29, 194s .. ~ .IATII, 'ATII..... ta ... 1'1, I •••• At ....., .. t11 ...... raOOl1l81lD rOODS, b... If. Partly Cloudy Ill••• ,. II ••• AI'...... CI .... ••••..ta.,. .UGH. T H E ~dents , .... , ••••1& ... ao ••• It ..... I.. flu , ...... IROEI, ..... Ibr•• alr...... 1& ... I, ! •••• "" IOWA: ParlIy elo"". ShoweR '.h".I'e.,. OAIOLlI'Ill, III-A .... ,.•••••• '.r ' •• r "U,,, ...... C·... - , .... c-, ••• ,..... U. ,., II.. ami ceoier. irsday; •. U.... ,.UEL OIL, ,.,•••••• n...... rI ....., ••• DAILY IOWAN , ..., •• ,. lat. 7 ••r·, ...t.. ,... ••• ,... .•. ,. .. :bride till ..JI •• Iowa City's Mornlnv Newspaper ~nvE==~CENTS~~~======~======~~:=ftQ===U=HOm==;.=ftm===n.u======~======I=O=VV==A==C=tt=Y=,==~===A======VVED===NES~=D=A=Y=.=~==Y==~=.==1~==5======aa===u=.=.===.=na~=....======~~v=o~L~UME~~X~X~I== ~NU~NmER~~ , number ~Th~ udelliQj HOOVER BACK IN WHITE HOUSE B. Norr~ Hearl of Tokyo • IOQIs, "". Id." ~ .. ~ inClUde \\rho wfll Wiped Oul Yank "Ma rlnes I ben~. ,'Who "'ill lISontht r, COUnr, By Fire Bombs • lOis, Will I~r lettell I~g liollot Jap Command Admits , 15% ot are JUlIa Yokohama Damage, uri , Eugene TeUs of Navy Shakeup cht, Earl legrnuUfr G AM, Wednesday (AP)­ Forestry Official Explains- ~d White; Big Five Offer Goetz The heart of Tokyo has been All of North Ird, Rich. wiped out by fire b 0 m b 8 Middle Powers Hand Gingerich, dropped by American B·29's, lIo0ns Id Camp Mal Gen. Curtis E. Le May, How Japanese Sa Operale Naha Secured lennernan: commander of the 21st bomber In Peace El!forcement ------KOChste!. command, announced today. WASHINGTON (AP)- A gov­ The hydrogen-filled balloons as­ ignited automatically and sets oCt ernment official said la t night that More than 51 square miles cend lo heights 01 25.000 to 35,000 a demoJltion charge which destroys Total of Jap Suicide surrounding the imp e ria I America Willing Japan's bomb-carrying balloons the balloon." beln, tent against America are feet where they reach air currents Planes Destroyed grounds are a g't'eat rna. s of To Admit Denmark launched in the home islands and which travel constantly from west The only balloons found on the lay gray ashes, matkin!! the site of IJ'OUDd are defective ones which to Conference are controlled by an automatic bal­ to east, he asserted. Each time they Raised to 115 thousands of buildings and resi­ last-dropping device. failed to explode. HOO\ltr dences that once housed factor­ descend to 25,000 feet from loss of Watts said the balloons travel Up SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The Lyle F. Watls, chief of the United gas, a baromtric pressure switch G An. Wpdn. day (AP)­ ~rs. Flo . ies of all types. to 125 miles an hour. takini from r Big nve held out to middle pow­ States forest service, told in a radio automatically drop a sandbag. Re­ United State. mann stormed who died Here and there fire·black­ ers yesterday the right to take • interview prepared {or the blue 80 to 120 hours t.o ruch this coun­ their way Tu. day in. id 1 be I be held ened ruins ot a few buildings still leue ot this sandbag causes the try. hand in peace enforcement dec:i­ network how the unmanned bal­ balloon to rise again to about 35,000 moated, medieval c a 8 t 1 of Ik In the Itllnd. loons operate. The forest 5ervice He rC!ported that the forest ser­ sions of a new world lealue when teet. hun, keystone strong-point jn She reo "We baye de8troye.l lilt ., \be their armed forces would be used haa been asslstina the army in pre­ vice has Increased Its air patrol to ,daUFhter ..et areas we Ie' 0.' 10 tletitN)'," to prevent war. venting damage from the balloons. "It the Japs have figured right," silbt 85 many as possible in the air til center of tbe flauked Japa­ and Mrs. General Le May said In cUllllloatoc ! There were these additional de­ The army and navy recently dls­ Watls said, "the last sandbai has and shoot them down. It also has n e defens tin on southern been dropped only alter the balloon IVn streel IIdII aslound1n6 d~ from .8-Z9 rOR THE nll8T Ume since he left the lIresldency 12 yean .,0 velopments as the major powers c10sed that some of the balloons increased the number of parachut­ Okinawa. It wa. former head­ 10 daugh. raids that reached their he"'ht Herbert Hoover, rllhl, retllrnetl to the White Houae on the InvltaUon trled to spur the United Nations have landed in the western part oC has reached thls country." ing lire lighters. quarters of the Japan com­ I of San lut week with two ."'lke. 01 Df Pruldent Harry 8. Tru.man, left. who lIOurht a non -partisan pre- con!erence into a finishing sprint: this country and aid they caused A second automatic switch which "There is a point I'd Like to brllll mand on the prnbattled i~land. ;~el1ada' j lOme 500 plan.. each that IIOUft4I scription for qulek alleviation of bun,er In llber.ted Europe. The I. The Amerlcan ~eration no property damage. controls the bombs, then takes out," the forestry chief &aid. "We Leathernecks of the J<'irst rna· SIX great &bo_nels of lone of InceDdIa1'7 White House wlthbeld comment on .uuestlon tbat tbe former pre 1- was reported wllling to back a Watts said the balloons-made of over, he continued. are less worried about this Japan­ rin divi. ion, surpriing orne bombs on colI&'ested are.. 01 the ese balloon attack than we are with den&--lH9-UlSs--...nd UnUed late. food admJnl.stralor and chairman Norwegian request that Denmark five layers of silk paper and 35 feet "When the balloon drops to 27.- ,Japanese swimming ill (l moat pas tor of eft,. of the Bel,'en reUel in World War I would be eon Idered for I. pO t be admitted as the 50th nation at In diameter--are taken to Japan~e 000 teel a bomb Is reieased. The matches and smolces in the hands The Jap high command mean­ urrounding the forlr , un­ reh, Is In In the European reUef setup, but elllPhaslzed ImpOrtance 10 hi viewl. this Golden Gate meeting. war plants where oWclals "make a oolloon goes back up, then down of good Americans hiking and corked the dramatic drive while al will be while reported the great American 2. Though Russia '-8 raised lot of speeches, stir up workers to a agam and another incendlary is camping in the woods. Lumber ror other marlOes of the Sixth division fire bomb raid on the Yokohama some new questions, a urances frenzy and then launch the bal~ relased and 80 on as It travels crating our war good golni to the region during daylight Tuesday were circulated that flnal agree­ laona from the piant {or their trip Bcro the United States. Whf'tl the Paci!lc is still a very critical item. on the we t coast invested all of morning, Japanese time, left "con­ At a Glance- - I I .Chinese Widen Gap ment is near among the Ir~t na­ to the United States." last Incendiary Is dropped, a fu e is We must protect our timber." the rubbl -strewn city ot Naba Iken siderable" damage in the strbtegic tions on the question of Interna­ north of the maln harbor. port city. tional trusteeships. Whether f.be devlldor eotnPlUlY As Yokohama and adjacent dis­ II! Jap Lifeline 3. American delegates now \.alk tricts flamed under the impact of Eden Protests french which lourbt IMide ShUTI eastle i To day:'s, Informally 01 completilli the new Infantry Captures held. Its lIOSlUon or later had to thousands of incendiaries, the Jap­ charter for a new world league by Brilish Trailor anese radio told of a reshuIfie of Chase Fleeing Enemy faU back wa not clear from avail­ June 11. The unofficfal Boa] has Action in Syria able tront reports. the naval high command, seem­ Across South China be n June 6. Dam Near Manila ingly in an eHort to put more IIowan To Indo-China Border 4. Toe Bi" Fiv_the United Today's fleet communique, an­ punch in NipPon's airforce and States, Britain, Russia, France and Seizure Breaks Last Lord Haw Haw Paris Diplomats Say nouncing the round successes on evolve a plan to meet an expected CHUNGKING (AP) - Chinese Chma - considered asking the France Would Reject the west coast and in the center of !...oasion of the homeland. Ma.rI.nes pub* *inlo * casUe of t.roop widened to 120 miles a policy making executive commit­ Japanese Stronghold the line, also raised from 77 to Another of a series of Tokyo ShurL gaping br ach In the ruptured Mediation Offers 115 the number of enemy suicide tee of the conference to prod ll\g­ East of Capital planes destroyed Sunday night and broadeasts, recorded by the FCC, southern end of Japan's' lanD gard committees and, It neces ary, Wounded AId Jap.. n wu or~"11I&' I. new Hea.n of Tokyo wiped out by bridie to southeast. A la yest rday LONDON (AP) - The Paris Monday morning during attacks on w rl I.e agendas lor tb m to .tallow MANiLA, Wednt'JIday (AP) - American shipping. The planes "'olde ~ of y01lll&' officer. and B-29 incendiary raida. and pursued fleeing enemy forces Cram now on. radio, accusing the British govern­ aen 10 pUot rocket bomblr ....alnst Maj. Gen. WilHam C. Chase's 38th LUENEBURG (AP)-"Lord Haw ment of is uing an "unju t" com­ sank one HeM naval un.t and aero s ~outh China toward the S. In a three-hour meeting Haw," notorious British renegade munique on the crisis in Syria and "-ertcan land and Ilea (01'_ at Forestry oCflem. de cribes oper- French Indo-China border, 93 with A sistant Secretary 01 State In{anley dlviIJion Beized Wawa damaied 12 others. Oklaawa. 3%5 miles off the IOU.Ut· wh Iuo a Co th N&i dur~ Lebanon, I st night charlted "for­ allon of Jap balloon bOmbs. miles from the capital efty of Nel~nn Rocke1'ell r, LaUn Ameri­ dmn undarn~ and without a Mustane fiJ~hters from lwo Jima et'Al J1p of Ute NIPpon lsland ohaln. ing th' war, 18 8 e rio u sly eign Influences" with having a can delegates looked over such light Monday to secure the last of whJch corted more than 450 .\ new shakeup of the high BIC Five powers HS;sO\,ve Chln('s baltic groups wounded and scowling here last hand in the middle east agi\.ation B-20's in Tuesday's 3,200-ton fire oI~ddle conference issues as veto powers, night whil BriUsh soldlcrs command which commands what . hand in peace enfor ement de- .tore lnt.o the Jupon . e supply cor­ Manila'S three reservoirs and against France• bomb assaulL on Yo k 0 ham a, political aspects of trtllteeships, shouted "You yellow traitor - in remains of Japan's fleet was an­ cisions. ridol' from Manchuria to Singapore future amendment of the charter, crack the last fixed Japanes At the same time, Prench diplo­ Tokyo'lI port, shot down 26 out of nounced by the agency Domel. It our hands at last." and compul:sory jurisdiction of 8 stroogpoint immediately east of matic quarters In Paris said that 140 Jnterceptors, probably de­ said Vice-Admiral J J s a bur 0 Memorial day ceremonies btart at points tliong a 900-mile fronl The 3D-year-old prlsoner, born France would not welcome any stroyed 10 others and damaged 18, across Chino's heart, veteran Chi- new international court. the capital. William Joyce, was shot In the Ozawa, vice-chief of the general at 7 a. m. nese troops battled within 30 miles No decisions were made and offers of mediation In her dispute the communique disc losed. The staff, took over the three top lleet The dam, in a scenic rocky thigh Monday by a British olflcer with the Levant states. IOS8 01 three fighter planes, one ot of Indo-China and 123 miles Crom Latins sald there had been no in­ gorge between towerinll cutts 20 jobs-commBnder-in-chief of the who captured him near FJensberg British Foreign Secretary An­ whose pilot:s was rescued, was Hanoi, a Chinese communique dis­ tention to make any, since, they mUes from Manila, was abandoned when h made a threatening move combined fleet, the newly created closed. explain, their states are not acting thony Eden told parllament that acknowledged. overall naval command, and naval Intact by the Japanese who evi­ in his pocket as lhoullh clutching Unconfirmed reports in Chung­ as a bloc but 88 individual na­ the British government had in­ The a aul~ on. hurt was cU ­ escort forces. Clare Boothe Luce dently had been frightened off a revolver. king said the Japanese apparently tions. by the previous day's shelling and formed Paris of its fear that the re ted a' lh only pOln~ leU on the Ozawa replaced Admiral Soemu Brought here last night In an arrival of French reinforcem nls enemy Une whl h had held linn. were pJ'eparJnf: a new withdrawal 6. United States delegates were bazooka fire. ambulance, he was placed on ex­ Toyoda who was chief of the com­ Says Reds Deserted in the central sector of their over­ report d to have decided sup­ In Syria and Lebanon "might cause Yonabaru fell la t week and Na.ha bined fleet during the past 13 to Its capture, announced today by hibition for !lve minutes so that land corridor- this time from the port an "optional" clause for jur­ regr ttable acUon." has been crumblinK (or days. months. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, climaxed Brillsh tommies could get a Eden said it would be inxecus­ Tuesday elements of Maj. Gen. 'By Thousands' Yangyze river pOI·t of lehang, isdiction of the world court. Un the tribunal's decisions. British InteUlgence ortlcer lndi­ (Cairo and Beyrouth rid i a "By nightfall, C company of the that "Russian soldiers by the thou- Swarms of American United after ridge until comm nding cated he would be taken to Britain Jeen tap- sands, and Russian generals by the Slates 14th airtorce bombel'S and broadcasts heard by the FCC re­ First battal10n Fifth regiment of heights on either side were won. as soon as possible. 