tbe- club owners in St. Stevens, 1b ...... 4 2 3 o The champjol) was defini\.ely off Bittle With Clinton 1 form trom the beglnl')ing of the burgh here Saturday. Sprague was er~ may ap{lf/ar at two pos~ions. Lou ~, ~h ,illa.cO, Detroit and Wash­ Bordagaray, 3b ...... 4 I 2 a center aod fullback last season. City high's Little Hawks, victors ington. Sandlock, c ...... 3 1 2 o match. Angott landed a flurry of 5S ...... 4 1 blows in the fil'.>t round, rock'ed Eliot has three co mp l et~ teams MlCIllGAN over Moline Jast Friday, journey In st. Louis, the l;ardinals are Basinski, 0 I Williams back on his heels with a ready for this game. with the re- ..:\NN ARIjIOR, Mich. (AP)­ to Clinton tomorrow night to clash striv il:.l& mightily to Pl\SS the Na­ V. Lombardi, P .... 3 0 2 o Bob NUssbaumer, marine di~­ with a strong River King eleven. tional lelliue leadin& ChicBio Cu,bs Buker, p ...... 1 0 0 o left hook in tbe second, al'ld in the charpe, who 1luesday rejuined his It will be the first Mississippi Val­ and annex the pennaat for a fourth nex~ round Innded a blow in the stoJ'l)Jlch which put Ike on the Univerijity of Mich!aal) gridmates, ley conference contest for either st~aillht Y6lI\.ll· Owner Sam Bl;eadon Totals ...... 3 3 ~ 12 3 stood. out Or) pass defense yester­ team. has the tickets ordel'ed aJ;Id his New York ...... 000 000 400-4 rOPlls and seemed to cause him day as tbe Wolverines worked Bothered by the threat of a staff is working on a souvenir pro­ Bl'Ooklyn ...... 030 000 20x-5 pain. Williams' second worked fron­ against an expected Indiana uni­ speedy Clinton lad n,uned. Don i(~. But th6l ducats won't go. on BOX OFFICE OPEN 1:15-9:45 Wa'ki~9 versity aerial attack in their Big Burridge,' Coach Wally Schwank sale until the !lag is clinched. lhree Iowa Gridmen tically over him between rounds. Ten opener h6lre Saturday. has been drilling his defense aU Phil Wr!aley, owner of She ClIi­ In the fourth and fifth, 111;e's face To S•• Action With twisWld wllQ Iliony with every Ull;';j:J'~ . N~ba\.llI1er, Oak Park, Ill., week, while at the same time con­ cago Cubs, ~ certain his club will More? blo'v)! that went home to his body. w "ENDS TO-OA Y "INOa halft!ack, &aiD.edi more than 500 centratinll on bulld.ing u,p the of­ l'e'~in Its lead nnd has the tlckets NabrQska Team Sept. 28 No; As tbe fitth ended, W iIliarns c;o\Jld :· WI flJ. lD~ Y" f aJAA'I" y~rds rushiD& in six games last lense .• printed f~ t~e last fou r games "THE ScU~ 'lEAH ~ DES MOINES (AP) - Thrge On ly paw aJlci jab at AI;l~ott wbile season b6liol'e he was lost to the Illness has loomed in the Little of the ~6l8t-o~-~& v ~ n series. ~ u t " UOLY MATRIMONY" . Wolveri,nes by transteD. Hawk li neup, lak in, Chick ~ v:ans, he, Ilk. Breac;l.on, isn't accepti9g Iowans Yesterday w~t'e listed on Angott kept driving IW liSts home. regular' riaht guard, ou ~ 01 these any mpiley from the fans and both the roster 01 the Kearney, Neb., Reteree. Red RobinSOn went to NOTU DAMIL all-important last dlliliS. Schw" nk are returning hundreds 01 checks army ai~ field and wcre slated to Williams' cornel' to ask about the SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)-The said lask night thllt it is tkl4Jbtful dailY. see action alainst Drake unive~­ figb,Wl"s condi~ioD. 'I(hll comer­ Notre Dame arid squad enaaged in whether' Evans wilL be a.ble to It is the $lU1le way in the Ameri­ sHy here Sept. 28. men said he I¥ould continue. lengthy sianal drills yesterday aft­ make the trip. Bill Copdon, re­ can league where Delroit now They were the Holits twins, Sammy's punishinM blows ended ernoon as Coach Hugh Devore serve, broke n thumb in TuesdaJl's leads Wuh lng~ n by a single William an(1 Arthur, of Sioux City the fi&h~ a little mo~e lhan a min­ continued his search fOI' callable practice. game. The Tigers started receiv­ and Kenneth EV\!l'liog: o. Creston. ute after lhe sixth round opened, f ull bac~ pro~pects among Irish Pen din g Ev~ns' condition, ing WOJ;ld se~ i es applications by Arthur Haflts is halfback and his Rohinson stop~ing the bout and squad mentb,ers to :till the spot Schwenk said that the same lineup mall last tyeek, limiting four to a twin, a guard. Everling plays at awarclln( I\ngQt~ a T.