I

SUI Alumni Gathering Here The Weather Today

TWy !.he University of Iowa plan host to the school's Partly cloudy and cooler today, Tomorrow a1..m who are a-atbered here for their class reunions. "-Ill theluests are a. busba.nd and wife, tbe only livina- partly cloudy with moderate tempera­ 1I!tmbenl of the metllcal class of 1888. For infomllltion tures. High today 80. Low today 60. High u..t tbeu and other euests see the "pictun!! and story til Ibis pace and till PAGE 8. y sf rday 91. Low y t day 54. Eatabliahed 1868-Vol. 80, No, 214-AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa, Saturday, June 5, 194.8-rivo Cents Goldsborough Law '93 Remembers Golf, Sips Lemonade Orders Lewis House Passes Slashed l To Negotiate I WASHINGTON (IP)-Judge T. Alan Goldsborough draped an­ Dther injunction around John L. Lewis yesterday, and as a result Foreign Aid Measure lIfgotiations for a new national soft-coal contract will stad up again Monday. Goldsborough ordered Lewis Sustains Taber's Trimming; Honored at Emeritus Club Dinner and his United Mine Workers to sit down and dicker with the Southern' Coal Producers associa­ Vandenberg 'Fighting Mad' tion. This time Lewis lost no time in WASHINGTON (JP) - The hou e last night pa sed a foreign aid obeying-or rather, he announc­ bill slashed 26.7 percent under th IImount Pr ident Truman ask d. fd through his lawyer that the It calls tor $5,980,710,228 for 15 months. The administration aid union would comply. He didn't $6,533,710,228 tor 12 months should be tbe minimum. say he would be there in person. There was no record vote. The bl!1 was pas d on a chorus of '!'hus II question mark remains. It "oyes." A Republtcan-Demol'raUc coa\lUon led by Rep. Dirksen 15 an important question mark, eR-IlI.) fall d, likewise by a voice vote, to get the bill sent bal'k to lor Lewis alone has authority to committe wllh instructions to add about $l-billion. speak for the mi ners. Previously the Dirksen amend------ment was defealed, 148 to 113, by A meeting with coal operators a teller v~ a procedure by I, from all regions was quickly ar­ which. the m mbers me past Social Security Aid ranged tor Monday morning. The tellers and are counted. talks had flown apart two weeks S r tary of State Marshall Hiked by Congress: ago because Lewis reCused to in­ [ouiht hard against the cut, He clude the southern association. told n wsmen it would mean put­ The federal judge, Lewis's old ting Europ on a r lief dole, Bill Sent to Truman lIfmesis of the court room, made rather than helping it to its teet. rilE WEATHER WAS nOT YESTERDAY and Mr. and I'ry of lou City II USO'() t the WASHINGTON OP)-Con r !IS sOme disapproving thrusts at Senator Vandenberg (R-Mlch), Lewis's power and methods. Iowa Union for lemona.de as they revisited tbe campus durin&' alumni reunloll~, Bl'rrY, a J1l mber or approved and , nt to PI sidellt the Ia.w olass of 1893, Is 81Ul proud ot the lact that be once WOIl a roU match and a luvlna- up here on who engineered the enablinl act But at the same time Goldsbor­ Trum~n la.t night I III latioH in­ whicJ. his name was hlSCl'tbed. He laid he stili sho ot "a. Jl)od rame." und l' which congress auUlorized ough said the southern associa­ crea ing by lB4-m1i1i01i allnual­ (Dally low 1\ 1'11oto by lIerb Nip on) a lJluch Isrg r recovery program ly the soctal e"urity paym ntl to lion "may need ( ' ~stroy ing, so than the one actually voted last 3,500,000 needy ged pel~ons. far as I know," and he suggested night, was reported !lghtin( mad, that all the nation's coal compa­ blind p rson! und dt·p~ndellt But ox-swinginl Rep, John children. nies get togethe, and hire one SUI May Receive It Taber (R-NY) had his way. WIIS Hou. II approval was by vuh' salaried man to deal with Lewis Hancher To Confer Degrees his appropriations committee that year after year. vote, aU r the cnatt' arli r pa s­ 931 Housing Units nocommended th cut. He ariued d the me sur 74 to G. This suggestion fell into the that th Lunds II proposed were troubled coal labor siutation wilh all thal could be spent prudently, Under th pre nt program Ihe unusual force. The idea of unify­ To Record 1,400 Graduates Dackers of the bigger approp­ maximum for til IIIit'd tint! til If Senate Approves htilul, unuer redel'ul-stute mat h· ing the coal operators of all )'e­ Nearly 1,400 candidates for deirees Will'1I131'('h into Ih lowli Ii Id­ riation pInned their hopes 011 th gions has long been fJvored by The University of Iowa wlll re­ s nut . The bill now goes tIlere, ing, is $45 u month; (or th d ,­ TUE ONLY LIVING IE mER OF m ,MEDIC L cia of 1881 house at 9:45 this morning in the lurgest ('0111111 ·IIC('/lI •. ot xel'cl s p ndent ('hilllrcn, $24. lOme government officials and ceive 931 units of temporary hous­ in the university's history. and they plan a d termined tight. ar hw;b nd and wire. Dr, Donn M. D rkcr nd Dr. J me. W. lOme co~l-mjning executives. ing now on the campus if the se­ President Virgil M. Hancher will cont l' the ucgrpes ;Hld deliver If they win, the final bill will H're is how thl' booted b n - rker of Peoria, III. They are pIctured a the)' aU oded "be Emer­ Goldsborough, with some reluc­ nate passes legislation now under the charge to the candidates. An old custom will bl! r"viv d with prob3bly be whipp d Into shap fits would work: Itus cl ub dInner II.t Currier hall hut n!chi, The merlhlJl club dinner tance, granted a temporary in­ consideration, University Business Hancher's delivery of the charge, according to Dircctor of ConvoclI­ in u s nate-hou, e conl r nee com­ Th t1£'ct1y ug!d :Jilt! th bl i nd ­ I! an annual tvenl. to honor alumni who rradu ted before 1898. junction against Lewis and the Mllnager Fred W. Ambrose said tiOIll F.G. Higbee. mittee. thl! Icdcl-:l1 gO\ wmt!l1t ",uulrl (DaUy Iowan Photo by [I rb Nlpson) miners. It req uires them to bar­ yesterday. Recent years have seen oft-campus sp nkc~s d Ilv!.')'!n, the IIddress As it passed the house, th bill l'olltribulc thr -fourths uf th' gain with the sou thern associa­ The bill, passed June 3 'by the at commencement exercises. The ('[1l'rl d th se amounts: firsl ., 20 \laid tu a r' 'IPIClIt .The tion headed by Jllseph E. Moody. house, would give colleges and previous custom will be re~umed Ecollomic cooperation adminis­ tatl' woulu IJay IIlIe-fourth, Thrn That makes two GOldsborough universities 129,300 dwelling units this year, lIigbee said. tr"tioll, for economic aid to Eu­ lhe fl'.i('rul 'ov,'rllll'('lIt IIl1d 1111' an Says 'Ab und n~e' t t.· .• , lu lit II 50 flO liP tl) • Jru lor injunctions hanging around Le­ wbich have b n mOk'ecj to them The university concert bund JQI UU 41111- ·bllllon Inst ad ot the $4,245,000,000 the president muximUIn oC $50 for .,dl Il'd"i­ wls's neck. The other prohibits to housc veteran students. Most under the direction ot C.B, RJgh.t~ striking over miners' pensions. of the units are former army and er wul present a prologue concert had I'cquested. The sum approved ·nl. Thus, whc!'e a r "'Ipicnt !'l'­ 29c ' include $20,000,000 lor IIld t o l' iv('d $50, till' Il-d( r 1 guvNn­ Moody, at a news conference, navy housing. before and during the processioll. PORTLAND, OR£. (IP) - The (an III "111.1 People Stop Communism Triestc (01' which the PI' ident nt would (,OlltniJut( $:l1l I IIIld his association will do any­ The senate banking committee The candidates and faculty mem­ drowned city 01 Van port gave up hull requ sted a separate allot­ Uw ~t..nt· $20. thing it can to see that a new na­ yesterday recommended passage bers will march through the arm­ Its first boell,'s lust hight while HICAGO (A"). President Truman said last night that congress can 1c Uonal sort-coal contract is agreed of the bill. ory to the platform in the gold the Columbia rivt'r, working up m nl. D P 'nd I ~ l'iIilu. ~ nl-~ht· C('d ­ throttl communl.. m ill Am rica by providing a greater "abundance" upon. The present contract ex­ and black draped fieldhouse. to u n ,wand hlghet· ell'.·t, lidded A' Istance to Crcec and Turk­ ral gOY rnm nt wtll proville [or th people. Rents here would not be affect­ t;y-$200-million inst ad ot the pires June 30. to the d 'ath lull UIJ, rteam. lIwe -fourth of the fn' ,t I:.! hlr All it hns to 110, h said, is paIS laws to a urI' lhat Americans ed by the transfer of ownership if Hancher will deliver the charge $275-million lrle P ident had Lewis had the option of obey­ the law is passed, Ambrose said. to the candidates following the Salvagc workmcn l"I·rovered two the first "10 uy ('htld ill u fUlJllly, have homes, chooHng, curity, good job, fair wages and "a brake bodies lit VaJiporl. T}H11 city of r('quested. !lntl g(j 50-50 with thl' stote up to on inflation," Ing the injunction or facing an­ UndeL' the present system, the invocation by Prot. M. Willard Aid to Chinll-$400-million in- other conviction for contempt 01 Lampe of the school of rellgioll. 18,700 p TSan.. wa~ smashed to u muximulll of $27 for th til 1 It was tht' Prt' id nl's first, tailored· In-advance sp h on a stump­ housing law specifies that the stead of th $463-milllon th ctlllu, Each additional child In ine tour into the west. It was made to a crowd thal packed Chicago court. buildings must be torn down in Four students will represent kindling last Sunciay in the great­ est singl' disa tl'r of th Pacific President had asked. the n cdy ramily wUllld gel II stadium, wh re Mr. Truman walk­ 1949 if their use as temporary ve­ those receiving prizes, honors and Government and reltel In occup­ moximum of .