12, 1944 • =13 mOhlha ealand h, RAnOH CALENDAR N &latiOll. Cloudy I'IIOCI:aED FOODS blue slarnpo A8 Ihrou.h Q8 valid htdellnJt~IY : "- t and h.. JlL\T red slam.,. AI IbroUlh TI vaUd Indellnitely; SUGAR atamp ;. .. 31 (book t) valid IndeIlnll~Y ••lamp 40 lor ""nnlnl IU,U IOlC­ lew.: Cloud, and Cooler pirw 1~: SHOE slamp. airplane Slampa I and 2 (book 3) DAILY IOWAN ,eb.•• THE voIId IIIIhfInileiy: GASOLINE A-II coupon expl_ Iune 22: FUEL On. por. t and 5 tOU pons expire S.pl. I. Iowa Citr's MornIng Newspaper y, SOn or ,dsey, 718 t'IVE CENTS Ta, AIIOOlATaD n.1I IOWA CITY, IOWA SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1944 na 4UOC1AftO ..... VOLUME XLIV NUMBER 195 recenU,. mt in the ing in the AMERICA'S NAVAL STRATEGISTS MEET IN CALIFORNIA ber ot the . ' arine air Yanks·' Smash has~ has ~ Allies -Mount Full-Seal e lhe entirt Five Big Nazi .

:, Jr., SO!t , 924 IOwa Oil Refineries a training larUts at Offensive o'n Italian Front ris. American Airmen i, Son of Meet Strong Enemy Jefferson At a Glance- England Fighter Resistance Aerial (over il affai1'8 he com. , (AP)-Srnasbing odoy's ge course through swarms of German P,e-_'n_vo_s_io_il_D_ecree T Aids Assault 1 trainln, fighters in one of the wal"s WASHINGTON, (AP) - Allied tous policy of opposing the Inevit­ 100versity. fiercest aerial battles, an Ameri· radici pounded the peoples of axis able allied victory, while there 15 m Reeds salellites last night with a pre- yet time for them to contribute to tlD sky.f1eet of 2,000 bombers Iowan Fifth, Eighth Armies Ig assign~ Inv8$ion ultimalum to turn against the allled Victory." and fighters struck yesterday at Germany now or abandon all hope The Implication was clear that of. of. ... Southern Wall five big Nazi synthetic oil plantli of saving themselves from "dls- if theY persist In working with Of Hitler's Fortress 'raneis J, Allied Flf1h, Eighth armies un­ and shot down 150 enemy planes astrous consequences. Germany then they must expect dertake lull-scale offensive in a Coffey, .t a cost of 42 bombel's and ten Issued jointly by the United no terms shori of complete and Italy. AL LIE D HEADQtrAR'I'­ ~en com. fighters. States, Great Britain and Russia, unconditional surrender followed ER., laples. (AP)-,.,h allied an Diego, A total of. more tllan 3,000 al· the ultimatum wai directed alike by severe armistice terms. • AmerlCl&ll bombers hit Nazi syn­ F i f t han d E i g h t h armies med. En. to 'inland. with which the United On the other hand. it they get lied planes based in Britain theUc oU plants. mount d a full· cal offem,iva home In States is not at war; to Bulgaria, out now, the promise was they yesterday to destroy the Ger­ bammered Nazi targets by day· I with which Russia is not at war, would receive mOre favorable RWIIIlan annI.. mop up last ot man annie in Italy, advancing light and at midnight German and to Hungary and Romania. treatment In direct relation to the axis troops near Scvastopol. radios warned that allied planes THREE TOP U. S. naval stratertsls are shown at a surprise meetlnr In San Francisco. The naval chief. The United States government contribution they make to allied against tile ()Uthern wall of & ;Hitler's European COl'trcss were -approaching westel'n Ger. are, left to ri ..ht, Admiral Ernest J. KIn .., commander-In-chlef of the U. . fleel: Admiral Chester L. thereby apparently served notice victory, either In a mliltary or Reportl Indicate fewer men over along a. blazing 25·mile front i many. Thus the RAF's night shift Nimitz, commander-in-chief of U;le Pacific fleet, and Admiral William F. Halsey, commander-In-ehlef on the people of Finland that It psychological way. 26 will be needed for rest ot this apparently was car r yin g the of the south Paclne fleet. The occasion was the awardlnr to Admiral Nimit:& the dlsUnruJshed serviCe has reached the end of its poUcy of The joint statement completely year. from ina to th Gulf of world's greatest aerial campaign medal, a.warded by con ..ress and presented by Admiral Kin... Mrs. Nimitz anel their daurMer, Mary, setUng them apart from the other by-passed the sateUite govern­ Gaeta. into the firth straight week of pre­ rlrM, look on. German coilaborators. Russia ap- ments, to which various appeals Under an unprecedented aeri­ invasion assault. parently Intended the same kind have been made In the past, and al cover and with UppOl't of the The main blow was dellv­ of warning to lhe ,people ot Bul-I was directed to the peoples of Reds Wipe Oul Axis gr at , t artillery barrage evel' Ilred tn the Lelpzlr area, garia. FInland, and ,he three Balkan loosed in the l\f('dit cl'l'lIn ean "These nations must decide countries. 10 that respect it was where the Germans had COll­ Yank Liberators Federal Jurist Drops Troops at Sevastopol area, the alli ed armicl'l opened centrated 4 important refin­ Allies Bomb• now," the u It i mat urn said, an appeal for revolution against their assault at 11 o'clock Thurs- eries turnlshln&" a lifeline for "whether they Inlend to persist in the governments U they persist in Down 6 Jap Fighters Petition Against Ward their present hopeless and ealami- an alliance with Germany. day night. By tonight they had Hitler', armies on the weltern Moscow Announces gained their Initial objectives at and lOuthern fronts, and in Lodged 111,587 Romanians, some paints and at one" sPOt had ~dltlon two formation, of Japs Americans Fight Off • I • Dismisses Request a d van c e d approximately 2,000 Fortresses thundered acrOSll Nazis Killed, Captured 30 Planes to Make To Prevent Officials' IRep. Martin Dies yards. tile border Into Czecho-Slo­ Fewer·Older The Fifth and Elrhlh vallia for the flnlt time In the 96·Ton Raid on Truk Near Im'phil Interference at Plant LONDON, Saturday (AP)- The armies, com pie tel y re­ war and blasted another Ger­ Quits Political Arena Red army wiped out the last axis .. rouped since the bloody and man-operaled 011 plant at ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD- CHICAGO, (AP)- The govern- ! Men Needed remnants trapped west of Sevas­ Indenlslve baUle 01 Cusino 8rux. SOUTHEAST A 5 r (\ HEAD- ment's petition tor an injunction two months a .. o, struck to­ It was on this stab that the most QUARTERS, New Guinea, Satur­ Withdrawal of Texan topal on Cape Khersones Friday, savage fighting of the day ap­ day, (AP)- American Liberators QUARTERS, Kandy, Ceylon (AP) to restrain Montgomery Ward and ending a flve-wcek-old Crimean .. ether a ..alnat the Germans' Expected to Mean End formidable Gu tav line and parently occurred. fought off 30 Japanese fighters - Allied air forces sent unprece­ company executives from Inter­ campaign in which 111,587 Ger­ dented swarms of bombers and Of Committees ran Into fierce Gernun resist­ As many as 250 Nazi figh tel's and shot down at least six Wed- fering with federal operation of In.' 44 Draft mans and Romaoians were killed