3.nd Ie In­ dozens" deserted the Red army to fighters hammered Japanese lines ported fresh outbreaks of violence marines, reached Shurl castle, isoner at fight "beside the Nazis." along the enUre gOO-mile front. General MacArthur also re­ in Syria and the country's acting former headquarters of the enemy Churchill Names ported the 32nd division had .natioall) "They were, of course, deceived Chinese vctcrans under (Rmed Expensive Accident premier, Jamll Mardam Bey, an­ force commander," the communi­ ---, in their search for freedom, just Gen. Chang F'ah-Kwei widened Memorial Day joined the 25th in captured Santa nounced that demonstrations dur­ que said. as deceived as the German sol- the breach torn in the oulhern 'Fe, on the mountainous southern COUNCIL BLUFFS CAP) ing thc pa t 10 days had resulted Chief Prosecutor approach to the Cagayan valley "Opposition In the area. WIlS diers who deserted to the Rus- end o·r the Japanese tran con tin­ Ranks of Marchers Hooking bumpers with a police In the death of 80 to 100 persons Urht. To tbe north and northeu& sians," she said in a Blue network ntal supply Ufeline by reaching of northern Luzon, "bringing to an car cost Harvey Arnst, 23, of while 100 to 300 have been In­ To g. Smaller end organized enemy resis\.ance in of Shurl, elements of the Fin' For War Criminals broadcast. the vicinity 01 Shulo, more than Portland, Ore., 25 years yesterday. jured.) marlne dlv lon, the 77th Inranin "Today in the Balkans over 60 miles southwest 01 liberated this vital area flanking the main When lhey started to unhook the With the situation in the Levant dlvlslon and Ute 96th infantry dlvl- .1 highway into the Cagayan valley." bumpers the patrolmen driving containing threats of potential LONDON (AP)- Prime Minister 300,000 Russian soldiers have de- Yungning (Nanning). Memorial day parades. This year 510n weill m tlDr sUff r !;e, Churchill named Britain's chief Heavy and attack bombers and the car recognized him a.S the man repercussions througbout the Arab serted victorious Russian armies to they will mean more than ever to Inclu.cUDI' tanks. Nlcht attacks, ai­ prosecutor of German war crim­ seek a better, richer, happier way fighters dropped 521 tons of ex­ they sought in connectJon with world, Eden called on all parties t.empted by enemy flWimmen off 66 inals today but told an impatient us. The ranks of the marchers may plosives in support of the Luzon two recent store robberies. He Involved to "behave with caution of lite," Representative Luce con­ th& east eoaM (Yonabaru !leCtor) U. S. Denies Charge was s n tenced to 25 years. and prudence." house of commons the trials Ghould tinued. "Theil' search becomes be smaller, with the death of many ground operations. In tM Seventh Inlan~ry division Dot begin "until they are properly every day more fruitle:ss-becauS'e of the old guard, and the return to zone 0' action, were repul ed." arranged and a method agreed the hanCt OJ communism reaches Of Deliberate Sinking combat of the First Wold war vet­ Front reports of oeroy groups upon between the great uowers.' out for them-reaches over the SYRIAN CAPITAL SCENE OF RIOTING, CRISIS GROWS ,---- erans, both men and women. but io retreat south of Shuri were Attorney General Sir David Balkans." WASHINGTON (AP)- The Uni- confirmed by the communique. Maxwell Fyfe, who was nominated Mrs. Luce, discussing "Amedca ted States hilS denied Japan's those that do march and watch this to the big powers board of prose­ and the Kremlin," said "180 mU­ charge that sinking of the Japanese year will close up ranks and hold cution, will serve with Supreme llon Russians are today incarcer­ relief ship Awa Maru was deliber­ their heads a UtUe higher, step Court Justice Robert H. Jackson of ated behind a towering waU of ate and has warned sternly against the United Staies and the repre­ censorship. They are unaware any retaliatory treatment of allied more proudly, in honor of those Two Representatives sentatives of France and Russia that there is a world in which the war prisoners. tbat have died for freedom. yet to be chosen. words law and justice, charity and The state department disclosed Yes, on this day a solellllJfty Come 10 Blows Churchill's implication that the freedom, have a real and personal this yesterday, making public an never found in an ordinary parade trials of Hermann Goering and meaning for great masses of men." exchange of notes over the inci­ is expected. Even more than OD the other Nazi big shots would have dent, which occurred in the Straits Fourth of July we celebrate the ad­ Over Expense Money to walt until various details were War Department of Formosa Api'll 1. The Japanese vent of freedom. For on this day worked out among the al~ied pow­ Cancels Contract said more than 1,000 passengers we consecrate those that have died WASHINGTON (AP)-The bit­ ers supported a statement by Jus­ perished. Only one survivor was in bitter battles to retain that free­ ter fiIIht over congressional ex­ tice Jackson Monday that they With Studebaker picked up. dom. pense money drew blood yester­ could not start for "some time." The Japan se protesl, received day and Representative Taber (R., Justice Jackson, who arrived CHICAGO (AP)-The war de­ through the Swiss government, On every Memorial day music plays, martial music. Boy Scouts N. Y.( emerged from the office here iate Monday from Paris, partment has cancelled its con­ charged that a United States sub­ of Representative Cannon D ., Mo.) went into immediate conference tract with Studebaker for the marine had "deliberately and wil­ Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls, aU are with a lacerated upper lip. ready to add to the train of honor. With Lieu\. Col. Joseph Hodgson, manufacture oj' B-1 7 aircraft en­ fully sunk" tbe Awa Maru while !t Taber, who i.s 65 and ranking Re­ American representative on the gines and the company's giant was returning to Japan aner deliv­ As the bands from the surroundin" war crimes commission, to obtain countryside play the column from publican on the house appropria­ plants here and at Ft. Wayne, Ind., ering relief suppH s to American tions committee, had been criticiz­ Up·lo-the-minute news on the will be closed immediately. and ailied prisoners of war and in­ the city hall to the cemetery, tbe Prol1'ess made in indicting promi­ onlookers, with a lump in their ing the house's action in voting Notice of the shutdown of the ternees in southern Asia. ltsell a $2,500-a-year \.ax-free ex­ nent Nazis. $20,000,000 Cliicago faclory was throats. and the scent of flowers, bridal wreath and lilacs, in the air pense allowance. Cannon, 65, is given 2,500 employes yesterday chairman of the bouse appropria­ through posters stating: BeHer Weather add to a nation in mourning grate­ Reds Order Largest fully for the part these dead have tions committee. "The war department has can­ Coming Our Way Peacetime Army celled its contract with Stude­ I piayed in America's destiny, her Taber told reporters it was a baker for the manufacture of air­ --Belter------weather------is moving --in --on big stick raised against aggression, one-sided light, the only blows being struck by Cannon. MOSCOW (AP)-In the bigiest plane engines as of the closing us. That cold front has finally want and fear. peacetime military training sched­ period ending this day." passed and today the clouds wlU Taps are played in holy silence "If I had him I might have Ule ever ordered in the Soviet be lew, (ar between and high. at the end of the march that was killed him," added the New Union, thousands of 15 and 18- Contempt Charge Killed Also it will be somewhat warmer the end of life for others. All eyes BUI: 18 A view of Damascas, cl.plta] o( 81rta, where a serloas erial. has developed between Freneb and Yorker, who is bigger and stockier year-olds boys from all parts of WASHINGTON (AP) - The although not much. There is no are on the fiag and all hearts are lOVerDlDeD' forces. Barrlcadea were erected In DaniaKUI as Brltbh and American dlplomatl 101IIh' to than bis antagonist. RUSSia will be called up Friday house veterans committee yester­ sign yet of any bad weather com­ thinking of the future, when this brln.r I. lIOlailoD 10 the crisis, lateat In I. Ion, series In ibe LevaDt ltates, which laelades 87r1a and Cannon would not even discuss for Red army training, it was an­ day killed its own contempt ing. AU points north and west of present horror and those that have &be repabUe of Lebanon. The French rovemment _rted Usa, the two ARb natlona were the inCident, replying to all queries nounced yesterday. charge against Albert Deutsch, us are having fine weather so we preceded it, will seem a sad warn­ ..., routine French troop movemeDtI .. a preten for hreak .... off nerotlaUoDl with FranCIe. S)'rIa, for­ that he had been sitting with the The muster of 15- and 16-year­ New York author of an attack on should have some too. ing memory. By the grace 0{ God IDI!r proviDce o( &be old Tarkbb empire, w .. WIder F .....aClh mandate la IMI when aD acreellM!D' wa. committee during the afternoon. old boys Friday wlll coincide with the veterans administration hospi­ It seemed cool yesterday but the and the dint of our hard work, we "ed, traulerrlD. aU pOwen hitherto eserelaecl by France to tbe Syrian and LeNnon rovel'lUDl',O&a. He declined, though. to deny the end of train in" for bOYI 17 tals. mercury dId get to 72 and didn't shall watch the band, and the re Great BrI&a1a _apled Syria IUId Lebano, In lIU Dnder te~., aD anals&iee wlf.b &he Vlch7 rove~t Taber's account of it. :rears old who, on ,raduation, wJll The motion also required that fall below 52. At midnight it was turned veterans next year, forever of FraDch, IenDinatlnr a five-week war. Franee tamed her mandate over &0 the British aDd the Free The two started their argument undergo examinatolna for spec\al­ Deutsch be alven a further op­ 51 with the sky nearly clear. So it more to march in their country in Preach forcea. On Sepl. 16, llU, 87ria w.. proc...aImed a repabUe by the _ap7lDr Free FnDCb in a corner of the speaker's lobby ilt Jobe. portunity to testify. should be fine today. peace, aalhorlUel. jUllt oU the house chamber. "~:GE TWO THE DAlLY IOWAN. IOWA- CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, MAY 30.1945 .,.- THE DAILY IOWAN Obs8fvanceofMemorialDay TRAITOR QUISLING ARRAIGNED ()FF·f'C1AL ,D:A1LY BUL1~ ETIN Pubt:shed every mornlni exeept Moodily by Student PubUcaUODI ..... I. , ... IlNll'I.,rrY O"LIJfD"•• n · ...... I •• I..... ".. ,. Dales Back From 1860 . ~~ Ofll... 0 .. CuI'eI...... f •• OINI."L )l0T1C.' .. lDcorporated at 126-130 IOlYa avenue. Iowa City Iowa. ~ ••• "& ,lie 'lo< ..,...... '''' ••P.' ..... r .f tolo. D.U, I..... •• .., M {!I ...... I. ."1 "''1 .. ~.I'''' ,.. .bel...... I. ta.. .ff.... of no Board at tl'Ustees: Wilbur Schramm, Kirk H. Porter, A. Craig .. ,~ • U 'J I..... OPIUL I'I01l1C.' .". II. '"' Til. DeI'J ..... ~, The formal observance Me­ holiday. Several slates have fol­ • .:~ It • • • lb. "J ••••• 1.n, II ....ubllu .... : "'I..... W 11M M l..alrd, Paul R. Olson. Donald Ottilie. Mary Jane Neville. Mary Beth at •••• P.... IIr •••• , ...... lDuII II. TnlED oa LEOIBLI W&I11III morial day or Decoratioll day, as lowed the same policy. ";lJIIer. Karalyn Keller. Jack Moyen. • ••• IONID Iol' • ~.na""" "n." It is so well known. dates back In Gr ece when a person died. Fred M. Pownall, Publlaber from 1868. The graves of the sol­ the nearest f em a I e relatives Vol. XXI. No, 1948 Wedneaclu. Mn JI,lN5 ~roth, Klein, EdUor Dick Baxter, Adv. M(r. diers killed in the Civil war had crowned the head of the person been decorated with [Jowers be­ with flowers. The Romans used 'UN IVERS ITY CALENDAR Entered 118 second due mail Subscription rate.-By mall $5 fore that year, especially in the flowers more freely. for the pur­ ~t~r at the postoffice at Iowa per year; b.J cartier, 15 ceota BOuth. pose of completeLY covering the 1'1IeIidaY, JUDe (; I back Outing; meet at engirieetilc City. Iowa, under the act at con­ weekly. $5 I*' ,.ar. Early in May, 1865, Adjutant dead. 12 M. ProtelSional WoMen's building. pe&!! of Marcb 2, 1879. General Chipman of the Grand Naval observances follow navy 'Iuncheon, UnI'VersUy Club TueNay. June 11 r. The Aaoclated Pres, " exclu­ Army Republic. tile organization regulations of suspension or drills s.tfUrdaY. J1tIte 11 2 p. m. Bridge. University c..,. sively entitled to use tor republi­ TELEPHONES or Union veterans, suggested to and the usual 21 gun salute is RegUlt>iUon for lrl!iihmen, Col- Wednesday. JW1e 13 ICdltorlal OUlce _.__ . ___ .• 192 cation of all news dlspatcht!8 Gen. John A. Logan that arrange­ given. A navy custom has been -lege -of Liberal 'Arts. 8 a. m. Summer sessioD T.-m credited to It not otherwise Society OUice _ .... __• __ .. -4193 or ments be made for the organiza­ for the ship's crew to make small 12 M. Summer Session Term 11 daISes begin. credited In this paper and also tion to decorate the gTaves of the ships of flowers and set them I ends. Frrday• .hme 15 Business Office .._. __. __. • 191 the local news publJahed bel-eiD. Union soldiers on a uniform date afloat at a port so that the tide 8 ....)'. 'JIIIIe .t 6 p. m. Iowa Mountline'en: WEDNESDAY, MAY 30.1945 throuahout the country. can carry them over the water for 3:30 p. m. and 4:30 p. m. Iowa horseback riding-timbertrail ride; Memorial day was not yet a leaal those who have died on the sea. Mount.lineers:· Campfire H 0 r s e- meet at engineering buildina. ----~------holiday in any of the states. The Army posts display the flag at veterans in New York succeeded halt mast from sunrise to noon, (Wer ...... , .. ___ riUJIc _&ell be~oDd ..... ICIbe ....e ... They Shall Not Have Died in Vain- in persuading the legislation to followed by a 21 gun salute, the NMrn..... ID Ute ..,..,. at tbe President. Old Capital) pass on an act in 1873 designating flag then being hoisted to the top Memorial day is something real ice stars are too new to make this the thirtieth of May as a legal of the flagpole. o;E:NERAIL NOTICES and close to the neal'esl of all of mereLY another day for flag-wav­ ing patriotism...... D BOOb LANGUA.GE ACBDVKMBN'! us this year. It is not just a By Kenneth Dixon- StlJdeau 'and fwculty mUit u­ The !lowers plaoed on ~ravl!ii TE8T holiday with a big family picnic ran,e 'for'leekePl betoN fI II. m. It carry a promise from us to all of the tielClll0\M8. 'rhe 10teign laDguage achleft­ a,nd a few solemn minutes hon­ them who have given their lives. ment test (readiD3 or spolten) will oring men long since dead. l\lJ universItY men IDlI'1 u. the From the sparse line of Boys in Infantry Was Grateful field h;)U1It! ' nOON andfaclUtie. be given Thursday. May 31. from It is vital because small boys Blue clear down to the Boy I born ~:!O ' to 9l)l'n. The, must be 4 to 6 p. m . Students who fnt8!d of pest M morial day picnics are Scouts. citizens (not soldiers) of dreaed tn 'J'IIUllltiGn Dm ·.Uit ot to take this test should report to among those mourned today. It is tomorrow, comes the unfor­ OCCuPIED GERMANY (AP)- personnel in order to oust Nazi blaclt shota. whlte'shlrt, and rub- the department in qUestion 'IIOt In normal combat service. air corps party leaders from control, the var­ ber-soleoa ~ f\l8faniee which we Americans had gathered el'ed the fastest gl'Owing crop in together. recover this market. the world. in a seaweed which has ligations, Spruille Braden,. A'e" Needless to say a good many of Ihex cultural, 8CooOilllic lID. &tra­ The Japanese weed at­ Post Chaplain F ran k Kerr at least 30 important industrial gr~ws United States ambassador to Ar:J meJl> were leaving the campus dur- teeic intexests there. tached to rocks and has to be la­ .. opened the exercises by announc­ and household uses. gentina, said her\'! last night ing World war I just as they are Several hours after he outlioH illAf the singing of the hymn boriously pried loose. Tne yield is The wceds grow like the fabu­ now. William J . Brush became an the Frencb positian ill Par;i:s. the "Nearer My God To Thee." small. The American west coast Braden spoke at a banquet g1V.D unUsual example when he was Syrian and Leb~se le&atiOl)S ill ' lous tissues whi h if not stopped Those who were present will weeds. an improvement over the in his honor by the Am'erican S0<­ ,iven his diploma at the home 01 London issued a "~ Ilt' W. Thomas, Lows in8 to aain by force lind thJ-eats and our duties to each olher. pressions, food for stock and temperatures can be carled, sim­ Bradeh said Oesar Am~ Ticktin, Orle F. Triplett, and Ern- wllat she ~v~ ~ ool,lld not "ElR "PPA,E/ft to ' th~ tl\rone and re,ent of Iraq, Printle ~bdal nab Du~ing a pause in the cere­ sources of Vitam. ins and. iodine. Iply by the way they are extracted foreign rhi~ister of f\r~en,~" est C. Wills. . obtain by Jl$!'oij,~t.Ip.D. 'fhi,s opiJ)- " 1l)9wn a~ve wl*h PresLdent Ha~1')' S. Tra...... the WbUe B,ou.se monies the Amelrcan ladies dec­ But the -public knows it most as and by chemical treatmen,t. Th.ls Tuesday in{ormed him the ' Ar~: Th, uniforms were a little dlf- ion is Incorrect and is belied by ~ W,sbtncton where the prince will be tbe nelt of tbe pre.ldell& orllted the graves and assembled the culture medium on which sc~- means that easte~n agar can b. tina ,ove~nment will u~.eq.U\V~ ferent. the mann.er has changed the French attitude." darinf btl ...)' bI ~e natloD', capital. . troopes telt glad to think that our entists grow germs. That use .IJ adapted for a "",der r~nge o( ~. meet all these obU,afiom.