$18 ulldrl' til' ed oCC with th DemocraUc vice­ terans housing has ended. The awards. These will be announced northw('st's floods. ieu areas undel' army supervision matching .sy~tem. presidential nominaUon tour years new law under consideration following the charge. The four Upstr<'am the Columbio's tribu­ Dewey Chills Talk New Contract Ends tarl s ag:lln wCle Ii, ing fast, -$1,250,000,000 in~tead ot $1,400- The increased b n lits w('re ago. would allow the universities to men also will rec'eive special .iJillion, use the buildings for storage pur­ citation for their outst..nndin threatening the devastaLed lower tacked on to u bill tI r,llng wilh Y sterday, along the route of his Phone Strike Threat riv r orea w tth n crest at I ast a International refug e organlza­ an ntirely dJCfer nt sodal H'l'uri­ Of Vice-Presidency special train from WtlIShin,too, 1St poses or remove them after the records. lion-$70,710,228 as asked. housing need had ended. '11 1 ·u half-loot iJigilt.:r tl1:111 this week's ty maUt'I·. The bill is d'sign d to Mr. Truman cultivated support for NEW YORK (JP)-The Lhreat ot Th e exerc i ses WI c os WI. [lood I nternalional children's merg­ Of the 931 housing units on the block n move by th IIdministra­ BOSTON (JP)-Gov, Thomas E. four more y ars In the White l nationwide strike of long dis­ the singing of the university hymn I . • . ' ncy Cund-$60-million as asked, Iowa campus that would be affec­ and the benediction by Lampe. . Five bridges Wl'r(, wa'hed out lion to xt lid covera!!' L1uuer t)1 Dewey said flatly yesterday he House, He spoke as if he take. It lance telephone workers was eli­ While the lotal IIpproved by old (II! and survivors insuranc' 29c ted by the bill, 632 ar~ barracks . m Idaho. A tl'tIl'k (.hlver was was shooting for the Republican lor granted that the party will minated yesterday. Addihonal candidates 1~r de- swept to his ueath. the house is $553-mlllion In cash ection of the sociul urity law pr sidential nomina lion or noth- nominate him next month. Negotiators for the American apartments, 249 trailers and 50 le~s than the President asked, the quonset apartments, Ambrose grees announced yesterday mclud- ThIS, plus the Vanport bodies, to on stimoted 500,00 10 750,000 ina. All along the way, he jabbed at Telephone and Telegraph com­ ed Kathryn Elleen Clemons, B.S. increased the t II in floods actual reduction was made for P 1'8011,.• said. The New York goveror told [l congrelil. lIe repeaLed that he Pany, and the CIa American un­ N., and Herbert Carroll Cassill, throughout the PltciCic northwest greater by spreoding the period ion ot telephone workers removed .All of the hOUsing came to the of spending over 15 months in­ n 'WB conference: wants n draft low and universal 10c Paul Edward Lydolph, David Wll- and Canada to 26. "I have made It entirely clear military training. He laId respon­ lhe threat by signing a 21-month university from the federal hous­ lenson, William Daniel Trevor, Th lirst body recovered al stead of 12. Langer Asks Civil Rights contract. The agreement, reach­ ing administration (F'HA) on a that I would not accept the nom- sibiUty for high living costs on Kitty Kleiner and James Clifford Vanport WIIS thai of a boy believ­ Amendment in Draft Bill ination for vice-president it it coneress, He accused it of serving ed with the help of federal media­ bailment basis. Donance, all B.A. ed about 5 years old. The second Says Princess Elizabeth WASHINGTON UP) _ Senator was tendered to me." the "men who have all the money" tors, broke a protracted deadlock. "We now have them in trust for was that of a boy believed about the purpose of housing veterans," Langer (R-ND) sought y terday Dewey came here on a one-day instead of the common people. The union, which originally 1%. Is Expeding a Baby sought a 30-cent hourlY wage Ambrose said, and universities Officials lea red th re would be LONDON (IP) - Buckingham to attach the "civil rights pro- vi it to line up "second choice" That was at Gary, Ind., where which have such housing are, "in Prof. Jordan Kills gram" to th drart bill, but s nate support among Massachusetts' 35 Mr. Truman made the last of a boost, did not win any general in­ mOre. The R d ro~s said an in­ palace announced last night that crease. effect, the agents 01: the FHA." complete list shows 13 persons Princess Elizabeth is expecting a leaders pr dieted he would noi d legates, who have already indi- series of off-the-cu£f talks to way- However, a company spokes­ The university has been respon­ Poisonous Moccasin no t located. baby. succeed. ated they would vote for a fa- side audience . man said concessions were grant­ sible for all costs in connection The riv r's new crest is expect­ Il wasn't stated as simply as Senator Gurney (R-SD), chair- vorite son on the first ballot. He told th folks lit industrial with the housing except for the A two and one-hail foot poison­ ed on a number of fringe issues. ous water mocassin snake was ed to reach the Portland-Van­ that, but in language as close to man of the senate armed forces Whj!n one newsman noted that Gary that America must have a These included increases in maxi­ buildi ngs themselves. FHA now II birth announcement as the royal killed Thrusday n~t by Prof. couver, Wash., area next Tuesday. committee, said he would let several commentators had sug-I"sound and solid" economy. mum wage rates affecting em­ wants to get rid of the dwelling Elmer Fisher, river forecaster, bousehold ever gets: Langer explain his proposals and gested Dewey as a possible vice- "It you support me" he said ployees at some places, improved units because the law rental char­ James Jordan, head of the univer­ sity information serVice, in the said the 30.5 feet at Portland and "Her royal bighness, the PrIn­ then moved to shelve them, to preSidential nominee on a ticket "we will probably get' it." ' night di1ferential rates for some ges provide only "trickling" pro­ 30.8 at Vancouver, Wash., may not cess Elizabeth, Duchess ot Edin­ avoid long debate. beaded by Senator Arthur Van- I F th Mr Tru pre workers and increased overtime fits which are inadequate to cover back yard of his home, 1000 River I r man street. be the crest. He said he lacked burgh, will undertake no public The senate recessed yesterday denberg of Michigan, Dewey re- d' .tued etrmtoire, f' D u- 2St pay for holiday work. FHA's high cost of supervision 'l M d b te plied' IC e ec on 0 a emocra c in(orma lion to go beyond Tues­ engagemen al'l.er tile end oJ. un tI on ay, w en a vo may . congress in November The firm also accepted the un· and auditing, Ambrose eXplained. The snake was discovered on day in his forecas!. June." come, ' "I can't stop silly stories." Her in Chicago, the occasion Ion demand for a maintenance of However, the housing would the back porch of the house by dues clause if the employees vote still be under government super­ Mrs. Jordan about 11 :30 and was tor last nieht's speech was the for it under the Tall-Hartley act. vision even if the bill was passed, identified as a water mocassin by 100th anniversary of the migra­ The new contract provides for according to Ambrose. Tbe gov­ Richard Ilgenfritz, who graduates tion of Swedish settlers acroa one wage reopening during lts ernment would also require that today in zoology. the midwestern prairies. life. It no agreement on' pay the dwelling units be used to "I was letting the dog into the Reports Immigration Truce And here, too, Mr. Truman par­ hou se veterans as long as. they are Stalls SCales is reached aHer such a re­ house when J happened to noUce c led oul advice to congress. OPening, either party may cancel n eded for that purpose. the snake under a deck chair near He said proposals to outlsw the Ambrose testified a t the house the door," Mrs. Jordan said. lhe contract after June 2 next terms of the truce and fixing the CommunL. t pnrty or check some year upon 60 days notice. ot representatives' hearings on the Palestine Mediator planation tor his change of mind. UN as its mediator in the Holy She then went to get a fl ash­ The delegate from Syria s31d sim­ Land Lighting and has been Hying kinds of political activity ''Jnlu bill last March 29, 30 and 31. He exact day and hour of the sease the poin!." He suggested. ,that con- light and told her husband who ply that "there is no need to meet back and forth from the Jewish. represented President Virgil M. killed the snake with a baseball fire as a prelude to a four weeks grass get busy instead on some Hancher at the hearings, testify­ Asks New Orders tomorrow. Monday is soon provisional capilal at Tel Aviv to U. S. Accuses Russ bat. eoough." the capitals 01 the Arab states. armistice.' Ibills he has b en asking for all ing [or the American Association "I don't know why I happened LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y. (IP)­ of State Universities. Hancher is Bernadotte-who asked for a He was given the job by the se­ In a cable to the council last along, to notice the snake. J thought at In Berlin Incident president of the association. Count Folke B nadoUe reported Teply today-was n lmed by the curity council of interpretmg night he said : A nation which reaches the first it was a piece of rope," Mrs. last night that th question of Je­ "goals of abundance," he said, Jordan explained. "The question of Jewish immi­ BERLIN (IP)-Maj. Gen. George wish immiBTants alone was hold­ never will "succumb to the evUa • She described the snake as be­ gration into Palestine during the of communism." P. Hays, American deputy mili­ I Seeing a Ball Game Is •I ing up a cease fire in Palestine tary Kovernor, in an exchange of ing copper-colored with small Bloody Palestine Land, Sea Fights Reported dura tion of the truce alone is ob- In 'addition, he said, con,rea A Matter of '08gr,8" square or diamond shaped mark­ and urgently asked lhe UN secur­ CAIRO (IP)-The Arabs said last slructing an agreement between ought to pass II law witbout "crip­ letters released yesterday, charg­ I I ity council for instructions, I ed that a RU SS ian transport at­ • • ings on the back. night they had killM 580 Jews MilitarY he:Jdquarters said the the two parties on the effective pling amendments" thal will let tempted to ram an American Herbert Nickelsen of Clinton Ilgen1ritz was puzzled as to why Faris El Khouri, president of and wounded 1,000 others in a Egyptian naval units attempted to date of the truce. some of Europe's displaced re­ the snake would be found so far I fighter on April 28. planned to drive with his wife to !he coun('il, immediately clilled ' a fierce land batlle while a Jewish approaeh Tel Aviv soon aft r "The difficulty arises concern­ fugees come to America. trom water during a dry spell. The Russians alleged that Ame­ Chicago today to see a baseball special meeting tor 9 Q. m. Iowa communique reported four Egyp- I noon yesterday and were driven ing the precise interpretation to be Th e people, he said, are rican fIghters had taken the lrans­ game. time today, and lhen within a given to the phrases 'fighting per­ "heroes of democ1'8cy" who are Port Into "protective escort" and His wife was already in Clinton Mihai, Anne Meet matter of minut s cancelled tbe !