fighters to the direct support of .. ance all alonr the fron&. chaUenged the Americans in a the fi rm's Chi cago plants - now or captured, Moscow announced vain attempt to save the vital oil nesday in pressing home a 96-ton ground troops yesterday I n II back in the hands or the manage­ WASHINGTON, (AP) - Rep. Gen. Sir Harold Alexander, the plants which the Germans so des­ bombing of Truk, key enemy base smash at Japanese lodged on the ment- was dismissed yesterday by WASHINGTON (AP) - Only Martin Dies of Texas bowed out early this morning. allied commander, declared in an perately need to meet the coming in the- central Paci!lc, head- edge of India's Imphal plain. Judge Wlillam H. Holly without 150,000 to 200,000 men 26 and of the political arena yesterday The axls toll apparently was order of the day that "We are With the sky swept clean of the prejudice. going to destroy the German Invasion from the west. quarters announced yesterday. over n~ed be drafted for the rest and his withdrawal Is oxpected to even ireater, because tho broad­ armies in Italy" and that allied The communique of the United Results of the 35-minutes run- enemy, waves of allied heavy and The "without· prejudice" proviso medium bombers poured 200 tons of this year, Informed government mean th& end of the house com­ cast report by the Soviet informa­ forces were massing from east, States strategic air forces said meant that the government could tion bvreau said that Ru!sian simplY that "Strong enemy fighter nlng air battle were given in a re­ of bombs Tuesday and Wednesd !1 Y file a aimilar suit again, wlareaa offiCials estimated lall night, and mUlee on un-American activttles west, north and south "ror the resistance was encountered," but capitulation of the raid which was on embedded tanks, pillboxes and a "with brejudice" ruling would selective ~vlce was I'epor&.ed ap. Which he piloted through six planes and ships of the Black sea final battles" to destroy the returning crew-men declared that announced yestcrday when head_ bunkers manned by thousands of have ba rred insti tution of such prehenslve that too many older stormy year• . fleet sank a total of 191 ships, In­ enemy. Japanese at Nlngthougkohong, Lieu!. Gen. Mark W. Clark, her­ t~ey had come through battles quarters said one of the Liberators proceediogs In the future against men might be taken despite a new Dies announced at Beaumont, cludl ng 69 transports and 56 hlgh­ more terrible than any tough t in key stronghold roughly 22 miles alding what may prove the deci­ had been lost. the same concern. speed landing barges which the the great daylight attacks on Ber­ southwest of Imphal. The federal jurist's formal dis­ deferment policy. Tex., that he would not seek reo sive blow of the Italian campaign, lin. The Japanese de.fenders of the North on the Kohima front, an missal of the case Came two days The estimate was declared to be election to congress, because ot enemy was using both for supply told his Fifth army troops in an Fortre_ and flrhlers were Caroline islands base paid for the allied communique reported "op­ after he announced that he con­ high, if anything, since It did not 11\ health lind a desire to return to and evacuation during tbe Cri­ order of the day that he was con­ blowln.. UP all over the ally, erations to clear the enemy from fident "We can and will destroy destruction of the American Lib- sidered the litigation ended be­ take into account the likelihood private business. mean debacle. one American tiler said, and strong points in the hills in the cause Ward's Chicago properlles the German armies." leveral escorilnr fl .. hter pllols erator with six, probably eight, of southern outskirts of Kohima have lhat many more young farmers 18 Three-Day BatUe had been returned to compilOY of­ The CIO pOlitical action com· "You h a. v e p I ace d the declared that their combals their interceptors. made iniUal progress." Artillery through 25 will Inducted under MOre than 20,000 Germans and ficials. mlttee, headed by Sidney Hillman, Romanians were killed In the final enemy tn hi present dlstre s· with tile German defenders The Carolines 'raiding force, de­ broke up Japanese concentrations tighteneCl farm deferment proced- I".. position of trylnr hope~ south Of that British base. The CIO union won a collective had marked Dies down for defeat. three-day battle which toppled were more viCious than any In scribed by headquarters spokes- bargaining election at the plants ure. lessly' to hold back allied which they ever had partici­ Lieut. Gen. Josepb W. Stilwell's May 9, In the repres ntative's Sevastopol last Tuesday and more mea as "sizeable," also laid bombs Tuesday night and now awaits More older men may be taken forlles which he knows will pated. fighters and bombers in northern home county, II Democratic coun- than 50,000 were killed in the ov­ eventually overrun him. from on Dublon township at Truk. Burma also ranged freely, bomb­ certlflcation from lhe Nallonal than needed, o!ficials teared, be­ er-ali 34-day campaigo which In spite of this tremendous op- ty convention dominated by the beaan April 8, said the broadcast. two dlreotlons," G e n era I position tbe American airmen ing and strafing Japanese bridges Labor Relations board. Union cause local draft boards may not Gen. Do u g I a s MacArthur's leaders plan to scek incorporation Refinery Employes union (CIO) A total of 61,687 enemy troops Clark said. plunged through successfu~ly and bombers also attacked the Wewak and installations. immediately adjust themselves From the Eighth army front saw their bombs drop with whal of a maintenance of membership denounced Dies as a "demagogue." was captured in the campaign, the communique described as area again, dropping 100 Ions of clause in a new agreement, while to the liberalized standards of es- 50 far as the house committee Is including Lieutenant G e n era 1 Correspondent ",ood results" on the assigned tar- explosives on this British New 3 Federal Agencies Sewell Avery, Ward's chief execu­ sential work set forth by Selective concerned, Dies has been Its per- Boheme, commander of the Ger­ Lynn Heinzerling wrote that the , gets. Guinea coaslal area where by- Argue Public Attitude tive ofiicer, has stated he would Service Director Lewis B. Her- sonIflcation and the driving force man Fifth army, Moscow said. Of baltle appeared to be going favor­ Th'e American heavy bombers, passed Japanese troops have been meet wlth them but would con­ shey. behind illi widespread Investiga- these, 24,361 were taken In the ably thls afternOOn. 