¥;.O. lett vacan t by the transler this as wa$ us~q agajn:;t M.o~ ine wiLL perl on in. strips of three each. center. week of number one fu llback go into action against the River The Tiger front ollice has already , The Drake squad had tough Mar~ Wendell to Great Lakes by Kings. received nea rly 300,000 requests luck yesterday-it had to qult tbe navy. The lineup will be as follows: for the Il.s·rk which seats only scrlmmagina when Ernie Hol,lz9, 11.50 to 15.'15 Frank Ruggerio curiently Is LE, Smith; LT, Strasburg; LG, ~, OOO . Should the Tigers win, ot­ the tirst string sillnal caJ ler, aot 6 llare CondlUonetl holdlni down the fullback position Zeithamel; C, Devinej ~G , Evans; fichlls ,aid that 10,000 bleacher a crack on the head an!\ hod to ·'Cartoon'· on the til'lt string .but Coach De­ RT, Fryauf; RE, &\kes; QB, Sang­ seats and 5,000 standi ng rOOm withdraw. 'two quarterbl\cks were LIQUID, ' ABLlJa, '"LVI. NO.. "TRUE TO naoPi - II 1\ o,lI,Ll; ,U DIJ'CTltl BREMERS vore is trying to uncover one or ster; LH, Krall; RH, Wilaon j FB, tickets will be sold on the mornina kept away from practice bl; schol­ THE ARMY" - La'e ' Ne~ - two men to live him relief. Olson. 01 the I~mee. astic duties. ~20. W&' I!WRSDAY '- S~~~~ER 20.l.9!5 -'H£ DAU,Y IqWA-N. IOWA CnTY. IOWA - .scoffllli at Allied testimonials on the determinants of policy." probably would be necessary to turning to the Unit~ States in the things." He evaded qu Hons ; "BEAST Of BELSEN" AND . COHORT OCCUPATION Japanese prison camp atrocities. (The acting secretary said he bring him home so that he might r'I~ar future." about the manes of pro1Tlinelt , (General MacArthur's recent was "surprised that anybody can receive public acknowledgement Brig. Gen. Elliott Thorpe. chief members of the organizatio~. (Continued from page 1) . oes statement that the American oc- foresee .. t this time the number of to the part he played in winning of American counter. intelll,ence, I Ch' rsh' f Ad .. announced that the new lisa of Ja- n ma, ';Ya IPS 0 m. punIsh Japanese wor criminals on cUPatlon force$ IJ:1 Japan could be forces which will be necessary in the war in Pacific. panese wanted for investigation Thomas C. Kinkaid's Seventh fleet ngles with Hs own hook If MacAI'thur ap- cut to 200,000 in six months, drew Japan.") MacArthur's attitude toward a Iconcerning war guilt charges steamed up the' Whanpoo river proved, said that Shig milLIS "was crisp remarks from acUng Seere- I General MacArthur's press re- trip to the United States, which he would be lengtl1ier than the first and beeame ihe first United States torelin minister dUI'i ng the war, tl1l'Y Acheson In Washington. lations office said the Allie<;! su- hasn't seen since long before the roll. He commented that two mem- navy ships to come to Shanghai in w and now we ore luullched in (Acheson said he had no com- preme commander in Japan was P .t. t ted . I bers of Gen. Hideki Tojo's cabinet, building a new Japan." ment on "the military a.peets" of making no further comment on his aCI IC war s ar ,was seen In a in o(fice when Pearl Harbor was force in eight years. The Chinese Thl~ followed MacArthur's aC- the general's statement, but that so statement about the 200,000-man message to Gov. Waiter S. Good- attacked, were left ol! the first thronged the bund, welcoming the tlon or Tu sday closing down the far the pacification and cOntrol of occupation force. The office said land of Wisconsin. list through "a clerical error." !Ieet with cheers and waving pQwerful Tokyo Asahl for two the conquered country Is con- MacArthur's remark was "quite Goodland had asked President Tojo himself is in American !lags. daY~ as punishment for public(l- earned the "occupation forces are clear and explanatory." Truman to permit MacArthur to handS, aIter a suicide by, and nine The Chine e government has In- tion of an uncensored edltol'il11 the Instruments of policy and not MacArthur is the only United come to Wiscon in for an official members of his cabin~t are on the viied the United States to send _------~. States army war theater comman- welcome, when he does return to first lit of war criminal suspects. troops to four of China's leading der who has not returned to the America. D 6 