Ali-America Rising Temperatur .. Traok Team Nomlnal roWA: ."1Da WlQPerah1res today Meehllkey tor J:Wl Tlnuo THE DAILY IOWA"N with )~bt mow nurriH Rile Story on Pare 4 Iowa City's Morning Newspaper thl arternoob.

FIVE CENTS THI A8S00lATED raEBI IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1943 rae AI OelATIJ) .al8 VOLUME XLIll NUMBER 98 e e I rlY . / Chile to Break ,Axi Rei a t io ' n5 Fighting Forces Within 79 Miles - - --,.-.------I Of Big. Ukraine Industrial City RISING TEMPERATURES PIlEDICTED AS IOWA CITIANS SHIVER THROUGH SUB-ZERO WEATHER Kamenlk, Strategic German Outpost of Caucalui, Senale Follows Falls to Advancing Ru ••ian legions, Special Communique Says Suggestion Of By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MOOW - The Red army hu. reached a point only 7D miles from Kharkov, big Ukrainoindustrial city, in a continuing west· President Rios ward sweep that bas 1'1'. ulted in the eapture or 52,000 axis pri~. OnE'rR in one WE'Ck, it wa. announced officially last night in a spe· cial I.'ommnniqne circulated by the Soviet news agency Ta'!S. Formal Announcement Kam('nsk, 85 mil north of Ro tov, trategio Nazi ba e at the nOI·thwcstel'n corner of the Cal1C8 us, also fell to the advancing Of Axis-Chile Standing Russians, the special communique said, and field reports placed To Be Broadcast Today the Russian vanguard within 75 miles oC that vital enemy com· munications hub. SANTIAGO, ('hilc (AP ) - Vnll1iki and Urazo\,o feU to tho Ru iallS driving on Kharkov, Rnn lhe Red army now bas hurl d back the German to their 1941 The Chilean Sl'nlltl' \'ol('(l :10 10 invasion mark. 10 l\1l1t ni~ht (0 hl'('nk r('lntions Valttiki, an important railway with 1he axis, polit ica 1 somc('s Left Wing of British j unction for three lines, is 82 AAid, linn a Iro\'(lrnml'nf miles ea t of ICharkov, and Ura. nO"nc~m(ll1t Ifill'r I>llirl Eighth Army Wifhin zov is 79 miles from the steel ('ity. Pr('!;ident. ,lunn Antonio Rio. Ot the 52,000 prisoners taken would broad('118t to tll(, eOIl n IJ'Y 50 Miles of Tripoli since last Wednesday the Rusalans tonight on thl' "infi')'nfllionu) said 27,500 were Hunprlans, 22,- 4O-Mile-a-Day Sweep 000 Italians, and 2,500 Gennana. • siUlstion. " A"ls troops (ightln, under Ger­ '['If 0 ah. tentionq wC! r(' l'l'port­ Intended to Cut OH many's helm. w ere showIng cd.in the "01('. Fleeing Nazi Units marked signs of war weariness and readiness to alve up without. a The mm'!' would 1(,6\'(, AI'grn­ CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-The left hard fight, and the Rusaiana were tina o. thp fi iuA'l(1 Amf'riran reo wing of the British Eighth army encircling and crusblni them just public still maintalning relations II! hl\d swept aCl'oss the Tripolltanian as they had done to the Ruman­ with Germany, Italy and Japan. hump last night to within !$O miles ian force at Stalingrad. Alter weeks oC wrangling over or less Of Tripoli in an inland dash (The mldJ}I,ht Soviet COlll- ' apparently intended to cut in munlque beard In LoDClon .... the !/mue Foreign Mtntster Joaquin SlIOW lJuvy mittens, searls and overshoes were rlA'ht In style for university Expected flurries. although acco!ppanled by rlslnr temperature, may low down work today as state ahead of Mn~shal Rommel's flee- how the Jtusalans took ," Fernandez presented the motion tudent.l yesterday as 8ub·lero weather alld three·foot drifts made and local transportation companies try to resume regQlar schedules. Iowa CIUans crowded local bus IInel ing axis forces along the coast. trlUlU from tbe Italians oa &he aDlPus walkln~ prf!(luious. Margaret Holman. Al from Lakewood, yesterday as dav time temperatures dillPed to seven degrees below zero. Ray Justin. county engineer. to the senate, then went to Pre s i~ the advance had carried more Voronezh front,. and uled Utem dent Rlos' residence to lnfonn him Ohio. and Ellen Garms. also Al from Lakewood, are shown above as announced yesterday afternoon that 90 percent ot the counly hl&"hways were Ull blocked but that than 40 miles within 24 houra. to eentlnue their purtalt of a ol that body's vote. A public tnte­ they hurried to class. fully prepared for old man wlnte"'s worst. All crews, worklnA' all night. should have the main roads opened sometlmc today, Train service Willi ap­ (The Cairo radio, in a broadcast neeln~ enemy. . , menl is expected soon. unJverslty and city school . c) asses were held although some county prOximately olle hour late all yesterday and last night but local officials stated early this momln&' that heard in London by Reuters, re- (This bulletin that followed. the • • chools had to be closed beQau!Ie of IIJocked road . they hoped to be runlling on schedule soon. ported the llrltish had swept to special comm'mique said 1hll& in 1.'Il~l! ourI''' said It wa un­ within 30 mlles or TripolI.) offensive enga~ements soutb of dtf lOad all the I"adln&, poUtlc I The British right, driving along Lake Ladoga where the :ned army ".rtJes-(lon~rvative. Ubf'rlli. Charging Price Violc.tlon., I~legal Sole_- • ~. . . , ' ._. Peyrouto~ Appointed 1Demos Refuse t.he cOastal l'oads had reachC(l a has driven a relief corridor ladIeal Socialist. DemOC'rIltic. point beyond the settlement of through to Leningrad the Russlans­ ... CllllUllunl__ oted In favor Zllten in an area 80-ode;! miles captured four more enemy rood ., the motion. short of Tripoli and It appeared and ammunition dumps . • • • more and more likely that tbat (The Russians also were re­ .. 1f .. greU port, once the key to ltaly's ported to have killed 800 more colonial empire, would be indefen- Germans during the day in tbeJr ler Joaquin Fernandez to the sen- wide campaign yesterday agalrut this authority explained. A · I t sible, even assuming that a serious steady whittling down of the rem­ ,te, where he spent more than an I what Is called a black market in fusal on the part of the oUice or OPA regional attorneys met in AHempted Elimination PPoin men axis defense were oIlered. nants of 22 Nazi divisions trapped hour detaillni the iovernment' meat, moving against alleged vio- price administration to accept as Cleveland to set \IP a program The British communique an- before Stallngrad. More than 300 position. Members ot the chamber lations of price ceilings and boot- a working principle that neither against illegal meat sales, and Of All Pro-Vichyites nouncing the extraordinary rapid prisoners were taken in this pocket of deputie also attended the sen- leg operations tending to aggra- producers nor distributors can criminal actions already were un- Will Probably Result WASHINGTON (AP) - House movement ot General Sir Bernard as well as nine planes, 12 tanks, at~ debate. vate t.he shortages. reasonably be expected to con- derway in several districts. Democl'ats yesterday refused to L. Montgomery's army, said his several hundred trucks and other When Fernandez finished, the The "mcatlegging" took various (jnue to ()perate at a loss." Farm CooperaUon give a place 011 the important ju­ southern columns had driven tbe booty.) sehate began voting on a motion rorms around the country, oificials An office of price administration The OP A spokesman disclosed ALL lED HEADQUARTERS, diciary committee to Rep, Marcan­ enemy from the Beni UUd area in In the fighting from Jan. IS to putting It on record a supportini said. In some places livestock was spokesman said in Washington: that the agriculture department North Africa (AP)-The appoint- tonio ot New York, the sole Ameri­ hot, brief tank fighting, and were Jan. 18 the Russians said their the president's nction, to make belng slaughtered surreptitiously "Persistent reports have come was cooperating il') the drive, part- ment oC Mai'cel Peyrouton as gov­ can LabOi' pal'ty representative, in contact as early as Monday troops on the Voronezh front had Chile the 20th American republic In out-of-the-way, improvised ab- in irom all agricultural areas about Iy because of the alleged evasion ernpr general of AJgel'ia was an- and thereby spiked a threatened night with the axis towards Tar- captured 170 tanks, J,7oo guns, to break with the axls, lbatoir s. Elsewhere there were I black market operations and we of federal meat inspection laws, nounced yesterday and his ele- revolt in the Dcmocratic majority, huna, a town only 40 miles south- 2,1100 machineguns, 4,000 mortars, • • • charles that meat salesmen elt- naturally must do something about and also predicted eUorts t? per- "ation was taken by observers now the ~ Hmme st in 10 years. east of Tl'ipolJ. 6,000 trucks, J,500 horses, 55,000 (Radio La Americana reported acted above-ceiling premiums of It." suade farmers not to sell theIr cat- here as a sign that there would be Members of the Dies committee There was evet·y indication that rifles, about 10,000,000 cartridges, the vote wa 30·to·l0, with two several cenis a pound be [ore they Extra-Legal Prices tIe to .anyone b~t known buyers in a thorough housecleaning of pro- had cited Marcantonio's opposi­ the swift momentum of this pur- approximately 600,000 shells, and abllenttOllll. Ibe federal com· ,would sell meat. ~ A typical report, this spokesman established bUSiness. Vichyites by the deadly pOlitical tion to rearmament legislation be­ ~ ult WaS rising rather than falling, more than 150 vaL'ious supply RlIlDkatlons !!:lid.) )1 Job of 'BunrUnf' added, was of "meatleggers" gOiDg Aside from sanitary aspects, the enemy of Pierre Laval. fore Germany attacked Rus ia and and tllus that the approache to dumps. • • • Meanwhile, "bureaucratic bung- to farmers and buying cattle at chief threat in the black market Am9ng the pro-Vichyites in Ai- had said he was associated with 'l'ripoli we.,·e now in British hands Chile, which alon with Ar en- ling" was blamed by Mrs. Rose higher than market prices, taking. l sale of meat was said to be the geria most likely to go at the in­ "Communist-front organizations." in the long march that had brought tina oC all American nations had Marie KieCer, sccretary-manllger the cattle to hidden slaughter hou ~ - effect of the illegal meat prices on sistence of Peyrouton, who is Southerners led the opposition Sir Bernat'd forward more than Allied Troops BeHer been maintaln!n, relations with 01 the NaUonal AsSociation of Re- cs [or butchering, and peddling the the cost of living. If the black known as a ruthless administrator, to Marcantonio, who has support­ 1,100 mile~ since he broke Rom­ the axis po\Ver~, has been debar-- tail Grocers, for meat and dairy