1 On Food Situation tinue to oppose a clause of that , tions which brought frequent last phase of lhe baltle which re- There was no comparison be­ In probably their longest haul ovel· reported massing. The Wewak Th!! war manpower commission land with the exception of the prea has been covered almost nature. clashes with high political figures, gained the big tor tress-port city tween this assault and earlier ones Regensburg shuttle raid, flew daily by raiders since American WASHINGTON, (AP) - Three informed its 1,500 Uoiled States labor and other groups. of Sevastopol. in Italy. Forces engaged are much 1,200 miles to raid the oil plants. forces leap-{rogged around il to fcderal agencies were locked in a Wherry Says Biddle employment service oltlces yes- Other members indicated they , BII" Dattle greater and better equipped. The ------invade Hollandia April 2. behind-the-scene argument yes- Sh Id B I h d ierday that men.30 throush 37 in would not take the lead In any et- Indicating that a big battle was enemy's defenses are tar more terday over whether the publlc OU e e · . fort to continue the committee raging on the west bank of the elaborate than any previously en­ Other targets for MacArthur's . NO")mpeac bl ' essential Induslries are not ex- wide-ranging bombers were New has been given too optimistic a EW Y RK, (Ar -Repu lcan under the new congress which wlll lower Dnestr river, the Russian countered on lhe peninsula and Nips Cut Retreat Line Ireland and New Britain islands. picture of the wartime food situa- Senator Wherry of Nebraska said peeled to be Inducted probably come Into o!!lee next January. daily communique said that 4,000 they are manned by crack troops Enemy anti-aircraft fire brought lion. last night that Attorney General "Cor the remainder of the year." Created May ~6, 1938, the Dies Germans had been killed and 100 who will fight to the end. Halian down two allied planes of flights At the War Food Adminlstra- Biddle should be impeached if in- This was the first official state-I committee has received $625,000 enemy tanks destroyed In a two­ military stUdents came to the Cas_ For Chinese Troops which dropped 44 tons of bombs lion, top ranking oWcials, includ- vestigations now underway prove ment that the over-30 group could I to (Jnance Its Investigations which day repulse of heavy axis attacks sino area In other years to study on Matupi Island and Lakunai and ing Administrator Marvin Jones, government seizure of Montgom- expect deferment throulh 1944. have ranged from inquirles into northwest of Tiraspol. what were regarded as perfect de­ CHUNGKING (AP)-Japanese Tobera airdromes al Rabaul on fear the public has gotten the idea ery Ward's Chicago plant was 11- employment ot "subversive per- This is the sector where the fensl ve positions. invaders sweeping into northwest­ New Britain. the food battle is won. . legal. sons" by the government to Ger- German high command declared ern Honan from Shansi province The argument Involving WFA, In a speech prepared tor the One Dead, 16 Missing man and Japanese activities. that Nazi troops commanded by have cut the east-west Lunghai the O.ffice of Price Administration New Jersey Bankers association Gen. Buschenhagen had smashed Shell ,Pierces Diner raiway 48 miles west of Loyang, Senate Group O. K.'s and the Office of War Informa- Wherry said seizure of the plant In Explolion, Fire Martin Dies' Decision a Soviet bridgehead, dispersing severing a main retreat line for tion, started last week after Price by troops meant "dictators~lp and Aboard Navy Lighter PI CIO H d seven Russian rifle divisions and several hundred thousand Cblnese Income Tax Bill Administrator Chester Bowles the end of private enterprIse." I easel eo parts of one artillery and anti- Near Santa Barbara troops, tJie Chinese high command took all meat except beefsteaks The "time is now or never" lor BOSTON (AP) _ An enlisted (AE) - Phi I J p aircraft division. SAN MARIA Cali r (AP)- acknowledged last night. WASHINGTON, (AP) - The and roasts off rall.onlng. brea~lng " this contlnuity of po.wer I man died ~f bums and 16 others Murray, president of the CIO, ex- A midnight Soviet buJietin .said More than a doz~n shell'fragments A Chinese army spokesman said senate finance committee gave its The manner m which the that IS a threat to our Amencan were reported missing as the re- pressed this comment yesterday the .Soviet troop~ were PItted ' pierced a dining car unit of the Japanese striking from the south approval yesterday to the income Bowles announ.cement ~as mad.e economy," Wherry declared. suit of an explosion and fire when Informed that Rep. Martin a gal ns t numerically superior northbound Southem Pacific Day. were only five miles from Loyang, tax simpLilication bill, previously and the public. reactIOn to It alx>ard a navy Ughter whUe its Dies announced he would not ask enemy forces and had t? call up light Limited yesterday, injuring while a third column, pushing passed by the house, leaving only caused consternahon at the. WFA. C . S d crew was dumping' old and con- renomination: Russian planes to assIst them two Negro women dishwashenl along tt;le Lunghai raHway from minor techoical matters to be Bowles did not clear hIS an- arner qua rons demned ammunition Thursday "I think It Is the greatest con- along the Dnestr but declared "the one seriously. ' the east, was from 13 to 18 miles settled before the measure 15 sent nouncement through 0 WI 0 r afternoon about 14 mUes north- tribution he has made to the wel- enemy did not achieve any suc- Witnesses aboard the train toid aWBY. to the floor for action. WFA. Down 1229 Japs east of Boston harbor. fare of the country since he cess ~1thOUg~, suUering heavy railroad officials that the shell, He estimated that the Japan­ , I'lnlt naval district headquarters entered public life." losses 10 men. apparently launched f~om the land ese, with. the troops from Shansl, revealed the explosion yesterday ------side had gone over the lrain, now had more than 100,000 men UNITED S TAT E S PACIFIC Two Army P-S1 Mustang Fighter Planes In an announcement that declared struck the nearly beach and frag- In the field in an attempt to de­ • FLEET HEADQUARTERS, Pearl the cause was undetermined and D-rlDG 'lnRadl"o Clal"ms Amerl'cans Repulsed ments then hit the dining car. Ali troy the Chinese army In Honan Harbor, (APl - Destruction of that a court in inquiry had been the holes made by lhe fragments al • fighting force. 