~:rp~h~:ee~~u~ ~~~a~e~ng~ge~ I~ ~~fd b:Oal~: 1 I~:~:~n~~.airitla;: sonnel' and 'men of military age.' tmable to return to their bome­ dangerously molested it. The wa iting for him to join her for a GENEVA (A") - Former King session. As Q result Bernadotte's ment off Tel Aviv. the lirst naval eneagement o! the "Does the UN resolution envi­ Lands because they are a,aiDIt transport was bound from Zurich, vacation before summer school Mihai of Fr.nania and Princess appeal will be held at a regular A Baghdad communique of the Palestine war. sage that men of military age may communism. The President objeet­ meeting Monday at ]2:30 p. m. Io­ Swilzerland, to Berlin In Lhe So­ began. They were going to relax Anne of Bourbon Parma met here Iraqi defense ministry said the l Last night's Iraqi communique be brought into the J ewish area of ed to "limits and quotas on COUD­ Viet zone. before be continued to study for yealerday for the first time in wa lime. Jewi h casualties were inflicted said the Jewish troops in the Palestine during the period of the tries and occupations" in lOme of Gen, Hays, in reply, said one his B. A. degree in August, th ree ,.lOn ths, The UN offiCially announced 10- when Israeli forces used 5,000 Jenin region made a strong at­ truce provided that they are not the bills before congreu. flehter went up to inwstlgate Today, however, the ball game Mihai said their marriage plans ler that 'Bernadotte had wilh­ troops in an attack in the Jenin tack but were "pursued, dispersed mobil ized or submitted to train­ Mr. Truman did not fall to "'hen the Russian transport was is off and Nlckelsen's wife will were "8tm indefinite." Aides had drawn hi s request after receiving area ot norlhern Palestine. A ' and beaten." It added: 'Our ing? Is the resol uti on t:: , rmissive oUer a hand ot triendlhip to d1l1Covered 30 miles off Its course return here. Nickelsen was noti­ Indicated the pair may fly to additionnl information from the large number of Jewish prisoners , forces repelled the attack, in!1ict­ in this regard or does the resolu­ Sweden. He called that countr7 over the American %01 \" flying to­ fied yesterday that he will receive Greece next week tO'l the cere- council president. and great quantities of arms were ing very BTeat losses on the en­ tion seek Lhe exclusion of all men one of the most prosperQUJ an4 lrarli Bremen instead of BerUn, hiB degree this mornln,. moo),. El Khouri g v.e no expliciL ex- captW'ed, tbe communique said.. ~l113," of military age? .• ! progressive democracies. THE DAILY IOWAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1945-PAGE TWO I Pinch Single in Red Sox Win Doubleheader Demar.el Paces f~eld Dodgers Nip'~ , au~dy Ke rr s In Albuquerque Open . . ' 0 J ALBUQuERQUE, NM, '" - Jimmy Demaret trunmed par Cardinals r ·1.Ji1' Bra tilr~ strokes for a 69 yesterday ST. LOUIS (~Brll1iant ~ to chng to a one-stroke lead half- pitching by Ralph Branca plIf , inc inn a -4 way through the $10,000 Albu- the Brooklyn Dodgers C 5 a IhriIIinc Eighth Dumps ti, Bro.wns~~~~ twice,~~:::~~~~~~'~ 10-4 and 7-2, before~ ~~~;!~~~~~~td~~\:an appreciative Ladies day 'on crowd of 17,362, of whom 14,901 paid their way into Fenway park. querque. open gol! tournament. 1 to 0 victory over the st. Louia II Joe Dobson, the most depend­ Combmed with his 65 for ~he Cardinals last night. Branca.1l able of Sox hurlers this season, first rQund, yesterday's score gave up nine hits, but haa seven lINe­ RadiO • j Hank Sa~er pitched his seventh complete game the Ojai, Calif., swinger a 134 outs and pitched out of everrliCbt tile ,Ir O'Yanks Clip Tigers in the opener when he won his tota1-10 better than standard spot. tomorro Indians Beat Nots 15, 5- figures- tor 3.6 holes on tile Howie RollQtt ~ntribulld III ne\\'s di sixth against four losses. He gave WASHINGTON (JP)-Cleveland 'up nine hits, one of them Whitey 6,81~-yard Umver~lty ot New his own downfall when he field­ 10\\'8 poured five runs across the plate Before 64,261 Fans Bangs Oul2 NEW YORK (JP)-Johnny Lin­ Platt's fourth Qomer and another, MexlC~ course. ed a si ngle to Don Lund in !he &tatlon : in the 15th inning to defeat Wa­ Movmg up relentlessly, bulky second inning and then threw IjIe On The Way Out dell homered in the seventh inn­ Les Moss' fifth. cast siD' shington, 5-0, and retain its Am­ Clayton Heafne.r added a 68 to ball into right field tryq to until Y erican league lead here last nighf ing to break a 4-4 tie and (he Denny Galehouse limited the added two Browns to seven hits In the Thursday's 67 for 135 and second pick tile runner off first. liIDI fiJlil al Home Runs before a crowd of 29,555. The In­ place. raced to third and scored on Tom. federal more lUns in the eighth and went ni&'lrtcap and shut them oull dians scored their runs off Re­ Except lor Marty hrlol of my Brown's 10IJ,g iIy to ~ sloP, Cl CINCINNATI (JP) - Buddy lief Pitchers Tom Ferrick and on to defeat the Detroit Tigers, except in the second Innllle Utica, N.Y .. who put a 811 with Slaughter. Tbe Kerr's two-run pinch hit single in Dick Welterotil after Mickey 7-4, last night befoJ'e 64,261 lans. when they buncbed three hits c Dick Wakefield betled a three­ for both their runs. a 69 tor 131 and third in tbe Branca fanned Pinch·hitUt dilficuU th.e eighth i.nning enab~ed the Haefner had hurled 12 scoreless medal Korel, Texas Jimmy and Whitey Kurowski for the tIiird run pinch-hit homer for the Tig­ The Sox had their biggest inn­ ! league-leading New York Giants innings against , wlio the Die Charlotte, N.C.. pro out with two Ca~ds on base , was replaced by ers in the seventh. ing of the season when they scored to edge the Cincinnati Reds, 5-4, Frank Hiller made his start of were the only toP conienden the seventh and with two out lDII after 1] innings. six times in the eighth frame of who didn't B\lffer trow ... co,m- two on in the ninth he made r,. yesterday. the season for the Yanks. Hiller the opener. Ten men batted. Feller and Muncrief collaborat­ was lifted for a pinch-hi tter in blDatrop of iroublea either ry Moore hit into a force play 10 Kerr, who suffered a bruise on They had four run innings in ed in limiting the Senators to four the bottom of the eighth and Joe Thunday or yeatonlay. end the game. both games, the third of the lid­ Georic Schneitcr slipped to an "ii______his rili:ht forefinger on a pick-off hits, none in the last seven inn­ Page finished up to preserve the lifter, play in last night's game, came up ings. Haefner scattered five hits deciGi'lD for Hiller. when nine men went Ito even par 72 but his previous fine .. Open 1:15 p. an the plate, and the initial session "noon with the score tied at 3-3, the before yielding to Pinch-hitfer 66 permitted the Ogden, Utah, Tom McBride in the 12th. of the closer when they also batt­ bases loaded and two out. He f~~~er to hold onto fourth witil a ajP,IAfIl Cleveland clustered five of Its ed around. banged the ball to lelt to break 10 hits Into tbe 16th inning af­ PhUlies Roll Over Shortstop Vern Stephens treated Long-driving George Schoux, NOW "Over The up the game and send starein'g ter J'errlek had plaee4 himsell his [ormer St. Louis teammates from Mamaroneck, N.Y" posted Weelr-Bnd" Pitcher Kent Peterson to the In trollble by wauw.. MWlcr.ef roughly as he clubbed' out four 70-69 and E.J. (Dutch) Harrison, - Roulln,. Screell Schmitz, Cubs, 7-2 from Little Rock, Ark., 68-71, to Entertainment At showen. and E4ldie Rohinson. Hal Peck hits in sevlln times in both attempted to sacrifice but forc­ CHICAGO (JPJ-The Philadel­ games and drove in four Boston rank next with 1395, UII Bestl H.'" Sauer was the big CWl phia Phillies unleased a la-hit ed Mu.crlef at third before run~. for ,Itt' Reds. Sauer clouted two Dale Mlklhell slna'Jed off bombardment for a total of 25 ba­ COLLEGE SeORII S ses yesterday to rout Johnny Ohio Slate 7. WIsconsin 3 IIoDUlI'8, ane In the flrat innine Shortstop Johnny Sullivan's Ohio University 6. Mlch".n Stat. 3 &lid the eecond in the eighth. ,love to score RobinsoD. Schmitz and trounce the Chicago To Hold Meeting to N'atre Dame 13. Weetern Mlchllan 0 TJw bomen were his 15th and 's single scored Cubs, 7 to 2. Dick Sisler walloped his sixth 16th at the seuon, top produc­ Peck before Mitchell went out Adopt Big Nine Code .lon In either teape. homer and Del Ennis his seventh. I trying to steal. tripled, Richie Ashburn extended bis bat- C:HICAGO (JP)-Anoth~r in. a Andy Hansen started tor the singled and Walt ting streak to 21 straight games sene~ of hush-hush BIg NlDe Giants and gave up three nigs Judnich tripled off Welte roth to with two singles in the high points meetmgs ~o . ~eep confel:ence before bowing out in favor of boost the score to its final pro­ of the assault. 'Both homers came members wlthm oounds on aid to Dave Koslo in the third inning. portions. A KNOCKOUT PUNCH-Renle Hughes (left) takes a knockout off Jess Dobernic, third Cub hur- athletes is scheduled here toiia,Y Koslo held the Reds hitless for 1'1\l1 punch thrown by Leo Smith of Colfax. Hughes, a l3S·pounder ler, after Schmitz had been kayo- and tomorrow. five innings. He was lifted in tlie ed in tile seventh for his sixth loss. Kenneth L. (Tug) Wilson, l3ig eighUl for pinch-hitter Kerr and from Omaha was knocked down and the referee stopped tile bout Bored Cuckoo "Cartooa" A's lEdge Chisox; Walt Dubiel scattered eight hits, Nine ('ommissioner, would neither - Late Newl- .amed credit lor the victory when in :55 of tne Ill'st round. The actiOll occurred in the finals of the including Andy Pafko's eighth ho- confirm nor deny that a so called Kerr came through with his pay­ Cedar Rapids sub-rerional Olympic tryouk>. (AP WIREPHOTO) mer, for his third victory of the "secret" meetin2 was slated. Shows - 1:30·4:11·7:" off sock to left. Sheldon Jones Brissie Gels Win season. A recruiting coae is expected 9:35 - "Feature 9:55" finished. PHILADELPHIA (JP) - Mike to be submitted by a conference New York AB R Hlelnclnnall AB R II Guerr:l'$ double sent Ferris Fain committee which will be more BASEBALL RESULTS "Doors Open 1:15 p, m," Conway. SS. 5 0 lBaumh

SummerI Students

IF • • • 6. L Requisi~ions Accepted

Textbooks. New and' Used-for all. courses

Notebooks-Supplies-Equipment for ~yery SchoQ' need r. THEY'RE. ' • • • . .