.' ::.:..WD-=::=NES==D=A::::;Y=,=M=A:::Y:::::3:0':.=:1=94:=S======-==='I'=:8=I===D=A=1L Y 10. A If. 10. A CI 'I' Y. 10. A PAGE TBBEI Four Special Classes Express Opinions Offered in Annual freshmen Peace Officer Course

Project Severely Criticized- Four pedal cl in the ninth This is the first in a series of editorials to be annual peace o(ficers short course written by University of Iowa freshmen during at the University of Iowa June 25 the summer session. This week the students dis­ Freshman Suggesf$ More T. V. A. through 29, are open to officers, cuss the Tennessee Valley admnistration, com­ Prof. Rollin M. Perkins of the law college uid Tuesday. pulsory military training and the necessity of By Harold Moe ner thing' for the Tennessee river electric motors: and electric appli­ In June of J933 one of the region, It should be a 'good thing' ances of all kinds. The eta es will be taught by ex­ world organization for the survival of civiliza­ greatest projects undertaken by for every other river region." Last of aU, ereat steps have perts from f'BI, police depart­ tion, the government of the United Let's examine lOme of t.he Im­ been taJcen in the conservation of ments, Iowa bureau of criminal States, the Tennes ee Valley ad- provements w hie h h a ve been soil 152,000 see d I In. s were investigation, U.S. ecret service, The weekly feature is under the direction of ministration, was started. Mo t of brought about by the T. V. A. planted on eroded 1011 In this and Jowa highway patrol George de Schweinitz, instructor in communica­ you know that the administration, First of all, It has lessened fue region. Fertllil.ers have alJo been On the 1945 schedule are classes better known as the T. V. A., was danger of floods. This Is not only usecl ex ensively. If the proposed in basic police problems, criminal tion skills. founded by the New Deal and true 01 the Tennessee river, but projects accompliahed lOme of investigation, crime detection lab­ that it has been subjected to a lot also of the Ohio and the Miuu­ these lmprovementa, America's oratory techniques, and traffic, ot criticism. This criticism has sippi rivers. It has been estimated standard of Hving would be raised Profes or Perkins declared. - been both favorable and unlavor- that the series of dams on fue considerably and, all In all, tiley Crime detection laboratory lech­ able. Tennessee river i. able to reduce would lead to a more prOlperous niques will be handled by a staff Program of Compulsory Military Training At the present time the T. V. A. the crests of the Ohio and the America. of 15 men. They include preserva­ controls 26 dams in the valleys of Mississippi rivers trom two to four A stron, argument haa been tion and identification of evidence, Under Army Discipline Bert.eficial to Men the Tennessee river and its lribu- inches. If projects similar to the bullt up by the opposition to the use of ullar violet light. lie detec­ tarles. The total in v est men t T. V. A. were established 011 other T. V. A. around the fact that ,ov­ tor technique, fact-finding pllotog­ which the government has made tributaries or the MissiSSippi, fue raphy, fir ear m identification, 8y M11cIre4 ~\lSC1'ave military discipline, a year of co­ ernment entran<=-e into the field of amounts to $700,000,000. Since annual spring floods in the Mls­ sound recording procedure, hand­ operating with others, they will be public utility would decrease pri­ In a recent poll of experts, con­ the annual gross revenue or in- sissippl vaUey could easily be writing and typewriting identifi­ betl.er suited to carry on with self­ vate enterprIse. Thls has ~n ducted by the American magazine, come has been around $35,000,000 eliminated. cation and chemical munitions. only 16 per cent I!(ere in favor of dlscipIJne. proved totally falae. The Baltl· during the last 12 years, It has Sec 0 n diy, the T. V. A. has compulsory m i1 I tar y training. The third point concerning the more Sun of Nov. 16, 11144, stated, In the criminal invesllgaiion These people ,gave rour reasons for moral behavior of the boys is ap­ been estimated by DaVid E. Lilien- created a channel for Davigalion "Far lrom with e r In, private class, the men will learn or collec­ thai, chairman oC the T. V. A., that on the Tenne&See river which is Mn. Kenneth J. Mc:ManlJ their deciSion:, first, it would give surd. 1 wonder if the experts are enterprise, the T. V. A. has af­ tion, pr ervaUon, and identifica­ the boys a taste of being away acquainted with the army's method it will only take about 30 years 650 miles 10111. In 1943, 200,000,­ forded the means for a variety of tion of evidence, taking of photo­ for the repayment of the invest- 000 ton-miles ot freight were the .. graphs and measurements, recon­ from home and they would be dis­ of keeping their personnel we1\­ new businesses to sprin, up in • • • . . informed on the evils of sex, gam­ ment. hauled on this rIver. valley." struction of crime seeen, and ques­ satisfied with their old home town tioning of suspects. and job; second, it is undemocratic bling and drinking. In my opinion, the United The thIrd improvement is the eecause lrTeat improvements to substitute military discipline This part of the army program States government shOUld con- great amount of cheap electricity can be made withIn the area and Shirley Lowrey Weds Pic. K. J. McManis Fundamentals ot law enforce­ lor self-discipline; third, it would is functioning better right now struct other projects similar to the which Is produced by the T. V. A. because the .rowtb of new bu.i­ ment will be taken up in basic undermine their character morally, than the majority of homes where T. V. A. In other river valleys. In dams. The amount of e\ectrlclty nesaes Is encouraled, I think that In Candelight Service at Lutheran Church police problems, while fue traffic and fourth, the health benefits de­ the father is responsible tor giv­ January of 1945 the Wall Street which is produceci aon\lal\y is projects based on the prInciples of class will make a detailed study rived would be of no use to those Ing his son this training. The Journal said, "President Roose- &bout 12,000,000,000 k 11 0 w a t t the T. V. A. should be constructed of JowllS motor vehicle Jaws. who need them most. army has never been accused of velt's proposal for T. V. A.'s In hours. This great amount of cheap In other river va)lt!ys of the In a candlelight ceremony, crepe the gathered bodice of every important watershed in the electricity Ita. brought about a United States. In this way we Shirley Lowrey, daughter of Mrs. which was fashioned with a [ do not w~h to doubt the good not supervising its boys properly. ' Intentions of I.l:ie;e experts, but I As a matter of fact, this third ob­ country has a certain logical SUbstantial Increa e in the stand­ could attain a happier and more L. ~ . Lowrey of Keokuk, became sweetheart neckline and peplum. do not agree with iheir point of jection conflicts with the ex perl:>' foundation-no doubt about thai. ard of living in tbe region by prOliperous United States of the the bride 01 Pfc. Kenneth J . Mc­ White accessories completed her Faye Von Draska view. To take the issues one at a second objection. If the T. V. A. has been a 'good making practical electric IIl1hts, future. Manis, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. ensemble and her shoulder cor­ time, lirst, wh'y shOUldn't a boy Fourth, and last, the expert$ ------~------~~------McManis, !llso of Keokuk, In the sage was of gardenias and mock To Give Recital see a little of this great country claim that the health benefit de­ c lui pel of the SI. Paul's Lutheran orange blo oms. church May 22 . The double ring of ours before settling down to the rived from military training would Miss Septer wore 1\ brown gab­ Faye Von Draska, contralto, will old home job? It will make him not benefit those who need It most. ceremony was pertormed by the ardine suit with luguage tan ac­ World Must Organize for Survival of Our Civilization Rev. L. C. Wuerffel. be featured in another or the re­ dissatisfied! That's fine; I hope I wiIJ grant this, because those • .. 'It ce ories lind her flowers were citals gi ven in the stud nt series it willi He will know how to im­ physically unfit would not be in Marvel Septer of North Eng­ pink carnalions. tonlAht at 8 p. m. in the north the army. However, even the ex­ By Larry N. Driscoll standard of* IIvln,. • *Without co- crIminal or anll-lOCial, It is the IIsh, ' student . In the school of prove his home town so it will .. '. Following the c ere m 0 n y the music hall. be more satisfactory place for his perts agree that those in the army The torces of thc world are ap­ operation urban and rural Inhabi­ duty ot another to turn him In 10 nurJlng; attended the bride as couple lett tor. a short wedding would benefit by regular hours, proaching thc c I I m a x of the maid of honor. Miss Von Draska will be ac­ ,ellera tion to /lve in. tants could noi survive under the that properly constituted auUlorl­ trip to Burlington and Keokuk, proper diet and pbysical examina­ greatest war this planet has ever ty can handle the situallQJ1. In The bride was attired In a companied by Itelen Skogsmark. We are Jiving in an age when lifter Which Mr. McManis left for Her program will consist of all tions correcting minor defects, witnessed. Such a conflict must present system of Boclal organiza­ this W8Y socIety Is organized to street.Jengtt\ dres -of dusty pink things are changed by people who Camp Gruber, Okla., nnd Mrs. Schubert melodies Including: "Pax are discontented. If the settlers and the majority of the boY'S would not happen again. The world must tion. Likewise, no nation can be protect the majorIty. An IndI­ sell-sufficient If It desIres 1\ hlgb McManis returned to continue her vobiscum," "M Innelied," "An die had been satisfied with their old be in the army. organize If our present civili1.8- vidual must not take the authority nurses' training in Iown City. tion is to survive. standard of living. Even Creat Leyer," "Am Crube Anselmo's" home tow~ they would never In the place 01 compulsory mlli­ Into hIs own hands, because, by so and "J-rellopolls;" "Ocr Jungling have come to America In the first As we all know, a social group .Britain and the Uniled States, two doing, the maJority would sutfl1r Cigarette Ration Plan Thc bride and bridegroom were tar ylraining these experts would both graduated Irom Keokuk high on del' Quelle," "Auf nthalt," "Die place. have an extensive course In' mili­ survives and pro s per 8 only countries having the greatest re­ at the hands of a minority. That ·Secondly, the experts claim It is tnrough cooperation. Our present sources In the world, ore not eJf- Is why the power of authority is school In 1044. Mrs. McManis' Is Krahe," "In the Spring" and tary tactics and physical education Announced by Navy now a junior In the Cadet Nurscs' "Erkonig;" "Wandering," "Klar­ undemocratic to put our boys Instituted in all schools. On the world is a social group. ArIstotle 5uHicient If they want a hlah vested In tHe most disinterested under military rule Qecause this said, "Man is a social animal," slandllrd of livIng. One of the corps at the University of Iowa. chen's song," "c r a die song," surface this looks fine, but think hands and In more than one Lieul. William Forbes, ship', "Laughler and Tears" and "Die runs counter ot the iualltles of m~aning reasons that they are able to af­ a minute. Our schools are already that men must live to­ party's hands. The same is true lervlc officer of the navy prc­ Individual initiative and sel!