1,229 Japanese aircraft by United Shaffer Cross-Continental Speed Record organized. were on the coastal side of the While fierce fighting raged in States navy carrier squadrons There was no chance to control In Increased Offensive on Italian Front train. the outer defenses of Loyang, an­ NEW YORK (APl-Two P-51.Clair Peterson of the army all' during the last eight months was the fire, survivors related, and 35 The ace ide n 't occurred at other Japanesc drive menaced the Mustang fighter planes shattereu forces. Eight minutes later. the reported by navy officials yester­ minutes after the first surprise LONDON, (AJ»-The BerlinTlng has been in progress since yes- Tanga!r approximately 55 miles IlIIportant" lown of Sunghsien, 45 the cross-continental flight speed -Mustang piloted by . Lleut. Col, day. The carrier forces lost 164 blast, the 132-foot seU-propelled radio claimed yesterday that first terday on the southern Italian north of Sanla Barbara. miles to the southwest, as the record yesterday, one plane tra- Jack H. Carter, who had taken planes in the same actions--a fa­ vessel sank to the ocean bottom. American thrusts had been re- front" and while merely local it Army oWclals at nearby Camp Japanese, determined to safeguard vellng from Los Angeles to New off from Los Angeles one minute vorable ratio of better th'an seven pulsed near Casteitorte In the al- "unmistakably lignifies the pre- Cooke withheld comment until a their newly-won hold on the York in six hours, 31 minutes and ahead of Peterson, swooped onto to one. lied offensive in Italy and the Nazi liminary stage of new break- complete Investigation could be nor t h - south Peiping-Hankow 30 seconds with one stop, and the a runway. A large percentage o( th6 crews Million Dollar Flood propaganda mlll ground 'out a through attempts long planned by Imade . • raJlway, a ttempted to · sweep the other making the trip non-stop in Carter flew what Is known as of the lost American planes were story that Field Marshal Erwin the Anglo-Americans." defenders from the great Honan slx hours, 39 minutes and 30· sec- the great ~Ircle rout of 2,464 miles, rescued. NORFOLK, Neb. (AP)-Flash Rommel milht counter the Im- However, the Berlin radio In a Yank Subs Destroy p1alns and into the hills, onds. the regular route followed by The navy announcement re- floods swept 00 past Norfolk last pending drive from the west with broadcast to the controlled press ' I Both ships carried regular army service planes from west to east. I capitulated the store beginning nlght lind threatened smaller an Invasion of Great Britain. of southeastern said "It is 14 Japanese Ven. I equipment, Including a full com- Petel'son's route, Including a stop I with the Marcus Island rlld list communities downstream after The German account said !leld assumed that this Is the expected Gen, Mark Clark plement of six machine guns and at Kansas City to refuel, was Sept. 1 and extending through the WASHINGTON, (AP) - De­ , causilll an estimated million dol­ troops wit h d r e w before the allied larle-scale attack." Conferred With FDR armament and extra gasoline 2,470 miles. The Constellation's second heavy raid on Truk, in the Ius damage In this city ot 10,500 American advance bul th.al the al- The co un t e r-invaliion boast struction of a Japanese destroyer tanks. t1.ight was also made over the Carolines, during the last two population, which wal .warned tackers were subjected to "ex- came in an Axis press report and 13 merchant vessels by hard­ At Southern H·ld.away The previous west-to-east speed great circle route. days of April. The total does not new heavy rains upstream wUl \Temely violent German artillery I which insisted that Rommel could hitting American submarines bat· record was made last April 17 by Peterson told reporters he av- Include slight losses at Truk and brlna, more hiJh wate" here. tire" and that "GermjUl shock be counted on to delend by at­ tering s \ e a d i I y at Nipponese W~SHINGTON, (APl-As a the Lockheed Constellation which eraged about 390 miles per hour. during the Hollandia landin,. For six houra, NorMll" only ctJtIU1'andos carried out a counter- tacking. supply lines in Pacific waters was preliminary to the new allled of. flew fram Burbank, Calif., to "I feel pretty good, but a little April 21 nor does It take in the means of communicaUon with blow with such ' vehemence that Most London observers took this announced by the navy yesterday, fenalve now underway in Italy, Washington, D. C., in six hours numb iri spots," he said. "We used 54 Japanese planes ahot down by other ~ ; wu radio staUon the AmerlcaOl were defeated be- with a l1'ain of salt believing it The .Inklngs brought to 709 \he Ll Gen. Mark Clark, commander and 68 minutes. The CoOlteUation oxygen aU the way and didn't eat. task force anti-aircraft fire. lUAG, which broadcast warnings fore they had been able to settle more likely that the Nazi prll!SS number of Japanese ships sunk or of the FlIth army, recently made Is a huge, four-engined traMport No, I wasn't pushing the plane. The American carriet SQuadron. and dlrect\oDl after transferrlna down." wu pUltflll out dispatches ot damaled by American submeni· • IeCref trip to this country and plane. You could fly those plane. aU day destroyed 673 Japanue planes In operations from Ita Dooded down­ The Germany alency DNB told feill'led confidence rather than bles. Of that number 11M have C!Qaferred with President ROOM- Pilot of the first plane to land and all nlsht at that rate without aerial combats and amHhed 1156 I lown atudio to the tranamiltlnl the controlled European press out- rlskiDi dilcl08ure of any real Ger­ been sent to the bottom, 38 prob­ veJt. at LaGuardia a1rpol'~ wu CoL pUBhinl them." . on the &round. ataUQOi OIl the Norfolk outakirta. ,ide' Germany that "violent fiIh\- IIUlD defense plans. ably sunk and 115 dama8ed...... ;j PJlG'E TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA - CITY, IOWA SATURDAY, MAY 13,' i944 THE DAILY lowA N Stalin AdvocaYing Incredible That Men OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN !lem. In the UHlVEft!ITY CALENDAR are ""bed.md In a.e~. Published every morning exeept Monday by Student Publications ~,,~a, deposited with lhe camp"s editor of The Dally Iowan or Ilia), be '!;j I' placed '" lhe box provIded for their deposit In tbe old"". of fto ~I ~ ': DaJly Iowan. GENERAL NOTICES must be 8t The DAlly 10_."" Board of Trustees: Wilbur L. Schramm, A. Graig Baird, Kirk H. • ,~ 4:30 p. m. the day preeedinc flnt publlcatlon; I\o\.loes will NOT be 4'J accepled by telephone. and must be TYPED OR LEGlllLY WRITTEN Porter, Paul E. Olson, Jack Moyers, Jeanne Franklin, Sarah Bailey, Insists Visiting Priest To Presidency Now and SIGNED by a r""pan&l.ble person. Donald Ottilie, Charles Swisher. ~ CHICAGO - The Rev. Stanis­ WASHINGTON-It seems jn­ Saturday, May 13, 1944 Fred M. Pownall, Publisher laus Orlemansi

From the 1/ Sid I ]HI DAILY IOWAN

E I:n tines • • • 9:30 o Classes s By WHITNEY MARTIN By • Supple. NEW YORK, May 8

