IBER 22, 1942 == , . Cards, Dodse,. Warmer Keep Wi ...... u It. Lou IOWA: 8eaUend UPl NMnP'" lIIo_n ....." THEI • DAILY IOWAN ird 8" .10" oil Pare « "'~r. -:-- Iowa City~s Morning Newspaper FIVE CENTS A'100~.D ral,. IOWA CITY. IOWA WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1942 VOLUME ,.- ~ T.. Xtn NUMBER 311 !COUn~ , . Itioning ~~ipery

IlWhlnery Will SO n COu nty by board consist. , rounty AM farmers to be rOUl1ly War Unred yester. lC boord will I!males. nl, which has I icarce 8nd 'nment at this ' c h~sed with. and must be Io be r' 31, 1942, Iroup incl Udes Advocates of Higher Taylor Forming Plans lUll ba lers, Gird Solomons ng machines, Soviet Defenders Slay 3,000 Iders, manure Farm Parity Ceilings For Post-War World eaders, com· 'eed grinders J ItrOWS, tertii: Gain Senate Support Against Violent Say Envoy Reached In (ounteraHack North of City ~ . elevators, h~y Important Decisions shredders, - Leaders Order Early B,. IUNay c. CAS my II, which \jI. In Talka With Pope mmachillefJ', Ad;ournment, les;n Enemy Thrusl biO W, W dnesday (AP)-Th d army, (i htin Ii reely farmer ceHI. BERN, SWITZERLAND, (AP) in the wreckage of talinJ.,"Tad, yield d two more treets to the Il lhe desired Quick Voting Survey -Myron C. Taylor, President battering aUack of reinfor ed I rman troop Tn day, the Soviet Dive Bomber Scores Roosevelt·s personal representa. high command IUll10UnC d today a th r at batH nt red its for current WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate on Jap Cruiser; tive to the Vatican, bas laid the 30th day. y, which In. advocates of writing hllher farm groundwork for post'\"ar colla­ parity price ceilings into the pend· U,S. Raids Continue III other parb of tb burning, mok ·fill d city, how,' r, the rylhes, forks, Ing inflation bill gained @upport boration in the La Its ot world Ru. siaM were Sl\id to be balding their grounu gain t tll attack. rehabilitation through his talks opera ted and , illfJJctill~ tr III nd u I Ill! th (I rman poured an ap- ~uipmen t at such a rate yesterday that ad- WASHING,rlON (AP) 'l'J with Pope Plus XII, In the opin­ not ministration leaders ordered an , 1 - 10 exe mpt Crom ion of veteran Vatican ob ervers, parently nul . stream or IIt'W men into the great lind bloody early adjournment and began a navy expcats violent Japanese batt! . hurried survey of the probable counterattacks on AlIIerican Taylor's first audience with the The midnight communique said the r d army ,~as count rat· 01 be placed voting alignment. positions in the Solomon islands Pope was last Saturday. ' tacking northwest oC ·talingrad, where 3,000 (1 'rman w re flBid )/ used farm Senator Brown (D-Mlch), author end is preparing accordingly. Since Saturday, TaylOr hES also 'usnl ot eer­ ot the bill, designed to live Pres i- Secretary Knox said yesterday. conferred with the British and to h8\'l' been kill d in tw daSH. Thi oppar ntly i an effort to !)lay appeal French envoy to th Vatican and ------. cut communication, of the (ler· e USDA war dent Roosevelt his requested Lending emphasis to hls reo the representatives of conquered power to stabilize the cost of liv- port that the navy was on watch, mlln now in til eity, lor it was l special war Poland and YugoslEvia, and Is ex­ from fhi area that th y fil'llt he secretary ing, frankly conceded that the out- a communique told of dive Ipected to t(llk with other dlplo. come would be close and appar· bomb hits on a Japanese cruiser mats before his final audience Interpreting br k throu h til d f enUy was in doubt. li th t fA' Meanwhile, the communique IlIld, Asked for his view of the situa- prow ng nor wes 0 merl· with the Pope and his departure tion, Senator Barkley (D-Ky), the can·held Guadalrutnal and Dew for Spain. The War News the Cermaru launched a heavy Meet administration