-dis­ overburdened by trying to cram a gether. It that was true in ArIs­ ford the luxurIes they do, and pay of relations between counUes In a Allmachl." cipIJne. On llle counlrary, I think the high wages they do, Is through tlIght base has announced the new lifetime educatlon into 12 or 16 totle's age, think how much more state as well 8S between states In plan for cigarette raUonlng. Thl Two Aviation Pilots It is excellent training for sell­ years. If extensive military anq their trade with other nations. 80 It is today In our age. The a nation. The world Is like a rationing wi11 apply to a\l army, discipline in future life. Our ju­ physical courseS are introduced world is vastly more Interdepen­ Some nations, it Is well known, community. It Is a social grOUP, Florence Bemrose venile delinquents are a good ex­ something else will have to suffer. can produce certain commodities navy and marine acUvllles. It Is Decorated at Navy dent than the world that Aristotle and, a& such, It must oraanJze to beln, done to release more clg- Granted Divorce ampie of lac;k of discipline. They It would be much better to have knew. Even the farmer of the and services more cheaply tban survive. do not realize that laws are neces­ con others. ThUS, we see the areUes for civILIan use. . our boys receive this vital train­ United States Is only 15 per cent I would liken the world to one Pre-Flight Station A divorce deC'ree was granted to sary to protect them as well as to Lng in the army for a year ex­ self-sufClcient. Barter, trade, and world as a social group, and as of our early frontier towns before It bas been approved that a ra­ protect oth After a year of clusively. such must have co-operation. tion of six packages of cigarette , Florence J. Bcmrose trom Wil­ co-operation gave us our present law came. We all know that in liam G. B mrosc by Judge Harold ------.~--.~_c--~~ or 24 cigars, or four ounces of Reese Carl CLark, gunners mate The only way the nations of these early communltlel every first class, and Charles R. PhlJlips, D. Evans in district court yester­ the world can enjoy 10 the fuUest man was law unto himself, and tobacco can be purcha ed each week by army, navy and marine ACRM, stud nt aviation piloL~ at day. advantage our present civiliza­ under t his s Y' t em preiudlce, lh navy pre-flight station w re Medical Journal Editor tion Is through co-operation. The personnel. The coupl was married Sept. bIgotry, stupidity and brutality r enlly decorated lor meritorious 21, 1936, In P kID, III. She world of today is too small not to. ruled. The finer and more decent The only exceptions to this rul­ servIce. The modern system of transporta­ Ing are men stationed In rehabila­ chargcd cruel and inhuman treal­ To Be Commencement thlnes in liCe had no chance of ment. tion and com m u n I cat Ion has survIval. The survival-of-the­ tation centers, hospitals and in ac­ They received their decorations drawn our world closer together. fIttest Idea was acceptable when tive duty (as on ships in battl for service while in the south Pa­ The pJamti[(, who tiled the Speaker Here June 17 The scattered nations of the world the world had to be conquered zone ). These men will have more cific area. C remonies were held petition for divorce March 23, was , during the regimental review. today arc relatively more accessl. and subdued b~ man. But now It This ruling wlll be errecllve on granted custody of their three Dr. Morris ~jshbeln, editor of ble than were the settlements of Ree Carl Clark, GM lie, of children, Billie Joe, 7, Jay, 5, and the Journal of the American Is civilized, or at leut It hal a June 3. The ration wlll be by VIrginia In the Revolullonary Two-Able, wa~ awarded the Navy Olis, 3. Medical association and Hygeia, somewhat unlverll81 type of civili­ cards and onJy one week rolion period. A place as m1all as our and Marin Corps Medal tCI' his will address the University of zation. 11'0 keee> the 18lhs that we may be purchosed at one tJme, William n. lIort represented the world could not possibly prosper have made, for our civilization to heroic act ot diving !rom his ship, plaintiff. Iowa's medical, ~ental, and nurs­ eliminating posslbilitiel of hoard­ to the fullest extent, even In that survive, Il ii, III they Bald on the Ing. USS Bradford, to rescue a ship­ ing commetW4l~tnt \ June 17 as 189 time, much less in our time, with­ mate despite Imminent attack by graduates receive their awards. frontier, "about time law eame." This plan should release m!lny out co-operation. By that, I mean Il Is tlme for the more cigarettes and tobacco pro­ the enemy during action oct the Christian Church It WBS a "q1~!le~ Tuesday by Ina community one person is world to orranlze anci work a8 a ducts of aU kinds for civilians. Marianas June 19, 1044. Prof. F. C. Ingbee, director ot responsible to and for another. social group to the goal of benefit Charles R. Phillip, ACRM of To Have Picnic convocations, that the npted medi­ That Is, a person cannot be anti­ for the wbole ratber than to work Three-Able, was given the Presi­ cal editor alld author would make social without being detrimental at cross purposes to ultimate dam­ dential Unit Cltatlon with the Members of the First Christian his first appearance as a Univer­ to the group. .r a person Is a natlon. lieut. Ruth Hillman Bronze Star. He served with patrol church will have a family picnic sity of Iowa. commencement wing 10 of PS 102 during the Phil­ tonight at the farm 01 Dr. William speaker. Ceremonies are sched­ Rohrbacher. Those planning to jpplne de{en~e bet we n D c. 8 and uled for :'\5 p. rn., In Iowa Union Arrives in States March 3, 19<12. attend the picnic ore to meet at and will b~ broadcast by station Charlotte Curtis Weds SergI. R. Worthley Following the presentation of the church at 6:30 p. m. [or trans­ WSUI . Lleut. Ruth Hillman, graduate the decoration, the entire regi­ portation. Dr. Fishbein, who Is from Chi­ of S. U. I., arrived In New York ment passed In review In their cago, holds such pOSitions as con­ At Cherokee in Double Ring Ceremony City from Naples by plane 'Sun­ honor. sulting editor 0' Scientific Ameri­ day and will spenci her leave at Stor.s to Close can; medical editor of Encyclo­ In a double ring ceremony, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Erich the h.ome of her mother, Mrs. A. pedia Britannica, writer for the Charlotte Curtls, daughter of Mr. Jobnson in Meriden. N. Hllfman, 426 S. Clinton street. Clerk Issues License All Iowa City retail stores, Chicago Dllily Times syndicate, and Mrs. Glenn Curtis o! Chero­ The couple then left for a short Lieutenant RUfman, an army A marriage license was Issued banks, the city hall, courthouse and contributor to ' Your Life In kee, became the bride of Sergi. weddinr trip to Storm Lake. For dietiCian, has served overseas for to Robert Fonda, Rockwell City, and post oUice will remain the Saturday Evening Post. He is Richard Worthley, son of the Rev. traveling the bride selected a char­ the past two years. She Is ex­ and Lenore Johnson, lowa City, closed today in observance of the author of 15 books between and Mrs. EVans A. Worthley, 10 S. treuse sbantung dresa with brown pecled home by fue lalter part of by the clerk of the district court Memorial day. 1915 and 1942. Gilbert street, at high noon Sun­ accessories. lhe week. yesterday. Degrees will be given to 81 day In the home of the bride's par­ Vade' N_ medical and 4t dental students ents in Clterokee. The Reverend The bride, a gnlduate of Iowa and certitieates- go to 64 nurses. Worthley read the vows of the State Teachers collece In Cedar DAVIES, WINANT CALL ON WINSTON CHURCHILl' Of the award-winners, 132 are in service. Tall baskets or mixed Falls, is now ehroned in cadet nur­ UDiform, Including 53 army, 35 snapdragons and ferns served as ses training lit the UnIversity of navy, and 44 U. S. cadet nurse decorations. Minnesota. corps. Preceding the ceremony, Fred H. The bridegroom, a rraduate of Until present r~strlctions of the Mrs. William KuechmanD Falkenhainer 01 Des Moines, Iowa City high achool, attended oUIce of defense transportation uncle of the bride, sang" At Dawn­ the University of Iowa and Iowa hive been relaxed, commence­ I • • • ing" (Cadman), accompanied by State Teachers colle,e lit Cedar ments are to be held on a local • • * Mrs. James Wooters of Des Moines, Palls prior to his entrance Into the basis. Under thi$ exemption, which cousin of the bride, wbo also service. He recently returned from Ilmlts out-of-tdwn attendance to Double Ring Ceremony in Cedar Rapids played the weddina marches. 40 months duty in ~d. no more than 50 persons, a permit Lieut. (j. g.) Mary Jane Middle­ from ODT Is not required. ton of Sioux City attended the Funeral Service. ! Unites Gene Swain, William Kuech.mann bride as rnald of honor and Erich Johnson of Meriden, brother-in­ for W. F. Stock Lieuf. Robert Briggs In a double ring ceremony, Cene Alter the service a reception Swain, daughter of Mrs. H. W. Jaw of the bride waa best man. To Be Tomorrow Swain of West Palm Beach, Fla., took place at the home of Mrs. C. RiDg bearers were Jean Ann and Dies of Wounds became the bride of William J. Hover in Cedar Rapids. Center­ Ronald Curtis, piece and nepbew Funeral services lor William Kuechmann, son 01 Mrs. John F. ing the serving table was a tiered of the bride. Fredf!t'lclt Stock, 71, who died yes­ First Lleut. Robert K. Briggs, Kuechmann of Burlington, May) wedding cake decorated in pink. a.e Crepe Euemble l.erday at 12:30 a. m. after a heart of Sumner lind a 1943 graduate ot at 4 p. m. in the First Baptist The couple later left for a wed­ The bride, who was given In attack, will be held at the the University of Iowa, died of church at Cedar Rapids. The Rev. ding trip through lUinois and Wis­ marraige by her father, was .t­ Evang~lical and Reformed cburch Wounds In the European theater Grant Anderson ofIlciated. consin. tired in a rose wool crepe dress am) at 2 o'clock Thunday afternoon. April 12, aecording to word re­ He was born on a farm IOUtb­ . Altending the bride all maid of The bride completed her fresh­ carried a colonial bouquet of whjte ceived bere. l' J' carnations. east of Lone Tree Dec. 15, 1873. honor was Beverly Hover of Cedar man year in the college of engi­ He marrIed Freiderleke ROAman He had received the Bronze Star Rapids, former university student. and the Purple Heart for action neering at the Vniversity of Iowa Lieutenant. Middleton, who W8B March 20, 1901, and had Uved In Best man was Wayne Rohse, in April. Mr. Kuechmann received attired in the uni form of tbe Lone Tree for many yeara. . With the 38th' h"'flmtry division of graduate student In the depart­ the lst army. Lieutenant Briggs his B. A. degree from the Univer­ W A ViES, carried a bouquet 0' He Is survIved by his widow; had previously been wounded in ment of chemistry at the Univer­ sity of Iowa and was graduated sweetpeas. sity of Iowa. Ihree IOns, Elmer of Iowa City, action last October and had been from Colgate Rochester seminary For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Harry of Lone Tree and Howard, bospitalized lil Ji: n g I and until The bride chose for her wedding In New York. He completed a Curtis selected a street-Ienitfl dress who Is In the army overaeu; two December. II .• 1\ street-length dress of white lace year of pre-medical work at the of sbeer blue. Mrs. Wol1hley wore da\lghters, Mra. Huet Kutcher of with which she wore a corsale of University of Iowa last semester a street-Ienath dress of aqua crepe Muscatine and Mrs. Wilma Idle Baked bepqa seasoned wit.b red roses. and plans to continue his studies and both wore cona'es of 'wtet­ of Lone Tree. onions, pickle n:!llSh' and moistened Miss Hover selected a teal blUe in the fall. peas and rOles. The Rev. Wendell Hansen wlll JOS.,H I. DAVIES, Pre,ldent Truman', 8peclal envoy, is pletured at the left above as he called at wltb salad d~in. g make a ~e­ ensemble complimented with I The couple is now residing at Following the ceremon)', 36 officiate at the services and burial "Cbequen," the prima mlnlater', 01llc1aJ country reeldence, tor • conference with Winston Churchlll, lic10us :san~'rir9 Lfilllnr. corsa,e oC talisman roses. Rochelle, Ill. guests atteDd~ a I>ridal cUnn!f will be 10 the LoDe Tree cemeier)'. -rla'ht. John G. Wloant, ~erican ambUaador to Great Britain, Is In the middle. " (Int,rn.tional)