Stark, will sing an anthem. Ifhip t upper and soeial hour. with Holy Communion. erman, Monday, MJY 15, Rogation day. Guild in Parisn h use. peak on "The Bread CHURCH CALENDAR "Welch Chor;)le" (Protherocl. ',' '? ,\ I lUrtety i. mai tained during "Emergency Religion." 7 n. m.-Holy Communion. Thursday, May 18, Feast of the of Life." dir lor will sing ",1(,t Il'r I) , 1 l h of the morning service 12:30 p . m.-Th Luth ron Hour 10 a, m.-Lit ny and mornin Asee ion. 2 p. m.-Divin!' rvi!'<.>:u. SL (For Tomorrow and Next Week) Mine" (Tours). Mrs. 0 1'0 y,!. j r tbe convt'nien I' vi p;.rents ov r WMT. S.Ch eldrup, organist, will 1.11. yo I\ .:h .:111 children. 4 p. m.-Discussion and social prayer. 7 II, m.-Holy Communion. John' Lutheran chur h, Sharon FIrst Baptist church • discussion on the theme "Are You Theme from "Finlnndi" (~~ - 8 1. Mllry's church feIlowship for alliuden nd 7:30 p. m.-Special mt'eting of 10 s. m.-Holy Communion. nter . 227 • Clinton street Convinced?" hus), "Adagio (C M jor F :,:-1 - 21 11 E J rr ervicemen sponsored by Gamma the Ve try for electing delegates 7:30 p. m.-The Inquir r's class 4 p. m.- Lutheran Student as- Elmer E. Dierks, pastor Tuesday, 7:30 p. m.-The Busi­ sie)" (Franck) and • • e erson (Henry Smart). ' l.l. I!cv,. ~&'r. Carl H. einburw, Delta, n lion'l ocit/lion bf io I OIoc an c enti n. at the rector. .sociation devotional mt'eting at the 9:30 a. m.-Sunday school. ness Women's circle will meet at Lutheran students: Tuesday. May 16. Rogation day. Saturday, May 20. First English Lutheran church. Classes for all ages. George W. the home of Mrs. Anna Carpen­ 4:30 p, m.-Wesl!.'y found:lticn R ' J p~ lor hmt' Friday, 7 p. 7 D. m.-Holy Communion. 5 p. m .- Junior choir. The Rev. Ralph Krueger wiIl Supplee, misSionary from Kohima, ter. 217 E. Davenport street. and Pilgrim Youth fcllowEhiJl \. ill • e;. I'tant p lor I, meeting. 10 D. m.-Red Cross Sewing 7 p. m.-Senior ch ir. speak on "God." India , will speak to the Sunday Wednesday, 2:30 p. m.-The mt'et at the studellt ('enter fLl' n G:t, m. First mass. group. 7:30 p. m.-Mt'eting oC the ~ooJ. Women's association will meet in socwl hour. 7~v'J-tl. m.-Second rna s. TrinH E~pal lIurch 7:30 p. m.-ExpJo er Troop UDiI.lian c11.~h Luther Le-ague. The pa tor wHl 10:30 a. m.-Service of WQJ'ship the SOcia l rooms of the churCh. 5:30 p. m.-Supper :md I'e pel's. !l :1, m.--Children's mass. 2U . JohDMll .reet m hng. Iowa aDd GiUIerl a&re speak on " How We Got Our and adltress by George W. Sup­ Mrs. Ira H. Pierce and Mrs. A. O. 10.15 :I, m,- High muss. Rev. tetle:r1c:k W. Putnam, 11 Wednruday, My 17, Rag lion Rev. baas A. Werihle,.,.,.... B ible." pJee on his work as educational Kelley are co-hostesses. Mrs. j\fenn niCe Gospel 1" ion Churrh 1 Lv:! .1 . m.- Student mass. 8 a. m.-Holy Communion. day. . 10:45 a. m.-Public service. Sub- Wednesday, 2:30 p. m.-Mis- director of the American Baptist J ames E. Waery will review the Norman Uobb, uperinl ndlllt D ...." mJ c S at 6:30 and 7:30 9:30 /1 . m.-Upper church school. 7 D. m.- Holy Communion. ject: "Life's Richest Legacy." sionary tea in the church parlors mission at Kohima, India. Ruth book "Angel Moe and Her SOn, 10 a. m.-Sundny l'hool. o. 0'1 . 10:45 a. m.-Holy Eucharist and 10 a. m.- Litany and Holy Com- under the auspic of the Ladies 11 D. m.-Communiun service. Healy will sing Van de Water's Roland Hayes." ! ... :urd s-Confes ions will be sermon. Lower church chool in munion. ZlolI LUIhenD ehuell Aid society. ('I :nlle. arrengement of the parable "The Sunday, May 21-Congrega­ Bi hop D. J. Fisher in he •. rtl I."m 2:30 until 5 p . m. and parish bouse. 2:30 p. m.- omen's Auxiliary lelul54la anti Blo·m',..tDn dreets 7:30 p. m.- F'irst mt'eting of the PIIblican." Mrs. C h a r 1 e s B. tional Christian World Order 7:30 p. m.-Young 1It'Or,II:5' : .... m -; cr,' j) 8:30 p. m . 2 p. m.-Holy communion for Annual Spri.ng tea at the home ot A. C. Proehl, .aslor adult class of instruction. Rllhter wiJI be at the organ. As Compact day witb special morn­ meeting. Pre-Flight cndets. the pr ident, Mn. W. A. And r- 9:15 a. m.-Sunday school. Saturday, 6 p. m.-Supper nnd • prelude she will play "Adagio" ing service . 8:20 p. m.-S"rmon. ~t. Patrick's church 2:45 p. m - Gamma K ppa son, 530 Fe on. 9:30 a. m.-Bibl class. social ,atber' t r students and (Franck) "Chorale Prelude" Hum­ Thursday, May 25 - Annual Tuesday, 7:25 p. In.-BillIe study 22 1 E. Court str.ee~ Delta outing. 7:30 p. m.- Saint Vin ent's lQ:30 a. m.-Divine rviee. The service m n. ~rdinck) , and "Postlude In A meeti{lg of the church. at 803 Rooseevlt str t. Rt. Rev. lbiT. Patrick O'Reilly, Flal" (Eslava). The Ordinance of June 5 to June 17- United Daily Thursd:lY, 7:45 p. m. - PmyeJ' pasl.or POPEYE Ileptism will be administered. Vacation Bible schoOl. meeting. Rev. Geor"e E.. nell. Parents may leave small chil­ I. tant pa tor dren in the nursery. Coralville Bible church Nazaren c'burch 7 a. m.-Low ma"s. 4:30 p. m.-Vesper meeting of Coralville 726 Walnut 8:30 D. m.-High mass. the Roger Williams fellowship .at Rudolph Mellficrll, pastor Paul W. omervillc. pastor 9:45 a. m.-Low moss. the student center, 230 N. Clinton 9:45 a. m.-Sundoy school with 9:45 a. m.-Sunday bchw l. 11 a. m.-Low mass. street. Ruth Healy will lead the classes for all ages. Mrs. Leo 10:45 a. m.- Morning worship. Daily mns e at 8 a. m. except meeting on the subject "What We Bergthold, superintendent. Sermon "God With Us." on Saturd&y. Saturday ma ~s at OWe to Roger Williams, the Man." 11 a. m.-Mother's day worship 7 p. m.-You ng people's. rvice. 7:30 D . m. Inlonnal fellowship follows this service. The sermon by the pas­ 8 p. m.- Evening wor hip. Mr. Saturday- Confessions will be JJiteting. All students, mlJitary tor will be on the theme "Mercy's Day, blind music-ia n, will )Jlay Ihe a rd from 3 .until 5 p. m. and Jl\en and business young people Return." and Ing. Crom 7 unhl 9 p. m. are invited. 7:30 p. m.-Evening gasp I 8 p. m.· Midwc k prny .. . erv- t. Weuceslaus cJ:wrcb )londay, 7:30 p. m.-Meeting of service. The speaker for thls ice. 630 E. DavcA»Or' tr t the Junior Baptist Women's asso­ mt'etihg will be George Supplt'e, Rev. Edward W. eUIII, pa tor ciation at the home of Mrs. n. I r. missionary to Kohirtl3 Assam, In­ First Pr bytcria.n chorch t'V. J . B. COllra"', Grillet, 851 Dearborn street. dia, under the American Baptist 2G Jo.:. Market bln:!'t assisLant 11 stor Missionary society. His message Dr. iliOn T. Jones, pa~lor 0:30 a. m.-Low mass. First Christian church will be illustrated by stereopticon 9:30 n. m.· ·Church ~c h oo l , Rub­ 8 a, m.- Low mllss. 217 Iowa. avenue slides of the work in India. Vocal ert Wil son, ~ up · rint ~ ll dc nt . All 10 11 . m.- lIigh ma . Rev. Ra.ymond Ludw'igson, selec::tions will be pr s nted by lhe d!.'pnrtrn nl m 1 fit th .om Dnily 100 ' cs. at 7 :md 7:30 n. m. supply pastor hour. Mrs. Helen Jongewaard. S turdDY conf ion will be BLONDIE CHIC YOUNG 9:30 D. m.-Sunday school. Wednesday, 2:30 p. m.-Wom­ 9:3 0 a. m. Bible ,I:ISS (fi nch! by henrd (rom 3 until 0 p. m. nnd D. 11. J 10:30 m.-Morhing service. en's Christian fellowship meeting. Dl·. Thornton. from 7 Ulltll 8:30 p. m. Strmoll, "Mother's Dny Message." Thursday, 4 p. m.- K. Y. B 10:30 '3. m.-Sl'rl ll'e 01 wur., hip. AlI..~~Drml 4:30 p. m,-Youth fell owship. club meting at the church. S J lJlon , .. III" J 111111 and Our 't "aul's Lulheran /liver ·ily GET UP AND GEr Thursday, 7,30 p. m.