floor leader, grin- American air Ilttaeks on' enemy The Swi telegraphk _Iency attack with two infantry rellments DrawID. upon. her vast reserves of manpower, Soviet Russia constantly is iralnl~, thousanCl8 more sol. Nazis' Great Need: Explain ned and replied: • bases. reported from Rom that Taylor against the southern outskirts or "Do you expect me to say we are Land fighting on' Guadalcansl, dlers to be flung Into the battle against Germany. Some of these reserves ,are plc' tJlr~ a!HIve p~arlnl' held his ecood audieflCc with the New Cannon Fodder Stalinirad In an attempt to pene­ beaten?" limited to patrol activity, Intensi- for action "somewhere" In the Stallnl'rad area. By now they have probably joined Rds Ian forces fl~blln, Pope thill morning. He was with Program inside the city Itself. lrale the clly from that dJrection. 'More Than EDOu~h' fied somewhat Sunday, the com- the Pontirt 50 minutes. For Hitler Machine RUBS Ian m 0 r tar I, however, in debate, Earlier in the day, admlnistra- munique sBid, but "Our positions . . The dispatch said he was ex­ opened up on them and wiped ssociation 01 pected to lca ve Rome by pia ne By KIRK!; L. lMl' ON out about a battalion, fru t.raUni Cor Victory September 26 s tler a probable Wide World War Anab' t the attack. night at 7:30 ~~ ~:~~~:h:}J:~;~:~£:; re::~n i~~E~a:i rS~:~:s were Say 'RAF Attempting to Boftle New ~ork ' Has , Alerf third audience. The tremendous twin· pronged Two B/oek Gain han, Both lion may come to a vote today. car~ied out Saturday and Sunday. I :. a. ' For Over Half Hour' drive Hitler loosed last May in In the .treet filhtin, In which uding fresh. southern Russin and north Africa The oWce of prIce admlnistra- T the GermaN made their two­ ttend, N FI f b PI t M ' r has made hUlle strides, dealt atai­ block ,I[n, ont Russian lormation topic, "Or­ ~~~ ~~in:m!~~m~~t:a~ai°: I~S~ H~~ul:E~:,~T~~~T~~~ ' ' aZ'1 ee y an Ing Ines 'No Hostile Aircraft' Illinois Lawyer gerini blows to the Russians and killed more thcn 300 nu[ oWcers War World." I\i"ht t\ 'Would resul\ \n a 10ur or LIA, Wedneuky, ~ept. la, (AP) the British, but obviously failed and men, damaled ten tanka and I the AfSV five per cent. rise in the cost of -AUIed bOmbers sCored two to achieve any decisive results lor destroyed nine motor vehicles, the ""'__ "-,,_, __ _ _ _ f -l. ,..,. _ ... _ ... ~_ tined. Prof. living Index, hit. en a Sapaoese sblp Aerial Operations Ijmuiden. The British lost two NEW YORK, (AP)- A report this year. "r'l! Wife Murdered i hei(l. 11 nit *he German ctor ot de­ ~DIlUOUl. Th re no p bl Under the provision in the house In a o~hl raid at Rabaul, N'~ .... Over ~"AftlIV w,...... hnmh"ro ." ... - n .. h ....• ;" .,,- ... -. ' _rir.'i~·-;'liPla~ wis oper. etUer, ,rad­ bill tor loans of 90 per cent of I-lmaUoll~~'7":»·--' ~ ... light offemJives. · • B U L LET IN estimate from any source by which drive toward the Grotn,. oU field •• ,ate, are in pa..-ity, OPA laid tne COst of llV: aDnolUleed ioda,. On Extensive Scale Observers pointed to the risk allng over a seaward area" caused to judge thc cumulaUve attrition The high command said heavy ing would Increase by $670,000,- wbich the air command is willing a blue aIr ra ~d alert lasting 34 PRINOnELD, III. (AP)- of axis manpower reserves but in Hghtlnl continued In the MOldok 000, Involving a one per cent rise The first day army "flying for· LONDON, (AP)-Brltain'~ ex- to run. to plant mines in the Ska- mlnutes last night in the New York Capt. Thomas J. O'Connor of that tact or more thon any other area, but made no mention ot an,. in the index. However, It added, tresses" bombed IIIId strafed shore tensive and continued aerIal mlne- metropolitan area. the Illinois '-te police saId that may lie the sure Indices of both soviet withdrawals. Meet under the new pari~ formula installations at Rekata, on Santa sowing in enemy waters was ex- gereak, the Kattegat, the BalUc Radio stallons lett the air at lh~ hacked and battered bodies the outcome and the duraUon ot Tbe communique allO fepOried umnae wlll proposed by the farm bloc the cost Isabel island, about 185 miles plained by some London obser- and even the Kiel canal. 