.\ Law Supplies, Zoo Kits, Engine~ring Su~pl~es, Dr~wi~a Sets, Laundry Cases, Wastebaskets, Pe~cil Sharpeners~ ~rief (~~es SCHOOL • • • I Special: Genui~e Ar~y Surplus Sun Glasses-pnly ~5.~~ , , • •• SUPPLIES! t .' The place to buy •• . for the beit in quality and price ... il the Student Supply See our complete line of Eatons -­ WEHAVE1HEM!! White-Wykoff and Hobby Craft stationery . . "ONE STOP' SERVICE AT THE

' . STUDENT S~~p~Y STOnE '. - the place to buy- Hi ; , THE DAILY IOWAN, 8A~DAY. JtJN'£ 5, 19t5--PAGE TRUE Students Wed in Evening Ceremony Town In' Campus ~ I 10 Air Klle Church Calendar Personal Notes EAGLE LADIES - The Eagle Ladles win hold an installation ,~ Broadcasts METHOD) T CRUt B cI,..,~ mHlln. wllh Mrs. W. W. Sum· dinner in the Spanish room of the Mr. and Mrs. William Villhauer, fllteen ounces, was born y t rday Jetlenoll ka. Dabeca •• tflu_d IIlB'WW. 13:1 Hl,hwood. L L. Du.lDII...... a . • . 8aab, D &: L grin Monday at 6:30 p.rn. 813 Seventh street, are the par­ to Mr. and Mrs. John Wahl, 619 ..lall~n J'Jll T BA"I T CB aCB Installation wiU be held in Eaele fllts of a girl, born Wednesday at Finkbine park. Sund.y. 1:30 a .m. Church IChooL ':30 CU.t..... a.,ll.,t•• d.ud. • . m. Momln, wonhlp. Stonnon: "In RiA £I.IDe' e. Dlo.rb, paA., hall at 8 p.m. Reservations for the Mercy hospital. She weighed eight Tomorrow Steps: Reception 01 new memMn.. 3:n Sunday••• a.m. Joint ..",I.,. of lb. dinner should be made by calling pounds, on~ ounce, at birt p.m. S.pllsm of Infan.. and unall chil· churclt Ind church IChool In ~Itlon Jeannie Butler, RN, Om ha, Radio station KXIC wUl go on dren al th~ altar. of Children'. dol'. Ordlnlnce of s.pUsm either Mrs. Anna Parizek, 6558, Nebraska. visited her fianc , Will­ Ind .w._ and recocnlUon ...... ] .... or Mrs. Lydia DeLtman, 6546, not the air for the first time at 2 p.m. A son, weighing six pounds, Wll$ iam King, E3, Red Oak, Tuesday, ST. I'A L' L THII!JlI\N BI\.I'eL I ler than tomorrow night. tomorrow, Gene Clausen, KXIC 4tH E. J.tI..... Ir... COM... NITl" CIIllIlCH NT .... born Thursday t.o Mr. and Mrs. Wednesday and Thursday. news director, said yesterday. JObD . belh, ,."tar ( " un a CHIll ) SundlY•• : so a.m Sund.y ..,hool .nd DOU.. D O . Bart. pw., Jam B. Starr, 812 Kirkwood Iowa CItJls first commercDal Bibl clua. 10::10 I .m. DI_In" wonhlp. SUndaY. ':30 • m. Church ..,hool. 10::10 avenue, at Mercy hospital. Topic: "Assocl.un. wllb Sinn n" a.m. Mornin, wonbip .00 communlOll. WE T LUC Memb rs of Mr. and Mrs. Ben De Boni!. station bas been ready to broad­ Stormon: "Lan",., of Love .nd NOI cast since May 16. but it was not ".u." Nursery. MondaY. 7· p.m. CllliJl·. th West Lucs Women's club Des Moines, wiU attend the grad- ZION L TH&IIAN H IICB CN eN m lin. with Velm. Stubb.. will meet at the home 01 Mrs. Mr. aid MJ'II. John Cannon, 717 uation of their daughl r, El until yesterday at 3 p.m. that j'.bD QB aD. 1ll.... laI10D .net. 1510 Roch • WmnHdIY. 8 p.m. F.m. E. Market street, are the parents today. fical approval arrived t ram the A . • p,..el.. , ...tur Ily picnic .t elly park Thuraday. ' Morl D vis, Black Diamond ro d, SUndlY. 81~ • m. Sond.,. "'''001. ' ::10 pm. Bible udy ... Itb John KobH • .,. Tu . d y at 2 p.rn. Elizabelh Bud­ of an eight pound, on ounce boy, ffdtrsl cOIIIIDunications commis­ •. m Slud~nl Bible class. 10::10 • .m. 0 1· S Gonmot. born yesterday at Mercy hOlpltal. sion, Clausen said. vine worship Stormon: "Tne Slnnu'. re u, county health nu ,will In Iowa City to aHend the l"TIl'nd." I p.m. Dlvln. ...rvlce .t St. sp" II: on modern medicine. Roll John'. Lutheran churc:h. Sharon. Vau­ CHURCH OF .JESUS CHRIST or. craduation of Loi5 Fritz, L3- l'lncb'hi\ttt The delay was due to technical tlon Bible ..,b.ool for children between LATTE. DAY SAINTS call will be answered witb il'and- Mrs. John F. Kerr, dauahter tor the lQirj difiiculties in checking KXIC's the 1&" 01 live Ind 13 ... Ill be C'Onductm C •• fere. e rHm I, 1... al. Billie and son Phillip, 307 Grand Grange, m., will be h I' parent9, .1 the church ~Innln. Mond.y .t 1 Sund.,.. 10 .m. SUnd.y ..,bool. 11 mother's remedIes. Dues will be sianal strength, he said. • .m. S • .,.,.....,nl m Une. Mr. and Mrs. E.W. Fritz. her bra­ on bile fa un. Session. will be beld each morn· .... IQ at this meeting. avenue, will leave today to spend two oul lDd Three former WSUI staffers, Inc. Mond.y Ihroueh FrldlY. for IhrH the summer at West Okoboji lake. t.rn!r, Blll Frllz, and Bernit' Spon, he made'!',. Robert Snyder, Gene Claussen and weeb. T.INITY CPI COPAL all of LaGnnge, Ill. Colle.-..... Ollb.,t I1reel .t 2:30 10 5:30 and 1 10 1:'" pm •• w k­ force pI.., to Herb Olson started the slotion. Huel" P. M~Gee. red.r A daughter, Kathleen Ann, was UNITAIlIAN CH .cu Sunday, • I .m . lfoJy communion. 1:30 d.y durin. lb.. 1:25 •.m . ma Ind after They were joined by Elliot Full, Sunday. no momln. rvlce. An In· l.m. Ilornlns pr.yer and UPI>U church the Novena ..,-vlcot. born Tuesday at M rey hospital Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lind, 438 In FCC licensed engineer, who fonnll dlscuwon ...rI... on trend. In school. 10:30 1m. Low.r church oc1tool Mr. Lexin(ton aveou , I ft ye t rd y modem rallllo,," Ihou,hl will be oIr.red 110 '45 I m Holy communion and r. T. PAT.I K' II. H to and Mrs. Buell Hoagland, last summer belped construct on the !aUowln, thr SundlY. in June man: "Olvln. Oursetv8" Saturday. ". "I. .... M..... Pat.ld. 0·... 111, ...... 935 E. College street. She weiahed for FreesoiL, Mich., art r receiving 1\ II a rn. p .m . Stonlor choir r~hea ...J In the .burch. !'•• Ito . .., ..... J . Pu..... _lot.. ! KSUl, the FM station at the uni­ ,ut.r II yen pounds, four oun II at birth. word that Mrs. Lind's mother, versity. IIIIl !'NOLI 8----- LUTHEaAN HUilCH • la l' CHil-----i TIA HUa H :10 • m. LOw m_. ,,30 ' .m. HISh Mrs. H.L. Lydie, h d d ht h I' The tour men filed their appli­ tolled Lulberan CburCb Ja America' !: l' le.& •• eDue m. • 1;30 • m~ Low mi.; ditty m. OubuQ_e ••d "arlll' Ilrett Le.1'J C. EJIIlaDII. ,war .t • 1.11\. Salurd.y m .1 1 ::10 • rD. A son, w iahing six pounds, home th re Thursday. cation wIth the FCC just one hour a.lpb ... . Kr.er...... SundIY. ':30 a.m. Chu..,h ..,hool 10:SO Sund~. ~30 .m. Matln ~NI... 8 ::10 a.~ Moml~ worsh~ ~~ : ·Th. I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ before nhe final deadline set by I .m . Sunday ..,hool. 10:45 I .rn. Morn· S&vln, Ftllow hlp." bul.llallon of new II the FCC for new staUon permits TWO UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, Anne Mudge, AZ, and Charles Inl[ woroblp Tu.Way, • p.m. Sund.y pastor .nd communion ... rvlce. Wl'd. on February 7, 1947. The quartet .chool board m ••Untr It Ih. church. nuday. ' :30 a .M. W.M.B. m tine II the A. LIndberg. E2, were married Thursday eveoln .. a\ tbe First Pres­ Wmnl'Jd.y. , p.m Stonlor choir. Thuro church ror qulll!n.. 6:30 p.m . Cbolr ~. received FCC's permiSSion to con­ byterian church. Thc Rev. lIewlson Pollock olliefated al the double day. &:30 p .m . Church nl.hl lupper It h •• raal II the churcb Thu.Way. 1 • m. struct KXIC on December 15, the cburch. saturdny. 2 pm. Junior Pearr" MllAlon.ry .odely brultfl wllh rlllg ceremony. Mary Mudre, Sioux City, was maid of bonor and choir. Mrs. W. R. Rohrb.ch r. III . Call .p The Methodist Church 1947. bridesmaids were Lol Johnson. ' Ioux Ity. and MarllYII Harris. IU t. BVANO 1. 1 AL II Il H The permit grants KXIC the A3, Mu_ca Une. Fr d Nordstrom, AZ, henandoah, was beli man. .,.1,111.".EI! J HOVAII' WI rlCht to operate a 1000 watt sta­ Ushers were RiehJU'd FI hbauch. A4. Shenandoah, Daniel Rater, SUnday. 8' 45 • nl. Sunday chool. 1!l 1111 10 SoUl1I D.'uQ.e .Irul • . m . Jolomln. wo,.."lp. 7 pm. Junior Sund.y, 4,l'I p.m W.lchtower oIudy . tion from sunup to sundown at 800 AZ. Casey. and Georre Walm Y. A2. Freeport, 1Il. A reception was fellowShiP ,,,0 p.rn Pre- nolce p •• yer Frld.y. 8 p.m Bible IIIudy . kilocycles. It's primary area will held a.t the Chi Ome&,a. house following the ceremony. The bride, m lin.. with •• rvlc" followln.. 9'1~ ANNOUNCES p.m Slnll plfllUon. Thurod..y. a p.m . T. THOIIIA MOllE HAI'IL utend to Grinnell in the west, daughter 01 Mr. and Mrs. Aly", L. Mudge, iaux City. Is a. member F .C.Y.F 8 pm Prayer metun. U pm. 4.~ N • • 1.... 1 •• 41.1 .. Galesburg, Ill. in the east, south­ ChOir reh ....1 . R .... lA.ft."" J . Hr...... p ...'" of Chi Omega. oclal ororlty. The brldelrl'oom. on of Mr. aod Mrs. lb • • J. Walker MLl£leDeJ" ....I l. put.r em Wisconsin in the norlh and Elmer Llndberr. henandoall. Is a. member ot Phi Kappa. SIvna ONOIIEOATIONAL CH·VllCH .ey, aYI. Bel•• t, "i. p. lor Kttlkuk In the south. social fra.ternlty. The ouple I plannl!l( to eoter the University of Sunday. 9:30 a .m . Chu..,h sehool. 10 :30 SUnday m. I! 5:45. '. I . 10 Ind 11 :30 I .m . Momln, wo .....lp . Stom,on: .. W ...... •. m. We«kdlY m .....: 8:30. T. and 1:30 Michigan, Ann AI'bor, lie t fall . They will live 10 Chlea.ro lhl tIIna with Ood" Nur... ry. MondlY. • . m. H oly day m. : 5:'5. 1. B. 11 and A single Sunday morning service noon Lunch ...n at 1I0iei Jdferoon (or 12:15 •. m. ConI 10nl h Ird fram 3:30 10 swruner. odvlso.. , Polrd and board of tru I o g.m. and 7 10 8:30 p.m. on all S.lur· Wl'dnpKd.,.. 1 p.m. Choir practke. day.. daY I berore bol)' dil'l .nd flraL Nine Nurses Attend Frld.y.. Aloo Sund.y" lrom 10 nllnul... lei Jefferson !ollowlng th bero,., m... to 5 mlnu ~Io", rn HKST CII KCI! a)' CHili T. Newman club .Ich Tueldly of "'''001 mony. 8 IENTIST year .1 7:30 p.m. In lhe oIud, nL c nl ... 9:30 to 10:30 o'clock Chicago Convention Patricia Holland, ,'!! e. alle,. Itre.el Mrs. Shoener, a graduate of In­ Sunday. g I .m . WHO rldlo broadc." . T. WB"'~ . LA 8 II II II Nine women from the school of 9:45 D.m . SUndlY •• hool. II I.m. 1.0. atv. £dw.rd W. 'Neu1.Jl . patt.r wood, Iowa high school, attended ..,n· nnon Nuroery. Wl'dn IChy. • aflY, Jo epb W . IUn •• , au't pulor For the four summer months beginning tomorrow. We shall nursing attended the Biennial Herbert Shoener the Universlly of Iowo and is a pm. THllmonlal m'.llnl[. GO E. Davebport Ilrt , Nurses's convention in Chicago SundaY. :30 I .m. Low ml • am. mEmber of Delta Della Delta so­ .. I'll 88YTEKIAN CRUll R Low rna.. D.lly IT\UICS II 7 and 9'SO trom May 31 to June 4. cial sorority. Mr. Shoener, a :0 E. Market .,,-tn 8m. Saturday ~ontedlonl. !I to 5:30 p .m ., return to the double service on Oct. 3rd. A cordial welcome to Married Yesterday P . lll..,I •• n PoUeek, pastor , to ':SO p.m. Those who attended the con­ gradUate of Charleston, W. Va ., Sund.y. 0:30 • . m. Only adult ela.... vention were Lola Lindsey, dir­ ot church I