.I MGEFOUB · IRE DAILY IO W AN, I OWA CIT Y, tOWA WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1945 ' - .' -- .'- == Second Athleti(:s Snap' Indian D • 1 Pirates o'wn R8 Guess tileD moril rtg\ll Trifle Too Winning Streak, 2 t.o 1 JlIOI''' tile ~ For Eighth Early Snead-Nelson Match Similar to- We'll Take Ars Win J.C CUB~ SLUGGER Bremen LUI Take Over 'Sunday Foorsome Gr8if By ROY LUCK In Tenth Mu Dally Iowan SpOrt. Editor By WHITNEY MARTIN Ne hounds in the spots where their H. Second Place ALTHOUGH IT'S a trifle too NEW YORK (AP)-I1that two­ tee shots wel'e hidden il they Flores Walks Home early in the sebson to get out on tone gol! match Byron Nelson and hadn't had 6,000 galloping fans to a limb again, SECOND GUESS Sam Snead played over the week­ help' them. With Decisive Tally; Mr· Mel Ott Continues will stick its neck (or rather what's end had been a title affair, the Ntl Torrid HiHing Streak left of Lt after the many-many two probably could be called co­ The real treat was in watchin'g Ninth Rally FaRs Oi mistakes in the past) 0\11 agpin champions now. Nelson and Snea .. recovel' from With Three Singles and predict the outcome of ·the ActuaUy the match had no more these predicaments. Two or three PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Pitch~r City softball league. of a championship Matus than your times ihey had to waste shots, but Jess Flores walk d in with his ollln ordinarily a bad lie in the rough PITTSBURGH (AP) - As we see it, after a week's play, Sunday foursome. It simply was winning in the tenth inning called for a little brow-wrinkling, Bill Salkeld's second major league Bremers, Navy Enlisted and the an e:xhibition, although so much yesterday as the Philadelphia Ath­ with and Veterans appear to be Ute three publicity had been attached to it a careful surv y of the landscape, letics snapped a 1i ve-game winni'-f pinch runner Vic Barnhart on base top teams in the league. However, that the participants were under and bingo-a shot Ute average fel­ streak for the , broke up the ball game yesterday as softball is an off shoot of base­ the tension of a championship low woul be tickled to make oll 2-1. and gave the ' ball-many things can happen be­ ll\atch. They are very proud gents a perfect fairway. The A's had muffed a ninth Inn­ a 4-3 edge over the league-leading fore the season is over. The so­ when it comes to their golf, and How Not to Do It ing chance when after the bases New York Giants for their eighth called experts that picked the knew a lot of folks over the coun­ They weren't infallible on the wer~ loaded, fanned straigh t victory. Cards to win the try would attach much significance fairway, either, Cor that matter, lrv Hall and Joe Burns and gilt HaJ'ry Feldman had shut out the flag for the second straight year, to the outcome. and on one occasion Nelson sent a George KeJl on a liner. Reynolds Bucs for seven behind a certainly didn't think that Mort E,,' lrh&enlD&- brassie shot dribbling along the walked Flores and Bobby Wilkins 3-0 lead of! Preacher Roe picked Cooper might not be around lit the Anyway, the affair. particularly ground in a perfect demonstration to open the A's tenth and Larry up one at a time in the first, sixth end of the season. The City league the stroke play part of it held at or how not to hit a golt ball. He Rosenthal was awarded first b8'11! and seventh innings. Pinch hitter is natUl'ally very similar-many Fresh Meadow, was enlightening explained it was a close lie, and he on interference by cntcher Jim Mc. Lloyd Waner walked and scored changes have all'eady been made to the duffers and gave them some figured he'd take the chance with Donnell of the Indians. the first Pirate tally in the eighth - and many more probably will be encouragement, and also provided his brassie, knowing the worst he Relief hurler Ed Klieman came on a single by Jack Salt.zgaver and made before the tlrst halt of play an angle on an interesting argu­ could do would be a ground in and promptly got Bobby Esta· Jack Barrett's outfield fly. 1$ over. ment-that involving the abilities creeper. As to the comparison be­ lelia on a foul with Rosenthal be. Ott singled three times, bring­ Plenty of P.ower of today's par busters apd the stars tween the modern stars and the ing doubled off first. Klieman of years gone by who as a ruLe did ing his lif time tot. I base mark to But, regardless of the changes in old timers, the match showed that walked Dick Siebert to rill the the opposing teams, It appears that well to hit par. players such as Snead and Nelson, 4,887, one less than Honus Wa~­ sacks and then g:lVe up four balls Bremers has the power to roll It encouraged the dufters be­ who turn in phenomenal scores on ner's National league standard, set to to Charley Geol'ge to force in t~ o"'er a 21-year-span. an easy title as far as the first half cause they aaw, with their own the winter tour, take no liberties winning marker, of the race is concerned. Navy En­ two eyes, the two outstanding with por when they get on a cham­ Pittsburgh took charge of sec­ ilsted wI! undoubtedly ofter them players in competition today make pionship course. 'CleVieland AB R H I ond place, five and a half games plenty of competition as will the shots with all the wayward ten­ They had just as much trouble back ot the Giants. Meyer, 3b ...... 1 Veterans organization. Wil1iam' ~ dencies 01 their own rudderless ef­ with the Fresh Meadow layout as 5 1 0 1 41~ fZ(!;lJ~s BAl"s Delta Sigs are not to be counted forts, and putt at times like they the playel's who competed there Mackiewicz, cf ...... 4 0 I 0 New York AB R H E -(f{e ESI&!tl"'" O'Dea, rf ...... 1 ,.J. out of the r~e either, They are were !J'ying to guess which way when Nelson and Snead still were 5 0 0 , NAP f"OSl'tlON, VJ~'CH IS , very definitely in it-and as far as the cup was gOing to jump. caddies. Par is 70. Gene Sarazen's Boudrea\l, ss ...... 4 0 0 0 TI'eadway, cf ...... 5 1 1 0 c&.\SOl-A1IOtJ ONe. fi:>R See frey, If 00' ...... , ..... 4 0 Hausmann, 2b ...... 5 1 1 0 that goes-so are some of the rest 6.000 Galloping Fans 286 in winning Ule National Open 0 0 Of'A:>SI~G- PrrC;l~~ Ross, 3b ...... 3 0 2 0 Ott, rf ...... 4 0 3 0 of the tearos, On one hoLe Snead put his drive there in 1932 still is low for f6ur Reye:~ :.... i .. ~···, ...... Rocco, 1b ...... ~ 5 0 I 0 Reyes, 3b ...... 4 1 2 0 ( Wednesday night's encounter of over some trees to ao adjoining tournament rounds, and Gene shot McDonnell, c ...... 4 0 0 Weintraub, 1b ...... 4 0 1 . 0 NG'rV iOf?K G,AiJ'(S ' • the Veterans against Sigma Chi, fairway, and both men at times the last 28 holes in an even 100 1 Reynolds, p .:...... Filipowicz, If ...... 4 0 1 0 ~Pl-\oMORG. -(.. tiRO 6A~~MM should go far to determine just would have had trouble finding sll·okes. Nelson had 144 fot' two 4 0 1, 0 Klieman, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Kerr, 5S ...... 4 0 2 0 CJ,.OVlI,* rI,~ ""Ai 10 S-(ArzOOA-4 )~~ what each team has. Sigma Chi meat baUs with a pack of blood- rounds and Snead 143. Berres, c ...... 4 0 1 0 fell, rather unglamol'ously in thelr ...... 39 1 7 Feldman, p ...... 4 0 0 0 £Irst time out to William's Delta Totals 8igs 12 to 2. However, the Sigma ·-two out when winning run scored. Ada_ms,_p ._...... _.... ,,_.. 0_ 0_ 0_ o0 Bums Thump Atley Donald Blanks Chi ten was reduced to nlne that Sporting World Lovemenow Wins­ Tota_ ls ...... 38 3 12 Red Sox Down night and several of their k y Philadelphia. AB R H I: p1ayers were not able to play. With Pittsburgh AD R H E Browns on Five Hits the addi lion of these men and sult­ Wilkins, S8 ...... 4, 1 I I able replacements, the Sigma Chi Rosenthal, If ...... 4 0 1 0 Saltzgaver, 2b -_ ...... 4 0 1 0 ToPayTribute Racing Estalella, ...... 4 0 2 0 Barrett, cf -_ ...... 4 0 0 1 (ubs, 10 10 3 (hisox, 6 to 4 ten should be able to fIeld a fairly cI. As Yanks Win, 11 -0 Siebert, Gionfriddo, rf ...... 4 0 3 (\ potent team. "Skip" Herwig's ad- Ill> ...... 4 0 1 0 Hayes, ...... 2 0 I 1 ElHott, 3b .. -...... _- 2 0 0 0 dition to the squad should add c CHICAGO (AP)-Five runs in NEW YORK (AP)-AUey Don­ BOSTON (AP)-Successive fifth George, c ...... 1 0 0 0 Russell, If .. ... 3 1 0 0 plenty of punch in the batting de­ To Nile Kinnick Roundup the thir,d inning gave the Brook­ ald blanked the Sl. Louis Browns inning triples by Bob Johnson alld Hall, 2b ...... 8 Pahlgren. 1b ...... 4 0 2 0 partment. .. If If 4 0 0 lyn Dodgel's a 10-3 decision over with five hits y sterday, 11-0, as Pete Fox plus Jack Tobin's fly Kell, 3b ...... 4 0 Barnhart ,...... 0 1 0 0 Week's HlghllgM 0 the Chicago Cubs yesterday with lh swept the gave the a 6-4 win STANTON, Del. (AP)-Love­ Burns, rf ...... • Gustine, ss ...... 3 0 0 0 Probably the highlight of the Tribute to Nile C. Kinnick, Jr., 4 0 0 Ben Chapman, making his first three-game series for their eighth over the yes­ mellow, recent winner of his first Flores, p ...... 2 1 0 1 Colman ...... 1 0 0 0 first week's ogening round was the I the University of Iowa's a11- start since May 6, earning his sec­ successive win and 14th in 16 terday in their series' :finale. start at PimUco. looked like a " Lopez, c ...... 2 0 1 0 sensational pitching of Bill Bar- American football playcr who ond victory on an eight-hit per­ Yankee stadium stm·ts. It was whirJaway in the stretch yester­ Totals ...... ·'33 2 6 I Salkeld. c ...... 2 1 1 0 Pinky Woods started ihe :/3oston bour for the Bremer ten. Barboul' died in the Caribbean in the crash formance. Donald's fourth success. day as he marked the opening of · ·-Rosenthal reached first OIl Roe, p ...... 2 0 0 0 Ilinpng but he was forced to re­ has allowed just five hits in 14 of his fighter plane June 2, 1943, ", Delaware park's 30-day meeting catcher's inference L. Waner ...... 0 1 0 0 Singles by Goody Rosen, Augie Two hits nnd three walks in the tire in the last of the second when innings, which is ~mewhat ot a will be given today during Bill • wi~h vict ' y in the christiana Cleveland OOJ 000 000 0-1 Gables, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Galan, Dixie Walker, John Dan­ £irst inning sent Jack KI'amer to he was spik d on the foot by Cass record. as far as the City league Stern's sports memorial program. tonio and Eddie Basinski, two the show rs with his third defeat Michaels during a rundown pLay. stt\kes. Philadelphia 000 010 000 1-2 is concerned. His latest accomp- The program will occur at 12 :30 He caught Geheral Don irlside walks and an enol' by shortstop and the Yanks continued to blllSt R d Barrell then took over .and lishment was a two hit chore ovel' p. m. over the NaG network, with Totals ...... 