meat at extra-legal prices, either market in meat continues, a sub- is Charles Temple, Laval-appoint­ ed anti-lynching and anti-poll tax mel's El Alamein Une in Egypt. ing the step for many w ek•. The products shortages. Hundreds or direct to the public or through stantiaJ part oC the population cd prcfect of Algiers, a post second legislation, The New Yorker attri­ Ail' reconnaissance showed en­ Sanananda Positions senate was ready to vot in De- communities 10r weeks have lackeli retail stores. will find its food budget increased in importance only to the governor buted the decision t.o "the forces emy columns streaming westward cember, but at the reque. t of Presl - adequate supplies oC these pro- B'ecause of this diversion of considet'ably because of the high generalship. of domestic FasciSts, most of whom toward ihe Tunisian. frontier with dEnt Juan AntoniO Rios po!tponed ducts, she told a senate committee meat, many legitimate packing prices demanded by meat boot- Ttmple also is director general have entrenched themselves in the Eighth anny in relentless pur­ Pocketed Jap Forc .. action awaiting a report oC InterIor in Wushington. Responsible in houses are getting little more than leggers, since legally-priced meat oC the French postal and telegraph congress by the undemocratic poll suit. Suffer Heavy LOII8I Minister Raul Morales on 11 trip pnrt at least, she declared, were enough meat to till their orders would tend to disappear f"om the system. tax." (If Rommel had the in~ntlon he had made to the United StA te. "bUl'eaucratic bungling and a re- for the armed forces, lend-lease stores, the officials said. • • • The action was taken at a Demo­ of taking refuge behind the Tunis­ AI~ng Swampy Beach Peyrouton. a former French cratic cau\=us, and Rep. Starnes ian Mareth line, however, he was ambassador to Argentina. who (D., AJa.) declared its action racing toward a position which al­ ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN 1'5 Japanese Vessels once signed an order for Pierre "avoided a break in the party" and ready was threatened by the flank­ AUSTRALIA, Wednesday (AP)­ Third Daughter Born Laval's arresl but who at the "undoubtedly resulted in a morc ing movement of a force of Fight­ American and Australian jWli1e Peg Satterlee Sunk by U.S. Subs united and harmonious party re­ 3 Iowans Die same time played hand-In.glove ing French and allied French of fighters t i g h ten e d their lines Operating in Pacific with Vichy, apparently had the lfltionship ~o vital and essential Gen. Henri GiraUd, who had joined around low' pockets ot doomed. ,To Crown Princess at this hour of history." full approval of the allied fOV. hands in the Sahara. Japanese in the Sanananda sector WASHINGTON (AlP)-Fi v e ernments. The commlttec on committees (A Frencb spokesman at north of New Guinea yesterday after lells of Cruise In Farm Fire apparently will attempt to find a African allled headquarters said taking the village and point Mon­ Juliana of Netherlands J3pan~se ships, including a de- • * • It is understood that any ne14 place on some other committee for these forces were threaterun, Ga­ day, stroyer, were sunk by American Marcantonlo, who argued that his dames lrom all sides after cleaning LOS ANGELES (AP)- Peagy OTTAWA (AP)-A third daugh- GUTHRIE CENTER. In. (AP)- appointees in north Africa have Japanese were pocketed on the La Rue Satterl • brunell Holly~ submarines in the Pacific during five years of house service en­ the Italians out of the Sahara and coast on both sides of Sanananda Three persons were burned to the approvar of the British and ""oed entertnlner, described In ter WIIJl born last night to Crown recent opel'aUons, the v.avy an­ American governments, and Pey­ titled him to the judiciary assign­ capturing Gat, Sel'deles and point and in two places aloni the lllperior court y terdny her week- Princess Juliana of the Nelher- nounced yesterday, and two other death in a farm fire tragedy here routon hnd a }ong talk with U. S. ment. UbarL) swampy Sanananda road wbJah end cruise aboard Errol Flynn'. land, and the line of succession craft were damaged. Monday night. Lieut. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower leads to the beach, Enemy CBlual­ Yacht on which, she charg ,the In addition to the destroyer, ties were described 88 heaVJ but \0 the tbrone, for which a Inale the ships sunk were a small pa- Coroner Harold Hill identified two days ago, . the victims as Mr. and Mrs. O. M. A former Vichy minister of the no figures were given. Twent,­ IIlOvie star twice raped h r. h il' bas not been bol.11 since 1851, trol vessel, a medium-sized trans- seven were captured. Some Japa· Flynn Is being tried on statu- r mained unchanged. ' port and one large and one med- Ruby, both in theil' early fifties, jnt4rio'r, Peyrouton su~ceeded Workers at 5 Anthracite Plants nese e.caped from dugouts and lory rape char. s made by Mi. $ The 33-year-old Q'ownprincess jum-s~zed cargo ship. Yves Chatel, who as ' a member of Satterlee. 16, and blonde B tty Iand her thlt'd child are "doIng ~ ~ ______aDd George M. Morse, 87, Mrs. the imperial council aided in Ute were wanderinl at larie. lIinlen, 17. well," 8ald the attending physician, Ruby's fAther who was visiting. selection of Gen. Henri Giraud as TbC! namber eaptured ~ _- Miss Salter! e t slitl d the Yll cht Dr. John PO. PuddlcOmbe. them from California. successor to the assassinated Jean Vote 10 Continue 20-Day Strike 1I8.an, larn. trip was mad to n arby Calalinll A son would have become auto- CITIZENS' DEFENSE Bodies oC the three were iound Darlan. Elrb&eeD Jap bombe" ~ It was understood that Chatel tbe 8aDeMDda area ID ....- ufllId in Augu t, 1041 , with Flynn matJcaJly heir to the throne after CORPS in the ruins of the Ruby farm home and his companion, Buster Wiles. the)' 19oing Queen WilhelmIna and is leaving for Lisbon with his WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (AP)-rsteps" to protect the nation against &empt to aid &heir beleaperei Ind another IIlrt whos nam ahe PL'inccss Juliana. 6:45 p. m.-Commander Rol­ I three miles northeast of here yes­ wife. One oC ·the objections to Workers at flve strike-bound an- "serious injury to the war effort" rroUDd torcet bat tbe COIDJMJlt­ eould not recall. Ttl llttle princess, who weighed lin M. Perkins will interview terday morning. The tragedy was him, it Is reported. is that he had thracite collieries voted yesterday would be enforced by iovemment qae said the at~" - 1IJII1Ie­ 'Alter reachilli the island the 7 pounds and 12 ounces, Is the Air Raid Warden Don Mallett, discovered by a neighbor, John been in toucrr with Vichy since to continue their 20-day-old walk- seizure of the closed mines, witb- ce.luL fOUr had 80m drink ru bor , th n first member of the royal House associate director of the uni­ Flanery. the allied landings in north Af­ out, three of them balloting for out the use of troops. The first diaclosure ot the PreII- l'tIumed to th boat. Miss Snt- of Oranie to be born outsid~ Neth­ versity office of student affairs, Hill said it was believed all rica. hours after President Roosevelt As commander-in-chlef of the ence of any enemy submarine in Over station WSUI, tetlee aald 8h w nt to bed in her erlands ten'itory, and the !irst three were trapped by the llames • $ ... demanded lhe strike be ended, armed forces, President Roosevelt Australian waters in several IIIttroom, wcarlng her under- member or any Europea~ .royal Tomorrow, 7:30-The clvll In upstairs bedrooms, Monty Ruby, .. Ite was offlCllally delClrlbed as ' Local unions representing 1:200 served notice on strJklni anthracite montha came with the announce- elotblna. Sbortly afterword , sh fnmlly to be bom in Norih Am'erl- air patrol and CAP cadets wIU 15, only cbild of the Ruby'. at­ bein, "Called upon for other workers at the Wbodward c011lery miners yesterday that they must ment that a small allled vessel had 1Iid, Flynn ent red. 1alked lUI cn. ' met:t in room 106 of the law tends Guthrie Center .high 'school functiOns" - wbloh were not and 1,500 at the No. 7 mine of return to work within 48 hours or been torpedoed and sunk. Tbere her and "had Intercour e with mc," Rct rathel', Prince Bernh¥d, buJldlng to discuss the physio­ and had remained in town Mon­ likelY to be Important. Susquehanna Colliedes company he would take the "necessary were two casualties. 'MIll Satterle tesUlled Flynn's hnd flown rrom Britain recently logical eCfects of flying. day night because of the storm. Monday, Tuesday and Wed.­ • • • , had made a similar decision, ai- steps" to protect the nation allaiNt ..our Japanese bombe" raided Iecond a1leied seduction of h r to be hue 101' tho event. AJthou(!h Peyrouton is a con- though 5,000 strikers went back "serious injury in the war effort." Milne bay "without eUect" Mon- nesday, Jan. 211, 26 and 27- 0I:turred jUlt betor the yacht Her gi,tet's are Princess Beatrix, Named Honor Man troversial figure because of his to their jobs yesterday at other The chief executive's warninl, day nlcht, tollowinl u~ a much I'fached the Los An. lei ,harbor. who will be 5 on Jan. 31, and Prln- The second series of general SAN DIEGO, CaUf. (AP}-De- record as a Vichy collaborationJst, pits scattered throughout the dis- possibly implying that troops blUer raid about noon Sunday. couraes will be held. Rettlmln. home, Mi!s Satterlee cu Jrene, 3. As maUers now stand scribed by his commanding offi- it is undl!rstood that his firm but trict. would be djspatch~ to the mi/les, Allied air raids were reported PeP. I, 2 and 3-Gas d.elense IIId ahe de crlbed the yachting PrlnoclI8 Beatrix, a4 >t he oldest of cer as an example of a good mar- ~emperate hand with the Arabs Meanwhile, a general belief was telegraphed to loca) and na- on the Gasmata airdrome in New trlp to her mother, MrtI , Rose Sllt- the dau,hters, 18 heiress to the clB8seIJ wJ1l be held. Feb. 8 and 9-Flre defense ine, Pvt. Tyrone Power, former and his past record as a north Af- prevailed among the estimated 12 - tional officers of the United Mine Britain, supply dumps in the Lae terlee, who accompanied he,' nell t throne ntter the Crown Prlnceas film star, wa~ l'\Ilmed honor manl rican administrator were pOints 000 men remaining on strike th~t Workers. The War Labor board sector, buDdlngs and hutlin Por­ CI!l~8eos will be held, ,d., to \)r. Etta GI'ay for n physl- JuUana, who will succeed Queen of his p.latOon at the marines corps which recommended his appoint- the president's order, in whicb he had advised him that the strikers tu,uese Timor lnd • town in the fa! el~mlnatlon. Wilhelmina. ' ~----______---l base yesterday. . ment. said he would take "necessary (See STRIKE, Pille 5) Kat I1landl...... I ju,.::!f\ ...... ~ .. • ~N~ tI' THE IDAILY IOWAN, IOWA' CITY, IOWA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1943 ~ PAGE TWO ' . . , I , ~wa M tuw , but in their evel'Yday life, in theil' " THE DAILY IOWAN con ideratiou of other people and above all OFF IC I A L DA I [Y BU L tE 11 N'" Publisbed every morniDJ exceDt Monday by Pte!1 ill their ambition . A pI'of or who is able to to Student Publications Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa, increa e the force of ambition in hi student 51i rather than to di coura e thcm is the typ Wit~ Board of 1'rustees: Clyde W. Bart, A. Crail of man that we wa11t at Iowo because we 'want Baird, Kirk H. Porter, J ack Moyers, Glenn Iowa, tbe students of Iowa, and tnc prole or Horton, Blaine Asher, Ell7.abeth Charlton, Dan ON ~OUR DIAL Wednesday, Ja.tuary 20, 1&43 McLaughlin, of Iowa to lead t]le nation. \ • • • TODAY'S HlOHLIUnited states Navy. 6-News, Fulton Lewis Jr. 7 to 9-p. m. on the third floor of Macbride o"er what PI' id nt R 0 velt woulc1 a k of cecu to tho waiting room where coffee, oookics Pl·Of. H. W. Saunders It reaches the airlines over CBS. 6:15-11arry James and His Mu­ hall, there are supplementary ex­ the 7 th eon~1"eI!