-Proyer Civil izll liol) ." hllr'lI YOUR SISTER A Plrst Church of Christ Scientist meeting and Bible study at til' 4:30 p. 1Il.-Wc_lminst,· r fell ow­ GillJert and J t nMllJ tre ts GLASS OF WATER 7t2 E. College street pastor's home. sh.p ve~ p l'r ~('rvicl'. Dr. H .J . L. C. Wucrffel, p tor 9:45 a. m.-Sunday school. Friday, 4 p. m.-Children's Dible Thol'nton wiIL' .. pllk on "Optimi In 9:30 n. m.-Sundny Sl'hool and 11 o. m.-Lesson sermon, "Mor­ club in the pastor's homp. 0:30 In Ili ~ lory . " Bible cia for all. blls and Immortals." p. m.- Fellowship supper' tOKe the .. o p. m.-W... : tminster fcllow- 10:30 n. m.-Divine worship A nursery with an attendant in with the United GO.5 pel church of charge Js maintained [or the con­ Iown City in the assembly rOom venience of parents with small of the Iowa, Illinois Gas and Elec­ \VACS ARE READY fOR SUMMER children. tl'ic COm p an y. Members Dnd a great Wednesday, 8 p. m.-Testimo­ friends of the ch\1rch who plan to ool ,and Inial meeting. The publie is in- attend are asked to notify Mrs. up pro. vited. Floyd Kelley, dial 7402. the dis. .A reading room at the same .Ilt atfdress is open to the publ ic be­ ~Irs t Eng-Iish Lutheran church Car tween the hours of 2 and 5 every Dubuque and Market str 'et as afternoon except Sundays and Rev. Ralph M. Kreuger, pastor legal holidays. 9:30 a. m.-Sunday school. 10:45 n. m.-Morning worship HENRY First Coltg'reg-alionaJ church observing the f e s t i v i t y or the -so VOU FINAlLY DECIDED TO "()lin1on and Jefferson streets Christian home. Sermon. "}'aith cot.\e HOME, DID YOU - LU6 1 Rev. James E. Waery, pasl.or Filled Homes." 10:30 a. m.-Sunday schOOl, 4 p. m.-Lutheran Student as­ with Mrs. Kenneth E. Greene, superin­ sociation at the church. The that tendent. theme discussed will be "The Doc­ conc~D '1 10:30 a. m.-Morning service of trine of Cod." see any wotship. Sermon, "Homc Reli­ Wednesday, 2 p. m.-Mceting oC and gion." MI's. Gerald W. Buxton, the women of the church at the than organist, will play "Songs My church. K. Marie Jensen. mis­ doing i~ Motber Taught Me" (A n t on sionary recently relut'ned from he won't Dvorak) for the prelude and Liberia, Africa, will be the speak- hence "Moderato in 0 Minor" (C. Ett) er. rpigh! lot the postlude. The junior choir Saturday, 6 p. m.- Supper Dnd fin · directed by Mrs. Richard B. social hOur nt Zion Luthemn In Schenk will sing "0 Come To My church for students and ser vice Heart, Lord Jesus" (Paul Am- men. brose) , while the University high scbool sextet under the direction Methodist church ot Edna Ruth Wood will Sing Jefferson and Dubuque slreel "Dearest Lord Jesus" (Bach) as Dr. L. L. Dunnlngl.on, minister BRICK BRADFORD CLARENCE GRAY the offel'lory anthem. 9:15 B. m.-Church school, Clark 4:30 p. m.-Students and service Caldwell, acting supel'illtendel1t. I'LL SEE YOU DO NOT E5- KEEP T~05E DIRTY PAWS • IN AN INSTANT, T~E ROOM BECOME5 THE SCENE OF A WILD men will meet with the Metho- Each department meets in sepa­ CtlPE ME AGAIN, GIRL! TO.YOURSELF, C\.IUM! MELEE ,. dist young people at the Wesley rate session. foundation student center for rel- 10:30 a. m. - Morning worship. lowship, supper, song fest, and Sermon, "Love and a Home." The vespers with another stUdent-led Ichoir, directed by PrQf. Herald

CORP. MARY FRIEMAN at Niles, Mich., left, Md Lieut. Robin Eliot, ~aily Iowan Waht Ads Elgin, III., model the new summer uniform of the Women's Army Corps. Officers and enli sted members of the WAC will wear IdenUcal CLASSIFIEb LOST AND FOUND dresses except (or the Insignia. (1 ;,ter nation:.l) ADVERTISING LOST-Hammered silver bracel t. RATE CARD One inch thick-raised initial L. Senlimental val u e. R e war d. ,Marie Is Back! Name Too Small CASH RATE Phone X8416. PAUL ROBINSON lor 2 days- 10c per Ii ne per day mstRuonON S consecutive days- HOW OlD YOtJ MAKE; 7c per line per day OUT WITH 'THAT SOLD11:I2 6 consecutive days"- For a Foothold- f!:OI AND HIS GIRL r! 5c per I ine per day On Yom FD'Il~ (:) I rnonth- Enroll Now "'lIr 4c per lj ne per day Efficient Baslness Trahtln&' mFigure 5 words to line­ at 1 Mini1Ilum Ad-2 lines Iowa City Commercial CoIle.e 203 ~ E. Washlnnon CLASSIFIED DISPLAY 5Qc col. inch DANCING LESSONS - ballroom, Or $5.00 per month ballet tap. Dial 7248. MimI Youde Wuriu. All Want Ads Cash in Advance Payable at Daily Iowan Busi­ ness office dally until 5 p.m. Brown'. CommerC!e "Conere 10 .. City'. Aceredltid Cancellations must be called in Business School before 5 p. m. EstabliMled 1921 Responsible for one inconect Da,. Sehoo) Night SChool insertion only. "Open the Year 'Round" DIal >1682

DIAL 4191 WANTED-Plumbing end beaUn,. Larew Co. Dial 9681. WlJEftE TO BUY IT WANTED* * * 1VANTEO-Janilor. Larew Co. ,.Your Phone 9681. Sumaer Rec:teaU.D Suppll_ Camp Stoves Cots ------Picnic Boxes FEMALE HELP WANTED Golf .Aft:hety -WANTED-Girl for general office Baseball Badminton Work. Larew Co. Phone 9681. FIRESTONE STORE .. , . FURNITURE MOVING ACTRESS IINNII IARNES Is .eek­ = CURTIS THE FLORIST ing $100,000 in damqea trom the Edward Small productiolll be­ MAHER BROS. TRANSFER 127 South Dubuque cause, abe 8ays, aile lU1fered pro­ For Efficient Furniture MOving Dial 6566 fe8slonal Injury when advertise­ Ask About Our AWAY from the acreen tor three ments for "Up In Mabel's Room" WARDROBE SERVICE Greenhouse Near Airport years, Marie Wilson, above, now billed her In smaller lise type brings her curve. and pretty ler. biAL - 9696 - DIAL Dial 2455 than that u.sed .tor starring play. back to the film. In a new coUegl. en. (!lJt~rDltion~ -r.e mUllcaL,r .OIJC.r•• cioulJ PAGE SIX THE DAILY lOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA SATURDAY, MAY 13, 194t Prof. Earl E. Harper Addresses Universi'ty High Graduates ~------~~------~-- Army Signal Corpl REFUGEES HELD ELLIS ISLAND Civil Service Seeks Mrs. J. W. Howe Exercises Held Worker to Conduct AT Corp~ W. C. Mulherin Trainees for Work Iowa City Woman To Direct Canning Interviews Here Earns Purple Heart As Ordnance Aids Dies at Elkhorn Center Activities Interviews to till essential jobs Mrs, J . W. Howe will be the For 37 Seniors at 1he aircraft radio laboratory at Trainees are being sought by For wounds receIved in action the United States civil service Funeral services will be held general chairman of the Iowa Cit, Wright field, Dayton, Ohio, will today at Harlan for Mrs. Emma on tne ' Anzio beachhead, Corp. commission to work as technical canning center this summer, ac­ I be conducted in Iowa City May A rgotsinger, 83, who died Thurs­ cording to Prof. Sybil WoOdruff. 