31 4 8 the 16th pol :lI1d kept right on ~ucket pursp at Narragansett. ° Bill Schust l' routed starter Macl( Weldon West and Sam Zoldak lor • Batted for Roe in 8th before he was warmed up, the Shl­ George's Standard Service Mon- stalion WHO of Des Moines ti S going to cover the clistance in 54 Doctor Jeep, $10.00, was timed Stewart in the third and clinched a total of Iii blows including dou­ sox Ili kid him for two runs to pull •• Ran for Dahlgren in 9th day night. the Iowa outlet. Several oulstand- seconds flat and pay $5 .80 for $2. in 1: 12 4/ 5 in beating S. W. Shap­ the first win of the series for the bles by Herb Cromplon, Hersh ... Batted fOl' Gustine in 9th into a 3-3 tie . Tommy Wuriu of the Sigma Chi Ing men from various spotts will A total of $751,653 was wagered off's War Page and Mt. Desljrl Dodgers. Martin and Nick Etten and a triple New York ...... 100 001 10j}-3 The Red Sox leed off against team hQS the unique distinction of be eluogized as represehtative of on tile eight-roce card, stable's Weathel·ite. Jamoke, $8.1JO, Pittsburgh ...... 000 000 013-4 Dixie Walker led the Brooks' by Johnny Lindell. starter Lee Ross for six hits and prol>ably being the fastest man in all former athletes who died In ... led Mrs. W. W. Snyder's Cream 14-hit attack on three Vern St phens and Mike Kree­ two runs in the first two jnnings the who I e City league. Last war servlce, . . Mrs. Ethel Jarobs' Stymie sped and E. M. O'Brien's Gun Bearer to with a double and three Singles, vich were sidelined with injuries ().hd made v n saIeties agalnst Wednesday W.uri.u beat out t~o f Dil'ect9r E. G. Schroeder of the the wire in 1 :13 2/ 5. A crowd 01 driving in two runs. ond Manngel' Luke Sewell had to Frank PaI)ish during the Last six rollers in the m£Jeld f?r safe hIts unlverslty of Iowa athletic de­ to a five-length tt'iumj:Jh iii the Class C Ran ocas hUlldicap before 10,000 wagered $711 ,958. pres nt a patchwork lineup. frames. -rollers that were fIelded per- partment Will partiCipate In the City League Brooklyn AD R II E 27 ,136 at J amaica. The mutuel • * • fecU)' and pegged to. lirst with seclion of the program devoted to Full Cry, the Brolite ial1ll st Louis AB R H E Chlc;i.fo AD R H ~ plenty of llpeed- WurlU was ~ust Kinnlck hOndle was $2,240,501. Complete Auto took advantage of Stanky, 2b ...... 3 3 1 0 The $3.80 favorite ran the mile stable's seven-year-old, captured six O. K. Tire Shop errors in thc ------there ahead of the peg-something . Rosen, cf ...... 5 1 1 0 Byrnes, cf ...... Ii o 1 0 Moses, rf ...... _. 4 0 2 0 that doesn't happen very often in Kinnick was practically unanl- and one sixl enth in 1:44 3/ 5 . the featured Buckingham purse at first two innings last night to fash­ Galan, Ib ...... 4 1 2 0 Schulte, ss ...... 5 o 2 1 Fal'l'ell, 1b ...... 5 1 0 0 sortl>all. mou~ alJ-Amerlcah In 1939 and • • • Hawthorne by a length over J. J. Ion ten runs and their lirst victory Walker, r( ...... 5 2 4 0 Moore. rf ...... '" o 0 0 Hockett, cf .: ...... 4 0 2 0 Final Analysis No. 1 U. S. athlete o( the year. He A. F. Eqst's Doctor Jeep and Al. Keith's Four Deep. If ...... 4 1 0 of the season, downing the Tire Olmo, 1 McQuinn, Ib ...... 1 o 0 0 Curtright, If ...... 4 1 1 1 As a Cinal ana lysis then, we was called to training In the na vy Shlager's Jamoke won {he two di­ Shop ten, 10 to 6. Dantonio, c ...... 4 1 1 0 Gray, It ...... 1 o 0 0 Cuccinello, 3b ...... 3 0 1 0 pick Bremers to finish first, with air corps in December, 1941, while visions of Lhe six furlong Nan- 1 The Auto aggregation scored live Hart, 3b ...... 5 1 0 B. Martin, If-Ib ...... 3 o 1 0 Schalk, 2b ...... 4 0 1 0 Navy Enlisted second, Veterans an Iowa law student. A mechanl­ Basfnski, S8 ...... 4 0 3 0 ------American Leagu\! THE SfSToF times in the first and five limes in Hayworth, c ...... 2 o 0 0 Michaels, ss ...... 3 1 1 0 third, and the rest 01 the field cal ~Dllure of hIs plahe caused the p 5 1 0 the second, and then pl'oceded to Chapman, ...... 0 Muncuso, c ...... 2 o 0 0 Tresh, c ...... 1 1 1 0 strung out behind theIl). However, crash foul' miles from the carrier Detroit at New York (2)-Trout l/IE BLUE (4-3) p.nd Oval'mire (2-~) vs. Du· go scor less the rest of the way. Gu tteridge, 2b ...... 4 o 0 0 Ross, p ... _...... , ..... 1 0 0 0 we'll leave a loophole for escape- just two years ago S:lturday. Bradley of Complete Auto hit a Totals ...... , .... _...... 39 10 14 1 Clary, 3b ...... 4 1 0 Papish, p ...... 2 0 0 0 biel (4-2) ond Gettel (2-2) o the possibility of a darkhorse home l'un with two men on in the Kramer, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Cleveland at Boslon (2j­ II E o 0 0 Nagel, • ...... 1 pllshing 1~40 first. Cbical'o AB R West, p ...... 1 000 Bremers for the crqwn ap­ Gromek (5-1) and Bagby (0-5) ] pears very likely-so, well- take vs. Terry (0-0) and Wilson (I -5) 50,000 WATTS Line score Hack, 3b ...... , 4 2 o Zoldak, p ...... 2 o 0 0 Totals ...... 32 4 9 The Big Show o YOUl' pick- but we'll stick with Chicago at Philadelphia (2) - Complete Auto 550 000 0 10 102 Johnson, 2b 4 o o o Shultz ' ...... 1 o 0 0 .-batted for Papish in 9th BI' mers. even jf we are playing Ainerlc&n Leacue Lee (5-2) and Humphries Cl-O) O. K. 'fire Shop 050 001 0 6 5 7 Nichol son, rf ...... 4 o Doors Open 1:15-9:45 o o 1 Boston AD R H E on a dl1lel'ent team. vs. Christopher (6-2) and New­ Cavarretta, Ib 2 3 o 1 Totals ...... 35 • 5 Tea... W L Pet. 11 som (1-4) Rice, c ...... 4 o o o • Batted [or ZoJdak In 9th Melkovich. 1b ...... 5 1 3 Q New York ...... 21 .656 Detroit ...... 17 11 .607 SI. Louis at Washinglon (2') ­ Hi. ('.1'" ,~ Palko, cC ...... 3 o 1 o New York AB R H to: Steiner, 2b ...... 2 o o o Chlca~o ...... 16 14 .533 (Twilight nlght)- Shirley (2-2) Lowrey. 11 ...... 4 o 2 o ______McBride, cf ...... 3 o 2 o STARTS The Big Six St. Louis ...... " .... 15 14 .5)7 and Potter (4-2) vs. Leonard (3-3) TODAY n:::: Schuster, 5S ...... 1 o o 1 Stirnweiss. 2b ...... 4 2 3 1 Johnson, If ...... 4. 1 1 o By The Assocla.ted Presl Clevellthd ...... " ...... 1~ 15 A6~ and Pieretti (3-3) "FIRST RUN HITS" Gillespie· ...... 1 o 1 o Metheny. rf ...... 5 2 ' 3 0 Fox, rf ...... 4 1 1 B~tt)nc 1 1 o BostPh ...... 14 18 ,438 Merullo, ss ...... 2 o H. MarUn, If ...... 5 0 1 0 Tobin, 3b ...... 4. 1 ). o (Three Lea4er.ID Each Le....u~) Stewart, p ...... iJ o o o Washb $tob ...... 13 18 .4)9 Lindell. cJ. ... _...... 5 1 1 0 Lake, ss ...... 4. 1 3 o Player. Club G AB R H Pet, Philadelphia ...... 12 20 .375 Cornell as, p ...... 1 o o o Etten, Ib ...... 4 2 1 1 Garbork, c ...... 4. I 1 1 Holmes, ...... 31 132 32 53 .402 Natlobal Leahe Sauer·· ... _...... 1 o o o Grimes, 3b ...... 5 2 3 0 Woods, P ...... 1 o 1 o Braves ' Vandenberg, p ...... 1 o o o Crosetli, ss ...... 4 2 1 0 Barrett, p ...... 3 o o o Ott, ...... 36 122 30 48 .393 New York ...... 25 10 .114 Becker." ...... 1 o 1 o Crompton, c ...... 4 0 1 0 Hausmann, p ...... 0 o o o Giants Pittsburgh ...... 18 14 .5b3 3 Donald, p ...... 3 0 1 I Reyes, ...... 36 ISO 18 48 .369 Brooklyn ...... 19 15 .559 ToCAls ...... 33 3 8 Totals ...... " 11 15 3 l'otals ...... 34 6 13 1 GlMts Chicago ...... 17 15 .531 ·Blltted for Schuster in fourlh S1. Louis ...... 000 000 000- 0 Chicagq 012 000 001-4 Cuccinello, .... 29 100 1., 86 .360 St. Louis ...... 18 16 .529 " Batted for Comellas in fourth New york ...... 4.03011 20x- l1 Boston 120020 01x- fl White Sox Boston ...... 12 18 .400 ···Batted Cor Vand nberg in Stirnwelss, .... 82 128 29 41 .333 Cincinnati ...... 12 18 .400 Philade l ph~a .. , ...... 10 25 .286 Pal PIoneered, Perfected and Pat.nt­ ninth Yankees eel the Hollow G-ound blad. - a dlf· yetiterdaYl a-wt. Brooklyn ...... 105 1 \0 020-10 sented, as well as Great Lakes' Stephens, ...... 26 96 22 S 1 .323 hus f.,~ lIIOdem blade. Shaves with National, Lea&'¥e Chicago ...... 010 100 001- 3 favored Bluejackets, Marquette, Iowa Thinclids Browns All Star B o ~ Ra.lly Iud a ""'ather Jauch" because Pal Notre Dame, MJchigan State, Brooklyn 10, t;hlcago 3 - BlncCrosby-Bob "o~ Is 1Iu.. 1n the razar-foIIows facial R UDII battM In Pittsburgh 4, .New York 3 Doors Ope.. 1:15-10:00 P. II. Western Michigan, Wright Field of Sdlettat Lealue Betty Grable-And Others conlaln. No need .1o "bear dawn". Dayton, Ohio, Idaho, Illinois Tech, Will CORlPele St. Louis 8. Philadelphia 1 &lad.. lost !ant«, tao. Try "'-- Lombardi, Giants ...... 32 Only games scheduled IIIlhi Nol Enteted . Drake, St. Thomas and Cornell Olmo, Dodgers ...... 32 . . college. Amerjcan Leane In Centril Collegiate Kurowski. Cardinals ...... 31 New York ll, Louis 0 Unless George Walker, nllnois' st. Atnerlt!ul Le..ue Boston 8, Chicago 4 In Central Collegiate triple winner in the Big Ten meet, Athletes trom the University of Stephens, Browns ...... 22 Philadelphia 2, Cleveland competes as an individual, the Iowa for the tirst time iii several Etten. 'YanDleS ., ...... 22 Only games scheduled Rites Saturday John P. Nicholson trophy awarded years will compete in the Central R. Johnson, Red Sox ...... 22 to tlte outstanding performer will Collegiate championship track lind ~ ... be up for grabs. The trophy, field meet Saturday at Great I lI/aUou,I Lua'u Today's Galles GREAT L~KES, Ill. (AP)-The named in honor of the late Notre University of Illinois. new West­ takes, Ill. l.ombarc;i.i. Gi.ants ...... 11 National Learue Dame track coach, was won last Coach George Bresnahan will Weintraub, Giants ...... 8 ' New York at Chicago (2)-Han- ern conference track champion, year by Buddy Young of 11,1l nois, will skjp a title defense, but the leave Friday with several Hawk- Ott, GiI;mts ...... 7 'sen (4-2) and Voiselle (8-1) vs. now in the navy at Great Lakes, eyes, including Clayton and Her- Amerlcall ... eap e Wyse (5 -3 ) and Chipman (1-2) 20th Central Collegiate track and but not eligible to compete. field champoinships Saturday will bert Wilkinson, high jumpers; and Stephens, Browns ...... 8 BrOQkl, n at Pittsburgh (2) - provide plenty of cinder-path fire­ OutatandJnl Doels Keith Gotthardt. shot putter. R. Johnson, Red Sox ...... 6 Pfund (2-0) and Davis (4-3) vs. Outstanding duels as likely in works as an 18-team field strives Events are scheduled tor Satur- DerrY,.Yankees ...... 4 Sewell (5-4) and Gerheausel' the sprints, between Grover Klem­ day afternoon. (0-2) for the undefended crown. f LU8-:­ mcr of Great Lakes and Chuck Paul E'agerlind, the Drake relays Equifox, ' 12.20, woo the fea- Philadelphia at Cincinnati (t) AJ,.L STAB .BOND RAJ,l.y Not Entered Beaudl'y of Marquette, and ih the cha,lJlpion Javelin thrower, mean- tured sJxth race at Cburchill -Wyatt (0-3) and Lee (2-3) vs . Crosby-Hope-'Sinatra-GMM Neither the IIIini nor Michigan, high jump between Corp. Dwight while is preparjng to compete jn Downs before 5,500 who bet $256.- Heusser (8-3) and Bowman (0-0) Popeye "Sh,e ~Jck SaUor" delhroned as Big Ten champion at Eddleman of Wright Field and the National Collegiate title meet 584. NaY)' Cross was &eCood and Boston at 8t. Loul( s2)-Tobln Tr8(lk and Field Qu Champaign last Saturday, is en­ former Illinois star, Ken Wiesner at Milwaukee, Wis., June II . The Tropic third, The wiDner was (2-6) and Logan (1 - 1) vs. Wilks "SJIOI't" tered. But the seven other con­ of Marquette and Dick Kilpatrick javelin Is not on the procr~ of timed in 1:13 4 ~1 for the ,,~,ur- (2-.) $llQ lb'ech.een (2-1) or ____-Lat . es•.t, J i.Je' wl- 'fertn~ .eh90~ will be rePAl- of Purdue, Jilli Ten ohamp icm, the c.ntralJ. lolli 8 pr~t. Burkhardt (4-0)