~, ond IT. Wallnc 'I! l' C nt !lnd cigarette arc . ned you. Aud the wo­ 11:50-F'arm Flashes sic Makers PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS hibits in various parts of the build. claborstion of his ideas on post·war plamting,. men who ha\'e offered their sor\'ice at the 12-Rhythro Rambles MONTE WOOLLEY OUEST 6:30-Easy Aces All new students should make ing. The custodian is in attend­ cantoen do theil' utmost to make yow' visit 12:3&-News, The DailY IQwan STAR- 6:45-Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost appointrne:lts for physical exami­ ance and will be giad to show Monte Woolley joins Ose&r • • • enjoyllble. 0 much 0, in fact, that Olle fel­ 12:45-Religious NeW\9 Reporter Pel'sons nations at the office of the wo­ VIsitors where the exhiblts are I- Musical Chats Levant, George S. Kautmall and 7-Nelson Eddy men's gymnasium. located and 1.0 furnish question. I f ,111-, Wat'i1111 spoko fo)' /rim 'cll, and low we heard aid ho'd "gh'o a pint evel'Y 2-Victory Bulletin Board Morton Gould on tonllfht!s 7:30-Dr. Christian PROF. MARJORIE CAMP naJl'es when de ired. nothing more, his tlttCIlt IIts have little day just to get frec rofreshmonts." "Cresta Blanca Carnival" ovec HOMER R, DILL The cantcen women lllllst realize the ysluo 2:10-Recent and Contemporary 7:55-News, Cecil Browl1 8igllifica1tc6. Bnt if hi' $ ntim nt e:r p"C8S Music, Prof. Philip G. Clapp the Mutual network at 8:15, 8-Lionel :aarrymore, Mayor of Y. M. C. A. TRAVEL BUREAU Director of theil' work if everyone voice similar com· thos8 of / Ite Ame,.it'an L cgioll, 0)' if his 3-FamOlL~ ShOl'1. Stol'Y W.oolley is best remembered for the Town All car owners who are driv- fecli1tl/S bcco llt ,. II cted ill Le(jion pliment . 3:S6-News, The Dally Iowan his portrayal of the title role in 8:30-Good Listening ing out of town and who have COSl\[OPOLITAN CLUB policy (and L giOll 1)oliclf is It 1)Ol() trill 3:35-Thc Freshman Takes the the Broadway success, "The 9-Great Moments in Music room for extra passengers are Cosmopolitan club wlll meet Man Who Ca.me to Dlmler." A1n1l1'iclt1& political f orco), tll It his "(­ Platform 9:30-Man Behind the Gun aElted to reglster their name, des- Sunday, Jan. 24, at 4:30 at the marks have fUI'·l'cu.('/tillg impliclttion. For 4-Reminiscing Time 10-News, Doug Gt'ant Hnation and available space at the home Of Dl·. lI'1d Mrs. Arthur Washington in Wartime STEPHEN FOSTER NIGHT- Y. M. C. A. office in Iowa Union SteindJer, 103 MelI'O$e. Election o! it~ e lIce they are (lying 10 the 4:15-Treasury Stal' Parade 10:20-News Analysis, William Ameri­ Charles Kullman, Metropolitan by a personal visit or by calling 1 officers wiu be held and a supper can pcopl ; "DOll't look alt .ltd, don't 4:30-Tea Time Melodies opera tenor, makes another guest L. Shirer 5-Chlldren's Hour 10:30-Treasul'Y Star Parade X551. Persons desiring rides may wlll be served. Please make reser­ consider what may b , iltst naht tTt war. appearance on "GL'eat Moments in likewise register. v;\tions with Margaret Ems, 530 Moral of This Story~ K~ep 5:30-Musical Moods Music" tonight at 9 o'clOCk when lO:45-Guy Lombardo's Band Theta, whell, that is won. we'll see 1l'l!cl"( 5:45-News, The Daily Iowan ll-News RICHARD WOOTERS N. Clinton, X8262. togo lIC;tJt." a s~pH n ~t.el' night is to be Cha1l"UJan Ll:E FAH YIH 6-Dinner HOur Music pre~nte~ ea" TennYSqn, so­ 11 : 15-Blue Barron's Band Your Under Your Hal r lt~ent J , Boasts ~:450--Defending Your Home and prill1l1, ljnd obert Weede, bari) 11:30-Neil Bondshu's Band · . .. Mine l2-Press News GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP tone, also are to be heard. George 7-United States in the 20th There will be about 12 Lydia C. NEWMAN CLUB UllfOl'ililltltely tll' wodd will lIot, as did W A 'IIl 'U'fON-'l'ho cupital in wartimc; Sebastian conducts. Roberts graduate fellowijhips for Newman club will hold a sup- ' the eastle und its ocell pants in an old fairy Century, Prof, H. J. Thornton MBS , , 'rIle army'll dri \'e to end the conceit and 7 :30-Sportstimc NBC-Red WGN (720) next year available to graduates per Sunday, J->Ul. 2 • in the ],li,ne tale, uspend aeti\'ity the day the lam shot bl'agglldocio that often l'csult in blabbjllu in­ 7 :45-Music in America MIO (1040); WMAQ (670) of nn Iowa college or university room of Reich's-b;lfel at 6:30 p. m, is fired. Poopl will hll\' to flO right on trad­ formation of yalue to tho onemy brought out S-Music Hour 6:30-Californla Melodies ior study at Columbia university. All Catholic students al'e invited ing and manuf8ctU1~ ng and eatiu/!. And thif! !lton' of a boa t that backfil·ed. 8:45-News, The Dally Iowan 6-Fred Waring in Victory Tune 7:30-Just Five Lines Applications should be made be­ to attend. ReServatlol1l! may' be fore Feb. 15 in the office of the made by callil'\i Catherine Har­ governm nt will have to l,'ontinue functioning, It happened on an airliner bound from 9-Drama Hour Time 8:15-Cresta Blanca Carnival more effici ntly than befol'e, to meet il]e 1)081.­ dean 01 the college of llberai arts, meier, 4472, 01' ~ary Modesta Pitt. bm·rrh to WIIshillgton. He WIl/; just 1\ war train to which it w:ill b 'ubjected. And or direct to Philip M. Hayden, sec­ Monnig, 2745. garruJou pri"ate and he wor' the starred retary, Columbia univerSity, New right no\v, before the nations aud peoples of .li:J) BOWMAN, bar that showed he ]lad beel] in action. Latest Associated Press News York City. l'res1dent the world arc throwuinto the posi·wlll' pit, In n voice that earrieoo. . and other cmploy('s, . . but with all important addition. anywhere unless he adds the pro- tUl'e 101! its day." Its day WDS 11132, What the post·war world will b like, 110 Re". Thoma Bool'de, pastor of t he Aua­ The national genius has gone into viso that it may be opened only- Ten years ago, and Jt has had ill one can say. But certainly it wiLl be more costia Baptist ellllrch here, took up the matter adapting western inventibns with and then in greatest prlvDcy-by day. satisfactory £01' planning and conllideratiov, 'in a el'lnOn I'ccently, saying that" making the amazing cleverness to' the Japa- serious, accredited students 01 And Mr. Le ar proposes to pre­ than for a blind entrance into it when the ohureh II colloeting agency undoubtedly vio­ nC6e need, 'Dhe low ranli: of Japan's dramatic history, each pledged not serve fOl' po terltY' the generoUi shooting eeft!JeS. ' lat the principle of the eparatioll of church women is very well explained, and to bring a friend to tho ghoulish IIrt of Our CIlH!)nt tovorltel- the fact that Japanese men. are ritE:s. Helen Hayes aud Katherine Cor- and stHte. " responsible to nobody tor their • • • n Il tlnd Tallulah Bnnkh ad amonl ]n Tlto Lntherall, chUl'ch paper, it was rc­ moral" least of all to their !tlm~ For it is to be doub\.ecl that uny others from the wtagc, Dietrich, ported that Rc \,. R. G. BauculD, vice-pl'esi­ llies, has a connection with her artistic medium changes so up- Hepburn, Colbert ot als, !rom the 'Professor.of the Year'- d nt of the Baptist General COJlvention of conduct, now, in the conquei'ed Jdly 01' so noticeably as the mo ~ screen. He']] save- Utem, with all Ttu:8S, de~lared: "It (the collection clause of lands. tion pictut'e. OUI' sta\'8 today are their mllnnerl.m, for 10Q ye'" Joeepb taliJ}. wilo hit · j ushed back tile the bill) opens our churches to bureaucratic Intimately connected are Japan's wonderful c rea t u r e 8 - by our from now wh n, tor all we- know, Germllh jO\'sdm, wall-elected b' Time nt~ga .. control. This- gives the federaJ govel'lfment the heartless exploitation ot her own standards. They ad (11 they act wleviaion may be outmoded, radio and her exp]oltatJon at 8ueh to please tOdDY'S audi nc') the and :fllml! mlly be antlquea, and zpe' /bj tbe rolln ot the yeat~ .Pt!rbapl{ neKt l'igh.t to check om' chul'en fin&n~ .' ': • poor lands as l(orea.' · and odlUpted way WII like ~o Ullnk that I,Ulnllll c\'ery human , ·in. mil,v Qe '" Treasury officials said th.ey had reeei ~ed ~o. y~ QiOther JDaJl~ll. take:!iia place tit If' ital li offie~ p'r.otests on the .Ou:~ ,9~. ~ I-~,~~rtiilst~~' i,nbl~ , Clllt b6il fl .aot: ThIlY',t61or UI. today, ovn htU. ~ F, 4elJ~t.I" .' w1~lIJa\ ~er. Wliy dtia'twe t.ak6:0V6~ tIie idea:.. as yet InAttet, ~ ' ~ap.he s~ , I W~' 1i h6WL.~t ~Ot ~oo Yfar~ h.n ~ • twwd to Pla)';~ \ h,ja , own , ~~oWn ' ealilfu!i _MleGt. our. t, romsoi reoord, ~e, opinion w~ ~~~ fJi6, ,ttt.. ~ ~at ' ' it 1* .r;a~ AD,fbOdy who 1\,. IO~ tlU-ouah rot, 111 th4 ~c 4tama~t . 6t "f - ,. " matte~ would have te SO biclt t6 . . J6r­ fOt~ to shoW ~6ri- ~&Ueisi: it ~ Pauln. tQrt1,ll" ot 8"1nl a t4-= ~'of 'ntt~ ~bl~t1On • e wouiJ choOse' fo! thi. htlllClt a'tilaIll ,t1iat an- Itmendment to the tfl.x Jaw Itef~ otl\er ' 18 ·-not bad form to ao into a vj val of on old , we)\-lov~ movl. chines, or smokIng permitted ~ sadistic orgy behind closed doors. will get the point of this. Many th balcony. ' ~uld inspire hie students Dot only in their lllPllllA of '(,olwrtioll rOllIn I'll' l'1'SI)l'tpn to.