• • • SUNDAY AT :2 p.m. 'I LISTEN I and '1-1 EAR RONALD REAGAN

interviewed from Hollywood ... Salutes fro", PARIS •.. lONDON ... TORONTO .•. WASHING· TON ... Speeches by NATIONAL, STATE and

-- -~ Remember the unfroued bulb, the old.fathiOJl,d .. lOCAL dignitaries . .• a s~ial HOllYWOOD "pull I:b.in", and the hard·to·,lean diffu.in, bowU . fad. , wu an improYfment in ita day aDd delivered 1\I~c:e"ively better Jjgh t in the kitch,D.l But plenty . d ra matic show dedicated to Iowa City's own radio of glare accompanied the "glow", \ Today ther.', the Dewly-dcaiBned SUNLITE uDit that lighu every corn.r of ) station .•. and messages from EDWARD ARNOLD, ) th. kitchen. h '. u.y to c1eaD and ,coDomil:al to operate ••• deliver. approximately twice at much liSlu a. an old-fashioned kitchen lighting fixtW'e. BtcauW ART LlNKLEnER, GROUCHO MARX, RALPH ED- of the quaJjty of light it produce', the SUNLlT£. I complimenu your kitchen applianctl and decorauoD ~I add. UiC and convenience to your kitl:hen work.; WARDS and others ••• over KXIC ••• May be inn.lied in any ' exitting ceiling- oUtln; , Ju.t cali \I' today for a demonnration of 'hI' c:..lll'W_~h~h'D_SUNLITE in )'our home!.II 9rl - ... -- - . .... - ' ""I~1.!!!,-"'UI.T .... j - Also -avaUable from your electrical con\raetor, Convenient te...... INSTALLED IN EXISTING OUTLET -. : I I ••• ttthe VO~CE of Iowa City" 1tJ11J4-1t1Ut«4 ~ GAl AND ILlef.le COMPANY .r.!E .~A!f! I~:r~' ~~'f!'P-'~r· ~yNf 5. .1Ka-:!.~O.E !~UK .-- .-- _. Tbt Do.IflJ bmH I'D RATHER BE RIGHT South Africa's ",w McBride's H~"- I • Prime Minist~r Is , ESTABLISHED 1868 Beauties, Barrows and Birds Cl Congress - I SATURDAY. JUNE 5. 1M8 'he Clouds Stolid, 'Unromantic By Bill McBride ...ED M. POWNALL, hblbb•• By R.USSELL LANDSTROM 1 • WALLY IIT.INO.AII ...... _ J ao:ItJIER 01' THJI ASSOClATED P1I:ESS By SAMUEL GRAFl'ON (New York Post Syndicate) Word comes from John 1\facVicar, chainnan of lite De. ){oiDes lIa•••• r AI- Staff Writer OAIL t. MYOS. Edll•• The' Aaoclafed Preu ...nUlIed exclu­ C. of C. sponsored Hawkeye Holidays, that Mayor KOller h. _ J • IIvel7 to the ,... tOt' I'epubU.,.Uon ot LONDON (JP}-By comparison all the local ne'... prlnted In thia n ....- sent entry blanks for a. eontest to determine who will be queen of paper... weU .. all AP new. dt.patdles. The priee of lumber Cor home 'd I with dynamic Jan Smuts, the man the celebration in the state capital eity June 23 through 28. what might be called the debater what current econotnlc eve op- I! building has again jumped sharp­ he succeeds as prime minister ot rep­ • type of topic in place of the old ments may mean to the cost of Ii- The preliminary judgment will be passed by a group of 111 ly up; fuel is up, metal prices are resentative central Iowa mayors using pies as the basis bread-and-meat issues that tells ving and happiness of the average South Africa, Dr. Daniel Francois of their up; but almost nobody in congress its own stOry ot the extent of the Malan is a provincial figure. sto- deci ion . . Any girl Dlay enter, with or without organized Spoil­ is making a noise about thesP, shift toward the right in our gov­ consumer seems as out of place in lid if not stodgy, rather dour and sorsbip. -c circlf'_~ ernment. its deliberations as a discussion of matters. Some business Iowa City boasts enough beauty to place at least one local Pri begin to talk of an approachinp. the price of Valkyrie swts would something of a man of mystery. There has been a definite di­ on the winner' JO trum. "hyper-inflation" as a result of vorcement from day-to-day con­ be in one of the Ring operas. Few lecendl!l have coDected the arms program; but. again. you cerns. It Is not that the big subjects do around 111m, and even the' men • • • couldn't tell it from listening to ~ Almost .any congressman you not have to be discussed; they do; wbo are IDOII& devoted to 111m AStudent's World ------most of the SPeeches in either concede 'beir leader II poor ..a­ Sam 'l'homp on, profes or of economics at Iowa. State eollegt, • come across is prepared to give 'but it Is a very sharp question as .• This is a muHiple handshake. House . you a small epigram about nation­ terial for allY IlOl1 of romanUe is telling farmers that most consumers prefer pork euts from to whether the almost total sub­ About 1400 degrees will be conferred today with handshakes all The talk in congress these days al security, but there are few who buildup. .. good and choice barrows and gilts weighing 200-220 POUIlds." is kind of cosmic; it is based on stitution of one kind of interest the way around. Students from JlI(JSt of the United tates-from seem anxious to say anything Never popular in any quarter in This is Thompson's an weI' to the que tion of why" heavywelgJrt the broad subjects of national se­ for another is valid. many countries around the world will cross the stage bcfore the meaty and precise about the fact the hall-feUow-well-met manner, barrows and gilts wete di couuted heavily on the market late laat curity. defense, suppression of that milk has just gone up an­ eyes of thoWlallds of visitors. • • • he is said by his Nationalist party winter. " subversive activities, etc. It is other cent a quart in the New In spite of ail possible justifica­ supporters to be well-liked on , '.rhe site of the audience; the distance they have come to see the big talk-and it is being talked, to York City area. tions that might be cited. the net longer acquaintance. For all but I wouldn't 1()(Wt to qnibblc with (II professor of eC011Omic8 (11" university graduation testify to the scope of, the university. some degree, a t the cost of losing • • • effect is a return to the kind of a relative fe'NI however, anything less it cancerned a gl·rr.cl6), but I dm.lbt if mrlst hOltsewiveg t4I , But the graduates tJ.!cmse]ves and the distance tliey have come track of what is going on in the We note. too, the speed wIth government we had before Roo­ like intImacy is out of the ques­ laok at a pork chap Gllll tell if it came fram a 220 pDUfui gilt. daily lives of the people. te~ a tory of internationallsm that is both good and necessary. which congress has rushed to en­ sevelt. to the cool, remote. fara­ tion. The 74-year-old doctor By this we mean not only the students from India., Czechoslo­ • • way Congress, detached and di­ (the title is ministerial) is wary of Upon querying Jeanne on the subject, I discovered that she • large the airforce, and what re­ couldn't tell a barrow from a ,gilt if she had a book on animal vakia, Norway and Colombia who work here for degrees-but a Some of these big, up-in-the­ luctance it shows to adopt any sengaged from the day-to-day all but trusted biends. cautious larger group. These men and some women came through college stratosphere topics must be like a economic controls of a kind which struggles of the hot pavements about making public statements husbandry open in front of ller. by way of Salerno, Normandy, Guadalcanal, and Tokyo. month in the country lo public fi­ might keep such an enlargement and the side !trects. and inclined to keep to himseU. Ail a matter of fact, she thougbt a balTow was sometbiDg in Tradional mid-west isolationism, fortunately, is less of a. tl·a.­ gures who otherwise migh t find of our arms output from fOisting And this type of detachment is Scarcely anything is known of hls which dirt is wheeled. dition than before-a world out-look has been replacing it. that they had to do something more inflation on us. The present of itself a rightward developmeht; home life. In all the years of his public life he raraly has granted • With a graduating class of students from many countries and about homelier problems, bearing congress seems to have got itself for not to disduss a public need. • • on the cost of living. into a kind of Wagnerian mood; to be too abstracted to be concern­ a newspaper interView. students of this eountry familiar with the world and its nations. Nvw that the fleet-footed Iowa summcr ill hCl'e to stay for It National defense has to be con­ it is interested mainly in the epiC ed with it. is the flattest kind of A bulky, balding man. shortish, least three month, the bird stories ha.ve started to come in. The the university can be proud of its position. It has been charged Sidered, of course. but it is the stroke, the making and unmaking "No!"; it is a "No!" that is drama­ with a 'big round lace. hanging with preparing students for a world full of nations-not for a completeness of the substitution of of worlds; and a discussion of tized as well as spoken. cheeks and horn-rimmed &lasses, first tale of the season concerns Prof. Philip Ward Burton oftht nation full of states or a statc full of towns. Malan gives an Impression of advertising depal'tmen t. So we figuratively shake the band of the gradu8tes and the uni­ sluggishness in thought and ac­ There is a tree near his home in University Heights where" versity ... saying "well done." Under Observation - tion, family of robins built a borne (nest to you ornithologists). One As might be expected 01 a cler­ \mny afternoon Junior Robin decided to try bis pin feathmd gyman-although he gllve up ac­ wings. He climbed up to the edge of the nest, performed a sbort Informa,tion Pay,ing Off tive religious work 33 years ago­ pre-tlight warm-up and dived off into the wild blue yonder. he is a good speaker. but 1ar from The accusation that a $lO-million foreign exchango fund was Chile: Battling World Communism Tlte little feller cauldn't work 1lP enQ-Ugh ".p.m.s I" maiflt"" an emotlonal one. His oratorical written into the Marshall plan as a "payoff" to certain maga­ style Js voluminOUS, with hardly a flying speed and spun. in. TIt'llt 1va~ where Pf·Of. B1Lrttm wel'lt illo zines and newspapers for supporting the ERP was made and con­ glint of humor. his "escue act. He borrawed a ladder and proceeded to ~ tested in congrcss Thursday. Dr. Malan .lwa,8 nllea a Junior back into tIte nesl. Chairman Leo Allen (R.-ILl.) of. the house rule committee wide IDIile hoWeVer, wben he claimed the fund amoutlted to "sub idie " for publication wh.ich recalll tbat "SIba Jannle" After braving a. series of kip bombing attack by the pareD! "have fought for the Marshall plan. It is $10-million for propa­ Smuts. 