6;57 p.m., on orders of the first of Charie A. Nash, ILllomey for the war. tba t a part,. of Ru Ian marla", p.m. In the of living would Increase by $3,- northwest of the Guadalcanal vel'S today as an effort to fore- Mines W()uld not necessarily interceptor command, and resu- tbe Internal revenue department Manpower LimIte4 In the BJuk sta area. hacl made Jf!et supper 000,000,000 to $3,500,000,000, with airfield, and bombed Gizo island, stall or harass any German at- keep enemy naval forces cooped med service when the all-clear was at st. Louis, and his wife, were Axis manpower resources are a nl,M reconnalaanee ralel on ew pledges, 8 jump of 4 or 5 per cent in the 215 miles northwest of the air· tempt to slip the heavy nSli naval up, one of these experts conceded, flashed at 9:31.foond In an automobile la t Ibn/ted. New territory won In enemy J)OIUion Wellt of u.e s, alumnae index. field. concentration at Kiel into the but dense minefields would en- "The situation ~as been clarl- nJ,M el~ht mile. north of Europe or A ia has gained for the former .ovlet naval b_ of at the bus· General Dl8cllllloD Then on Sunday navy and ma- North sea to join forces with the danger any German attempt to fled," the first air force declared in Sprln,lleid. axis little or 1'10 army recruitment No"VorOMllk. Meanwhile, a lenera} discussion rine corps dive bombers damaged raider fleet led by the battleship Ibreak out of the Baltic and neces· an announcement at 9;53 p.m., O'Connor said that &be body except a torced labor exacted The main battleground, both in of the anti-Inflation bill occupied the cruiser northwest of Guadal- Tirpitz. sltate extensive sweeping opera. "and no hosUle aircralt were neal' of Mra. Null" wbo WIL '9, wa from occupied countrics set free intensity and Importance, contin­ , the two chambers. It :iound farm canal and bombed the Rekata bay King George took the unusual tlons beforehand. the vlclnlty." found crushed between the Iront Gennan or other axis nationals ued to be Stalinirad. state members contending that un­ Installations again. The attack on step yesterday of visiting the ad- Mines also serve to harass ald! · The area covered by the warning and rear seats of the car. She for ba !tIe use. In a defense stand unparalleled ICS8 farm labor costs are induded the cruiser raised to at least 22 miralty war room where the shipping through Baltic waters to was northeastern New Jersey and had b en severely beaten and On the other hand, with this In the war for Ita tenaCity, the in any reckoning of parity prices, the number of Japanese ships British navy's movements are German armies in northem RU$- Long Island. cut, her ,kull was crushed and country In the war, manpower' as size of force employed and the agricultural production and the sunk or damaged in the Solomons. charted. He spent "some time" sia and to the German homeland Throughout the region hundreds her rln~ I\nt'er alll.Putated. well as almost limitless American Intenslt,. of the attack, the RUJ­ weltare of the tarmer lire threat­ Bxpeet EnellU' Attack. there, an ahnouncement said; but from supply sources In Norway, of disaster workers, emergency The body of her busband, industrial resources are mobiliz· Bians mustered Itrength a,ain and ened. It found numerous republi­ Knolt told his press conference naval sources declined to dlscuss Sweden and Finland. squadl and air raid wardens re- O'Connor aald, WI not found ing to