l. WBDNESDAY,MAY30,194'5 THB · DAILY IO.A·". 'IQWA ~1'fT. IOWA PAGE FIVE c===~======~====~==~==~~~~====~======~~==~==~==~======~~~~~====~======:=~======~-= JAPS SAY BIG BAD 8-29'5 DEST~Y IMPERIAL PALACE of the Interstate Copper and Br Radio Station WSUI to Be Off the Air Today- -~----,----.., l10,000 Workers Quit Workers union. aUmate of the Work Explainecl- Confederated Union of America. ,,01 (lit) CBS-WBBII (_) --.WHO (t") MBS-WON ('Itt) "Woods and Fields" (KXEL) One of the plllnlf mak parts CU-WIIT (11M) lllue-IlX.L (IMI) ssential Jobs 9:45 for a new incendiary bomb being Frank Singiser (WMT) used over Japan. The union seeks Radio Stotion WSu[ will be 01( a new con tract \be air today in observance or Me­ Kay Kyser (WHO) In Sir Strikes Production of parts lor Super­ morial day. but will resume the Voice of the Army (KXEL) ., 'JBI; AI 0 IATED paE rortre was halted at five St. I!gWarly stheduled broadcasts to­ 10:00 LoUIS plants of the McDonnelJ Air­ morrow morning at 8 o'clock with News with Pat Patterson (WMT) Moce than 10,000 workers re­ craft comp ny by a strike of 1,250 tbe Morning Chapel program. Supper Club (WHO) mained aw y trom th ir job Tu - H. R. Gross. News (KXEL) * .. • day in six work stoppages in vari­ workers. Some 1,550 other workers ous parts of the n tion while an­ were foreed to r mrun idl . NETWOltK WGHLIGHTS 10:15 "An average American girl from other 15,000 who had been idle re­ The strike began 10nd y when 6:10 Fulton Lewis (WMT) the average American family is turned to work. 15 workers left their jobs in pro­ Jack Kirkwood Show (WMT) News from WHO (WHO) what the Red Cross is looking Three planu of Revere Copper t t. they id, gainst the down­ Lucia Thorne I'l< Co. (WHO) H. R. Gro~s, News (KXEL) 10:30 for," said Miss Margarel Mar­ and Brass Inc., Rome, N. Y., were grading of two m hanies. The Grain B It Ra~\'S (KXEL) Romance Rhythm & Ripley grave, who is in Iowa City re­ cl d by a stri\oe oC 3,400 m mbe.., walkout spread and the AFL In­ g:U cruiting g!T1s for the Red Crass. Music That Satisfies (WMT) (WMT) ternationlll ian n of Machin­ Fred Waring Orchestra (WHO) "Recruiting near universities is a Ists joined the trike. News of the World (WHO) n w pha I' ot the work," he said. She added thaI many ~rls look Paul Hut hens (K.XEL) 1n G dsden, AI.. walkout of H. R. Gross. ijews (K.XEL) 1.11 ~argrave·s tour took her to forward to going overs . Mi 10:45 3,300 CIO-United Hubber Workers G:gO • the Universities of Minne.ola and Margr ve expl ined lh t thi wa Romance Rhythm & Ripley of Interrupted production at the Mr. Keen (WMT) Wi con in before coming to l OW8. on the prin ipsl n for (WMT) Goodyear Tire and Rubber com­ News from WHO (WHO) Belore enterinl Red Cross work. elling a minimum age of 23. "We Did You Kno\'l? (KXEL) Fred Waring Orchestra (WHO) prefer girls who have had some pany plant for the cond time this UPERFORTRE E, carr,lnc tbe.lr (ire bomb .courre le. the beart of the enel1lJ' empire. Dve "prac­ 11SS Margrave gr d\lllte from the 6:45 Dance Orchestra (KXEL) experience in beln, on their own, month. Union officials . id the 11 :00 tically laid wasle what was once the world's third' !areest metropolU," says a Tokyo broad t. FOC'al University of Chica4to. She later Mr. Keen (WMT) )loint of the Japanese people's foremost alfee,Uon and uudyin&' JoyaJty-the I n-.perlal ))3.Iace, abon­ and who have developed a strong stoppage was unauthorized. News (WMT) r eived her M.A. in humanilie.s maturity," she said. "Usually at News. H. V. Kaltenborn (WHO) "\Va de Iroyed for the most part," a Tokyo cODlJDenllltor reported. The SOt-plane raid on the very {rom there. She hos pr Viowly Members oC lh . ame uni n Sports Cavalcade (KXEL) Starlit Road WHO Chorus 21 or 22. tttey have just em rged working in Goody ar' 1 h r e e (WHO) nerve center of tbe Nip empire was the ee,ond sueh B-29 attack within U hours. rved as a counselor at Stephens 7:00 from college or home, nnd ha\,en't Akron. Ohio, plants have v01ed al­ college in Columbia, Mo., and ,I Fresh Up Time (WMT) News (K.XEL) yet had the chance to work en­ most fur to one in f vor of a power reparatJons commission to the Boeing B-29 plant in Wichita, Mr. and Mrs. North (WHO) 11 :15 tirely on their own." strike. URW I aders claim com­ Ted Malone (KXEL) Off the Record (WMT) determine what paym nts Ger- Kan. Ml.ss Marerave's work cover 17 pany-union negotiation m chinery Starlit Road WHO Choms Fight Develops in British House of Commons 7:15 many mUJit make had not yel met Miss fargrave sla~ted working tales in the midw t. In the has broken down. (WHO) Fresh Up Tim (WMT) but would convene in Moscow for the REl(l Cross in order that Illraer cities. her work is carried About 3'15 employ oC the Rev. Pie~sch's Hour (KXEL) OYer Responsibility for Jury SEjection h mlin\ f el cI er to the war American Can company's Jer ey Mr. and Ml·S. North (WHO) under an arrangtment reached in 9D directly through th local cbap­ "Lum and Abner" (KXEL) 11:30 effort. "Tha t, I think, is upper­ ter. Leaving Iowa City Jate today. City, N. J., plants joined 1.000 other Rev. Pietsch's Hour (KXEL) the Soviet capital. He declined to 7:30 By James F. Kine thaI. it everyone cooperated some most in the minds of most younf he will 10 to th University of Federal Labor Union (AFL) mem­ Death Valley Sheriff (WMT) Wings Over the Nation (WMT) LONDON (AP)- A bitter fight make any statement in advance of women who apply for Red Cr0S3 Nebr Ita. Miss M rgrav 's home bel'll already on strike in a wage Jack Benny (WHO) arrangement possibly could be The Gay Mrs. Featherstone between Prime Minister Churchill the meet in,. work," .aid Miss Marerave. I.s in Falli City, Nebr. dispute. (WHO) 11 :45 worked out without "engendering Wings Over the Nation (WMT) and former Laborlt members ot "Counter Spy" (KXEL) heat" so !.hat everyone "at a POPEYE 8:00 Jack Benny (WHO) his wartime coalition cabinet de­ chance to vote. Churchill replied: Musi c or Morlon Gould (WMT) Da nce Orchestra (KXEL) vt'loped in commons yesterday ov r "No heat has b en eng ndered. Eddie Can lor (WHO) 12:00 responsibility for the coming July In fact I rather enjoy these occa­ Press News (WMT) "The Road Ahend" (KXEL) 5 genernl election. sions." Midnight Rhythm Parade 8:15 Labori tes nccused lhe prime The re ponsibility [or the im­ (WHO) Music of MOl'lon Gould (WMT) minister of stnging II "rush" elec­ m dio Le breakup ot the war time Station Break and Sign Oft Eddie Cantor (WHO) tion that would deprive hundreds conlition government is developing (KXEL) '''The Road Ahead" (KXEL) of thousands or votes on holiday of inlo one 01 the mnin issues of the 8:30 a chance to cast their ballots. campaign. Corliss Archer (WMT) Date for Execution Churchill retorted angrily: The Labor parly hlld demanded Mr. District Attorney (WHO) Of T. H, RobInson "All ot these diCliculties would an lIutumn election but mllde it 1 0 Spotlight Bands (KXEL) have been removed to II later date clear it was unwilling to join in a 1 0 8:45 Set for June 8 j f rep res ntativesof Labor and Li­ coalition in inaugurllting the post­ 1 0 Corliss Archer (WMT) beral parti s had con en ted to go war program. Mr. District Atlorney (WHO) 0 0 LOUISVlLLE, Ky. (AP)-Con­ on for as long os the war with The Con s e r v II t i v e s led by 0 0 Spotlight Bands (KXEL) victed kidnaper Thomas H. Rob­ Japan continues." Churchill pr clpitated on earlier 2 a 9:00 jnson Jr. began the last ten days Churchill wos in fighting form eleCtion by 1'e Il1ning after the 1 0 The First Line (WMT) of his life yesterday when Judge and said he was enjoying himself LaborJtes refused to stllY on in the 0 1 Kay Kyser (WIlO) Schackelford Mill r in federal dis­ as the verbal slug-fest broke out government until the end ot the 1. 0 Niles and Prindle (KXEL) . trict court here set June 8 tOI' Rob­ when (he new "caretaker" govern­ Japan se war. The king reap­ 0 0 9:15 inson's execution. ment took over and laced the old pointed Churchill to head nn in­ The First Line (WMT) Robinson wos brought h 0 r e wartime ministers on the opposi­ terim government. BLONDIE CHIC YOUtfG 7 I Kay Kyse~ (WIIO) Monday night from the fed 1'01 tion benCh. In answer to II question the run Niles and Pri(ldle (KXEL) prison at Milan. Mich .• ond os soon When one member sugg sted prime mini ter said the thre- 9:30 as the execution dale had been set. Home Town Philosopher (WMT) he was rushed awny to Eddyvi1l1e H I Kay Kyser (WHO) state penitenlial'Y in southwestern Kentucky. 1 1 The court proceedings h re yes­ 1 n Reveals Story terday appeared to be the last legal Daily' lowa"n Want Ads 2 0 step before the 37-year-old kid­ 1 0 naper is electrocu ted. 1 1 LOST AND roUND 0 0 CLASSH'IED 0 1\ Gets Top Job RATE CARt 0 0 LOS'I;: Flame-grain Kaywoodie 0 II CASH RATE pip in leather pouch. Can 3167 0 1 I or 2 day ..... lOe per line per de,. LOST: Brown ond white striped 8 coosecutlve daYII- Sehea! er pin. Phone 8449. 7c per )jne per dll7 e coosecuUve day_ Lost: Key chllin with one key. Cc per Une per d.., University pendant attached. month- Dally Iowan, Box D. HEN R Y 4c per line per da,. CARL ANDERSOJt -Figure Ii words to 11n_ M.lnlmum Ad-2 llnet WANTED

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Want d to buy' Trumpets, cor- 1I0c coL Incb nets. clarinets, alto and tenor Or S5.00 per montb saxophones. baritones and other I instruments. Carl I. Walteradort, , All Want Ads Cal h In Adval"l~ Creston. la. Payabl$ at Oail,. Iowan DUII­ Desa offfce dally unUi II p.m. --WHERE--·-T-O- '6-UY-lT--.;.....,.--

Cancellatiou. mUlt be caJIed tn before II p. m. EILEEN McKEE, 14-year-old sls­ Responsible f l)Y one Incorrect ttl' of Pvt. JO!;eph V. McKee, 24. \nAertion onl,.. PLUMBING ~ BEATING *,orcestcr, Mass., revcaled to the ~rt Workmaualal. ,rellS the IJliiM of her brolher, who lIas been sentenced to two BRENDAN BRACKEN, 44, new LAREW (JO. n&rS at Jlard labor lor slapping tlrst lord of ~he admlraUy In DIAL 4191 111 .. Wub. .hoDe HI llne Nazi PI' oners who refused Minister Winston Churhlll's to work. Th~ girl ruelved from 'caretaker cablnet.... takes over I;::::::::::::::::::::::::~ ibe DoughbOf. w 0 now is in jail perhaps the top civilian war job I at Fl. Benjamin Harrison, Ind .• a for Britain's coming role in the You are alwaJa weloo-. ETTA~ETT , PAUL ROBINSOU WMC Regulation. and PRICES are low at ~ JIIeka&,e contallling a copy of the 011 laught against Ja.pan. Bracken Adverilsemenla for male or _­ transcript of the courlm.artlal pro­ received ihe post lIS a reward for sential female worken are ear­ tetdlngs, which was the firEt ex­ II is services lIS close adv \ser to rled In these "Help Wautecl" ;Ianallon the tamlly had lor tbe Churchill and III recognition for col:lIllns with tbe uudentaJl4l­ DRUG SHOP loy being imprisoned. Thc .war his ability as millister of Informa­ till" tbat birlnc proeedal'flll mall .epartmellt hll ~ ordered an invest!­ tion In the dlsballded coalllton ,ation. conform le War Manpower cabi,net. Commission Recu.laUou. 'DIE , S,(UERMER" EDITOR CAPTURED riM Baked (Joodl FOR RENT Pl_ Cali. Isr.. For Rent- New four-room unfur­ 101.. I'utrIeiI ni shed apartments. Dial 6865. 8p4Cial Or,ur' City Bakery NEW Four-room unlurnishd apart­ III Wulllqtoa blal .... ments. Diol 6865. a. SPECIAL SERVICE FURNITURE MOVING THERE IS A public pay telephone that you can use in the Burkley Hotel lobby. MAHER BROS. TRANSFER ROOM Jl.lfD BOABD 'By GENE AREl" OLD RONE TOWN By STANLE ,. I'or Etficlent Furniture MllviDI INSTRUCTION AU: . About OUr ~£6 "fHEY'~ .sET E M TO Dial 7248. Mimi YOUde, ~ TIiE CHAIRS'Rl QLlj;t DIAL - 9696 - DI"" LAwr04 SOC""L.. olia SF\ot.PE uP,.. VAC.... NT WlT FOIi! .." "IC~ ~PEN -"rnl!!"yL1. SC(...... ABOOT FA1.LEN ~RHEUMATISM No Fuss and Flurrying We'n Do ihe Worrying

AU Y01l han to do fa I'!IIP to til. Dearest phone cmd dial 4191-we'11 tab over hom Ib.... A low rat. Dally Iowcm waal ad will my. you DlOIWy, .100.