m e i, the Japanese news cities to helf. disarm the JapaJ'lese, United States since the start of "Appreciate deeply your cor- agency, reported the suicide 01 said P. H. Chang, a government .Brooks 10 Interview New UHS Grid Coach- the war. It was learned that an in- dial invitation," MacArthur re- Gen. Shizulchl Tanalea, onc"tlme SpOkesman at Chundt!ng. vitation from President Tru~~_plied, "but have no pla.ns for re- commander of Nipponese forces in Maj. Gen. A. V. Arnold, Amerl- .., .. _,",1111 t"" c: ~ the Philippines. Tanaka, who was can military governor of southern IIBt-"OH t'IMl 8:00 , 81 __IlS ... ( ..... America's Town Meeting not on the war criminal list, shot Korea, told newsmen of steps -I 1 < W t Ad hlmseU Aug. 24, Domel said, in taken to aboliM Japanese laws ---- (K}(EL) S 1 Don Bal'Ohart, new football , . an . aton ment for American air raid and restore Korean sovere tnty in Andre K.ostelaneth Program coach at University high school, damage to one. oC the Imperial pal_ that country, Which the Nipponese (WMT) wm be Interviewed by Bob Brooks Oal Dwan seized 40 yealli ago. Music Hall with Stuart Foster " Y aces during the time be was re- Korean judges are presiding in of the staff this morning at wsur (WHO) sponsible [or TOkYO'S air defense. lower courts, Arnold said. Japan- 9:15 over Sports "l'ime. Coach 8:15 The Japanese Black Dragon soc- Barnhart, who came hcre from iety may have been disbanded ese police are being discharged America's Town Meeting Tipton ' high $chool, Will answer and 400 Koreans already have (KXEL) after Nippon's surrender, but 71- been inducted into the nation's po_ questions about U high's football FOR .SHOES OF MERIT Anc1re Kostelanetz Program year-old Yoshlsa LUSIJu, its chief lice force; primary schools will be season which opens al Marion (WMT) seCretary, still sits In the organi- reopened soon, and rice prices rrldar night. Music Hall with Stuart Foster zatiOns Tokyo headquarters and JOSEF RAMEl. commandant of the Nazi Beben concentration camp, The IIowa Medical society pro­ AND STYLE r~eives its members as indlvid- have dropped drastically under at­ (WHO) tack on the black market. ia shoWn above left a be wa brought before a BrItish court In ,ram at 11 :30 n. m. will [eatu~e 8:30 uals, ASiOClaled Press Correspon- Lueneberg. OnrruUlY. a10llg with Dr. Fritz Klein: ""'0 aUepdl, - i papel' on "Worry" to be rcad by Variations by Van Cleave dent Al Dopking reported. lected vlctlmll to be ted Into the cu cha.mben at the notorlul camp'. n ~ < Dave Widder of the WSUI starr. Visit Strub's Mez.zanine (KXEL) Lusuu told Dopklng that the so­ l'i1e Arctic tern migrates from "death factory." Known lUI lhe "Beat ot Beleen," Kramer 11 on trial 198 ' I '!'he pap r was wrilten by Dr. Robby Lobby (WMT) Ciety, which had 8 long record of pole to \lole in a time sequence tor hia war crimea aa 11 Klein. Prior t~ ~InC the Belsen , Philip M. Day of 0 ·kalo08a. 2nd Floor sinistcr and powerful influence arranged so that it covers the camp, Kramer wall at the Auachwlla con nlratlon camp Whe~. It Prof. Philip Greeley Clapp, head Phil Vance Mystery Drafl\B (WHO) in JaPanese pol(.lics, now "has 22,000 miles each way' when the has been report d In trIal testimony, more than ' ,000,000 pel1IOIlII days are longest. • dJed. This IB a radiophoto. (InterlJltiolJ.1 Sountlphoto) the Illl~la ' of the music d partment, will 8:45 Air Conditioned nothing to do wit h political __ ~ ______~ ______~------4---~------them lI\'e speak on Morning Chapel at B Variations by Van Cleave Setpico I. m. His topic wilJ be " Moral and (K.XEL) Dema~ spiritual Values in Education." Hobby Lobby (WMT) R~ Toda~'s Procrams Phil Vance Mystery Drama 1/ APARTMENT FOR RENT I Pr-0_'_E_Y_E_~~:...;;..._:...... :.....;;:,.....;,,;,..._._ ~ ______=-__-. r-~'":'":'"-,.