.. I I THE nAtty IOWAN, lOWA CITY, rOWA PAGE THREE ~wa Mountaineers 'HALE AMERICA' ENTHUSIASTS IN RUSSELL HOUSE Today MEET THE GRAY FOX Jack Johnson ,~ Present Program 11 Organizations Whh Slides, Movies Plan to Meet Will Lecture Double Four-Home of Mrs. Olin "The Impact of International 'l'he Iowa Mountaineers wtl\ pre­ Hauth, ] 824 Muscatine avenue, Relatio~ on. Social Welfare" will te'!t a ptoi[am dealine with Colo­ 8 p. m. /1"0 mountain flowers a!ld sk1 ltl,lr be the subject of a "World Tadn)''' Order or Eastern star, J cs,..amlne lecture by Jack T. Johnson, In­ ~ I4'orld champions tomorrow Chapter No. 13 5 - Masonic Wfnl!lf nt 7 :30 In room 223, ~n­ s1rul.'tor In the pOlitical science temple, 7:30 p. m. department, who will speak to­ .lneer1hl building. E... ll8h Lutheran Ladiu rulld­ 1'Ite tlrst porUon of lhe prn. night at 8 o'clock in room 221A, HOllie oC Rose and Nell Schmidt, Schaeffer hall. ~ win deal with ColorAdo wild 313 N. Linn street, 2 p. m. n~er8 found between ~,OOO and Johnson Is an Iowa alumnus, Ro,.1 Ne\a'hbors Iocige-K. of P . having received his bachelor of 1.,000 ,feet above sea J vel. 'the hall, 7:30 p. m. arL~ degree from the university in ~odacHromc pictures were taken Baptist Women's assoclation­ 1935, hb master's degree In 1936, hf A. Gayle Waldrop, dlrectOl' of Home of Mrs. L. R. Morlo~, JIIOunliln recreation for the UI1I. 120 E. Market street, 2:30 p. m. and his Ph.D. in 1938. He has ceen ymity of Colorado, Women's Assoclallon ot the Con­ a member of the faculty or the The descriptive notes were pre- cregatlonal church - Congrega­ political science department since l ".red by :prof. J OReph Ewen of tional church parlors, 2:30 p. m. 1940. ih~ satile university. The nnr~n­ WOlJIan's SOCiety or ChrlRtian Ser­ Townspeople, as weil as unlver­ lion oh the program will be glvM vice. - International group­ sit.y faculty members and students. ~y Mrs, Ji. Clay H{ll'shblltller, Fellowship hall or the Metho­ are invited to attend the lecture. Dated ,fown flowel' outhorlty nnd di t Chlll'ch, 2:30 p. m. author. University club - Clubrooms of The second porlion of 1M eve- Iowa Union, 10 a. m. SUI Stud-;;.;-l 111",'5 program wlil f aWre n mo­ Reed auxiliary of Presbyterian In Hospital I tiOn pictUre photographed in the church-Home of Mrs. Ilion T. Autrlan Tyrol and generally re­ J ones, 609 S. Summit street, 2:30 ....-Martin----=------Dishllp, D3 o{ Sioux City,. fOCIIued 0 thc III' nlest skiing ~ . m. ward C34 . film ever made. The Cllst includeS Altrusa club-Private dining room Jack Bass, G of Carbondale, m., II-"nl!l Schneider, world's cham­ of Iowa Umon, 6:30 p. m. isolation pion .kler, and 50 or the world's WOIIIen of tbe 1'I008e-w8r relief Stuart. Briggs, Al of Sumner, lIMt International skiers. ~ '" , commltl Moose hall, 7:Hi isolation Admlttance to th program Will I ---. - ~. -. - . - -- - _. . p. m. Miriam Baranoft, At of New­ be ' by membership or by t.IcketB Wom .. n In Ru §ell hllulie belan nightly physical tltnpss ""C"r"lsrs as a part ot thell" " Hale America" pro­ arir, N. J., child ward C IV,allable from members. Because gram early lu t lall. Id the enG or last semester tholr attendance recnrd WILli !ltIll peHect. Under the The gray fox, common In pncUcaUy all parts of the United states, Marilou Mosshart, Al of Prince­ climbs (rees, where it pursues prey and food A common belief 'Is of limlle(\ selltine capacity, UI.'Iu!Lq dlrection of Maxine Hunt, AS of Ea,le Grove, they kICk and strech on II. room eonte§t buls. Shown 4 Astronomers Take ton, Ill., isolation aIIOuld be obtl\lnE'd betor tomor- lIlU$traUnr various stares of the "airplane" exercise, guaranteed to make yoU feel your fittest, are, left that the tox is a robber of chicken yard and duck pens. Beu.UIIe William Franey, Ml ot Cedar tow evening. to right: Paullu6 Steele, A2 of Anamosa; Marilyn Watterson, Al of Agency; Ruth Lleb. Al of Pocahontas: fanners usually protect their ,rounds, however, the tolt turns to field Rapids, ward C53 .w~l:t'n Oook. Al of Atlantic, and Mary Ford, 'All 01 Mt. Vernon. Government Positions mice, rabbits and IllI4!(lta, The fur 01 the ,ray tox Is 'he leut valuable Jack Swanson, C4 ot Ames, C33 ot any lox , kilts. This anlma.l may be found mounted and on dlspla)' Lillian Castner, A2 of Des - Four former assistnnts to Prof. In tbe UbIversUy museum. Moines, C3l Carndtion Rebekahs, C. C. Wylie of thc astronomy Janet Butler, Al of Bethany, .CONSUMERS' department are now using their Mo., C53 Past Noble Grands Oswlll Fals, M 1 ot Cedar Rapids, 8 technical knowledge to aid the American Brides laugh Over Old Custom . CORNER To Meet This Week war effort. All lour have secured isolation positions relaled to air naviga­ Marvin Wilcox, A2 of What The Post --Noble Grands 01 Car­ tion. Of Dunking Parents, Telling Bees About It Cheer, isolation lolf U's n Book You Want to nation Re.bekah Lodge No. 376, and J. W. Kitchens is with the time (Note: No visitors allowed ~ Knit, It's a Good One to Gi ve" is Isolat Ion.) service of the United Slales naval If you see two elderly couples country when you think that a thttheme of the 1943 Victor)' Book Carnation Rebekah Lodge No, 376 will meet this week. observatory, while J. F. Foster is ca:ra.. This drive, sponsored teaChing navigntion and military rolling down a snowy hill while a Hindu suitor's father must wait jalnUy by the American Library · . .. astronomy at the University of laughing younger couple watches until the father of tHe bride hears Mrs. Ralph L. Rayner, re('ently the American from the top, yoU will know they the cry ot the lfiards from the ~lation, Red elected plt()sldent of the Past Arizona. Crou~d the United Service or­ Lieut. J. R. Naidcn of lhe army are just following nn old Russian south belore he will accept the Np~ Grnncls of 'Carnatlon,Rebe­ ca n~ti9na, is being conducted air forces Js navigation instructOl' custom which decrees that to be proposal. k~h "'Lodge No. 316, will preside hap,pHy married, the engal:ed pair Pity Big Sister ~m.ran. 5 unUL March 5. :\t a: meclJng oC the organization and J)'1ember of the wing staff of ', SUch .a.project should supply an the advanced aviation school at must roll theil' parents in tht! snow The throWing of the bridal bou- tomorro\v cvenih~. The groun will or submerge tllem in water. quet al American weddings i~ also outltt to . those housewives who meet at' 8' o'cloCk in the home ot. Hondo field, Tex. I I~m:I\P.S . considcr themselves slack­ Hetena Briggs is with the nau­ Today many a ' bri-qe-tO'-be is easier for the unmarried women in Mrs.-S. A. Fitzlfarrald, 436 S. Van hearing advice from too-interested the bridal party than the customs erll where war work is concerned. Bllren·str&et. Mrs. Carrie FryalAf, tical almanac ofIice of the United On duty at home for 24 hours a states n;lval observatory, assisting friends and relatives who Wi$h her' practiced in otner '" cO!Jntries. In Mrs. Ben Kimmel and Mrs. Al­ to follow every known supersti- Sussex, the qride$maids m\lst talte d~ jI~n't leave much time for fred: If. Mans will be assisting - with 'the preparation of marine and w\lclpation in de! nse organlza­ air almanacs. tion so that sbe will be happily every pin worn by the bride at hostesses. . wed. Perhaps she \yishes that no the ceremony so ·that they will IIpns, ~ut · cooperation ' in such a , ' . ... . one had ever invented the words mal'ry within the year, arid it the d ~~ !IS this is a challenge to Balloting for new members will ev,ery patriotic housewife. Triangle Club Plans "weddJng superstitions." Let her bride I)as alt -elder sis~er, this un­ be held under the direction of be thankful, however, that she fOI·tunate one' ml1~t dance bare­ . ,1'1 Give Goo4 Books Mfs. Milo NQvak at a meeting of Party Tomorrow Night ,TjIe attic cleaning psychology is Jives In this country where there footed or in ' g 'een $tockings on Carnation RebC:kah Lodge No.- 376 a~e few superstitions compared to the wedding day to escape spin­ \Iisoouraged. The aim of the dri ve f An inIormal dance will enler­ at 7:30 p. m. Fi'iday in Odd Fel­ the hundreds 1011 owed in other sterhood. In Holy the !irs~ un- ~ to 'collect from. the American lows hall. tain members of Triongle club and ~lIIlC as many books, with em­ their wives tomol'row night trom countrjes oC the world. married sister to touch the ear~h in 'Mr , Cllrl S. Kringel is in charge CO!n11'(0 .the· Bride front of·the dooT w.here thE' bride- ~ on good books, as H is 9 until 12 o'clock in the Iowa of the ol!iccr's treitL She 'will be No American girl need ieel her to-bo J18S- potlred hot water will be Ptaible to, collect in the time al­ aS~isfcd. by old and new ofCicers. Union clubrooms. The Avalon or­ lol~. · Last 'Y aI" results totaled m~rriage is doomed because her the fir&t to wed. , chestra will play and refreshments husband haa not presented her When it comes to weddin,J:" pre­ IQ lNIllon books. It Is hoped that will be served during intermis­ with an uneven number of ooin I sents, Arneril'sl tlaink ~her ' have this JtIIr the Victory Book cam­ sion. No rescrvations are neces­ Local P.E.O. Chapters as is done ill Bavat:ia. Nor must ti:oubl9 d IdJng what to give, but pti"" as an otflcial ~overnment sary. she do as t1)e Or~k malden, drop- they can alway~ dellidC' on some­ Pllljec~ will top that figure. The committee in chorge of the " ping a coin from her lips Into a thins practical like a complete set Plan Friday Meetings affair includes Lieut. lind Mrs. W. well and then drawing water from or kitchen knives or a box of hand­ T. Swenson, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil ~ it for her husband to drink. The kel'chll!fs. Not so in Sweden, where • Chapter HT and E of lhc P. E. Copeland, MI'. und Ml·S. Thcodore American man does not think this knives al'e said to sever love, O. sisterhood are meeting thi Rehder, Prof. and Mrs. William necessary for his happiness. handkerchiefs, to wipe away aetec- RENT week. Coder, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Far­ A bride in this country would tions, and shoes, io make the hus­ • • • Tea Dance Today