(Iowa City, Iowa), 1944-05-13

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Iowa City, Iowa), 1944-05-13 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. LONDON, (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. ... Hit 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!.
Recommended publications
  • Woman War Correspondent,” 1846-1945
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Carolina Digital Repository CONDITIONS OF ACCEPTANCE: THE UNITED STATES MILITARY, THE PRESS, AND THE “WOMAN WAR CORRESPONDENT,” 1846-1945 Carolyn M. Edy A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Chapel Hill 2012 Approved by: Jean Folkerts W. Fitzhugh Brundage Jacquelyn Dowd Hall Frank E. Fee, Jr. Barbara Friedman ©2012 Carolyn Martindale Edy ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii Abstract CAROLYN M. EDY: Conditions of Acceptance: The United States Military, the Press, and the “Woman War Correspondent,” 1846-1945 (Under the direction of Jean Folkerts) This dissertation chronicles the history of American women who worked as war correspondents through the end of World War II, demonstrating the ways the military, the press, and women themselves constructed categories for war reporting that promoted and prevented women’s access to war: the “war correspondent,” who covered war-related news, and the “woman war correspondent,” who covered the woman’s angle of war. As the first study to examine these concepts, from their emergence in the press through their use in military directives, this dissertation relies upon a variety of sources to consider the roles and influences, not only of the women who worked as war correspondents but of the individuals and institutions surrounding their work. Nineteenth and early 20th century newspapers continually featured the woman war correspondent—often as the first or only of her kind, even as they wrote about more than sixty such women by 1914.
    [Show full text]
  • PANTALEO's Many, They Have Thus -Far Failed, It Hitler’S Mobi)E Fighting Force And
    ••• / \ . \ \A / rAU £ i<UURT|:E3 TH U R SD A Y, 11,1944 -— — \ M ancheste^ Evening^.-H^'ra Average Daily Circulation s. The WeAthcr ------------------------ ^— T '- ^ — For the Month of April, 1844 Korecaat e l U. S. Menther Cl^n MacLcan No. 25 O. S. C., etton of East Center street Fair except for eensMeraMe teg will hold its ^-pgular meeting to­ Beth SlH^om NoLes Parker streets and grading Abotut Town’ morrow night dt 8 o’clock in the Getting Paper Sforin Water 8,746 aioeg eeaet; Uttle change la tem- workyw-ill be flniahed th^re In an­ V ■- I perature tealght; Saturday tetr Masonic Temple. ^ other Xeek, MetniMr ot the Audit aad eontlaued wans. Fri<lay, May 12— Evening ser­ Wiu.isr& SON, INC. The ChildreiK of M « o< St. The Vownsend Club will meet Salvage Hahit Line Complete B n re u o f ClreahittoBe _______ _______________ ■ James’s church w U libld the cere­ tomorrow ei?ening^t eight o’clock vices at 8 p. m. Sisterhood Sab- Manche$ter^4 Lily of Village Charm V. mony of the crowWn® o f the sta­ batk. In observance o f Mother’s Lumber of All Kinds JJ. at the Y. M. C. A.. Mhen plans FLolm LAYING tue of the Blessed W g in Mary on win be made for the ma.sa rteet- Local People Doing Day the ladies of the Sisterhood Parker St. jo b Awaits Mdson^upplies— Paint-^Hardware , (ClasaUted Advertising oa - Page U ) MANCHESTER, CONN„ FRIDAY, MAY 12, IW ■ \ (SIXTEEN PAGES) 1*HICE rH R E E CENTS Sunday afternoon.
    [Show full text]
  • 1940-06-19 [P ]
    Dedicated To The Progress 01 Served by Leased Wire of the WILMINGTON rt ASSOCIATED PBESS And Southeastern North 11 | T| | | I I I I I With Complete Coverage of Carolina State and National News TnTT^NO- N. JUNE ESTABLISHED 1867 251_____WILMINGTON, C., WEDNESDAY, 19, 1940_~_ * * NAZI PLANES RsP ENGLISH COAST AS FRANCE FIGHTS ON, AWAITING REPLY FROM DICTATORS Nazis Pass Arc de F. D. R. Plans Triomphe British Urged THAMES ESTUARY IS BOMBED; U. S. Service To Be Ready HITLER AND IL DUCE DECIDE For All Youth For Invasion FRANCE’S PRICE FOR PEACE Some Young Men Would Churchill Calls On Nation Go Into Fighting Forces, To Respond To Threat Of PETAIN ORDERS FIGHT AIR ALARMS SOUNDED Others Into Industry German Offensive Hitler And II Duce Silent French Continue To Stage German Bombers Downed NAVAL plans pushed VISITS KING GEORGE Desperate Battles On Following Munich Meet During Attack On Sev- 6 Bronk Front 4 p.m. (9 a.m. EST) that the eral Eastern Counties House Naval Committee Re- British Leader Urges terms arrived at would be kept secret until their acceptance commends $4,000,000,- France To Fight, To Sign CABINET HOLDS MEET GERMANY or rejection by France. DAMAGE IS LIGHT | It was a meeting that may 000 Naval No Peace the face of the world Program Separate BY LYNN HEINZERLING change as all men have known it—for MUNICH, Germany, une 18 had June 18—UP)— June 18—(.S’)—Winston Hitler and Mussolini WASHINGTON, LONDON, FRANCE —UP)—Adolf Hitler and Benito BRITAIN Roosevelt disclosed to- pledged themselves tt build “a President Churchill called confidently tonight | Mussolini totaled in a up today a new Europe.” that he was working on Britain to of air jay upon the stout heart of BORDEAUX, France, June 18- quiet study the great stone It that the dictate of., LONDON, June 18—UP)—Nazi for eventual appeared iuse plan government fuehrerhaus the which raiders scattered bombs up and respond to the menace of invasion.