1111 lonr·tlme poUtteal birds (wbo were laboring under the delusion Ulat the prohsor ganda and sub idies; it's a payoff:" foe who is only four years lila was goin .... to abscond with their youngster on account of lligb The fund would make dollars available, if desired, to publish­ scolor. was his Sunday iChool poultry prices) the faculty member suceeeded in replacing cae crs. news organizations, producers or distributors of American teaeher In theIr lIoybood In the papetown. Inrel. But all that labor was to no avail. That stupid little JObin books, movies or periodicals in excl1ange for foreign cu rt'encies tood up and bailed out of the nest again. which tl1ese organizations earn but are not able to usc to purchase Malan has a stock comment lor necessary supplies. that: "It didn't seem to do me , • • • Cited as specific periodicals and press services doing business much harm." The early friendship of these so Art Wimer, a Who' Whoer on the journalism faculty, has & in Europe who could use thc fund were Time, Life, Newsweek, wllippoorwill near his hou 'e that .starts hi song every night at Readers Digest, New York Herald Tribune, New York 'l'ime , The dissimilar personalities never de­ PRESIDENT Gabriel Gonzalez COMMUNIST-led I!Itrlkes con­ PORTFOLIOS were taken away veloped Into a deep relatJonship, dusk and continues until dawn. There's notlling unusual about Associated Press, United Press and International 1 ews Service. Vldela. a liberal, was elected tinued to paralyse ChUe's econ­ from all Communist members but through the years they have that, but Wimer says this bird yodels all night witJlOut taking a Chairman Taber (R-N.Y.) of the house appl'opriations commit­ in tbe Videla. government who usually called each other by their brCllth. tee and Paul G. HoHman, ERP admini trator, expre "cd doubt last fall with the help of 50,000 omy. Armed willi emerg!ency held appoIntive jobs. With the first names. ' Either the whippoorwiJ) shonl.d be given a medal for beinK t\e that such accusations were valid. lloffman pointed out that any CommunIst votes. Vldela tried D '0 W e r s. Vldela rigbt-about­ aid of Argentina, Chile next Born at Tiebeek West in the longest-winded bird on record or Wimer should bc given the bM­ "medium of inf01'mation" operating in Europe could apply for consistently to work willi the faced on tbe Communists and exposed a. new Communist Cape province-where Smuts. too, Ors for being the ouiy man in the world who would stay up all aid from the fund. Communists. fought the strikes. "plot". has roots-Malan was educated night to listen for a singing whippoorwill to take a breath. Typical Of the almost immediate denials by tbe publications and for the Clerical life at SteUenbosch pre s associations named ,vas the statement from the Interna­ (By Dally* Iowan * Itesearch * Staff) expelled the* Yugoslav * * diplomats * * * and the University of Utrecht in tional News, e1'\'ioe: "INS ha .. never accepted a gov rnml'llt sub­ not to outlaw the party. Whether Americans have real­ from the country on the grounds Holland. He preached until 1915 sidy in its entire history and does not intend to do so now." Meanwhile. Chile turned to when the Nationalist party asked WSUI PROGRAM CALENDAR ized it or not, we have a highly that they called a coal strike in batUJng the Russian giant all an nch an indictment should be sharply rejected. There is 110 vocal teammate in lhe internation­ defiance of presi~nlial orders, him to become the editor of Die International scale. Burger. the senior otgan of the reason to believe that the state department and SOllie of the COtlD­ al struggle of ideologies-Chile. threatening to prostrate the coun­ June, Saturday I , tNA 3:00 p.m. Musl~ Hall Varl@UfO try's leading publications and press associations would lct them­ try. When the Czechoslovakian gov­ party. For a time he- served as 8:00 a,m. Mornln, Chapel 3:30 p.m, New. The Latin American country ernment was overthrown last mil'lister of internal affairs and 8:15 a.m. News 3:35 p .m. Music Hall VarltllH selves in for a $10-million scandal. 8:30 a.m. Golden Gale Quartet 4:00 p.m. Marine Band recently went through a complete Close on the heels of this action. Marcn. the Czech representative 4:15 p.m. Cancer Program It is currently part of om foreign policy to llave U.S. publica­ held other cabinet positions under 8:45 a.m. Plano Melodies cycle, first contending with com­ Chile broke off diplomatic rela­ in the UN. Jan Papanek. charged coalition governments. He has 9:00 a.m. Musical Interlude 4:30 p .m. Tea Time lor tions penetrate the Iron Durtain and circulate in the so-called tions with Russia. Tbe Latin 9102 a,m. Iowa Council lor Better Edu- 5:00 p.m. Chlldren's Hour munism al home and then battl­ Russia with engineering the coup been leader of the Nationalists cation 5:30 p.m. Sports News Ix 6:00 p.m. Dinner Hour Mal"Shall plan ar('a. An exchange fuud which would mak it fi­ ing it on the intema tional scale American nation charged Russia and requested UN intervention. 9:M I.m. Commencement Exercises wilh inspiring "serious attempts since 1933 when they broke away 7:.00 p.m. New. nancially possible to circulate such publicatiolls abroad WiUlOut in the United Nations. from the United party. 12:00 noon Rhythm Ramble. 7: 15 p.m. Mu.lcal Mood. The charge was sidetracked in 12:30 p,m, NeWl! 7:30 p.m. Saturday Swln. Session losing lrloney is common' business' sense. At this moment, lhr;ee senate against the political Independence 12 :45 p .m. Guest Star of the Republic." the security council on the Dr. Malan. hll associates 8ay, 8:00 p.m. Candle LIt!ht lof,.s!. The United Nations, at a recent Freedom of Information con­ commissions are considering gov­ grounds that the' complaint was 1:00 p ,m. Mu.leal Chat. 8:30 p.m . Look at AUllnUa Set! ernment proposals to outlaw the Argentina sharpened lis attack favors a. SOCIa.lIl!1t control in the 2:00 p.m. Johnson Count)' News 8:45 p .m, Harmony from WIlY Bock vention in Geneva, came out for an unrestricted flow of infol'nm- voiced by an individual and not hands of tlJe state. a sort of 2: 15 p.m. SaIet)' Speaks 9:00 p .m. Campus Shop tion UHoughout the globe: . • communist party in Chile. against Russia simultaneously but 2:30 p.m. Voice of the Arm), 9:45 p.m. New. did not sever relations. by a nation (Papanek had refused overall corporaSlon to direct or 2:45 p .m . Latin American Rhythm 10:00 p.m. SIGN OFF It would be a criDle if' congl'ess would cut the exchange fund tLa.E>1. fall Prdden t Gabdel GOllzales Vldela. a liberal, was BrazlL broke with Russia claim­ to represent the new Czech gov­ guIde the countrY's economic ------from foreign aid appropriations. Just as the Voice of America voted into oUice with the aid ing the Russ refused to retract ernment in lhe UN). affairs. Actually. lIeYera) .f broadclIsts (if properly conducted) could be an invaluable weapon of 50,000 Commwlist votes. press attacks on Pl'esident Enrico Thal night, Chile's represenla­ South Africa's Induairtes and WHO ,WMT Calendar for the U.S. 011 tbe -European battleground of ideas; Amedcan Videla's gravest problem was tive on the security council. Santa pu blio utilities already are oPe­ Calendar (NBC OuUe') O1IUd) news and idea' tran 'mitted by American periodicals, films and the country's economic plight. A * *."" --'----* ,..... Cruz. received a long distance raUng under much lbat kind 01 (CBS press associations could become super weapons. spiraling inflation and a wave of phone call from President Videla. system. 8:45 a .m . News, Godt WMT CAL ...... The nexl morning. Chile present- One of his goals is to wean En­ 12::10 p .m . News, Shelley 9:00 a.m. News, WJclllUlrlc , 'l'here is firm ground for doubting ~he exjl:ite~ce of anything strikes in vit.al mining industries 1:30 p ,m. Salute to Veter.ns 9: 15 a.m. Music Snaps sinister in a foreign exchange fund; it is obvious, on the other were crippling the country. ed Papanek's charge before the glish-speaking people of South 3:00 p ,m . Iowa Roundtable 1l :00 • . m. Theatre 01 Tod.y council. Africa from what he caUs double 4:00 p.m. Swanee River Boys 12:15 p.m. News, Wldmark hand. that such a fund would s ced the flow of information to Large reserves of dollars accum­ 5:30 P.m. Svmphon)' of the Air 2:30 P.m. Give and Take ulated during the war were drain­ When Russia was hauled on the loyalty-to Britain and to the Un­ 8:30 p ,m . News, Nelsen 3:{\IJ p .m . Yl!ulll Chooses Democr.cY the front lines. ~:30 p.m, Spo~ts, Cummins ing 'off fast as the country security council carpet. Chile be- Ion. He thinks this can be done 6:45 p.m. Robert Blue 6:15 p.m. Governor Blue scrambled for postwar American came embroiled in the bitter "only by political and spirItual 7:00 p,m. Life of Rile)' 8:00 p.m. Joan Davi, Show 1 :~,? p,m, Truth o. Consequences 8:30 p.m. Vaughn Monroe maohincry and goods. Chiiean debates. Russia accused her of separation. as the Am.ericans 8:00 p.m. Your HII Parade 9:30 P,m. It Pays To Be Jl\loool Reported Missing in Action - exports were lagging. - being the pawn for the big wesl- broke away from the mother 10 :15 p.m. News. Nelson, 10:00 p.m, News, Jackson What's on the congressional active list' Senate (lOP leaders At first, the Communists were ern nations. country and the Finns from Swe- are aiming at a Junc ]9 adjournment. On the immediate docket on the winning team, holding 'Adually, Chile was on the den." are such things as limited revival of the draft, and extension of down prominent posts in the Vid­ offensive against Com.munlsm The Nationalists are keen on OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN the recipl'ocal trade !lCt. . ela government. The president for ber own particular reasons dcveloping South Africa's trade EquaJly interesting is the list of temporal'ily dead or mi sing: made a ·consistent effort to keep and on her own accord. She with the United States hut~ would ,'1~Q.1 n.m. III til. UNlVla11TY CALENDAI, ....0 .....1 .... 1M".. ~'he bill for long mnge housing the Communists working for the was trying t.o keep her vital like to se~ "a more reciprocal ar­ .e.I'. 0.1.... Old C.~U.1. lIem. f.. lb. OllflllAL HOTICII Civil rights legislation nalion's inlerests. mining industries hununln, In rangement with America." --·.,...... II.old be 'epotU.d ",llb tlie dt, .dllar .f n.) 1'1*", 1...... ~ , ...... In Ea.. HaU. Ol!n.AL NOTlCEa ...... 