----...... , r.:~;;;::;:C<:-;-';7.';';~::;:--;:::;:::::-:-~~-' and Alex 8:00 Mor~m g C~a.pel (WHO) CLASSIFIED iot should 8:15 MUSIcal Miniatures FOR RENT: Near campus fur­ 9:00 RATE CARt nished apartment rot' two, Write sn~lpirlg hiI 8:31 News, The Dally I~Wan 8:45 Program Calendar One Foot in Heaven (K.XEL) C-13, ~aily Iowan. The First Line (WMT) CASH RATE 8:55 Service R ports la,2~ 9:00 After Breakfast Coffee Mystery in the Ail' (WHO) 9:15 tOe per line per day 9:15 Sports Time LOST: String o( Peal'ls Monday One Foot in Heaven (KXEL) • consecutive dQl- 9:30 Treasury Salute 70 per line per daJ . nlgh~ between Theta house and 9:45 News. The Daily Iowan 'I'he First Line (WMT) post office. Call Deloris Dahlman, Mystery in the Air (WHO) , cOlJIeCUtiV4! def- 10:00 Paging Mrs America Phone 3~47. I 9:30 Ile per line per cia) 10:15 Y sterday's Musical Favor 1 month- Your AAF (KXEL) ROOMS Fo.R 1- lIes 4e per Une per da, RENT 10:30 The Bookshelf WMT Bandwagon (WMT) Rudy Vallee Show (WHO) -Filure II worda to u­ ROOMS FOR MEN-Single and 11:00 Master Works of Music Mlnlmum Ad- 2 liDeI double-B04 N. Dubuque. Dial 11 :30 Iowa State Mcdleol Soci­ 9:4.5 Your AAF (KXEL) 3583. ety CLASSIFIED DISPLAY 11:45 Farm Flashes Frank Singiser News (WMT) Rudy Vallee Show (WHO) ~Oc col. 1ncb INS! RUCTIOlt 12:00 Rhythm RumIJles Or 85.00 per lDOotli 12:30 News, TIle Daily Iowan 10:00 Dancing Lessons-ballroom, ba]· H. R. Gross and the NIlWS let, tap. Dial 7248. Youde 12 :.5 Beyond Victory-Whal? All Want Ada Cub• In Advance lI4.iml 1:00 Musical Chats (KXEL) Wuriu. News, Douglas Grant (WMT) Payabl" at Daily Iowan Bu.l­ BLONDI~ CHIC YOUNG 2:" News. The Dally Iowan Dell ottica daily until II p.m. 2:10 Sign Ooff Supper Club (WHO) TRANSPORTATION NETWORK IIJGnLlGHTS 10:15 H. R .Gross and the News CabCeUati01ll must be ~ fD LIGHT Hauling, delivery service. 6:00 before II p. m. Dial 6011. 1'iLe GrainbElt R:lDgel"S (KXEL) (KXEL) Fulton Lewis Commentary ReIpoDafbie for on. Inc~ Jack Smith Show (WMT) \naertlOD only. WANTED TO BUY Lucia Thorne and Company (WMT) • (WHO ) News, M. L. NeLsen (WHO) WANTED: Small upright or spinit 6:15 10:30 piano. Phone 9300. Call evenings. H. R. Gro.s and the News Roseland Ballroom O~che stra DIAL 4191 (KXEL) (K.XEL) Joa Smith Show (WMT) Romance Rhythm and Ripley News of the World (WHO) (WMT) HELP WANTED 6:30 Jack Shelley Reports (WHO) Did You Know? (KXEL) 1e:45 HELP WANTED: Lady' for house­ for Mr. Keen, Tracer oC Lost Per­ Roseland Ballroom Orchestra work by the hour. Dial 3918. sons (WMT) (KXEL) Second Hand News, M. L. Nelsen (WHO) Ray Block's Orchestra (WMT) W ANTED: Man or woman in Iowa Uhiversity Text Books 6:45 Memorable Music (WHO) City and MUscatine county. Preferred Melodies (KXEL) 11:08 Route experience preferred but that, are in' current use Mr. Keen. Tracer or Lost Per­ News (KXEL) not necessary to start. Rawleigh's sons (WMT) CBS World News (WMT) Department, IAI-284-M, Freeport, Ries ,lowa Book Store News, H. V. Kaltenborn (WHO) News, Music (WHO) Ill. 7:00 11:15 30 S. Cllnl9d Sl. • Lum an' Abnel' (KXEL) Rev. Pietsch's Hour (KXEL) HELP WANTED: Part-time radio Freshup Time With Ber! And So the StorY Goes (WMT) repairman. Dial 6731. Wheeler (WMT) Art Mooney Orchestra (WHO) ELECTRICAL SERVICE WANTED: Student girl 10r board Burns and Allen (WHO) 11:30 01' work by hour. Cail 5874. 7.:15 Dance Orchestra (KXEL) Earl Godwin (KXEL) Ofr the Record (WMT) HELP W ANTED: Wanted asslitunt For Freshup Time withe Dert News, Gany Lenhart (WHO) matron for locker room. Wom­ Compl&le Electrical Service Wheeler (WMT) 11:45 en's gymnasium. Inctuire at office call Burns and Allen (WHO) Dance Orchestra; News or caJl Univ. Ext. 723. 7:30 (KXEL) "Geg" at 9293 America's Town Meeting Off the Record (WMT) WANTED: Student fountain boys (KXEL) Music; News (WHO) and Waiters to work for board The FBI in Peace and War 12:00 and wages. Hours arranged to ii\ (WMT) Sign Off (KXtL) your schedule. Barney s Cafe. WHERE TO. eUY rr Press News (WMT) Dinah Shore's Open House with STUDENT proof reader wanted at PLUMBING and heat Lng. Expert Joseph Cotten (WHO) Midnight Rhythm Parade (WHO) The Daily lowan. Good hours, Workmanship. Larew Company, 7:45 excellent pay and fine opportunity 227 E. Washiniton, Phone 9681. Am rica's Town Meeting Friday . t ·1 d . th to learn the newspaper business. (KXEL) Th \ . e ear les ral ro~ S IDe Phone Gene Goodwin, managing You are al• .,.. weIoo-me. The FBI in Peace and War Unlte~ States wer~ bUlI.t of -.y0od- editor The D~l1y Iowan. (WMT) en ralls capped WIth lhm slrIps o! ___' ______aad PJlICES are" law at the' Dinah Shore's Open House , iron to provide a running sUr.face WANTED: Oirllo