    [Show full text]
  • @UCMMULES • @Mules Baseball • #Teamucm BASEBALL 1 Crane Stadium / Tompkins Field Has Served As Host Site for Numerous MIAA and Regional Tournaments
    @UCMMULES • @Mules_Baseball • #teamUCM BASEBALL 1 Crane Stadium / Tompkins Field has served as host site for numerous MIAA and Regional Tournaments. In the spring of 1998 Central Missouri enjoyed the completion of an outstanding baseball facility to go with its already outstanding baseball program – James R. Crane Stadium at Robert N. Tompkins Field. A $1.2 million construction project, funded primarily by Crane, added a locker room and coaches’ offices for the Mules, an umpires dressing room, new dugouts, permanent seats, a concession stand, a press box and lights to the already existing playing field. In the fall of 2004, a new facility was added to include indoor batting cages and bullpens, a weight room, storage facility, and umpires dressing room. Following that in 2006, permanent seatback chairs were installed for the fans. All of this was funded by Crane. In the summer of 2013, the stadium received another upgrade with a new grass playing surface being installed. In the fall of 2015, a $1.1 million project to outfit the stadium with a sythentic turf playing surface was funded primarily by Crane. The project, which includes synthetic turf from AstroTurf, was completed prior to the Mules’ 2016 home-opener On January 21, 1998, Central Missouri’s Board of Governors approved the naming of the facility, formerly known as Mules’ Field, in honor of Crane and Tompkins. Official dedication ceremonies were held on May 2, 1998. The facility was showcased in the October 1998 issue of Athletics Administration magazine. The first night game played under the new lights took place on March 25, 1998, with the Mules beating Benedictine College 21-6.
    [Show full text]
  • (Iowa City, Iowa), 1946-08-04
    , GOOD MORNING, IOWA CITYI Not one to stick his neck out more than necessary, the weatherman .anhOunces that today will be gen­ erally fair and cooler. Tomorrow fair and warmer. No. 270-AP New. and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa, Sunday, Auguat 4-Five Cents • .__________________ man~~ ________ ~ __'~ Predicts ________________ ~J__________________________ ' Big~ ________ <Eut. ____________ __________________________________________________F'ederal .· ~ Deficit __ . .. ./ 'Popular Pastime On August 3rd Secret Service Holds \ Sees Increase Belgian Leader ,Assails Big 4 - , Would-Be Assassin Of President Truman I I R • WASHINGTON (AP)-A selt: n evenue For 'lgnoring SmaJ/er Nations styled "executioner" who threat­ ened th~ Ufe of President Truman RLYr awaits grand jury (lction, the I ·B7 LYNN HEINZERLING • gether among themselves. They outspoken criticism by the Yugo­ CITIES secret service disclosed yesterday. President Pins Hopes PARIS (AP)-Pau!. Henri Spaak prepare treaties without consult­ slav peace delegation. It did not Id~ntlfy t.l)e Indlvld­ On Prosperity, High of BeJlium assailed tbe Big Four ing us; they attempt to Impose 2. Britain announced she would l'al nor furnish any clues ., to 7sterday for ignoring the smaUer his whereabouts. Level of Employment -. nations in preparing Europe's upon us rules of voting whlch;ln join the United States In un· The information about the .peace and for asking the smaUer practice, prevent us from securing qualified support of the agreed woulrl-be assassin of the chief WASHINGTON (AP) - PreSI­ 'bh. hootot. powers for recommendations only aClleptance for our points of view; ]>Ortions of all texts of treaties executive was Incorporated in a dent Truman forecast last night 'Ilh.