rell Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Wayne feel most impractical breaking band unfaithful. Mrs. B. V. Crawford, 208 Rich­ Andrew Moler Dies Travis and Mr. and Mrs. Eric A tea dance sponsMed by dishes on the threshold of her new The Borrowing kind ards street, will be hostess at a Wilson. anew double Union Board will be held In 'be home to assure herself ot a lucky However, Hie people of York- meeting of Chapter HI of the In Home Following river room or Iowa. Union this marriage as Is done in Prussia. No shire and Ireland do have one P. E. O. sisterhood at 2:30 p. m. one would accuse an American practice which might · help an Friday. Mrs. R. G. Popham is as­ afternoon rrom .. to 5:30. Onb New Representatives couples will be aUowed at thls bridegroom 01 seeking another American man who is having 'istanl hostess, and Mrs. E. G. breasted Two-Year Ailment no-ticket affair. Chosen for Currier wite if he should look backwards financial troubles and still wishes Kurtz is in charge of the pro- after his wedding ceremol}Y. to marry. In Yorkshire the bride- 'A family project may be made gram. Andrew Moler, 78, died at 4:30 Six women were recently elected reU U to the Bees grooms b01"l'0w the weddlng ring -TUX oi sorting books and deciding • • • yesterday afternoon in his home, floor re~resentatives to the Currier Modern American brides can be which is returned after the cere- The 74th anniversary of the p, council by residcnts of the dormi- thankful they nrc not living in mony. The Irish rent their rlngs. which to ghre. First of all, rule 510 Grant street. He had been in E. O. si~tcrhood will be observed torY. Derbyshire where the bees musf be And now, American brides-to- out old algebras and dog-eared at a Founders' day meeting of poor health ior two years and Reeves Hall Elected They are Betty Jane Morgan, A4 lold of any forthcoming wedding. be, aren't you thal'\ldul to know from 'V!clorlan novels. Dad and mother Chapter E at 7:30 p, m. Friday, seriously ill for the past two weeks. of Ottawa, Ill., Currier annex; Women today are saved the lhat aU you have to remember is may choose to give some recent The group will meet in the home Moler, who was born near Kin­ of Nu Mary Redinbaugh, A4 of Neola, trouble of decorating the hives "Something old and something of Mrs. F'. D. Francis, 529 E. Col. ross, Oct. 20, 1864, mar'ried Alice Head Sigma Mvels, /Ion-fiction best sellers and main floor: Charlotte Bagley, ,A3 with ribbons lind gatbering their new, something borrowed and lege st reet. Adams in November, 1869. After Reeves Hail, A3 of Mason City, of Audubon, first floor: Margery friends and relatives to sing to I something blue"? the men's shop some of dad's techni cal books. !\frs. P. W. Richardson is in farming near Kinross until 1918, will replace Blaine Asher Jr., ·C3 Hargrove, A4 of Des Moines, sec- the bees of the coming engage- 105 E, Colleq. Westem stories and adv nlure chnr~e of the Founder's day pro­ he retired and mOved to Iowa City. ond floor; Elizabeth Skafte, A4 of ments and matl'iage$. A crocodile skull more than six ~ Wes that would appeal to young arom. Meeting arrangements are He was a. member of the Modern of Spencer, as eminent comman­ !GIdiel'8 may be contributed by under lhe direction of Mrs. Paul Woodmen of Amel'ica. der ot Sigma Nu fraternity, 101- lowing elections held at II recent Chamberlain,~W~M,W~ A2 Ooo~of Independence ~d G~~:~p~a~l~~~n~ta~IJc~o~~~e:n~t~, paratively easy to b~U:I~w~c~o~get in thism~-~f~e~e~t~1:o:n:g=h:a: Texas. S~b:e:e:n~u:n:M:l~1:h:~~I:n~~~~~~~~~~~~~i bnltiter Bill, whU sist r Joan can C, Packer, Gertrude Smith and Surviving are his wife, his fourth floor. add mysteries and short story col­ PI·of. Clara Daley. daughter, Mrs. Dean p , Thomas meeting. Other new officers nre John A 6 o'clock dinner party Monday ledJons to the pU . of Traer, (lnd two grandchildren. Doran, A2 oC BOOlle, vice-cOm­ night in the private dinning room , OoIIetUon Center. Funeral arrangements have not of Currier hall honored the new RED CROSS COURSES yet. bee~ compteted. mander; Edwin Hicklin, A3 of Book boxC8 nre bel", placed in Wapello, recorder; Robert Bowles, representathrcs and staff mem­ lteallibrarles, stores, thent rs and Iowa Citio.os in lerested in A2 oC Des Moines, steward; Jo­ bers. ( ~a. rationing IlIher publlc places. Her the registering for the beginners' or Issues Wedding Permit siah Cafroll, A1 of Spe.ncer, chap­ beob are to be sorted and di - advanced Red Cross lirst aid R Neilson Miller, clerk of lain; James Sweeney, A2 of Ce­ ~tecI to army camps, navy and COU11!es should contOlct. Mrs, W. D.A.R. Chapter to Meet court, issued a marriage license dar Rapids, sentinel; William 00- Mrs. Ray Carson, 101 Lusk ave­ _ ~rd station, merchant E. Starr, phone, 5290. I •. yesterday to Merle Stockman and r1\n, Al of Boone, reporter; Wil­ nue, will be hostess to the Na~ { ~ throueh the American Mer­ Margaret Medde, both of Oxford. liam Hunt, Al of Fairfield, his­ dIInt Marlne Library association, thaniel Fellows chapt.er, Daughters torian, and William McGiffin, Al oC the American Revolution, to­ lIId '\lSO house . I of Fairfield, marshall, morrow night at 7:30. She will be '(00 may h~v a dozen books to assisted by Mrs. John Piper. Mrs. live, JOur neighbor n xt door, Three Leave Police L. K. Hurd will be in charge of tpc IlIII7 two or three, but gl'n rous program. II1II unselfish giving on lh part Force for Servi~.; of u.e millions of families In th United State will add up to : ~eplacements Chosen IlIetsure and recreation tor our , New".lhklrm . 'Ich\IJII men. Three. new policemen have been 1 I ~' added' to the force, it was disclo~d Cream Deodorant yesterday by Police Chief' Frank 1IIfJ .. THE OIlOOND ~ CAH J . Burn$. They are replacing sal'" 551 HIS SHAOOW, THAT Chaffee Chosen Edwin J. Ruppert, Georg-~ . Hlill Stops 'erspiratlon MAY I' lAD NEWS FOR R, ' f~ and Cleatus SUmmel, who: have YOUR I14TTEA'( - 6 ~ entered 'the armed forces. .,',.,. MUS OF WINTER. for london Mission The new men are James J. :DlJl­ 'HLISS' UPIRon.... STORED, A CM IN DiAD rn)AAO& KlI' IT CHECQI) ANI) o ton ; .who begat\ work yesterday; OOlS 0t'O THi DOOS 'ASTIR THAN IF c"a,wuy CHAROED FOR 1\01051 Chatle, on of Prot. Emmet H. Potter, who stiirteetn 11880C1Atc:d Mrs. Newcomer's son-Jn-law. 'and Arrid is the largest RED CROWN, ISO~YISMOTOIt • . "me, Inc. o.c New York CII)" daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde ot Time, Lite and For­ Even wilen Il eometl to worrying, two heads. are better than 0l1e, 80 Stun~ of Green. Mr. and Mrs, ' 9 deodorant UIO...... Ic ...... w ...... ••• hIeh I. ".e.ctI... pew.. , 1- I...... se II In F:Ii....,L!"Ipzlnes. J~e has been Field Marthal Irwin Bonunel, letl above, and Col. Gen. WaUher Nehr- Stuntz wer~ weekend iuests In: the '-tie.... ~II. ,., eM .. Ie ...... :'1IIIlIIII a leave of ab&ence to rve Ing" et ...edaer to tty. to tlrure out. way to escaPe the trap Itl which Newcomer home. - 'II 1M- eeonomrc warfare board. tile, are c... M In north Africa. Rommel commandll the axis desert ~ Otber guests at the pariy 'were ~tee" wife.!aft.d. t~.y.. r-01cl ann, Uaa' II 1Mlng Plllhed back by ,the British Eighth army .toward Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd W. HarrJlli­ toIi'w)lIrellliLlnlle to re.lde In New Tunlala, when Oenent Nehring', trlJOpa face allied forces advancing Oil, ,Jqsephlne McEwen and Do~ 'M·CI!J. fro .. UIe ".t,. The photo w.. reee/ved from a ' neut~al lOurcc. L. Wilson'-

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. .~ . . ' • " . i • PAGEFOtJ'R 'tHE DAlLY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, l.QWA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1943 I : • Ski ~eflm Nav~ A - merlca rac Rln ROller sk SlUt AT ro dels is the Ferris Picks Squad • • unlvel'l'lity's C. R. Irish ~ Rambler gram. Beg Led by McCluskey SPORT codet asnd Cagers Meet Tonight skate to IT g)'mnasium Serving 12th Time SIDELIGHTS SatUrday OJ Marians to Attempt Cadets m thelp chap II John 80rican Given • • • To Repeat Previo~s lIIen may 1 880, 1,000 Yards By Win Over St. Pat's door. Price cents, and Post for 4th Time DON SLYE Alter losing a 37 to 33 decision COIIlmOdate( at Solon two weeks ago, Ihe SI. Afler I'cturning fl'om the di .. will be av NEW YORK (AP)-Lieut. (j.g.) Roller sk Mary's Ramblers have had 15 days atrou series at Illinois, IOwa'. all universi Joe McCluskey, wInner of 23 na­ Tbe Hawks are back hOqle aIter in which to prepal'e for tonight's Hawkeye' will gel right to work tional senior trtles, yesterday was their weekend J'aunt to Cham- tilt here with St. Patrick's o( Ce- daY and Sa named 101' the 12th time on the this week for Indianl1 's H0051el'l 9 p. m., an( paign and we bet that they've seen dar Rapids. Coach Francis Sucp- \ m. Women I all-America team enough of the Whiz Kids to las t pel holds high hopes for his quin- who come into town for II two.. selected by Secretary-Treasurer "Travel- A them for some time to come. tet to repeat a victory over the game serIes Saturday and Mon. skating, on Dan Ferris of the A.A.U. for the We don't know if the boy, were Irish cagers, who wenl down in day night :;. 