assIst with eve­ WHO) for the wheels. njng meal few hours Saturday and Sunday. Meals and good pay. DRUG 5HO, Phone 4242 or 531&. JAP WOMAN 'SHINES UP' FOR YANKS STENOGRAPHER and record I '"" clerk to serve as secretary to sales departmenJ hea,d. Write Box 510, Iowa City, stating education, Pi", Baked Good. , experience, and salary expected. Pie. cu. ar.a Ko.1I I'aItrIei HELP WANTED: Yale, student. Special Ortltr. I Do chores private home for board and room while attending • City Bakery . university. Phone 3597. lIZ It. Wubbldoa Dial'" WANTED: University student fOr odd jobs, male. 60c per hour. Apply in person. Commonwealth FURNITURE Mo.VING apartments, 340 Ellis Avenue. ROOM AND BOARD By GERE AH·ERN FOR SALE MAHER BROS. TRANSFER ror Efficient Furniture JlovlDa' FOR SALE: 3 ~onths old Siamese Aak About Qui kittens. C. F. A. Registered. For WARDRo.BE SERVICB pet or breeding stock. 11 03 Third avenue or call 7604. DIAL - 9696 - DIAL - I'LL. Lf;l' 141M • RLlI'I : \·IIMSELf , UP 1N1O DAilY IOWAN 0 0' FULL SAIL : T\lEN S1<.W · , OFF HI S WANT ADS ~ RUDDER. I BRING RESULTS Call your classified ads to BUSINESS OFFICE ~ The Daily Iowan ~HII JA'ANESE lAPY, with her baby .trapped to' her back, clean a 'a f,tlndow at Azubl barrack. In Tokyo ...he tidies quarter. tor Ule by troo" of the First Unlled Statell Cavalry d1VllltOll. The house wal . Phone 4191 rOI'm!&'I1. ~ by Jap' IIOldi.,., -- (ldeuDaeio/NJ i . ' THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1.945 PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, lOW A =-- cluded in the discussion are: Symphony Orchestra First Methodist health, scholarship, finance, fam- Rehearsals Tuesday ANOTHER SECRET WEAPON UNVEILED Postwar Iax Committee Recommends Vesper Service lIy and home, rellcion, personal- 3,060 Enrolled ity, morals and discipline and so­ Sunday Evening Rehcarsa ls for the universlt, Over-All Reduction in Federal Revenue cial relationships. symphony orchestra will belln A special worship service has Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 7:15 P. IJ1. The first vesper forum of Wes­ been sketched tor the vespers by In (ily Schools By JOHN F. CHESTER mittcc proposed that after a two in North Music hall. AU former iey foundation, Methodist student Harold Schwarn. Leader of the members should conlact Prot. NEW YORK (AP)-An ulli- or three year transition period In group, wlll start at 7 p. m. Sunday worship service will be Carolyn Philip Greeley Clapp, conductor, mate over-aU reduction of more which the national budget, could in F'ellowship hall of the First Andcrson. during registration, and new me'll­ This Semesler. than . 50 percent in federal taxes I be pared down from Its swollen Methodist church wllh a discussion Ethel Miller will lead a social bers should report to Room 110, was recommended yesterday by war proportions, federal taxes on "How to Make Good in Col­ hour after the forum. One of the Music Studio building for audl. I the committee on postwar tax pol- should be reduced to between lege." features of this period will be a tion. Iowa City's public and parochial icy dtet' 16 months of gj;udy. $15,000,000,000 and $22,000,000,- A supper will be served at 0: 15 50ngtest using new song books de­ There Is room In the orcheslra p. m. IIchools have a combined enroll­ Immediate elimination of the 000. This would compare with the signed by Jean and Joyce Womels­ for players of all instruments, Be. three percent normal tax on indi- wartime peak of $47,000,000,000 The discussion will be led by dorf and Barbara Jo Victor. 'cording to Professor Clapp, bUI ment of 3,060 students for the cur­ Clair Langner, Ethel Miller and rent school year according to fig­ vidual Incomes was propohed by reached during the fiscal year students who play any double reed Ellen George. It is based on the instrument or the stringed lilliI'\!' the group, headed by Roswell Ma- ended last June. Public Affairs pamphlet "What It Don Ryan to Speak ures reported by school officials gill, (onner undersecretary of the Corporations rather than sala­ ments are especially asked 19 loIn yesterday. Takes to Make Good In College" At Rotary This Noon the orchestra. treasury, In a 278-page report ried individuals would be