bolster the united nallons again to strik" back, and the tury cans assertlnll that more 10rceful if was a "sale and sound assump- the purpose of the call Latest information here is that sponded to the blue signal, which until several hours later, stuffed ranks. of their counter-attacks won them uy' leadership on the part of the ad­ tion" that tbe marines garrison Both admiralty and air ministry the 26,OOO·ton battleship Scharn- means that unidentified planes are Into the trunk of &be car. There have been many hints of as much or more than the,. lost. minlstraUon months 810 would and naval forces lIIarding the ad- communiques hl\ve indicated un- horst, the 10-000-ton Cl'uiser Prinz expected to pass over the area Stale'a Altorne, i\lfred Green. the straits to which Germany is Cloee-Quamr rJrbUn, lTED have averted the present threat­ v'lnce- positions of America's first usual mlne.laying activity. Eugen and the 6,OOO-ton light warned. till of Sanramon eounty IBIeI belnl put to fill not only casualty It was close-quarter fightin. ~TES ened inflation.. But it 10und vir· offensive of the war would be the, In dayliih,~ yeslerday,' however, cruiser Nuernberg Bre completing Third avenlle elevated trains the couple had Me. ..enllflecl gaps in the l ighting ranks but with bayoneta lind cLubbed rifles '1NGS tually all 8l1reed that action to objectives of new thrusts by an RAP bomber forces hit power- repairs of battle damage at Kiel In Manhattan halted at stations. by a .on in St. Louis, fto IBid to supply additional troop needed in the corpse· heaped streeta and stabilize the cost ot living was enemY' which already has made hou.ses in the Lille-Lens area of and that the still-unused aircraft Storekeepers on the east side his parents had kn home tor .. to hold her Ireatly extended battle the debris-littered squares of the NDS necessary, two maj,or efforts to recover his northern France and an iron and carrier Graf Zeppelin t and Llb- of opinion with Hlll. Jver Itra­ ''1<1 darnaled. corded at the Iowa City pollet! Japanese after flylnl a marine he went to a creek to "et a drink ya and the certainty that Utia tel)' in Rwsal •. Tbe P&e14lhr1hal, "Sept. 18 at the airfield at Tinka .lIlion are .akld to do 10 • lllbter plane at Guadalcanal Is- and Ihe Japanese shot at him but winter in Russia will require more, It was said, wanted to conc.b'ate IIIJi former Chin.. ' alrplllle fac- ~n u poalble. land. missed. not lewer men, and It bcomes con- on the Ca~ ~ not .Uack to~ buIldlnp at Lolwlnl were ~t. Corpi mambel'l are abo re. TIle our. falle4 _ Jail rlnl There was no wild fruit in that vinclnab' evIdent that Hitler's most Stalinll'lld at the .... UnIt. He IlIrItl It..... ' a ,.... week area and Amerine said he got ' 10 lel!kad by medium bomben, De- minded to . fill out enrollment &lid W'lent need is IJIC)re cannon fodder. argued stalinlrad 'MIUld ~ too 1I\0lition bombl on • runwq cudi whlcb can 'be ob~ned at PnOUeaIb' \lDder U&e DOIII" hungrY Jle ate snaillllld anta after Gennah;y is not yet bled white; much in talualUea. ,.I1 ...... , VeoIIII lUll ...... • trying unsuccesstullt to ahoot a 'net two buUd/nII, ..ch 100 flit any. ot the mMtinp. but lIle 11 bleed.lni at every baWe SlxtJ-two-,ear-old Field Mar­ DOba' OIl teIe JlwII, ...... lie (See A.M!;RINE, ~ 8) • IQ leqib. )Y..... ~.. • • ~.-..-----...... I pore with no manpower tram- ahal von Bock b.. ~n IIO,me oC fuUaaI ~ lilbt. . _ . __ . _ _ {s..-}ICa J50cJr.-Ne J). _ THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, la.2 PAGE TWO I O'FF I '" AL DA I L Y BU t ,LE , IN On the 'Western Front- ".. " lteml In the UNrv1tft8JTY CALENDAR are ..medulld In ilia Olflll ',.