1948 athletic almanac and track dit miles off form or not, but they're prob- defeat, 37 to 23 , earlier in the The unbealcn Hoosiers now haVe l ing. Ann and field guide. ably glad to see thcil' own 11001' season. won ten straight games, three tt Lieul McCluskey, the Manche.,­ I tady, N. again . We doubt that they, could Stm'ting practice with funda- which wel'e ovel' conference op. roller ter, Conn., athlete who did hi.s col­ bc as IH!' oCf as the score indicaled. merttals, the Marians have finIShed ponents. The team is one of tbt lege running for Fordham and now Rather it was the superior play of polishing up 't heir orIel: live and highest scoring outfits in the is an instructor at the navy's the lllinois team. defensivc pll1Y, sel'i mmagi ng Mon- league. overllging 53 points ,per Norfh Carollna Pt'e-Flight school, Team Play day night be[o['e yesterday's la),- gl!me. wa named as the outstanding per­ Last year as sophomores the oIt. Substituting reserves more lown's chief problern this week former at 10,000 and 15,000 meters Whiz Kids managed to win the freely in practice, ,Coach Sueppel will be to develop defensive ~ -events in which he won national ~ISWo.! conference championship, and with has improved the play or the five STRIK' E OUT ' THE AXIS! tics which can hold in check s\lcb titles last y ar. But felr the :fact ~I~~r~ one year's expel'ience behind them regulars, making them laster and crack 'hots as Ralph HamUton, he missed out in 1936, ShutfLin' . l1"'L-~ 8-'CK 1i.1 no wonder they wipe up the oppo- more oggl'essive both in defeme Capt. Irvin Swanson and J'dm Joe would have hod a string of 1921, -rn~1,J6 sHion. And the outstanding thing and offense. INVEST 10°/0 OF YOUR INCOME' Logan. lither Joe 9'fi!'cAe~ 13 straight years on Fel1:is' team. about them is their team play. Although Dave Ivie still lacks IN WAR BONDS In thc victorie' over Ohio State, I ~inning On the team for the tenth ·time .sw·e Andy FhiUip 'is way ahead aggre ' siveness, he has improved 45-37 and 61-31, und Chicago, 5$. I ,hysical is , distlll1ce stat of in scoring, but take him out ahd greatly since before the nolidays - ~ 27, Indjana has presented ~amil .. l no the Millrose A.A. of New York it won't hurt the team too much. and will probably see plenty Of M· Sf I· d· B d ton h'gh 0 ·th 35 points The and school principal at Cleveland, They have IouI' other players Who action in tonight's game. arlnes a lone In ermu a 1 '(.Oll o~~edl b;C ~~:·dw.IWilllilms, ~ , ,q~are N.Y. can locate thc hoop when called Bill Sw~eney and George See- ophomore center, With 31. Logan I D. Two men are on the squad for upon. muth are slated and George See- . and SWllnson arc dangerous shoot. the fifth successive year-Corne- ~ Enough said about last weekend. wards, with Keith Bright at the Pi ers who may beak up any ban llll!; Warmerdam, the wOI'ld's only R II 6 I T f R f 15-foot pole vaulter, and EnSign ;;!i~:tS~isw~:~~~e Hawks are up ~~~te~ef~i~ti~~~n~t ~~: !:~~~ eea rea ur aees 0 as ga£'ae~t yellr wl:en the 'HOOsiers Fred Wolcott, hurdling ace !t'Om 0ne glimpse at the Big Ten Steady and dependable, Bright and appeared In the fieldhouse. JOWl Georgia Pre-Flight. Wolcott was standings teUs us that it is the )3rogla have contributed mucn to- won, 55-52. The Hawks had a 3t). named for the 70-yard hurdles. only team that is tied with Illinois. ward st. Mary's record of six By WHITNEY MAItTI 1'7 lead and the hall, but Indiana , New York A.C.'s In othel' words Indiana's Hoosiers. wins and three losses, NEW YORK {AP)-Our good one thing-the most unpredictable came back to tie the score at .. The game is scheduled to l(et un- great two and three mller, and the But they don't scare tbe Hawk- derway at 8 p. m' at the Junior friend and former colleague, Mason nag ever to set loot on a race track, apiece with three minutes to Ib, late John Borican who died last month, are four-year men. On for eyes, high school, pl'eceded by a cotain Brunson, is homesick 101' the horse including HeelCly and The CI ie!, largely on the shooting of 1.0- Sigma Nu and four The Hawks are back on their raiser in which the Midgets of st. tracks, a circumstance in which he is a Mongolian pony. gan who sunk even goals, with the third consecutIve year are home noor where 'they have won Mary's wiN. s"" ow their "tu"'. has plenty of company. In fact, Swanson contributing four. Iowa'! Harold Davis, San Francisco Umpire Cheered 33 ou t 0 f 46 games tl1e pas t fi ve ,"" U even the horses are hotneslck for "I'd like to sce another I'ace like Tom Cha pmsn p op pe d m. thr ee Olympic club sprinter; chief spe­ English Fans Think Pro Fraternities Win .seasons, and 10 out of 11 of the Velerans Cui tne horse tracks since Florida dis- the 1939 Preakness, when Challe- pOints to help Iowa win in the claUst Billy Btown, the jumper Baseball Fun last ones played. They're anxious covered you can't improve the don, my favorite horse, exploded final minutes. from NOI'folk training station, Clhd to atone for the IlIini beatings and breed without $2 bets. the Johnstown myth in the mud, H,lmilton and Logan are now AI Blozis, shot putter. Intramural Cage Tilts '------' are In a good spot to knock the Anyway, there is a more point- I kept hoping big Pete would at the forwards, Wiliams i! at The tcam: Eight profesSIonal frlltcrnities NEW ORLEANS - Johnny Hoosiers from their perch. f B ed l'eason tOr Brunson's home- make a successful comeback, but center, Dnd Swanson teams with 60 yards-Barney ,Ewel), Penn and two social fraternities opened doughboy has taught the English ChapImn Ready rom raves Sickness. He is now Marine Ser- now I bear he finally has been Dick Witlenbraker at the guard State. the second nigh t 0 f j ntram uI'al to love baseball, but apparently Tom Chapman will be able to geant Brunson, stationed in Ber- retired to stud, bless his honest positions. Four of the Hooslen 100 and 220 yards-Harold Da­ basketball in the iieldhouse gym nothing can be done about teach- discard his nose guard and tbat muda where, he says, even the heart. were regulars on the 1942 team vis, San FranciJjco Olympic club. last nigHt. After the smoke of bat­ lng them to hate the umpire. should bhng back his aggressive . famed carriage horses are sho',ving "I'1J ncve~' Iorg~t .Lou Schaefer, which shared second place with 440 yards-Clift B 0 uri and, tle had deal'ed, flrst round wIn­ Col. Bennett Molter o[ the U. S. play that all Iowa :lans lik~ to BOSTON (AP)-Intimating that the effects df the war. Before en-I Chally's tramer, Slt~U1g on an up- Iowa and Wi ·consil1 in the 1inal Southern Calif. A.A., Los Angeles. ners in both ections had been de­ air force, in a letter to one of bis watch. The local sUL'roundmgs they had about reached the end of tering the service he was an Asso- turned bucket oulslde. the W.. O. standing, 600 yards-Roy Cochran, Great cided. New Orleans cronies, told about should also help Tommy Thomsen their playing days, the Boston ciated Press staff man at Balti- Brann barn th at mormng, looking Both Iowa and Indiana h~'ye Lake' N. T. S. Bill Barbour of Sigma Nu ned the bewilderment and admiration regain his basket eye , ... hich he IBrave s yesterday unconditionally more, where he caught the horse ~p at the sky and ~~ispel'i~g: 'Send considerable speed and use thefBSl 880 and 1.000 yards-John BOl'i­ his mates to a 22 to 10 victory over England's enthusiastic baseball lost at Champaign. released two of the NEltional fever at Pimlico and near-by 1 er down, DaVId whIle l'ain break at frequent intet'val . The can, Asbury Park, N. J., A.C, the basketeers of Phi Delta Theta, fans are causing theiL' instructors. The Hoosiers will be tough to league's oldest players, outfield- tracks. streamed down his face. Lou Hoosiers. especIally, nt'e exponents 1,SOO-meters-J. Gregory Ricc, rolling In five field goula and one The Lormer Tulane athlete beat but the Hawks' will be ready ers Johnny Cooney, who wiI). be l\lemllries Left prayed for mud for Chally and of wild-racing tactic, wit/! 'he New York A.C. charity toss for a lotal of 11 points. wrote: "They never have less than tor them, and at least have a good 42 .in March. and the 40-in-April Rig)lt now all hc has lcft is mem- got it. players launching ODe-handedlbotS 10 and 15 kUometer Lieut, Jo­ John DOl'an capitalized on his free 5,000 paid attendance at a game chance for an even sput in the Paul (Big Poison) Waner. ories, which finally bubbled over "Nor will I forgct Ciencia. the fl'om all anglc:. scph McCluskey, New York A.C. throws and ran second in the -and the tops, in NOI-Wich, drew two-game selies. It Is likely, however, that those onto paper, and bis lettel' gives fine little fillY trained by Mary ------20 kilometers - Lou Gregory, game' scoring with five points fOr 40,000. A new game to the Eng- Hawkeye Highlights - Tommy two vetcrans, wbose professional an idea of how the minds of our Hirsch, lying down in her stall and I MiIlro ~ A.A, the winners. lish, their excitement seems in re- Chapman, now second in Big Ten baseball cxperience totals 41 service men, nc maltel' whcre thcy taking .a nap before th: race. As. Parsons WI' ns 34-)2 25 kUometers-, verse. scot'ing witb 60 points and an years, disagree with President Bob are, turn to their favodte sport. Abe GIbbs of the Baltimore SUil n, J Boston Edison E.C. -LA T NIGHT'S RE ULTS "In other words, a pop fly draws average of 15 per game, is super- Quinn, for, the latter explained" "There's just the faintest re- remarked, Ciencia must have slept 30 kilometers ~ Don Heincke, Social Fraternities more applause than a sharp single. ior as a point-maker to any In- Cooney rejected his offer to place mindel' of a track on Bermuda," al1 through the race, for she lin­ Baltimore White Horse society. Slfma Nu 22, Phi Delta Theta A man making first gets more diana star to date. C~apman has him in a managerial berth with a he writes. "Several years ago a ished a drowsy last. Over r~wa Wesleyan Marathon-Fred McGlone, Nor- 10 acclaim than one coming home and 23 tieltl goals and 14 of 18 tree double-A club because he was cer- group of optimists spent about "So' many o[ the 'sleepers' 1 bet folk Y. M. C. A. Proteatonal FraternlUes scoring. They '(the English) re- throws. tain he could make another major half a million dollars trying to eon- on do the same! Mr. PLEASANT, 111. (AP)­ Cross country- Frank Dixon, Nu Sirma Nu 18, Delta Sirma sent remarks about the umpire." Scoring statistics show that Ben league connection. vert a marsh into a race track "It·s been six months now ~ince Pul~ng away [rom II half-time tie, New York university. DeU.. 15 Col. Molter said what patticu- Trickey is in second place with Quinn said that Waner entel'- near the tennis stadium. The ven- I've smelled printer's ink or heard P&rsons college of Foh'field de­ -George DeGeorge, Theta Tau 13, Alpha Kappa lady confounded the British was 42 in the conferonce games and iained similar hopes. ture failed and the site is now the teletypes jabber and, broth 1', feated Iowa Wcsleyan hcre Jast New York A.C. K/&JIpa 9 that the players were able to wal- 99 in aU eight games. Chapman Both players were signed as free known as the 'Marsh Folly.' It's 1 really miss those familiar odors nigbt, 3~ to 32, It wa~ thc Wild· , 70 yard hudles-Enslgn Frcd Phi Chi 15, PhJ Bet. PI 11 lop such a small blllI with a has 126 101' the season. Third agents by the Braves after oUler hauntEd by ghoSts of nags that and noises. cats til t 1011'a cOllJerem:e wIn' 01 Wolcott, Gcorgia Pre-Fligbt. Pst Om~.. won on forfeit "round bat." 