0& De .,.., Oleo tax repeal But the country's 50,000 Com­ an effort to lure In badly- Malan has been skeptical of the '0 ••••• b, I p.m. til•• " ,teO...... , flm ,.,.11.. 11 •• , .eII...... munists were especially well NOT be ....'1 ••• y 1.1.,boDe...... t .. TYPID oa LlClIIIiI Extension of farm price supports needed American currency. United Nations. It will fail. in .J organtzed in essential industries ~ WalTTilf aad 1II01llED II, .. re., •••I,\I. ,.n... Wage rules, such as government workers' pay boosts Rud At the same time. Chile was his opinion. if "it meddles in the and saw fit to engineer paralys­ waging war on her mounting internal affairs of its members." Saturday, JUDe 50 I", raising of minimum wages ing strikes. However, as Sep.ator 'l'aft pointed out, this Jist is tentative and inflation. Her outspoken and Sud dell I y, Videla's patiencc active opposition to world com- incomplete-and he adds •• ruled nothing ,oot." snapped. . PRESIDENT VlDEL'A munism did not come from oul­ UNIVERSITY CALEND'AR Armed with emergency powers ·81,M About Paced side pressures, but from bitter Edit,Notes SaturdaY, J\lJle 5 Monday. JUDe 7 SUI Organizations - bestowed upon him by congress. experience at home. 7:00 a. m. Opening of cII.­ he ousted Communists from ap­ Exports to Europe may be low­ 9:45 a. m. University Com-' Gaspar Dutra ' and tite Brazilian Chile ,turned to challenging Rus­ men cement, Field House. in College of Law. pointive jobs in the government. armed fottl!!!. Brazililfl1s outlawed sia internationally in the UN only er this year than last year. Big­ 1:00 m. Summer 12:lJ() p. m. Firat Annual SlIver p. SesalOIl .... He attacked Communist strike the Communist party and ousted after the domestic rupture had gest drops will occur In cotton ilstration. Commerce Places Graduates tactics with a new fury. . textiles and ,' grains. German. Jubilee Luncheon, (All claSH' "f party chief Luiz Carlos Prestes occurred. Tuesday, JUDe' (This II the 19th of a serie. During this' JlerJod of transi­ from his seat in the senate. It is highly significant that the British and Italial1 mills will ac-, 1925). River Room, Iowa Memor­ ial Union. 8:00 a. m. Summer SealOIl re­ of articles deallq wltb ~Iver- lq IItudent& tion from working with tbe Growing Communist strength in move to outlaw the Communist count for most o( the difference gistration. 3:00 p. m. AU-Alumni Coffee alb' orranlzatloDL Otben will Already thls sprini many firms I Communists _and combattlpg Brazil-130,OOO votes in ' the last party is almost a law in Chile. in ~extiles. French and German Wednesday, JIIIHI • appear on tbls pa,e from time have sent congratulatory letters them, Vldela's popularity wllh election-influenced tbe decision. She is selting an example of pf().. gram harvests aTe expected to be .HCJOr, Iowa Memorial Union. 7:00 a. m. Opening of cia.. to tim_The Editor.) to the fraternity on its work. ac- his people soared, Things remained tense but quiet tecting national integrity and' the best since J,938. 8:00 p. m. Second AnnUlI Gol­ Frld.y, JUDe 11 Later in the fall of 1947. Chile in Chile until the Bogota flareup. den Jubilee Dinner. (All c.tasse. 8 p. m. Summer Session Lec· Making it easier for commerce cording to fraternity officers Guy securi ly. I· • • and Argentina uncovered alleged The country then lightened its Ail of Latin America has a Here is the joke of the week of 1898), River Room. Iowa Me­ ture: "What is Atomic Enel'l)'1" majors to find a job after gradua- Ames. headmaster. Frank Bar­ Communist plots to further under­ vIgilance of Communist activities home-grown champion to look to from Czechoslovakia: On a bri,ht motial Union. by W. W. Waymack, West Ap­ tloo-that·s the work of SUI's rett, senior warden and Edwin mine the Chilean economy. Videla and began considering whether or now. sunny day in Prague. Communil!lt 1:00 p. m. Commencement }lroach. Old Capitol (Macbride two professional commerce fra- Allen, junior warden. . Premier Klement

MilS Dean To Attend IF ITrs NEED·ABLE, IT'S WANT·AD·ABlE! USE DAILY IOWAN WANT ADS SLEEPING rooms. Phone 6981. Chosen To Rule Sorority Convention TWO ROOMS for men. StudY Lucille Dean, Valparaiso, Ind.• and bedroom. Dial 8361. has been selected as delepte of CLASSIFIED RATE CARD ·WHERE TO GO Not'ICE WHERE TO BOY IT WHO DOES IT the local chapter of Zeta Tau ROOMS for men for summer se5- Alpha, national social sorority, to CASH RATE SECURITY, Adv.",.....,t, BI&b HERB'S pick up. Baggage, llaht sion. 115 N. Clinton. Dial 8338. the Golden Anniversary conven­ If BverlUlloA' 10 Photo upplles tion to Oe held June 2f1 -to June }{°ilea 1 I Dan-Z00 per lIDe per 11&7, four weeD vacation a hauling, rubbish. Phone 5981 TWO double rooms for men. 509 411. year. Work lD the Job 70U lUte. 30 in Virtinia Beach, Va. h.~ At SCHARF'S or 7725. S. Luc&$ St. qUeen of I CoDaeeutlve da7_150 PH These are the bJIhlIt'tta In the Joanne Prokop, Gary, Ind., was 211. Une pel' day. New U. S. Ann7 &ad U. a.. AIr Iowa City'. Larcest ASHES and Bubbllh bauJ1n&, O-NE--OO-UB--LE-roo-m-cl-o-se-in-. ea-u selected 81 alternate deleeate. • Consecutive da7_IIo per Force career. See WSrt. O. A. Camera Store Phooe DeJa. 2061 alter 6. Helen Reich, assistant dean 01 of I'!p. lIDe pel' day. IIcClun" Room 2M POIt Oll1ce. 9 S. Dubuque DJaI 57t5 students and an alumna of Zeta of tlJtU. rtpre 5-word averaee pel' U.ae ROOMS for 3 student men. Call Tau Alpha, is the National Schol­ 1JIon. Hlnlmum Ad-Z Line.. TYPEWRITERS 80825 between 5 '" 7 p.m. arship chairman. She will be the TJpe1Vrlten Ieatured 5Peilker at the scholar­ / 1. Boucht.-8.eJIte. 8... ROOMS for rent for summer. ship luncheon during the meetine. local cirl CLASSIFIED DISPLAY alld Daily maid rvice, hot and rold I5c per Colllllln Inoll ~ Your A4cUnc Machblel Doris PIetsch, T. r·,..:::­ GRECIE STUDIO # I, Le Claire, Iowa. Enclose pic­ •. 'JUST BECAUSE A WATERMEt...6N 117 8. Da_Qae Dial '115 ture. FJl.Ol,'. W VINE HAS GRDNN TIlRU WANTED- : High school EngUsh A FENCE KNOlllOLE OVER INlO MIS YAW. HE SUGGESTED I '-:::K::E::-N:'!T::-::P~H-O~T~0~5~e-rv~I--~ i eacher who can direct girls' glee _ club. 38 miles from Iowa City. PAY HIM GROUND RENT" R:JR. ''/ ~ Pictures In The 1I0me Contact Supt. John L. Calkins, iNE MELON ON HIS PPDPERrY,I'~ Weddin&' Photoe Wes~ Chester, Iowa. ETTA ~ETT PAUL BOlrK80. AppUcation Picture. QualIty 35mm Dev. " Enlal'(­ tar. OUter IIpeclaUzed Photo­ crapby 1l5~ Iowa Ave. DIal 3331 WANTED ------~ LOST AND FOUlfD Fountain Help LOsT: Theta Tau fraternity pin engraved "Gene Hogan." Pind­ Apply Racines er please call 2698. Good Salary LOS ! I:Illlfold in vIcinitY Straud . Thtatet. Contains identification .-===='=== __--:::::--=:-:=~. ·1Mda. (James Marne) and money. • LOANS --- . ae,Ul'Il to Box 131. Iowa City or phone ~l56. Needed ul'gently...... loaned on camvu, fEMALE ,olden cocker, 5 months JUDI, clDthIn" lewe1r7, elcj. . . old. Reward. Call 4881. Rellatile Lou. - 101 Z. 151ll11DftoD TtiE DAILY 19411-PAGE SIX

SUI Alumni Gather. . For Gro. 'duation Reunions * * * * * * * * * Registration Continues Today Hea For (lasses of 1883 to 1947 By RUTH NESHEIM In ~ ,Classm:ltps of former days assembled yesterday and today for the annual l ive yrar reunions of SUI graduates. £leclion Reglstl'ation at lhe fowa Union which began yesterday noon and !lJloting will conlillll through today included members of classes from 1883 JllS jo.in to 1947. Over 75 had registered bst night. rnttrs 111 The ('lo~s of 1898 which is celebrating its golden jubilee this year l d , had 15 members registered. A traveling attendance cup will be award­ ~ovember s ed to the class with the ~argest Ooly one pe~centage o~ its living members Justice T. G. Garfield, Ames, the !II by the offICIally reglslered by noon 10- new president of the Alumni asso­ !iCJnS wilL day. elation. Presidents and organiz- ficeS- The A graduate 65 years ago, Mrs., ers of the reuniOns of each of the coe contest Eva Miller Nourse, Des MOines, is coUeges of the 25th year class will Iowa Cil), back to repl'esent the class of be recognized as well as Dr. J. K. ~peo from 7 1883. She is a graduate of the Von Lackum, Cedar Rapids, the balloting college Of liberal arts. retiring president of the Alumni firtt Two members of the law class association. JohnSon of 1898 were back on the campus • • • flni for I.he firsl. time in 50 years. Ed- THE ALL-ALUMNI coffee hour Jlawkeye w:lrd Sharp, New Maqrid, Mo., will be held I.his afternoon at 3 pIIIY, 221 SeCond and J .. C .. llalJ,~avenport, were p. m. in the main lounge of the busy v~ewrng SUJ s powth to the · Union. This event is for all Cit1 hall. west SIde of the nver, and the alumni who have returned to the StOOnd "new" buildings. campus and for all university fa- City parle 'I'he only living members of the cully. Hosts for this informal ga­ TJdrd medic:11 closs of 1888, Dr. James thering will be President and Mrs. Johnson W. Parker, and his wife Dr. Donna Hancher and the academic deans LOOKING OVER '1'HE AC'rlVlTJES planned for alumni nre (I to r) George A. Green, HollywoM, REGlS'I'EIUNG Fott ALUMNI activities lor ihls weekend is Leslie E. Francis, Des Moines. A grad­ M. Parker of Peoria, 111., have re- and tbeir wives. u;~tt" 01' tilt" law rla,~ of 189:1, AUy. Fl"al\cls was a. member of the Iowa Scnate for several yea.rs. turned to at\('nd the alumni activ­ Calif., Iowa Supreme Court Justice W.A, Smith, Du buque, and J.C. Hall, Davenport Former classmates, The coffee hour was introduced UnIversity high sl'hool ~tud('lIts I'eggy Miller and Belly Barnes help him register. Registration lor the ities. the three graduated In the la.w class of 1898, and are back this year for their golden jubilee. AUho.. ~ alumni bl'&all :Y1"telliav at the fowa Unloll, all(l will continue through tonight. A traveling attendance al I.he reunion program last year less than GO miles f.'om Iowa Uy, this Is the first lime Atty. lIall has returned to the campus . IIIN cup will be awarllt'd to the rlass wilh the largest )ereentage of membel's registered hy noon today. • • • to replace the all-alumni lunch­ hi s graduatJon 50 year ago. ' l\fR. AND MR . E. R. Ketchum, eon. The group is now too large Freeport, Tex:ls, have a double to be accommodated at a single purpose in attencling this year's luncheon;,. SUI graduation. The guests will be greeted offi­ Jury Brings Back Present Gift Plan 5 U I Summer Council Twenty-five years ago both Mr. cially by Hancher and by Gar­ and Mrs. Ketchum graduated from field. At this lime the traveling Iowa Drivers Sealed Verdict In • SUI. This