-~ of the SU~ leillllQn. W-' lui Hall. JI,ml for the OIMllUl ~, NOTICES .... de]lbllted .,\th lb. campul editor of Tha Dan, ..... Setting the Stage for Our Future World ,~ or may ~.ll~ced In Ibe bolCprovided tor their d,pOll1 In Ih. oIfIbtj '1' ,t Tl\e Iowan. QXNJ:IlAL NOTICJ:S mllal be .1 'nw DII!1 . Iowan by 4: p.m. th. day P*edlnl lint publlejtlof i._nol!C'L~ Of Democracies or Oictators ,IIOT be Iccepted b)/ telephone ••nd mUlt be TYPIID un .1.IoGI,IIL! :".tht. .. • They Have Undergone ~iiiV WRl'l"J'£N and 1I10NJ!lO I,>y a ....ponalble penon, J(r. an.C With another Russian winter in the offing BritiRh troops can find refuge. Tbe whole and Hitler'. armies for the moment stalemated Meditel'ran aJl will be in axis hands. Luftwaffe's Attacks­ ~oLine at S t a lin g r a d perhaps now i a • • • By GEORGE TUOKER Vol. XXI, No, 1322 Wednesday. September 21, 1841 opnli-_ good time to take stock of the Wlt\: as it is Now will be the time for Hitler to NEW YORK - The territylna UNIVERSITY CALENDAR =~I!::t beirt,g (ought in lhe European thentel·. ('hm'Uc all Ind'ia (111/1 ~',,!a.~h its frail whiStle of the incendiaries fallin. Wedneway, SlIptember II llI~e!i • • • bOl'de?' defenses wMle the Japanese al'ive . about them, the raucous racket of WednelClay, 8l1f,tember-l1 4:10 p. m. All "Y" meeting 1.01' 7:80 ll. m. The World "OIlar1 '\ tali111"nd 'is, accOf'dfng to Hitler's in j'1'om the 'east. ack-aok, and the comforting 8Ouni:l .students InteresteCi In Y.M.C.A. 01' ~ lectu!le aeries: "The ;EcononYc Set. ,~tl'ategis s, the key to tll.e Cnu('Oillls-at AWtonglt 'this is a black 7nct It I'll at (£ of the "all clear" are old hat to Y.W.C.A., river l'ooru, lowu Union. ....elY _ least tl,e rock of tlte 'wi nt 111' defense line, tim.e when the 1tnitCIl nations (Ire gather­ Gladys Cooper, Rhys Williams, 7:30 p. m. Town Me.n'S Assembly tine o! {he Present World Dla- '\ ' Vlrp,­ Here lie 1)j'obably plans to 1Jlace the key­ ing .~t,· e ngth fa!' a land Off61!.~ive, eVe!'1J­ Brenda Forbes and Jill Esmond. Macbride Auditorium order", by Professor Howard ~lic,'\AT stone of defell e along the Vol.ga t'iver, thing is. wit/tin lhe realm of possibility 7:30 p. m. The World Today Bowen, 221 Schaeffer hall. :~ ' This quartet of English actors, cur~ lecttlre series: "'The PolltlcJlI Set- in the meant illle consolida ting his f orees ';1/ th e 111'eSent confl,jet. Saturday, October II . rently portraying the roles of em~ ting of the Present WOI'ld Dls­ f01' a t'I'?lI''toed drive to'tI'af'd tire oil of fhe 2 p, m. FOOTBALL: <,lreal The Middle East, • • • battled Londoners In "The Morn~ order." by Prote SOl' Jacob Van A SU'ong diverting thrust toward the ing star," Emlyn Williams' play del' Zee, 221A SchoeHer hull. Lakes naval trnlolng school v, .u"t 1 • • II Freneh CORRt Ot' a drive across Libya into . about the Battle of Britain, know Thuriday, September ~, Iowa, Iowa .ta4ium, .11h hi With StalillgraU in Gel'm\ln hands and .Eritrea could we]] upset any axis planning all about the sound and t1w JUt,), I 7:30 p. m. Buconlon lecture, 9 p. m. UniverSity party, low, peeves. strong deten. ive fortifications set up alon,g the towllrd a lal'ge-scale separation or allied ' although they were happily far re- "~s There an Objective ;Ethic,1 UnJon. i .~~ ~ lower Volga, key axi forces could be sent to forces. moved from tI:IeJr native City when Standard?" by Prof. Everett W. uaay. Ootober • \III&~ relieve both Erwin Romrool 's Africa corpR The Recoud front is probabJy the aHies' the Luftwaffe struck. Hall, Senate Chamber, Old Capl- 7:00 a. m, Bicycle out.lj'le, low. IDCI a. Last year they were toreth.,r tol. . MounUUneen. M t at Enalneer. and the dangerous zone along the channel best cha nce since it would strike closest to the In the film version of "This 7:30 p.m. _ Moving pictures: coast. Fl.lrthel· preparations fot· two-Jlr.onged heart of German power. Hitler would he Ini bulldlne· a Above AU!' LIke "Mornltl, "I M un tal '1942 C I Wedlleaday, O~ 7 into the oil fields of Br,itish-held Iraq Star," It dealt with En,I.