the big and is the result of surveys on At City high school 701 students submitted to congress and the winners. Dan J. R. Ryan, district gov­ the important factors in success In To save suga r, cook cereala are enrolled and 1,182 students are treasury. In the long-range policy, Indl- college. ernor. of Rotary, will speak to with prunes, raisi ns or dates. yo~ attending the city's public ele­ This would reduce federal reve- viduals would get a cut in initial Because 50 percent of the stu­ members of the local Rotary club nue by around $2,000,000,000 and income lax rates to between 15 this noon at their weekly lunch­ will need very little, if any, 1\I&lr mentary schools. Students at the dents who start to college do not for sweetening. would free more than 9,000,000 and 20 percent in their initial rate finish, the purpose of the discus­ eon in Hotel Jefferson. Eco junior high school total 365. present taxpayers from . this levy as compared to a present rate of sion is to inform new students =" St. Patrick's and St. Mary's on their small incomes. 23 percent, which includes the what things make for success in schools now have an enrollment Repeal Prollts Tax three percent normal tax. college and to remind upperclass­ • Gol of 590; 315 of these stud en ts are The committee a Iso recom- Co(porations would have their men how to get the most from uni­ mended immediate repeal of the rates slashed from the present 40 versity exl>eriences. PICTURE OF ONE J. Q. attending St. Patrick's and 275 ' ex!=~ profits tax on corporations, percent-after repeal of the excess The factors which will be in- St. Mary's. repeal of the capital stock tax and profits tax-to around the same On, A total of 397 students are at­ the declared value excess profits figure as the individual starting 33", by the second year of the STUDENT •• A VERY tending the university schools: 232 tax and a gradual reduction in the rate. I transition period, and eventually, in' the senior and junior high corporate nonnal tax and surtax. Individual Rates the committee said, "the present WORRIED INDIVIDUAL U.S. grades and 165 in the elementary By 1947 or 1948, if federal IndJ.vidual rates would range miscellany of corporation taxes Striv achool. . spending is .harpl)' curtailed, the progressively upward to 25-30 should be ,abolished in favor of a .EnroJlment figures for the pub­ comll!ittee envisioned a graduated percent for the $8,000-$10,000 sJI181e tax on Income, preferably 'TILL HE HEARD THAT Dem lic elementary schools are: individual Income tax starting at bracket, 40-45 percent for the at the same rate as the initial rate Longfellow ...... 471 between 15 and 20 percent, and a $25,000 - $50,000 bracket, 49 - 54 on individual income." 'l'OKY Kirkwood ...... ~ ...... 44 single corporate tax of around the percent at the $75,000-$100,000 The Magill group proposed the States 8 8ame percentage. . bracket, with a 67-72 top for mil- elimination of nuisance taxes but L\ncoln ...... 36 HAWKEYE MOVES TRUNKS Japan's l{enry Sabin ...... ".: .....202 The, group cJeparted radically lion dollar incomes. said some excise levies should be VARSITY detel'min Horace Mann ...... 337 from previous tax proposals by The present rates range up to retained, particularly on liquor ROOIlevelt ...... 92 suggesting that estate and gift 91 percent on incomes over $200,- and tobacco. The excise levies A COASTER WAGON, !lation fo taxe~ . as weli as gasoline taxes be 000. ~ could be broadened or narrowed DON'T USE SD appet returned to the stateS. The committee would ellmlnate according to revenue needs. The a Magill oonceded, in a verbal individual surtaxes as well as the Others who made the study jective . , statement, that this might open normal tax in favor of a single with Magill were -Prof. Fred R. USE YOUR PHONE 2345 OR 3177 Bowles Seeks Price the 'way for a race between the step-ladder levy. It would retain Fairchild of Yale, Prof, Harley L. eeononlls ONE OF THE SECRET WEAPONS that helped the Allies and saved at states to attract gl;eat wealth by the withholding principle and Lutz ot Princeton, Rowland R. tion and Controls on Old, New le8.8t 10,000 Allied IiV\lS on D-Day In Normandy Is unveiled for the' lowering their gift and