y a1' Iheir daughter, attendance cup will be lIwarded to To Work Through WOl11pn's Associntion's Code for The f100ts will return tu the dor­ Ro~nli , will gradu:lte. the winning reunion class. To Use Birthdate In Topinka .. Worrell Suit From Seniors Copds giving "get-acquainted" mitories, froternities und sororities The Ketchums ore back to at­ The golden Jubilee dinner for License Renew~1 fncts nbout SUI. orter the purade and serv 3. tend their silver jubilee given this The Old Capitol 1, 1~1l which has the class of 1898 will 'be held to­ The jury of seven women Ilnd Executive Groups A II'UPI' f!'Ol11 Dpnn Earl J. Mc- hom e coming dE'(·or:ltions. The yem' in honor of all graduates of night at 6:30 in the River room at rung in and dismissed classes for the class 1923. five men returned a sealed ver­ For Ihe iirst limr, studcnt f:OV- Grath of thp college oC liberol chiet committee concern during ot the Union. This dinner was al~o When wlll I rellew my Iowa many years will soon be mechan­ art!; PXIJI:.1ining the core cpurse the summer will be to formulate dict at 9 o'clock las! night in ized. e1'l1n1l'Ilt at SUI will he (,lll'! il"d A gl'Oduate 10 m chanica] en- introduced for the first time last drivers' license? on by all uffici •. l orgnuimti(,n and other llniver~ity programs rules of entry fQl' the flouts in gineering, Ketchum has not l'e- year. Il is the university's special A new birthdate law goes into Marvin Topinka's $25,000 damage The senior class of 1948 Friday during till: surllln~r ("ssian. The ,lilt! a Ip\trl' of welcome from the parade. The commitLee term- t llrned t~ th~ campus for 121 function for all members of the 50 effect this year spreading I.he re­ suit against Mrs. M:ll'garet Wor­ night announced a gJfl lo the uni­ llultmun will he ~ent to ,lIl slud- ed " favorable" student reactiol\ to orpanizutiOln, tht' Studt·llt eIJullctl, year~ .. IIls wlfe h~s not been year classes. Hancher will speak, newal of about a million drivers' I·ell. versity of a grand masler clock will "I,noLc on .1 limilNI hasj~, Pllts applying for admission to the the plun. bock smce I.he famIly moved to and will award gold medals to :111 licenses over a 24-month period and equipment which will auto­ Nebraska in 1925. alumni present. Arguments were heard yester­ acc'ording to Jll'I"n It ,jch uf the 11l1lVerslty. 5. Camllus chest. This is a Stud­ rather than the usual six-month motically ring the Old Capltot Mrs. Ketchum graduated from . day morning in Johnson county bell. Announcement of the gill o(fi!'e of stutknt 'Ifr"rl S. Plans being drawn up now call ent cOllncil-sponsorrd project in- the college of liberal arts,. as will . In addlllo~ to the officlal rUnC­ period. district court. Ailer the noon re­ was made at the intermission ~I The f'}lcl'utive cOl1llJ1ittt'e of thc. fur u mu~s meeting or all new augurated in 1946. Next year's Rosnlie The KetcllUms nave bons sponsol ed by the university, The expiration dale in the low­ council and vnl'ious ('UWH']I or I ~ tlldcntR Friduy, Sept. 17, 1948, at Campus chest drive will be m:ln­ cess Judge Harold D. Evans gave the senior party at the Iowa UniOu tllr;p 'other daughters, two of classes of law, medicine, llber?l er left-hand corner of the persent the jury its instructlons and it cOllncil- ~: \l"ll >orl'd . llU-, lJllllllil\c·c'· 11:30 p.m. in Macbride auditorium. aged by Ruby Scott, an ex-of[icio by John Yavol'sky, Belle Plaine, whom attend the University of arts, denllstry, phannacy, engl- license is to be disregarded, ac­ retired at 2:30 to reach i ls deci­ chairman of the memorial com­ will opt'rate lIud"I' till' Sillne. IJOW- SpI'ecltes by faculty members and council member, and Harlon Texas. neering, commerce, and ~ursing cording to Captain Bay Ham of ers os till' elltirp cOlillcil. upper c1assmen and a short skit Hockenberg, Des Moines. The sion. The verdict will be opened mittee. • • • have planned get-togethers to the Iowa City police force. wIiI highlight the "introduce the drive committee of about 50 I)er­ lhis morning. The grand master clock will In­ ThL~ sumlll.-r, til<' eXl'l'ulivl' IN ADDITION to the oHcial honor graduates from 1896 to Ill'W dud~ntlo SUI" meeting. ~ons, yel to be selected, will he Under the new system, if the Topinka, farmer in northeastern clude auxiliary equipment for the cOlllwil will he c'ompo!;l2d of F.vnn rlnss get-togethers planned by in- 1943. numbel' of your license is over Johnson county, said his reputa­ L. lililtmun, cOllndl prefitlellt; K AI.,o at the meeting, 85 volun- organized into five branches: (l) dividual duss representatives with installation in Old Capitol of a 1~1'1' ol'ienlation lenders will be publicity, (2) entertainment, (3) • • • 500,000, l'cnewal must ')e made tion was damaged when Ml's. self-regulating clOCk and signat M. I,'I"'Jd Jr., vicf'-pI'Psilil'lIt, lind the assi, tance of the alumni office, TIlE COLLEGE of law honored within a 3~-day period b fore Worrell, his neighbor, signed an J{pi\h 1r'NUllan, lre:1 urI'!'. FiH' :w~ir.n('d 10 small groups of in- speakers, (4) solicitations, and (5) several speci:l l veil t s were graduates of 1898 at a dinner last system which wlll be extended I.· l'oming sludents. The ~rna ll group a general sec]'!:tury. The dates Jor your (irst birthday, o[ter July 5, information onarging him with ter to other buildings and class­ otht'r ('rHIIlI''' Illl'lnhl'rs who wrll pl:mnect. by the unlver~ity in hon­ night at Law Commons. Eight­ mectinp;s will be h£'ld Saturday, the drive h,lve not been set defin­ 1948. I.he rapp of her daughter. He said rooms I.hroughout the campus. be on eillllpu3 will act in :In adVIS­ or oJ relu I'll ing grud uates. een members of the class were Example: If your number is she later dismissed the charge. ory CIlIJtll'ily. Sept. Hl at 1 p.m., arcorciing 10 ilely. It will be some lime between The llni versi ty honored lhe present. The engraving on the plaque cm'rent commlUee plans. the middl oj October and lhe 550,417 and your birthday is Aug. The trial began Tuesday. Wit­ which will mark the gilL reads: Aeling .. ~ ::t CJordm.,lIng :1gcm­ graduates of 1883, 1888, ond 1893 The liberal arts claEs of 1918 ,)r first week in November, Co­ 23, renewlli must be made 110 ear­ nesses were heard Tuesday after­ "This' Cloek, the Memorial of the cy, thc ('xI'culive cnmrnitlpe will Thp meetings in effect wlll he. chairmen Scoll and Hockenberg at the Em rilus club dinner last which Hancher Is a member, will lier than July 23 nol' later than noon, Wednesday and Thursd:.tr. Class of 1948, is the control lor a ~uper\,j~p till' upe"ation, of llw question and :lnswer periods. New reported. night in the north dining room or hold a reunion luncheon at Cur­ Aug. 23, 1948. campus-wide clussroom time 51- ol'if'nl:rtioll, M'lliS rUlldron i nr :It the nll-cumpus elections next time this y ar In honor of all ' • • the train here and acknowledg­ Johnson county districl court yes­ test. this summer and their plulls fol­ spring. Officers elected then land, Morris J. Ward and Jackson gr:lduates who return to the cam- THE PLAY, "Years Ago", by ment will be made by officials terday. low: would serve the following year. C. Wenner. pus for their 25th reunions. , Ruth Gordon, Is scheduled for a of the American Heritage founda­ Mulford asked judgment [or the Membcrs of the board 01" direc- special performance tonight to ac­ 1. Orientatioll. Tne commillN' is Newly elected ofCicers, therefore, Four men sworn into lho infan­ years ending in "3" and "8", from tion, the group sponsoring the unpaid part of a bill for electrical tors of the Alumni Associatlol) commodate alumnI guests. Tic­ planning a new bookIe!, to be would be able to serve the entire try reserves were Sidney C. 1883 to 1943 were eligible for of­ train. services and supplies which be will be special guests. kets for the play are available at diLecl by D:lily luw"ll F.uitol' Gail yeal·. The new plan would replace Guthrie, Percy Niemann, Richard ficial [jve-year reunions this y.ear. According lo present plans the said he furnished Harkins when Speakers at the luncheon will the registration desk at the union lhe current fall class ejections. H. Timmins and Robert A. WL"ighl. train will be open to visitor~ from he was part owner of the O. K. E. Myers, tu repl:lce the 1I a 1111 book be Hancher, Dean Mason Ladd, until p. m. In charge of the preparations ~ Body shop in January and Febru­ for Studcllts. 'rhe new blll)klet wil l 4. Jlomecoming. Feature of the Tnree men sworn in as engineel' who graduated in the law class of More than 7,300 SUI graduates were Loren Hickerson, alumni se­ 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and the welcom­ ~ent all 1948 homecoming will be a parade reserve officers were U:lrlan L. ing program will take place shorl­ ary of J 947. be to l1Ien ullplyinq for 1923, and Iowa Supreme Court who received their degrees in crel.ary, Robert Nobie, executive admLsion to the univcrsity. It of floats sponsored by the housing Bjork, Phillip E. Morehead and assistant, and Mrs. Blanche ly before the opening of the train Kenneth M. Dunlop rePresents will be similar to the Univers ity units, :tceol'di ng to present plans. John W. Wickenkamp. * * * * * * Holmes of the alumni office. for exhibition. MuHord. Return-S~e Da ughter Graduated • • • I • • • Reminisces on Changed Campus '

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IIEL'PING II£R DA GIJTER, Rosalie, adju&t JII:r cap when sbe SWAMP COVERED THE ART BUILDING area wileD be a~ triell on her graduation attire yester/lay Is Mrs_ E.R. Kel.chum of school here, Edward Sharp of New MadrId, Mo., Cla. 01 1"', .... Frel'pod, Tt''tus. Mr. Kt:'trhulIl loolc Oll. Mr. and Mrs. Kel.chDm .Julian Moody of Des Moines, a. Ecnior law stud.CII&, lu& nlrll' 1& tile Law Commons. Sharp was olle of 18 m embers 'Of the are boUI f'lJI /I1'adna ll's nntl are attending Ule sliver jubilee of THREE EMERITUS OLU8 MEMBERS las& nlgM me& a& Currler NewtDn, Cl... of 1893; Mrs, C.L. Nourse of Des MoInes, ClaJIII of 18., ... the chIllS oC 1023 thIs weekend as w~ 1I as theIr dauehter'1 rradua­ nail before the annual dInner which honored SUI graduate. who re­ 18111, and 'Mrs. Francia Ro~el'll of Omaha, OlaJIII 'Of 18itS. cla.ss whiCh dined d lhe commons last night. lie returned UIia .­ ,Ion ~elved their derreH lIefore 1898. They are l\(ra. CraIe Wrl,b& 'Of (IDwan PhDtoa by FnuaceJI NeahehQ and Herb NIPlDn.). to the SUI campus rot the first time sillce he rraclua\ed. •