>ld • ,Owa <"ro neers 0 0- thrust forced to send his best troops west to defend 'I" ,{ado Outi,ng" "Tra~way to the 7:aO p. 1tI. "The World 'fOllay" and a drive across tlle Persian steppes through his gains as well liS to assm'e the German under fue. Odilly enourh Sky," and "CoIQl'ado Mountain lectur~ serl : The Social s.UoC I .AfghanistaJl to the westel'll gateway to India people of safety. A ).al1ge part of the air power Gladys C~per, ~renda 'FW-bes, club 1942 Outing", Iowa Moun~ of the Pre$ellt World DIsOrder," .l'.Ollld he made. ;now active on the Russian ft'ont would have Jill Esm~nd and Rhys Wllllall\ll tsineers, room 223, Engineering by Prof. Clyde W. Hart, fOOlll didn't realize they liad playea building. 1'bis is app~i'ently HitJe~'s ).'eason fot­ to take part in this defense and to prevent an 221l>, Scha Uer ,baU. to,et~r ItI the same picture un- 8ai1ll'UY, s.tenaber 1& throwing sllch starLling forces against the overwhelming ~isplay to Britisl1-Amerjcan TluarlClay Ootober , &It Guthrie McClintic's preIS de- 12:15 p. m.-Luncheon and gen~ city of Stalin when otherwise he could have ail.' power. 7:30 p. m, Baconian leetult: par&ment dul' Ii» Ute strallfe ral mee~, American AS!\,QCia~ "T,he Generation of Living Elec­ sent his air armies into a drive for Cairo and • • • lacl. 1t seeDIII that movies are UOD f Upjversity Women; speaJa's beautiful court­ rector motioos them when to duck way wm be open for a mighty nazi thrust slOan eyes will be looking greedily at the peace a bomb Qr hold their ears. On the Friday. Sept. 2~10 to 12 a. m., iate with the local group lind ill town, si mply picked one and house and park, streets in the 1 to 3 p. m. and 4 to 6 p. m. participate in the ieneral meeUnga aCroSS .the Cauca llS and down t,lte ;LevantillC tab) . • moved in on it. prom the reports, central business section, buildings stage the blitz lands all around coast toward the Suez canal. Simultaneously Although no one can accurately forecast them; actually it is louder to the S\lturdar, Sept. 26-10 to 12 a. and the study groups. The first he and his cast and crew were of tI:Ie American Trust and Bank general meeting will occur on Sal­ Germany's des~rt forces can drive eastward. the future of Europe in war or in peace, we very welcome. They spent four of America, the telegraph office, eardrums of the actors than to the m ., 1 to 3 p.m. ond 4 to 6 p.m. audience. Sunday, Sept. 27-4 loOp. m. urday, Sep . 26, In the Uni ersity iBritain' already small Middle Eastern armies at least feel sure that tbe war during the com­ weeks in the town they picked as the Till-Two cocktail bar, the city urday, Sept. 26, in the ' river will find themselves caught in a giant pincer ing fall and winter will set the stage for a typically American small town, library, the Methodist Episcopal One of the reasons lor " MQrn~ and 7 to 9 p. m. Monday, Sepl28-10 to 12 a. m., room ot Iowa Union at 12:15 and faced with the same problem that Mac­ tomorrow's world, and aJl allied offen.'>ive now and now they're back at Universal church, SOuth, the railway station, iog Star's" great hopes in New 3 to 5 p. m. Il1Id 7 to 9 p. m. Lieut. AlexanDer McKelway 01 Arthur had to contend with in the Philip­ will hasten the day when the khaki can be cast winding up the film with interior the residence of Dr. C. M. Carlson York is because, (1), it is Qy Emlyn Williams, who is well liked Tuesday, Sept. 20-10 to 12 a. the Naval Pre-P1igh t traininC a. ide fOI' the busine. s suit. shots. Santa Rosa, Cal., 15,000 and three blocks of tree-shaded school. Any woman desiring ill pines. This time there i!; no J3ataa/1 in which on Broadway, and, (2), the play m., 4 to 6 p. m. and 7:30 to 11:30 population, turned out the wel- McDonald avenues gave him check her Ugibllty may do so by has already 300 performances be­ p.m. :------.....,...