'Today's Youth Faces 25 through May 27 at the United William C. Mulherin has been aids In OrdmlOl:.e development in day evening in the home of her chairman of nutrition in the civil. States employment serVice oUice awarded the Purple Heart. He is Challenging Future,' Washington, D. C. daughter, Mrs. George Sorehson ian defense council. by Margaret Ann Smith, army sig­ the son of Mr. and Mrs. James of Elkhorn, after a short illness. WiijJ the in increase in V1cl011 Says Faculty Member nal corps representative. The an­ Mulherin, route 7. Corporal Mul- Starting salary is $1,970 a year, Mrs. Argotslnger lived at the gardens, it is expected that more nouncement was made today by herin wrote to his parents over a Including overtime pay. Promotion home of Mary O. Coldren, 602 people than formerly will want to "As makers of history today, E. E. Kline, area director of the month ago saying he was sending will be made upon completion of Clark street, for the past nine use the pressure canning equip. you who are graduating from high war manpower division. the medal home, and it arrived the training period to positions years. ment. Six semester hours credit in col­ Wednesday. school are both to be com- She was born April 13, 1861, Iowa City women canned nearl, lege mathematics and physics or Corporal Mulherin enlisted Jan. paying $2,190 a year. miserated with and congratu- No experience or education is in Perrysville, Ind. Surviving 4,000 jars of food in the cannilll one year's technical experience 22, 1941, and was called Into serv- required (or these positions, al­ Mrs. Argotsinger are two daugh­ lated," said Prof. Earl E. Harper, ice in February of the same year. center last summer. Last year'1 demonstrating a knowledge ot ters, Mrs. Hazel Anderson of canning was unusually successful director of the school ot line ads, mathematics and physics equiva­ He received his basic training at though persons who have had high school physics or a trade school Elgin, Neb. and Mrs. Sorenson, because almost no spoUage wq lent to college' work are required to the 1944 graduates of university Ft. Benning, Ga., and visited here course in mechanics or electricity and one son, George, of . reported, Professor Woo d r u f I high school last night at com­ for each applicant. All applicants on a I5-day furlough in Septem- are especially desired. stated. must have reached the age of 18, ber, before gOing overseas in Applicants must be at least 18 mencement exercises held at Uni­ A survey in the fali of 1943 In. but no maximum age level has December, 1942. years old, citizens of the United Reformatory Trusties dicated that for those who eaRned versity theater. been set. He served with the Fifth army States ang must pass a written He pointed out that as graduates Sentenced to Terms the average spoilage in Iowa wq A written examination covering In North Africa, Sicily and on the test. Applications must be filed about three quarts per family. they were on the brink of a future elementary algebra and geometry Anzio beachhead. ' with the United States civil serv- demanding great responsibility In' State Penitentiary About 94 out of every 100 families and ap aptltude test wlil also be Corporal Mulherin has two ice commiSSion Wasbington (25) did some canning and a little over and offering challenge. "Your required. broth~rs in. the navy, Daniel and D. C., or on ~fore July 31, 1944: task is to rid the world of a type ,- Three Anamosa trusties, Clar- one-third of them reported some Those accepted will be given a TWO WOMIN I.PUGEIS are being held at Ellis liIland, according- to ~arold. ~IS father manage~ a Persons using their highest skills ence Sallsbury, Lloyd Bailey and spoilage. of government which we abhor, a 26-week training coursc at the the department o( jWltice, on chargea ot violation of the "trading tllllng statIOn here In Iowa City. I in war work should not apply. type of government which makes William Gray, c h a r g e d with Profcssor Woodruf! s t a ted: University of Minnesota at Minne­ with the enemy" act of 1917, In attempting to bring hidden mea­ Announcements and application breaking and entering the Fox "Food canned at the center wq men slaves," he said. apolis, Minn., beginlng June 19. ... Into the U. S. The women were Identitled as M\ae Mary Anna Farm Field Work forms may be obtained from the Head tavern April 21, were sen- probably free from spoilage be • "For U8 today that problem During this time they will be paid I DeIln1kaJtla, 30, lett, and her elater, Mrs. Helen Braun, 2', nativell commiSsion's local secretary, Har­ tenced yesterday morning by Di5- cause oniy reliable methods were I. lIymbollzed by the draft a regular salary. of P8IlJIlIylvania who went to Poland &II children. Cwrtom agent.. Depends on Tractors old J. Rummels, at the post office trict Judge Harold D. Evans to 10 permitted to be used. Families board and the ratIon board," Following graduation from this found writing on cloth BeWD under a coat UnIng after the two arrived or from the United States civil years at hard labor in the state will be better able to gauge the he continued. The draft board course, they will be assigned to on the exchange liner Grlpabolm, (1Dt~rD.tiona1 Sound,boto) ' I With the delayed farm field I course to begin established to reduce injuries to range. " deck bunks are an was the head of a lar«e Christian Tuesday, according to Mrs. I. A. was chosen president of the Stu­ "Tomorrow will be a great day, Induction Tuesday. and volunteer help, will have to civilian and military personnel invitation to sprains, and broken school In Kohima Assam, India, Rankin, chairman of the local dent Nurses organization at aD tor tomorrow will be the day of Before presenting diplomas to be given a large amount of the and to promote health conserva- bones caused by falls or jumping." the scene of much war activity home nursing committee. election held last week. victory," emphasized Professor the class, Prof. E. T. Peterson, credit if these ' production goals tion. Colonel Schaub said that acci- at present. . The course wiii be given the fol. Other officers elected to serve Harper, "but it is the day after to­ acting dean of the college of edu­ are met. Without the tractor the are, Marjory Youngstrom, NI of Lieut. Col. Harold Schaub, ex- dents in the local unit have re­ He is ~ membCl' of the Ameri­ lowing tlmes: 9 a.m. until 11 a.m., morrow with which I am con­ cation, also congratulated the food production picture would be ecutive office, has been appointed mained at a minimum but that can Baptist. Missionary society, May 16, 17, 18, 19, 22 and 23; a Burlington, first vice-president; cerned." Alter the sense of peace graduates on the part of the Uni. much darker than it is at the pres­ Eleanor Lockwood, N2 of Cedat station safety director. He will "an ounce of prevention is worth and has befiln a missionary for the second class, 9 a.m. until 11 a.m., has again settled over the world, versity of Iowa of' which the ent lime, he stated. Rapids, second vice - president; be assisted by six supervisors: a pound of cure." past 22 years. His address on May 24, 25, 26, 27, 29 and 30; a the problems of making new de­ school is an integral part, and of There