'place in all games is held by National league clubs had dis- never l'eached the wire. Coming Back the senson. nO-meter hurdles - William from Alpba Vhl SIgma Tommy Thomsen with 52 and Jim carded them as over-agc. "The last race I saw was Ahab's "Some of these days I'm coming Wesleyan helel un early lead but IP===~ midway in th iirst period'llat· Cummins, Rice lhstitute. Irvi ng Wansik shared the eve- Radovich Transfers O'Brien is fourth with 40. d'Brien Cooney, who brok~ in with the great victory in the 1942 Preakness, back. And when I do, I'm heading is one place ahead elf Thomsen in Braves in 1921 as a sandlot which Sid Feder and I worked straight for Pimlico. my favorite sons put 011 Ii burst and never )osl 2~0-meter: hurdles - Rob e r t ning's high scoring honors as his T N f Ik V the lead aIter forging ahead at 1he Wnght, OhiO State. Theta Tau teammates held Alpha 0 or 0, a. conference games, 22 to 19 in pitcher. was reclaimed by that together. That was one I'll never track, if Bo'sun. AI! Vandelbilt. points. club in 1938, after thc St. Louis forget, like the 1~38 match be- Uncle M~tt Dalger ~nd Dave start of the. ocond haIr. 400-meter burdJes,-J. walte~ Kappa Kappa, ~3 to 9. Wamik rah GREAT LAKES, Ill. - Bill Iowa now has lost three of four Cardinals dropped him without a tween Seabiscuit and War Admil'al """oods still are holdIng forth Littlek~ut. Evans, Fifield and Smith, Southern Calif. A.A., Lo away with 11 01 the 13 points, Radovich, regular le[t guard on the I conference games and is tied for trial after obtai-ning him in a deal when 1 worked my first race with thel·e." . . Todd hared ,coring honors !or Angeles. live of which were scol'ed in the Great Lakes f09tball squad last eighth with Michigan in the con- with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Old 01'10 (Hoo[beats) Robertson. WeU f Sal·ge. we all hope It w~ll the whmers. Buckney Willi higII S,OOQ..meter and lIS-kilometer first half and six in the second. fall, has been transferred to Nor- terence standing. 13y a quirk of Waner, one of baseball's great- "But at least we marines can be oon, and that the horses Will fOr the la3ers. /-----\ walks-John P. ConnolJ,y, New Tonight's games: folk, Va., for advauced schooling the schedule, thc Hawkeyes have est hitters, along with his brother talk about racing. It's one of our be funning not only at Pimlico ~.Ii••••••• ~;. York A.C. 7 p. m.-Lambert VS. McChes- in training navy recruits. to play Illinois, defending cham- Lloyd, C'flme to 1he Braves in favorite topics over our beels at but anywhere else they are wanted, • 10 and 30 kilometer walkI- ney; Andel'son vs. Iioward Radovkh is the fourth member I . , 1941, aiter being '"hunted to Brook- the post exchange, The most rabid They can't run some places now James Wilson, New York. 8 p.m.-Thatcher vs. Slagle; of the Bluejacket squad to qual- pons, and Indiana, unbeaten con- lyn by the Pittsburgh pira\4!s. Can here is Albert Smith, 01 Wash- because 01 t.he gas und rubber tenders, on successive Saturday h' h h d I • ZO and 50 kilometer walks- Pickard vs. MacLean ily for special training. Jim Dan- Cooney, still II dependable hitter ington, D. O. He has seen them all s of.age, w Ie soun s unnv, at Winiam Miha)o, Detroit. 9 p. m.-Fairchild VS. Manse; lell, Vic Marino and Gene Ball also and Monday contests. ' h h h d 0 f ... ·om MallO' '/Jar to Waltet· Ral'ght, that. We always th ought all they I Slraild\ 4O-kilometer walk - Wolter Gables vs Dean are at Norfolk. The largest crowd of the season w en e reac e 4, was one 0 .. , ' " I d d Fleming, Hamtramck, Mich., boys' ____.____ -:- ______is expected at thc Indiana series the most versatile players in the i.)orse and. m' an. He's alway.s :I1'gu - nee e was hay. THE THIRD OF club. and extra bleachers will be erected majors. When the Bravcs cut him mg wlth. little Johnny Miller of /THE 1943 HIT PARADEl BJ,h jump - Adam Be r l' y, at one end of the court. The Min- adrift in 1930 because 01 a bone Summcrfteld, Pa., another platoon END S TO DAY Southern university. nesota games drew a total of about trouble in his pitching (trm, he sergeant, over the size and layout · Rafael Sabatini's story Statistics becamc a first baseman and out- of the track at Shangha i. They "FLYING FORTRESS" • .. Broad Jump and hop, .. aad Hawkeye ~askelball J3,000 persons. fielder and, after spending six served in China together. "THE OMAHA TRAIL" of high adventure a,·.d Jump - , Norfolk years in the minOI" , was bro\.lght Unpredictable Nag fiery romance that N. T. S. Pole VIIult-Corneliu8 Warmer- INDIVIDUAL SVORING back to thc ~ational league by "Lilllc Jbhll is emphatic about r.a.;\iM';1 i ~.!~ swept the Seven Seas! ' . Games FG FT FTM PF TP Brooklln in 1935. l~'/ l \ ' I~L~ dam, San Francisco Olympic club. Pla:rers ¥an~ Plav Dodgers Last scason Waner became the New Oonch 16-lJOWId shot-AI Blolls, New AI1 Games , Games FG lace for entrapment and an- slides loaned by the University of Thursday, Jan. 21, at 5 o'clock. Pre ident will be avallable. The service will be held in Beek­ is no less a key to his northem oihilation. That ha obviously sue- Colorado, titled "Colorado Moun- AUD,nEY ANDER O!ll Rollel' skating will be open to man's mortuary. flank, including what is left of ceeded, due to Hiller's unwining- tain Flowers." A feature length President WORLD TO 10RROW all university students next Frl­ the Russian - broken Leningrad ness to admit {aitu)'e at Stalin- ound movIe, "Ski Chase," wfll _____ The World Tomorrow discus ion daY and Saturday from 7:15 until ... siege ring, than Rostov is to his grad in time to efiect a retreat. conclude tbe program. The lilm SENIOR ORCHESJ group, open to all men and wo­ 9 p. m., and from 9 until 10:15 p. retreating southern flank in the And unle he has learned his was photographed aE St. Anton am Senior Orehesis wlI1 meet to- men students, will meet Thurs­ m. Women may earn credit toward (Continued from page 1) Caucasus and stride the Don. And bitter lesson now, it could hap- Alberg in the Austrian Tyrol ana night at 7:15 in the women's gym­ day in room 208, Schaeffer hall, "Travel - A - Century" for roller with Russian 10l'ces now west of pen again In the north belore felltur ' Ham\es SChneider and a oasium. from 4:10 to 5 o·clock. skaUng, on the basis of four cre­ had not complied with two requests both the Manych, below the Don, Leningrad and yet again in the cast ot 50 of th~ world's best in~er- DOROTUY BINDER JANE BYER dlt miles lor each hour of skat­ and the Donets above it, the Cauea u or west or Moscow. His national ., tiers: Adrr.ission bS ~resldebt Chairman ing. Ann Oliver, A3 of Schenec­ from it for a return to work. I !;Idy, N. Y., is in charge of the A holder of the Distinguished Although 6,000 of the st!'i l

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W·... , LeA~ PAGESlX THt: DAILY lOWAN, lOWA ClTY, IOWA WED~DAY, JANUARV 20, 1943 Pre-Flight Chaplain 2,500 Eggs, 1,~O Pounds of Meat Used Dally Katherine Roberts, Surprise Blackout " Describes Worship To B~ in Near Future, Former SUI Student, " On Eve of Sea Battle To feed Cadets, Officers at Navy Pre-Fligh.t Base Writes New Novel Prof. R. M. Perkins: 'Probably State-Wide, Lieutenant Schwyhart * * * Information Service Maybe Even Larger' Tells Kiwanis Group Supplies Material The unannounced blackout, ex. Of Bluejacket Spirit For Wartime Book peC'tcl! at nny lImc In the ncar Chaplain Robert M. Sehwyhart The present undergl'o und move­ fLlture, will probably be 01 leul oC the Iow(l Navy Pre-Flight chool stale-wiele nnd ml!:ht even tnkc ill menlo In Belgium is the themc of a described the unbeatable spirit 01 II much 101'/.1('1' AI en. Prof. Hollin M. nov I by Kathel'ille Roberts. Cl Pcrklns, local ('ltl7.('I1~' defcllII! American bluej(lckets on active Universi ty of l owa gradual.e, to corps commanclel', said yestel·day. duty. speaking beCore the Kiwanis be published by DoubleDay Doran "This Is lhe !lnly woy." he added, club at the Hotel Jefferson yester­ in February. Tcntl1tive titlc fol' "thaI the blackout could come as day noon. Discussing divine wor­ the book is "The Last Fl'ont." o complcte Rurprlse. H II were ship at sea, the chaplain recalled Tbe locale of the bOOk is a (a­ carried out by communities, it ' a service on the eve of a bat lie tol miliar one to Miss Roberts, who would bc qultc po~slble to figure iIIu trate the spiritual unity which went to Belgium the year of Ihe out our turn within II (pw elIlYS." pl'evaJls aboard the fighting ships. armistice and spenl. some li me Local orrlclnls b('lleve that a The crew, comprised o( men there. The Belgium in(ol'mation change In tho prCR(,l1l extromely from the most varied faiths and I service suplied lhe technical and cold und Inrlement weather might rellgiou~ denominatlons-Catho­ authentic mnterinl (or th e work. possib Iy \)(' till:' Hlgl1l1l tor Rtatt lies, Protestants, Jews, Congrega­ Katherine Roberts, ol'iglna lly il uthOl'ltie. to ('11 11 tht' blackout. Fr tlonallsts, Lutherans, Epi. copnl­ from. Ft. Madison, receivcd her Although it Is felll'cd tl1at the fnns-alL worshipped together be­ B.A. degree here in 1018 and . a local nil' ruid warning Hil'en may fore the little altar rail. year later. her M.A. in English. not be loud enough lo be heard all Declaring that little hatred in While on the campus she was af­ over the ci ly, e~p dally when ' lI . pUe oC what is commonly sup­ filiated with Delta Gamma 1:oc ial is not expected, Pel;J un- 0 . r _ . Kr'()l.lgh.