------come mat and will play itself- ready~made sets. Wednesday, Sept. 30-UJ to 12 callini Mrs. Fred Fehling, 3208, with screen credit-in Hitchcock's • • • hind it in London. This eives Londoners the opportunity to ljee a. m., I to 3 p. m. and 4 to 6 p . m. Mrs. John M. Russ, 9132, Or Prof. t "Shadow of a Doubt." If you can imagine what would Luella M. Wrieht, 5909, • • • • happen if Thornton Wilder ("Our and laugh at themselves under LUELLA M. WAIGHT This was just like the old days Town") got together witl:l Hitch- fire, and New Yorkers are won- EALS CJ.UB dering how they would behave Seals club members wiJ.l meet Member hlp CbalnnaD ¥;~'~ streets were the cock on a ~~ll. ~a~ to similM cirCllD"st8~.r: _,ieneral swimming ThUrsday, no prodUcer dreamed o~ s.Pe1ldlng It's "OUl' Town"- but up to date pecaally lI! It IS entirely POSSIl;>le ePL2t1, ,,' ....' ..... ;,,!Jlp wom ..n' IOWA MOUNTAINEERS for bombs to begin raining down pool. UnJverslty women jnt.erested 'Tfie (I t Ol"~111 lfldoor pronam WASHINGTON- One of the Iew bles ings sailol's and marines feel more at home. good money for a set if he could -overladen wiLh Hitch's ott-re­ borrow 01' purloin one tor free. pealed cinematic premise: the in Manhattan. in jolnini Seals are invited to at- 01. the scbool year will be Thlmday of this war is that Uncle Sam is meeting Rome And now 'J'lte Right HonorabZe Peter Those were the days when a movie most intriguing murderers are tt!!ld tryouts Oct. 1 at 4 p. m. Sept. 24, a 7:30 p. m. in room 223, en,ineering building. Because fiwell 'People ill this world he hardly knew Fraser, prime ministel' of New Zealand is company, keeping a look-out thQse who look-and could be­ Travers. When Uncle Charlie ar· ELVA I . BOLLE posted on a de~irable reSidence, innocent. President 01 limLted aling capacity only existed until now. visiting WaShington, and if Ite isn't as rives/ Santa Rosa also welcomes a m mbers will be guaranteed ad- J set up its cameras as soon as the The heroine, Teresa Wright, has COuPle of gents from the F.B.I. »ut UNlVERSITY DIllECTOIlY On,e of the latest acquail)tances an(] may­ llMtch at home on Pennsylvania avenue as family left, in the morning, shOt an idol in her Uncle Charlie whom mittance. II you wish to lOin do so Ihat's mere coincidence for a reel Cqpy lor the Uwverldty direc­ at once, A. soon As the mflllber­ be IIOmeday one of QUI' best ncj,gltbors is that all day, and vacated before the six she has never seen. Uncle Charlie he is on the streets of A1ICkland or Well­ or two-until Teresa discovers that tory is now heine ,prepared. Stu- ship Quota h bten fllled, ad­ o'clock whistle brought the occu- comes to Santa Rosa, distributing litH fellow from d wu under-New Zealand. ing I 011, he's pili tina on a flctwless act. her Uncle Charlie has a bent for dents wishing to make corrections missIon will be clo. ed to th, pub­ You can find all the physical iacts about pants trooping home. largesse, and Inspires a complete murder. or additions on thelt reif$tratlon liC. New Zealand in any good cncyclopedia, but • • • change in the home life of Teresa, Wh'lt makes this all "pertect cards shOUld ,,-eport to the publl. S. J. f;B£&T who has cjespaired of her slovenly that won It tell thiR story. First Ollr military Hitchcock" is that Uncle Charlie, caLions depart,ment, W-II, ;East PI' eDt When General Hl1I.'cly rece)ltly ini.,roduccd mamma. Patricia Collinge, and homicidist, is plyaed bY good.­ hall. fOI'ces made a call on New Zealand. Admiral her ambitionless papa, Henry looking, good-guy Joseph Cotton) Ghormley, who bossed the Solomon Islands li'rllser. at a luncheon, he said: "I have been PUJll,IC.