have been times in past Mary Murchison, N2 of Sidney, Lieut. William J. Silverman, The assistant safety supervisors Sunday night wlll be illustrated third class from 2 p.m. un til 4 cisions and determining the future Which they are in a sense, gradu­ years When horses could do the secretary; Carolyn Ruthenburg, Lieut. Herbert Garrett, Lieut. Irv- will be respo[lslble for the safety by stereopticon slides. p.m., May 16, 18, 20, 23, 25 and 27, will be of vital moment," he ates, he said. job and the tractor was, according N2 of Muscatine, treasure,; Jane ing L. Smith, Lieut. John D. of their individual units. They His daughter, Mrs. Helen Jonge­ and a fourth class from 7:30 p.m. added. . to some farmers, not needed. But Weeks, Nl of CarrOll, Hawkeye Bradley and Lieut. Bernard W. will be required to compile a list waard, will present VOcal !ll!lec­ to 9:30 p.m. May 17, 19, 22, 24, 26 He admitted that the picture he today necessary food production lions during the service. and university representative; Aginsky. of potential actual salety hazards and 29. was painting was not bright, but could not possibly be secured Mr. Supplee will also speak Margaret Alien, Nl of Cedar Rap­ "The supervisors will check sur- in and about their installations at This course is open to anyone In he urged the graduates to meet wi1hout the farm tractor-. There the First Baptist church Sunday ids, social chairman, and Beltr roundings and equipment tor safe. and will make recommendations Johnson county, and each class this task without prejudice, pas­ have been those in the past who school at 9:30 a. m. at the service Grange, Nl of Wheaton, Ill., ath. 1y hazards," Colonel SchaUb said. for the elimination of unnecessary will be limited to 10 persons. sion or bias. "Pessimists will al­ "They will also check the work hazards. have not realized the importance of worship at 10:30 a. m. tomor­ letic chairman. ways be among you but the reallst habits of their subordinates and They will be responsible for the of food production to aid in win.,. row can also be an idealist." initiate any cor r e c t i v e action proper reporting of injuries and ning the war. Gardner empha­ man, and Cadets G. B. Hayes, P. Following Professor Har­ necessary. We follow three rules disability cases. sized the fact that now almost W. Walters, E. K. Braun, M. E. per's address, the class of 37 in teaching safety: first, tell the Ofiicials of the safety program everyone knows that a farm is a Pre-Flight Battalion Barnes, J. H. Bryant, R. J. Mrs. W. Baldridge senIors was presented by E. P. employees how to work safely; will maintain close cooperation war plant and that every farm is a To Hold Graduation Stueber and T. N. Johnson. Lynn, principal, who urged second, show the employees how with the flre marshall, the Ameri­ vital unit in America's big war Chaperones will be Lieut. and Dies in Local Hospital them to take part In assuming to work safely, and third, see that can Red Cross in providing a first production program. Formal Tonight Mrs. C. E. Hurlbert, Lieut. (j.g.) responsibility both on the they work safely. Every accident lIid program, and with directors and Mrs. T. J. Craig and Ens. and Mrs. William Baldl'idge, 81, home front and on the battle can be traced to some person's of military t r a in i n g, physical Red Crall Chairman Battalion 3A of the Navy Pre­ Mrs. B. D. McGarry. mother of the late Dr. C. W. Bald­ front. PrIncipal Lynn paid fault, neglect or carelessness. Ac- training, Colonel Schaub said. Flight school will hold Its formal tribute to four former gradu­ ridge of Iowa City, died Thurs­ cident prevention is just a matter Announces Committee graduation dance this evening day evening in University hospital a&es now listed as mIssing or of the application of good common from 8 until 11 o'clock in the Intoxicated Driving killed In. acUon, and acknowl­ Judge Sentences following an illness of four weeks. horse sense. Mrs. J . P. Cady, Junior Red Iowa Union. Harry Powers was tined $5 by The funeral will be held at Straw­ ed ..~ two members 01 the Cross chairman in Johnson coun­ He pointed 0 u t t hat troup Robert Wingler The committee in charge con­ the local police tor driving while berry Point where Mrs. Baldridge ty, has announced her committee sists of Cadet J. D. Rose, chalr- intoxicated. To Penitentiary for the forthcoming year. resided. Robert Wingler, 22, of Iowa City The members are: Frank J. Missionary From India to Present Religious Broadcast- rural route 4, was sentenced yes­ Snider, county superintendent ot terday morning by District Judge schools, Mrs. Eric Wilson, Mrs. Harold D. Evans to a term of not Chan Coulter nad Mrs. Mary Say­ WSIJI (910) WMT (6410) 10:15 Musical Favorites Boston Pops Orchestra (Blue) lor. III.. 11(00): (1190) clla (7110) more than a year in the state penI­ 10:30 Famous Short Story 8:15 II'HO (lt40) MBa (72t) tentiary after he was convicted of The committee will meet with 11:00 High School News Hit Parade (WMT) Dorothy Anderson, Red Cross field TO ALL operating a motor vehicle wbile 11:15 Waltz Time National Barn Dance {WHO) Broadcast Induction intoxicated. director from St. Louis, at 10 a.m. 11 :30 Madonna Pictures Boston Pops Orcheslra (Blue) Ami s ion a r y from India, Saturday in the local Red Cross s 11:45 On the Home Front 8:30 Wing];:r was arrested by Iowa George Supplee, recently returned City policemen January 16, and office. 11 :50 Farm Flashes Hit Parade (WMT) from Kohima Assam, India, will 12:00 Rhythm Rambles Barn Dance Frolic (WHO) appeared for arraignment yester­ be interviewed over WSUI this BLOOD· day morning under an indictment DONO~S 12:30 News, The Dally Iowan Spotlight Bands (Blue) MUlic Group Elects afternoon at 12:45 by Dr. M. Wil­ 12:45 Views and Interviews 8:45 which was returned Feb. 10 by Mrs. C. A. Beckman lard Lampe, director of the school 1:00 Musical Chats Freedom of Opportunity the grand jury. -another chance to help of religion. Supplee spent 22 After serving two and one-half 2:00 Bible Reading (WMT) Mrs. Charles A. Beckman was years as a member of the Ameri­ 2:10 Drum Parade Barn Dance Frolic (WHO) years of an eight year sentence at can Baptist Missionary society Anamosa on a charge of man­ elected chairman of the music de­ 2:30 ScJence News Spotlight Bands (Blue) partment 0 f the Iowa Cit y among the Nagas In India, and 2:45 Light Opera Airs 9:00 slaughter, Wingler was paroled to returned to this country only a bis father. Woman's club at a meeting yester­ 3:15 United states Nurse Corps Freedom of Opportunity day afternoon in the clubrooms of few months ago. He has interest­ Induction (WMT) ing first-hand information about the Community building. She suc~ 4:15 Todd' Grant Barn Dance Parly (WHO) ceeds Mrs. Gerald Buxton. Re­ the work and programs of mis­ 4:30 Tea Time Melodies Guy Lombardo (Blue) sions in India, and will be able to elected secrel