• Eobert W.. M;1rtin. Carrol "The Pr,e,paratlOn of Income Tax · prcstdent '01· lhe clu"', and living III Arlington, Va. sle.ward" the crew or some:SS goC$ all-out to' prepare 1\ speCial del' general direction of T. M. Reh- IScusslon a.. l s " • • • Iowa Oltlans report at 5 o'cloek meal for the tledgllng pilots. This del' of the university dining serv- , · M. ' .' : ¥lc!te~, . ~ehx M. Muller. J Returns. . Phyllis Peterson, A2 of Wnlianu· Cadet John D. Lemon.. son ht the I}l0rn.lug- to prepare Uie hollday season, 85 tur)teys, 125 ice. . ~ Problems for Group Ja~ ~ . L. f.el!\1l11gton. I burg, is secretary-treasurer. .Mar· t M d Mr J A. Le bl:eakfast of about 700 t,..JDeeL pounds of cranberries and 160 . To handle the large: numbem; bf . qlriS ' Peterscn, ThO~U~ . R. • , , garel Mordy. instructor in the ;31 ~: ~~htl8C):' street, a::.'J:~ This m~111 ' always consists of pumpkm pies were caten in HiIl- cadets who have to be led. the meal ' PI~a.II.l,nt, Lester J. Roger~, MIles Fraternities Announce,. women's physicl1l education de- ai the all' forces weather train- fruit, cereal,' ern and bacon. crest alone. periods are divided int(YthreEl '~ci,u~ The World Tomorrow discussion H. , $l!hneb~·.ger, JO.hn .C, Sha?non, Five Receht Pled. ges pnrtment, is fnculty advIsor. Jill' Ichoo1 at. Grand Rapids, toast, butter and Ja.m, and milk • • • parts. Breakfast is served at .6;30,group will begin the )Jew sjo!mester Fronk C. Stumbn, LOUI S J. Shimon, Mich., Ja.n. 12. Clr.eoftee. For the Dlornin&, meal The food I. pre)lared and 6:55, and 7:20; lunch comes at with a meeting tomorrow aIter- Matlc"D.'SniClel·. E~el'L E. Swilzer. Theta Tau engineering. frater­ Cadet Lemons, who attended alone some 2500 ens are UIIed..[ cooked by maehines Dlan&«ed by 11:00, 11:30 and 1l:55;.whlLe dit).- noon from 4:10 to 5 o'cloCk in rDom ¢ah;it1 M. 'Tanner, Donald W. nity announces thc pledging of Ir­ To Speak on Religion lowa City hl&'h lICbool and tbe while 80-85 1% lb. loaves of the coDJ.lJlisllary statf. Even the ncr is "on" at 6:05. 6:30 and 6:55 208, Schaeffer haU, under. the lead- Tho11l~ sOn .. Glen E. Thompson, ving Wan.:;il<, E1 of Hart[ord, "The Place of ReligiOn in the university, was employed as bread are cOMumed as toast. arduous task of scrambling errs p. m. ershlp of Jack T. Johnson, in- Mi\ton E. Tonneson. Glenn D. Van World Crisis" will be discussed by surveyor by &he U. S. enrineer structor of political SCience, and Horn; 'Leo B. Vavrichck, Carrol Conn.; Donald Long, E1 or North department prior to his indue- • Betty Jean Peterson, A4 of Madi- V. V?A\\;tIrS , Samuel H. Ware, John English; Henry Fieselman, E3 or the Rev. Richard E. McEvoy at a I New Sharon, nnd John Ryan, E2 or luncheon meeting oC the lowa Hon Into the army air rorce. R ' J hBed An d d U· "f" T t son, S. D. ~ . Yoder, Paul E. Yoder, Clifford • • • ev" osep "0 e en e nlverSl,es empera ures Open to all men and women stu- C. Elder. Riverside. City Woman.;' club social sciences Henderson Forsythe, who re- lIourly temperature reacl1n1'l, dents, the group derives its dis- 'I: . ~h------• • • department Friday. Mrs. Mary L. I ed h' BAd MFA diE R· d H" h E I" h H In Iowa City (or yesterda.y at- cusslon material from "The World' wo undred and twenty-sil{ Sigma Chi fraternity announces Robinson is in charge or the mtet· ~~e~ 11'0::' th~ u'ni~~r slty: h'08'be:~ n urope, ecelve Ig ng IS onors temoon and last nIght: Today" lectures, which are given cOUnties 'operate under civil sel'- i the pledging of Robert Rigler. Al ing which will be held ot 12:30 promoted from second lieutenant every Wed nes d ay evening. Meetmg. vice. o( Kenl'lwol'lh, Ill. p. m. in Hotel J Herson. to first Heutenant in the quarter- 1:30 ...... -7 on alternate Thursdays, it is spon- mastel' corps at Camp Lee, Va. The Rev. Joseph B. Code, who mier of Belgium, who spoke here "'."'3 0 ...... -.. sored b y the Y . M . C . A .,..v W . He is supervisor of basic mili- arrived here recently as chaplain last year, was a professor at 3:30 ...... ~ ...... -1 ~ O. A .• W. R. A., U. W.A., and the tary training in company, C., ~5th tor Calholic students, adviser for the University of Louvain in Bel- 4:30 ...... ·2 Home Economics club. 'batlalion. in the quartermaster re- Ne,yman club and a mcmber of gium during the time Father Code 5:30 ...... -2 Johnson will be present at each placement training center. the school oC religion faculty, was studl'ed there and Is a personal 6'30...... -...... • 8 mee tmg· t 0 Sl1mmanze. . th e war Lieutenant ForsyUle was com- introduced to members of the fTiend of hIs. 7:30 ...... _...... -10 uews of the preceding two wl,!eks, mlssioned May 28. 1942, upon Newman club Sunday night. Father Code was attending the 8:30 ...... -12 and to ask leading questions to en- graduation from o(![cer candidate ' Studied In Europe University of Heidelberg at the 9:30 ...... _...... ·10 courage general discussion. school at Oamp Lee. Falher Code, born and reared time of the rise of Nazism to power 10:30 ...... -8 The student committee in charge A member of the Theta Chi In Keokuk, has spent several years and he saw the German people 11:30 ...... , ...... -8 of the project Is as rollows; Jane fralernity, he was an actor In the studying and doing research work turn to the leadership of Hltler. It 12:30 ...... -9 Byers, A4 of Fonda. general chaJr- Clevelaut! Playhouse of Cleveland, in Europe. While in Europe, he was during this general period also man; Betty Jean Peterson, A4 of Ohio. attended the University of Heidel~ that many of the smaller nations Madison, S. D. discussion leader; • • • berg, the University of Oxford, the of Europe were in the throe.; of Jean. Baumgartner, A4 of Mason Walter J. Linder, who was a Univcrsity of Paris and th~ Uni- gripping fears and the continent SUI Marl"ne Reservli. City, publicity chairman; Bctty st.... ent at the university in 19S8, versity of Louvain, where he ob- Jtself .was in a stale of unrest. In y Ivle, A4 of Iowa Ci ty, post.ec chair- rcoeDtly completed his a.dvanced terkins annQunced' yesterday. sent to tbe armored force schOOl resses," published in 1927, aDd of the Nail ChevrOlet company, I sen ted a short s ketch' on the rifle Perkins said that these classes . I i I at Ft. Knox. Ky., to become techni­ several others. 1.o. -r of was as t n I:ht 8e ec ted presl'd en t and target range practice w.hich fwill be for those who have enlisted . In 1936 he became a mem"'" f th I Cit j ' h be or service since the last ' classes cal speCialists. the faculty ot the Catholl'c Uol- 0 e owa y umol' c am r the mari'1e encounters in his train- . of commerce succeeding Howard ing at Quantico. were given but that local officilils Patriotic War Posters versity of America ' in Washing- P. Jacobs, who has been granted F Ol.lowing the speeches, movies are anxious to have those who ! ton, . D. C., where he Iec:tured on a leave of absence to enter the on China's part in the wat, "War l1)i~ed parts of tbeir p'revious . '. Placed on Exhibition history in the araduate college. armed forces. On the . Western Front." were classes take advantage of this Op\)- Continlllla8 Researeh W 11 . 'd t f th or!uflity to make up their work, Since his. return to Ameri~, e er was Vlcc-ptesl en 0 e shown the group. Plans fDr the S . I d ! I f I n Macbride Hall organization. immediate future were discussed, 1)eCla gas e ense c agsosor . Fatber Code- has been continuin4 Karl W. Ketelsen, bookkeeper d 1 .. , tl te tali I new and make-up workers will be '-ctor of the h' resea h ' ma>--'al tha an we nex. mee na n ve y b Id MdT d d W' d Homer R . Dill , d I,~ IS . rc In =1 on ~ of the Central Sand and Gravel et. i . Feb 2 .. , e on ay, ues ay an e- university museum, has recently Catholic church in the United company was appointed secretary- s 01 •• . ne&Wiy of the following week' wIth received some war poslers sent Stal~ s . " . . treaSure; to replace David L. .,' tire defense classcs scheduled :for out by the Smithsonian institute His Iate:st book, Dlct.i~!,ary. of Stoehl, who all;o has been granted ICompany Files ~uJt · Feb. 8 and 9. and has posted them in Ihe north t~e .Amerlcan Hierarchy, . whJch "a Iave10r the same purpose. A ' ainst Hen W-_.J. ----'---+-- mITidor opposite Macbride.library. gIves accounts of the lives of The seJqction were made at a 9 ry ~ : . One poster pictures Uncle Sam mo're than 500 American CathOlic eetl h . . ..------'--- . -~ ·I plaCing a nurse's cap on a young bishops, couid almoSt be conmd- m ng of t e organl~tlon held Iowa-Illinois Gas and Electl'i~ i lowQ Navy Chaplain . woman. Immediately beneath it cree! . a "by-product" of this re- last . nig~t In the D/ L gtlU. company fil~d suit .with Clerk o~ I W'II $lYftk Tonight I . arc the words, "Become a nurse search. The book's importance was Court R. Neilson Miller yesterday . I .... -- - your country needs you." The iqdicated by ' the 'Most Rev. Am- Bundles for Britain against Henry Wood demanding .------...,---. otber poster shows aU the diIferent leto Giovanni Cicognani, apostolic Bundles tor Britain will meet payment of debts. Lieut. Robert M. Schwyhll(t, flap belonging to the united na- delegate to. the United States, who tomorrow morning at 10 o'ciock in The company i~ suing for $289.88 ehl\Plaln of the Iowa Navy Pre- tions, with the statue of liberty wrote the preface to it. new headquarters at 2i6 Jowa and interest. putcher, Ries and Fli8ht school, will speak -before . alongside them. At present, Father Code ii pre- State Bank and Trust building. A Dutcher are attorneys tor the the Iowa City DIsabled American The posters were sent out under paring a ·hlstory. of Catho~Hsm in new shipment of yarn has arrived plaintiff. veterans in the court house 'court- the direction of the American th~.united states for spedal use in to be made ready lor knitters. room at 7:30 tonight. Museums association to e a c h colleges and universitie.. Eleven states operate reauiar The address will be part of a museum included in the aSSOCia- j .' friend 01 Van Zeeland Peanut oil Is uien a8 'a massage insurance funds f{)r the p~q~- mee4ing of the veterans tor their 11on, . Paul Van ZeelaQd, former pre- for infantile paralysis victims. tion of state property. mllD)bers, families and friends.

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