    [Show full text]
  • Win, Lose Or Draw
    Nats, Kept by Rain From Playing Chisox, Gain Half Game as Bosox Beat Tigers ± 4- 4r +■ ^ — .J- ——^ tmfiajj JSaf $§yat 1$ Scores in A—14 WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY 15, 1945.’ Pot o* Luck Nabs Wildlife Upset Dwyer Arlington, -— ----- ■■—-1 Wright Horse Snares $67,150; Lose or Draw Wolff, Niggeling Win, Pavot Runs Last at Aqueduct BY WALTER McCALLUM. Hurl as Odds-on Favorite, Ridden by Arcaro, Takes Konoye's Death Recalls Golf Stardom Against G. U. Today Early Lead, Folds After Six Furlongs Perhaps Billy Shea, Billy Dettweiler, Charley Pettijohn and the late Lt. John P. Burke, all formerly crack golfers on Georgetown Uni- By thf Associated Press. « By the Associated Press. versity’s best links team, would have a twinge of conscience when Browns Visif CHICAGO, July 14.—Pot o’ Luck, NEW YORK, July 14.—On one of of has been killed on they leam that Prince Fumi Konoye Japan route-running 3-year-old son of the biggest turf upsets of the year, Okinawa. It was Konoye more than any one else on the Princeton Chance Play, finally got lucky today Wildlife won the $50,000-added team who turned in an amazingly fine piece of golf at Manor one aay Two Games From First chilled Dwyer Stakes at Aqueduct today aa in May of 1937 to thwart Georgetown’s burgeoning bid for the Eastern exactly as 25,000 spectators Pavot, the 4-to-5 favorite, finished intercollegiate golf title. Place, Club Slugging at Washington Park figured he last, nearly 30 lengths behind the Burke lies buried in Tunisia, victim of a Nazi bullet.
    [Show full text]
  • Pulitzer Prize Winners and Finalists
    WINNERS AND FINALISTS 1917 TO PRESENT TABLE OF CONTENTS Excerpts from the Plan of Award ..............................................................2 PULITZER PRIZES IN JOURNALISM Public Service ...........................................................................................6 Reporting ...............................................................................................24 Local Reporting .....................................................................................27 Local Reporting, Edition Time ..............................................................32 Local General or Spot News Reporting ..................................................33 General News Reporting ........................................................................36 Spot News Reporting ............................................................................38 Breaking News Reporting .....................................................................39 Local Reporting, No Edition Time .......................................................45 Local Investigative or Specialized Reporting .........................................47 Investigative Reporting ..........................................................................50 Explanatory Journalism .........................................................................61 Explanatory Reporting ...........................................................................64 Specialized Reporting .............................................................................70
    [Show full text]
  • TRIPLE PLAY DESCRIPTIONS by Chuck Rosciam and Frank Hamilton (1940-2004)
    TRIPLE PLAY DESCRIPTIONS By Chuck Rosciam and Frank Hamilton (1940-2004) GameID Event Text Play Sequence Date Teams Inning Scores Men On Base Play-By-Play Description of First Out Play-By-Play Description of Second Out Play-By-Play Description of Third Out Note of Special Significance BOS194007180 43(B)1X2(36)3XH(652)/GTP 4-3*-6*-5-2* 7/18/1940 Detroit Tigers @ Boston Red Sox - Bottom of the 7th - Score 6-8 (2 Men on: Johnny Peacock 1B, Jim Tabor 3B) Marv Owen (BOS) is the batter with a ?-? count. He hits a grounder to the 2B (Charlie Gehringer) who was set to tag the runner from first, Johnny Peacock, but threw a shot to the 1B (Rudy York) to retire the batter, Marv Owen (OUT 1) 1B threw to the SS (Red Kress) who was covering second in time to tag the slow footed runner from first, Johnny Peacock (OUT 2) SS threw to the 3B (Pinky Higgins) who relayed home to the C (Birdie Tebbetts) who nailed the runner trying to score from third, Jim Tabor (OUT 3) NOTE: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BSN194007250 3(B)6(2)4(1)/PTP 3*-6*-4* 7/25/1940 Boston Braves @ Chicago Cubs - - Top of the 8th - Score 6-2 (2 Men on: Dom Dallessandro 1B, Gabby Hartnett 2B) Bill Lee (CHN) is the batter with a ?-? count. He tried to sacrifice bunt but hit a popup to the 1B, Buddy Hassett (OUT 1) 1B shot the ball to the SS (Eddie Miller) who doubled up the runner caught off second, Gabby Hartnett (OUT 2) SS pegged
    [Show full text]
  • Mules in the Pros