JULIUS 5TREJf~EIt · right, tormer editor of "Die Stuermer." an anti­ Semitic German ~ewspaper. 18 shown following hlB cal?ture by Maj. Classified Dept. Daily Iowan Henry G. Plitt; lelt.above. of. New York. The capture took place in a ..m1l.U.tarnihoU84! at BoaJQ . .. Gum&.nY, '- flIJtUD8tioD8J SOIUl@botoJ

• PAGE SIX THE DAILY lOW AIf. IOWA CITY. IOWA WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1945 ~~==~~~-~.~======~======---~======~~~======~======~======Iowa City Memorial" Day ·: Cer~ . monies to Begin at 7 A. M. Today Parade 1o Be HIROHITO--THEY'Rl: COMING OVER AGAIN Major Rex Sayre THE GENERAL AND HIS GUESTS EAT IN GI MESS Directs Population AI 9:30 In German Town

Rev. L. L. Dunnington Major S. Rex Sayre, Iowa grad­ 'To Deliver Chief uate from the college of engineer­ Ing in 1937 and a member of Address at Cemetery Theta Tau fraternity, is now in Germany directing the civilian The program for Memorial day population of a German town. His ceremonies in Iowa City today is wife, the former Alberta Arney, as follows: an SUI graduate nurse, and their 7:00 a. m. Decoration of vet­ small son reside in Davenport. erans' graves in Oakland and St. Joseph cemeteries by committees Capt. George D. Scarborough, from the Sons of Veterans and 29, former University or, Iowa stu­ American Legion, assisted by the dent who was reported miSSing in Boy Scouts and Grandsons of Vet­ action in' December is safe accord­ erans. ing' to word received by his wile am~ daughter who reside in Ma­ 8:30 a. m. Ser vice at the Iowa rian, Ind. Captain Scarborough avenue bridge in honor of the was captured at Bastogne with an sailor dead. 'l'he Women's Relief artillery unit. He wears four cam­ corps is in charge of the services, paign stars on the European Thea­ a nd will be a:;sisled by the Sea ter ribbon and the Bronze Star. Scouts. 9:30 a. m. The Memorial day Among men and women of the parade, forming at Clinton and air.force congratulated atter V -E­ Market streets. The marshall of day by Lieut. Gen. James H. Doo­ the parade is J ohn Hall, assisted little, were Maj. William T. McEL­ by Earl B. Weekes, Francis J . hinney, 2 Bella Vista drive; First Lieut. Arthur D. Sexton, 632 S. Boyle, James T. Gwynne a nd John GEN. DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER, center, with Senator A. W. Hawkes of New Jersey. right, and Sena· Fielding. Dodge street; Flight Officer Mich­ tor E. W. McFarland of Arizona line from mess !tIts In the enlisted men's sec lion of a newly lid... 10:00 a. m. Services at the ael C. Sewall, 732 E. Jefferson Tech. SergI. Thomas F. c.mp In France which prooeS5eS Yanks who were p rlsoncrs of war In Germany. This is an oUicla1 UII· G. A. R. lot in Oakland cemetery street; Organ, 322 E. Burlington streetj ted States .rm), .I(nal corps radiophoto. with Ed Stanfield pre s id In g. Stalf Sergt. Leslie J. Butter­ Services will be presented by the baugh, Route 1; Staff SergI. John ------~~---- W. R. C. and the rifle salute will M. Malone, 328 S. Dodge street; Pythian Sisters Install Sister Mary Paul, be given by the Iowa State guard. Staff SergI. Joseph A. Miller, 718 Mrs. George O'Harra Melba Black to Wed Former Iowa Citian, ]0:20 a. m. WOI'Jd War Services S. Dubuque streetj Staff SergI. Dies in Convent at the Ppul J . Prybil grave south­ James E. Thompson, 430 E. Bloom­ As Excellent Senior _ _ __ 4iIO-- east of the G. A. R. lot. The inJton street; Sergt. John R. Phil­ William Boiler American Legion and Veterans of lips, 527 Riverside drivej Corp. Mrs. George O'Harra WIIS in­ Sister M. Paul, 82, a tonoo Foreign Wars are in charge with , Walter "1. Stoner, 1211 Lukirk stalled excellent senior at a meet­ June 6in West Point member of St. Mary's church In R. P. White presiding. street, and PLc . Garland Kircher, ing of the Pythian Sisters In the Iowa City, died at St. Mary's con· 10:30 a. m. The plat(orm pro­ 29 W. Court street. Airmen of K. of P. hall Monday evening. vent in J loly Cross, Ind., Monday gram in Oakland cemetery. Will the Eighth were the first Ameri­ Mr. and Mrs. J ames Black of Mrs. J . W. Figg, district deputy morning. J. Hayek will preside and music cans to attack Germany and Rollo, Mo ., have announced the will be by the Navy Pre-Flight helped disorganize all transport, grand chief; Mrs. J acob Miller, engagement and approaohing mar­ Sisler Mary Paul entered Iht band. Dr. L. L. Dunnington will paving the way for the march of grand senior, and Mr.;. William riage of their daughter, Melba convent in 1895. Shc was born in present the mai n address. aUihl armies across Europe. Wiese, grand manager served as Fern, to Cadet William Boiler, son Iowa City in 1863, the daughttr of Dr. and Mrs. W. F. BOiler, 618 , , installing officers. of Julius and Veronica Haber· Automatic rifleman Pfe. Louis Brookland Park drive. The wed­ Plans were made ror a party to A. Cox, 820 Clinton street, set oft ding will take place June 6 in stroh, early Johnson county pio­ be Friday night. Pythian Sisters, • • .. . ' I an. enemy ammunition dump that West Point, N. Y. neers. Uniform Order Issued THESE 1-29 SUPERFORTRESSES, top, make an IPlpreaalve picture a. they wing their way through bUlowy new members and their families ble~ up II German position and an Miss Black will graduate next She is survived by one sister, clouds en route to Tokyo where they'll leave their Incendlllry calling cards for Em~ror Hlrohlto. I are invited to attend. There will undetermined number of Germans week from Edgewood Park college Two raids, each Including over 1100 ot the mighty Superlorta, laJd the Jap capital to wute anu "liter­ be a social hour after the program. Mary Habcrstroh, Iowa City; 0!lI For Pre-Flight School on the F'ifth army front during the in New York. ally scorched the ground," according to one Jap broadcast. The lower photo above ' ,bow~ .tlcks of Those planning to 'a ttend are asked brother, John lIa berstroh of Llv. allied offensive which ended in Cadet Boiler, a graduate of Uni­ Incendiary bombs as they are loaded on doIlies by crewmen at a Marlanl1.ll island B-29 baae prepara­ to bring a covered dish and their inl!ston. Monl.; and several niectl New uniform orders go into eL­ unconditional surrender of a 11 versity high school, attended the torY to plastering the Jap homeland. Army Air Forces photo. (lnltrnlltioll,lIl SOilruipbolO) own sandwiches and table service. and nephews. fect June 1 at the pre-flight base. Geman forces in Italy. He was University of Iowa for three and a The order affects all officers and with 362nd infantry, company G. half years where he was affili­ Fu nera I services will be held In enlisted men. This unit advanced on Bologna. Horace Mann Pupils ated with Phi Gamma Delta, social St. Mary's convent church at Hoi, SUI Has Authentic Group- Cross. Officers working uniform will Purchase $3,169 fraternity. He will graduate from be khaki or gray on the station and Staff Sergt. Albert P. Bogs, son West Point Military academy June will be worn with or without of Mrs. K!lte J;1ogS, 200 First street, In Bonds, Stamps 5, will receive his commission in blouses. In the officers' mess jack­ demoll3t.raled his resourcefulness the field artillery. Following his ColorfUl and leadership in the final drive Horace .Mann school pupils have graduation he wiU leave for two ~ts will be worn, also in the chapel Scottish . H,ghldl1d~rs. and at the orficers' club. Dress from the Rhine to the Elbe. While bought $3,169 in bonds and months additional specialized actlng in 'the capacity of an absent uniforms will be whiles and blues Iowa's colorful Scottish HJgh­ stamps it was announced yester­ training at Fort Sill, Okla. rude can pick it up and go along and the coat is made of red velvet oUlcer platoon leader, he success­ day by Prin. A. D. Hensleigh. Dr. and Mrs. Boiler wiJI leave will not be WOI'n except on leave. landers are known throughout the with the best of them," Adamson with white lace on the sleeves and fully directed his platoon in taking co untry. Surrounded by a roman­ Children have brought their sav­ tomorrow for West Point to attend Enlisted men while working will said. "Ambition is the main re­ collar. The vestee of white lace a town in the path of advance ings to school each Tuesday for the graduation and wedding. DrtlCIOUJ- SMOOJH- HO rCf CmrAll wear their whites and fOl' Saturday tic aura of authentic costumes, quirement." under this coat, the kilt (skirt) of wlthout one American casualty. purchases and there has been a INll,lNSlVl- SUIl TO 111001 inspections and for liberty wi U honest-to-goodness bagpipes and Choice of instruments Is allowed the dress Sewart tarton, the plaid For this and other outstanding steady flow of money for the war wear whites plus the blue necker­ an exciting past, the corps .is the (shawl) of the same tartan is achlevements he wears the Bronze ENJOY. MAKING IT to a certain extent. Besides the effort. .011ly I" your r.frlgllator. MI., whip chief. Blues are not to be worn pride of every university student. draped over the left shoulder and Star, and three compaign stars on I Harry K. Newburn I drum and pipe players there are Taking first place in sales is and fr .... evaporated mil ... mil" except on leave. Chiefs working Under the direction of pipe Major ,the white and black ,jbrush" pure 1'W •• t cr.om, IUIDr. w1th two bass drummers and a drum his European Theater ribbon. Speaks to Kiwanians I uniform will be gray or khaki. W. L. Adamso n, they perform at Adeline Kaderabek's first grade - . ... major. The pipers start out on a (sporan) that hangs tram the waist __ The WAVES gray seersucker every home football game. and knee length hose complete the Recently commissioned a Iieu­ with a total of $487.50. Dean Harry K. Newburn of the ANY FLAVOR practice chanter equipped with a college of liberal arts spoke yes­ and follow 0,., of th. 20 fomout will be their working uniformj and The group was organized as an dummy keyboard. This enables the outfit. tenllnt in the Women's Army corps reclp., In .och 15< pockov. of fOI' inspections they wi 11 wear the all-male drum corps in 1935. The serving with the 70th general hos- terday to the Kiwanis meeting at players to work up their lung ca­ The drummers wear copies of was Mary Josephine Leonard, of seersucker without the blouse and uniforms at that time were blue the drummers' cQstumes 'of the Collax, University graduate. She pita I of the peninsular base section Hotel Jefferson on "Possible De­ pacity. All the tunes are memor­ in Italy. This 'unit was the near- velopments in .Higher Education." LOnDOnDERRY with the garrison cap. Fot liberty trousers and red coats. In 1937, ized on the chantE:r; then, after pipe pand of the Black Watch, a received her 'commission at First I BRAND lhe corps was reorganized as a est general hospital to the Fifth Dean Newburn discussed im­ uniform may be seersucker with about two wCflks, the women famous Scottish regiment. The tall WAC training center, Ft. Des Scottish bagpipe band, with 16 army front lines. Sergeant Mac- provements in present educational the blouse, whites or blues, but the switch to the real bagpipes. hat is called 'a b,usbie or Hi,ihland Moines. STIlIIUZEI laUer are no~ to be worn on formal pipers and ]0 drummers. By 1942 feather bonnet and is a wire frame heak is the son ot Mr. and Mrs. systems and stressed the import­ .rI •••• o,k you' II'OCO' ... occasions. The WAVES have a new the band had increased to 35 pipers The main rehearsals are sched­ fastened to crown and covered Sergt. Merlin E. Macheak, uni­ A. T. Macheak of Lamont, and has Iance of individual attention to the left'uH,ry,IUlltw.nI St .. s.,,,....., ", meta I insignia to weal' on their and 18 drummers. In the faU of uled during the football season. with ostrich feathers. Weighing versity student in 1942, is now been overseas since August, 1943. studen t. . garrison caps. 1943, it became apparent that the Next year there is a month before about three pounds, it Is difficult t shortage of men made th e former the first game, so the rehearsals to conirol on a windy day. status of the group impossible. It will probably run about six hours Their red doublet (coat) worn $111 Damages Result was changed completely to univer­ a week. When the eorps was reor­ by the drummers is made of heavy sity women, and the drum section ganized with all new members, wool melton trimmed with gold From Auto Accident increased to 30 drummers. Since practices ,,{ere held two hOllrs a cloth braid. ,The kilt and plaid Time out to relax. • • Have a Coca-Cola this time the band has remained day, six days a week. 1n addition is of the hunting Stewart tartan. An accident at Dubuque and an aU-woman organization. to the drums and pipes, the mem­ The hose are dark blue' and red Benton streets Monday caused The eligibility of a Highlander bers are instructed in Scottish diced, heavy wool. The White damages amounting to $111 to does not depend entirely on any dancing. "They get pelnty of ex­ spats are made of heavy duck or automobiles driven by C. T. Jen­ one thing. A minimum height of ercise," Adamson commented. canvas. nlngs, route No.5, Iowa City, and approximately 5 leet, 4 inches with The women wear a variety ot The drum major wears a busbie, Clema Louisa Comstock, 1115 Cot­ corresponding weight is the only Scottish costumes. One is a white wool melton d 0 ubi e t tonwood street. definite requiremj!nt, and even this dancer's costume, a copy of that trimmed with gold braid, d.rCS3 The car driven by Jennings is not rigid. Musica l experience is worn by the Highlanders when Stewart kilt and plaid, . dar~ blue failed to stop at a stop sign. None desirable but not at all necessary. they attend. the royal court of and red diced hose with white of the occupants was injUred. "Anyone with average music apti- nobilty. The hat is a balmoral spats and leather gantlets., Her baton has II thistle ornament on one end. .' , JAPS GET FLAME TREATMENT ON OKINAWA Befofl~ ~e war one of the hlgh­ lights of each sellson was the trips the Highlanders took. The 81 corps has been to major cWell !Ill fI through the mid-west as well as n New York City. The big bass drum bears souvenirs of. t\"lese a trips-signatures of celebrities u \ who have watched the Scots per­ form. Dorothy Lamour, Rudy c Vallee, share honors with numer­ v ous senators, governorS, generals Ii and even an explorerl Although the war-time. restric­ t llons,have put a crimp in the tours, t the Hig)1landers did manage to ,et I a way this year to the governor's inauguration ceremonies. The y f also performed once at the Veter­ ). ans' hospital at Knoxville 'and I twice before patients of Schick General hospital at Clinton . . C 1 The Scottish Highlanders of tha University of Iowa wUl always have a high place In memories of ••• or refreshment helps in housework university days. Perhaps when the war is over they will 'a,_1n Home chores are easier when you work refreshed. With ice·cold Coca-Cola make their fame. known through­ out the states but until then they ia yOW' icebox, you a.re only a few steps from the pallse thaI rtfreshes at home. to will continue perform at' foot­ Wheo it'. time to HflJI. II Coke, or to offer it to guests, it's a comfon to 4now ball games and take thel.r part in the war effort. that you have a lupply on hand, ice-cold in ·your refrigerator, The P~IIS04 Ihal Theater Bond Sale. ,qrlslHs with ice-cold Coca-Cola has won it3 way into homes everywhere u Bond sales for the Seventh War a refrething symbul of American living. Loan drive premiere movie, "It'. A YOII natllrally hear Coca·Cola called by ita friendly abbNVlatioD Pleasure,' starrin, Sonja Hanle, tOTTleD UNDU A THO.ITV or THE COCA · COLA COMPANY IV quality went over the amount sold tOl' the "Coke-. Both mean the prod. U. S. TENTH A.BMY tank· men ,Ive the J .... holed upon Coral ricke, Oklnaw., the once over with Dam­ Sixth War Loan drive premiere, CEDAR RAPIDS COCA~OLA BOmING COMPANY ,-,-,;....;.l:J \lct or Tho CocB.(;olll ComplD)'. Inf oll. When tbey are finished, the Inf.ntrymen ahown waltlnl' In the cover 0' the tank, will 1'0 III for Albert Davis, chairman of the \he­ ~ ______to" .. OUr, ( ... ~IP~STh.C . CC~ ______~ ______~~ .. the mop-up with toDUll¥ ,un .nd carbine. Result-4ead J ..... ThIs Is an olliel•• United States IU'III1 q­ ater's bond committee, said lut Dilht. nal corpt radiophoto. •