estate lev- current payment of taxes and Hughes, comptroller of the Na­ tl'ibution first time In the above photos. They show a Sherman tank, top, In ies. In any event, he said, most would allow joint returns. The tional City bank of New York, riots an the seagoing outfit that enabled It to swim ashore on Normandy statl~s probably would lower these present low $500 exemption also' Victor H. Stemp!, New York cer­ I Houses, Real Estate VARSITY -HAWKEYE (AB StateR J' I beaches and blast a wJJ.Y for the landing parties that fol\owed. Be­ taxes from their present high fed- would stay. tified public accountant and low is a rear view of the tank with Its boat-shaped framework eral levels. Cotporate taxes w 0 u I d be Thomas N. Tarleau, New' York ah~ad . WASHINGTON (AP) -Price opened up. These tanks were also used by Fi'lld Marshal Bernard L. (A W Adminlsttat,()t CheSler Bowles last Montgomery m the crossing of the lower Rhine. (International) ~ . an~er~U~.~~- dro~ed~m40~~~ttoH~~~~w~y~e~r~.======~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~ night announced he would ask ~ : new pOll congress for prlce controls on old been sent eliminat" ~~~~~~rer';~ ~~~~e~ouses and re- I J Sf· Sh h· fAil W· MI· I dustry, r Ill~;:tr~~~~:\sth:S8~~~~t o~~~~~ J aps np aog al 0 ar a ena s of Japa told a news conference, "if we are * * * * * * (ion for to avoid a serlo s inflationary CHUNGKING (AP)- The Jap-I Shanghai. Some 300,000 Japan- and rem boom in this field." anese did an excellent job of ese now are concentrated there. '. The price administrator said the Long before the surrender, loot- IsIs from m~sure would be introduced in c1e~ring Shanghai of everything lie or pri congress shortly with "the com- remotely usefuf to their war ef- ers had ransacked allied-owned THIS IS FOR plete support" of reconversion Di- fort, but the final touch came after residences which had not ,been al­ (The s rector John W. Snyder who yes- Japan gave up. lot ted to Japanese. Everything cial lind terday ordered all construction I From Aug. 15 to the time Am- was removed, including beams, restrictions eliminated on Oct 15 erican and Chinese for.ces arrived • may sOO -including the price limit on new Iin Shanghai, the Japanese sold floor i n g, windows, tiles and YOU TOO, . MaeArlh homes. most of their military supplies to bricks. The looting often occur- "Mr. Snyder agrees to this plan Chinese at a fraction of Ule cost red near internee camps f t om minale a and will back up my recommenda- of replacement. ' which Japanese guards could have tween th tlon," Bowles said. Japanese trucks roamed the city intervened. MRS. AMERICA! OPA's only control over housing around the block, clearing Ware- peace po prices at present is on the "cus- house after warehouse of every- Japanese troops . and civilians tom-built" dwelling-that is, one thing conceivable. S u gar, rice, looted Shanghai from the begin­ cornman built to the buyer's blueprints by shovels, cotton cloth, ' paper, soap, ning. Japan ,) a contractor. Even this control, office equipment, furniture, auto­ Factories owned by Allied ' na­ exercised through OP A's ceilings mobiles, bicycles and thousands of tionals we r e looted completely, on contractors' services, is rather other categories of goods were dis­ down to t h c I a s t wheel-shatto In an "loose," Bowles said. posed of before Allied troops ar­ Street lights were carried off, as . "We have no control of prices on rived. were bronze tablets, a cenotaph control, homes for resale old houses, or on Except for the looting of a num­ commemorating Allied war dead­ residential reai estate," he went ber of Allied-owned homes, there including the Japanese World War ~Iry at on. "We will ask for it." were no "incidents" in the last I dead-monuments and tablets all a sets Congress previously has refused days of Japanese occupation. from graves. to authorize ceilings on property. Offices Surrendered All Metal Taken Domei r Bowles also announced in a When Allied nationals were in- Metal street markers were re­ The statement, Which he am-plified at a terned, their "esidences and of­ placed with wooden ones. Tram­ news conference, that he intended fices were handed over to Japan­ way lracks were removed in