    Mules in the Pros Morgan Burkhart Boston - 2000-01 • Kansas City - 2003 Morgan Burkhart made his major league debut with the Boston Red Sox on June 27, 2000 and, in doing so, became the first former Mules’ baseball player to appear in a major league game. In his first major league at-bat, Burkhart singled off the Orioles’ Mike Mussina. He was 2-for-4 in the game. He wound up playing in 25 games with the Red Sox in 2000, hitting .288 with four home runs and 18 RBI. In 2001 Burkhart spent most of the season at Pawtucket (R.I.), where he hit .269 with 25 home runs and 62 RBI. He made his second trip to the major leagues that year, when he played in 11 games with Boston, hitting .182 with one home run and four RBI. However, the Red Sox released him after the 2001 season. In 2002, Burkhart played in 42 games with Japan’s Fukuoka Daiei Hawks before being signed by the Kansas City Royals for the 2003 season. In six games for the Royals, he went 3-for-15 (.200). Burkhart spent most of the season with Kansas City’s Triple A affiliate in Omaha, Neb., where he batted .251 with 17 home runs, 18 doubles, and 57 RBI. A key member of the Mules’ 1994 national championship team, Burkhart had spent five-plus seasons in the minor leagues before being called up. With Pawtucket in 2000, he hit .255 with 23 home runs and 77 RBI. Before the Red Sox signed him to a minor league contract in 1998, Burkhart had enjoyed a stellar career in the independent Frontier League for Richmond, Indiana.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1946-04-24
    . ' GOOD MORNING, IOWA CITY! Generally fair and somewhat warmer is ~he wea­ therman's prophecy for today. Tomorrow will see owan. increasing cloudiness. Established 1868 Vol. 78, No. 182 AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa, Wednesday. April 24--Five Cents ~~~ __ ~ ________________________ ~ ________________________________________________--...- ~ ________________________ ~ __ .__ --__ ~----------------~------------------------ 2 Bank Robber Escapes With $19 Robbers Sleal BOdy Leaving Denmark in Conlusion Of Benito Mussolini Russia n Motion to ... ... ... Official Says Theft Reiec~ Calm Manager Keeps Part of Underground $2,450 aut of Sight Fascist Propaganda In Cash Drawer, Safe MILAN (AP)-Swift, expert grave robbers dug the remains of DENMARK (AP)-"lt's just Ironia n D'ispute Fails, ' 8-3 Benito Mussolini from his un­ I like a ~ircus day," commented an marked grave in the dead of night, oid·timer. Hundreds of persons poured into a ' municipal communique said * * * this little southeastern Iowa vil­ yesterday, and officials disclosed lage of 150 population. Children finding a letter which said the Qavam See,ks were yelling, running up and President Trumon Sets 3D-Day Reds Refuse 1 body was taken by the "Demo­ down the street, playing bandit. cratic Fascist party." Town Swamped The corpse wl1s taken night be­ The one grocery store and one fore last, and the open coffin was Unity in Iran Period of Mourning for Stone To Discuss confectionery were swamped with ~Ct at the grave. sandwich, ice cream and soda pop A,ain Amonl Us ' business. The letter, signed by the party's Meeting to Discuss WASHINGTON (AP)-The na­ speculation over Slane's successor The court then recessed until And all because the bank was "central directive committee," Return of Province lion will ao inla official mounting was entirely unofficilll.
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]
  • Heard in Singers Concerdeclt
    Scott Says Cagers Are Ready Opening Game Saturday n o liDQ Vol LXXIII Phone 4417 Delaware Ohio Tuesday December 5 1939 Z 563 No 20 Corne Five Winterset Stars Enjoy CantataCarols of All Countries Appears For Unusual Roles of Drama Heard In Singers ConcerDeclT YaAMmn In Winft AC TrA VC CUJUJ-rnmc U fl- 7 First Game set more than any other play Ive ever been in This was the opinion Driver Selects All of Last Years Team Return of both Ruth Klick as Miriatmie Keller Directs Annual Program Keyes as Mio in Max- For Twenly- Game and Earl well Andersons play which is being Revision Board Group Includes 170 Voices Schedule presented by Wesleyan players Dec- 8 9 Willis high ember and in the Runyan Meads Investigation By Sidney Rowland With four days remaining be- school auditorium under the direct- A fore the opening of a 20- game ion of Professor RoMin C Hunter Of Election Policies program of Christmas carols of all nations and the cantata schedule Saturday night against Miss Klick who has appeared in The Mysiery of Bethlehem by Healy Willan will be featured in A to consider revision Cornell college ML Vernon la ipnoductlionis of Skidding Bar commiUtee the annual December concert of the Singers club and the A Capella HoOi of government and election Fritchey Death Take a student 1 at Edwards gym the Ohio Wes- baira choir to be presented in Gray chapel Sunday December 7 at Bury Dfiad believes prcgram to be headed by Richard day and the 730 p m leyan basketball team has com- WinterseP inspires those in it to Runyan was appointed Thursday meeting by
    [Show full text]