some meanwh to put into e~fect a progl/am ese civilians. When the sunend­ s t r e e t s in the central district. sharply tightening OPA's control er came, the Japanese consulate More than 100 metal bus bodies !hat th over building material prices. instructed the squatters to remajn we r e scrapped. Steamheating army of Thes!! contrpls also will cover most on the premises until the rightful eqUipment, boilers, filling station had bee of the fixtures and household owners returned. The squatters, tanks and pumps, aU were remov­ eqUipment which go into a new fearing Chinese crowds-w hie h ed to bolster the Japanese scrap were b' home, and construction seI"Yices. I behaved extremely well-ignored reserves. of 50,000 Regional and district OPA of- the order and moved into "little Thus did Japan try to convince flees throughout the country will Tokyo," the pre war Japanese China's masses it wanted to "free" At lhi prepare specific dollars-and-cents quarter in the norlhern part of China from the Allied "yoke." home ar prices on as many items as pos- ,) ence the sible, Bowles said. :-======~======~ .. .. least a Describing the whole field of ".~t~\\'el. ~\ ~~, ... ~~ ,~,,\\\W~\ ~t 't'\l ~1"'lt ho~e building, home ownership and rent control as "a highly ex­ W:"I" " ,,-t, \"'''~\~.. ~\\, plosive situation," Bowles said: "Unless the real estate interests, .t~\"'~\\ H.\ ~\.\.~~t'- "'~~... \,,'-'- '''''' t~, ,~tt

the home building industry and I • the public' join with the govern­ . ~,,'- \'tt... ment to meet the issue head-on, the danger of Inflation in this ali­ ~':'~ ~~'\ ~,\\.\. \.'-~~u ~\ ~\.~~\\\~\." ~,,~~, ~~ ~\..\\ ~\\~ ~\U. Important field will grow rapidly. ,,'-t\'~\'- ,t ,,\.\. t~" \\\~'- \~ ~'- \'-~\~~\\." ~,,~\, ~i ,,,,-~t Seven "If we fail to handle this prob­ Slates lem with courage and good judge­ t\\,-" \ ~\. t_~~\, \'-\ ~~l. ,~" 'i~\\\"~ \1:) ~~.. \ " \~ ~~~\ t." pation ment, we're Inviting a repetition / largely \""~t'~" \~, ~\ ~~t\\~ ''''- "~l. ,~ ~"'~l Wi,~'4, l.\\ ~~ \)~'t.,\) of the real estate and home build­ Tokyo b . lhousnn ing 'boom' and 'bust' experience H\. \''''-~\t ..." 'W:)'i\\\ t\\\ "t\.~ ~~ "" \"'~ ~~\" ...\ ,. ...,',-l discharg' which helped to bring on the col­ ~~ \~"\.,, '" \"t\t ~"" ~"t'\\l\\\. \ ~\~'t. '4,~\\ ' t.,,,~ ...'-'- \l\."'''\'~~ Four I lapse of 1929." minals " ~~ 'I,~~\ tll"~\"tl, \1:) '\\t\., \;1\.'\)\''1\ ,,~.. \. '''\~ '1""'- "\.~\.~,,,\, .. lop susp Bowles said the OPA proiram Lieut. G, would include elimination of rent \~ '-~ll.,\ ,~.... ~1l\\\lI'-l" . . - aaJd thai SOOn w controls only when the danger of t , \"'\)'t.wo~\\ ~\.~ "1O~\c;,- hOf;pital a general increase in an area has \ • Join the gang." ~een eliminated-when the nor­ Japan' . ..-- Was ann mal bargaining situatiol) between -,.---' ...... -~ C. K raJT ..,--...'. "...... mic and landlord and tenant has been re­ .~ ··Wea stored. He said rent controls the stn: make hi would be necessary thrQugh June, merdecl industric 1946, in most of the medium and cent tax cost indi large industrial areas. IOTEX cent 0"1 1 I At Lhe must stJ level ofl I Special 4 ply Uonlng.- Council BluHs Man • Low « .afety cent~r glvei in Used Kitchen Fi~S f~8' C "h . Pleads Innocent ~i) and EA~a Ration Points Off Ri IND(J extra protection ' tioning COUNCIL BLUFF~ (AP)-Ber­ wlU en( Smith, of Oakland, derson . nard F. ·33, Bald ye Calif., yesterday pleaded innocent during I He Sli In district court here to a grand NOW-CQNTAINS A WONDERFUL NEW DEODBRANT in a pOtS jury Indictm'ent charging him with of meal I ration ] assault wIt h Intent to 'commit 54 Pads (2 box ••) $1.75 . details, manslaughter. Washinl A d, No plea was entered to a charge FREE DELIVERY-Wed. and Sat. lpokesrr of Boini armed with intent to use \ (2 or More BolU.) eJtplana Bame unlawfully, which the grand THE 'DAIL Y IOWAN' The, Jury also returned against him. ilrad8ll ' Dial 2141 I' District Judge John Murray per­ zero fat mitted Smith's attorneys, lohn P. tober, tJ ., oN taU, Tinley Jr., and William Welch, to J poItpone arraignment on the sec­ But I ond charge after they had Indicat­ lot the ed they "mi,ht" file a motion for Yett'er's of thos, • writ of certiorari before the JOWl! supreme court. Verted . 'lie or ., .. (