-lTiONS DEJ'ARTMENT piLJ)• .aEADI G EXAMS asked many times wJlat New Zealanders are ------. ------.--~ The Ph.D. Fren h reading exam­ attack, had (and fOI' all I kTlJ)w still does Oct. 1, 11142, in room 314, Sch&et­ have) his headq~al'ter tllere. Brig. Gen, Pat like. Ii you dropped down in It parachute ler hall. Plaue make application Hurley, one-time secretary of war, is (among there and the people Cl1lne out to meet you, By JOHN SELBY beton Honday, pt. 28, In room other things) minist I' to New Zealand. YO\l wouldn't k,now that you weren't in ;Kala­ "THE SEVENTJI CROSS," by 307, Sch (er lWl. No appUca­ mazoo, Tulsa, Okla., Dallas or Fort Worth. Anna Se,bers (LUtle, Brown; tionl wllJ b acc ptect altb that • • • "You would notice only two differences. $2.50). date. PR.O •• U. B H Prom all t'epQrts, tl£6t'(J ig 1l0wlw'e else The New Zcalandcrs have II- ,lightly different On this day in the transition accent and their coffee lsn 't tlle same. United period between 1933 and the start &oJhln~ Laatllate Dtparlaafat in fQreign la/ld/l wlte"e U. 8, soldiers, of Schicklgrubber's war, seven "". 910 ON DIAL States and New Zealand coffee have two YOUR RADIO . OCIA.L DANClNG things in common. They both are made from men escaped from the Rhineland concentration camp 01 Westhofen. Social d41ncinJ( CUtiSes iOl' uni­ the coffee bean and they both are served in '~lmpresSions- The sircn& sounded, and a vast TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS l-Musical Chats 5:30--Musical MOOds versity meo and women wiU belin It cup. 'I'here, all similarity ends." community of Germans reacted to 2-Victory Bulletin Board 5:4$--,News, The Dally Iowan Monday, Sept. 28, In the women's iU'lI'lnaslum. Tickets will 10 on , As in a <'h:eam 1 senseo these things: oppres­ them in a vast number of ways. VIEWS AND INTERVIEWS- 2:10-Recent and Contemporary 6-Dinner 110ur Music • • • A man named Alger caught one Mrs. Imelda Murphy, manager Music, Prof. Philip G. Clapp 6:50--Detendlng Your Home and sale tor 1h leri S ot 10 IUIOIU sive heat, then cool damp air; wailing winds, Fl'iday and Saturday trom 10 to But apparently what's true of New Qf the seven in his garden and of the division of student housing, 3-The Bookman Mine, Irving Weber i then fre h crisp breezes ; rustling leaves, 3:15-Melody Time 7-United In tbe 20th 12 a. m. and Monday, Sept. 28, Zealand coffee isn't true of the people joyously aided the Gestapo I n their and Helen Reich, assistant director state. tram 1 to 2 p. m. and to p. m. apples on I,l half naked tree, tomatoes piled floiging. A man named Franz of student affairs and adviser to 3:30-Boy's Town Century, Prof. H. J. Thornton a a who it. 10 Around the well, birds hurrying soutb, a make The Maoris the Polynesian 7:30-Sportstlme the nmn8lllum, to began quietly looking about for town girls, will be interviewed 4-Let's Be Neighbors HIllLIY MADSEN WOrd lingel'ing robin, a' grumbling ~ay, chattel' of natives 01 the island, according General something he might do. And so on. over WSUI on the VieWs and In~ 4:15-Builders of Russia, Prof. 7:45-Muslc In Am rica Chalralaa bfrth of squirrels gathering nuts, smoke from the chim­ Hurley, are almost identical with 01tr One by one the seven men, rep­ terviews program at 12 :30 Loday Chester W. Clark 8-Mu,sic Hour more adva.nced Indians. And the whites 10 Mr. ney, coal grating down the cliute, :ilie sme~l of resented by seven crosses nailed by Carrol McConnaha. They wlll ~:30-Tea Time Melodies 8:45-New., The Dally 'owan SBNloa OIlCHBSIS ,of Lee L've met f"01It there seefli 110 1/lfJr/l loreig7i 5--Children's Houl' 9-Dratpa Hour burning leaves, nardy dahlias and batwred t.cj trees in the pri~on yard, were discuss hOUSing for women and The llrst meeUng of Senlor Or­ Iwmer hines, the gold on the oaks, blood on the sumac, tha7~ a fellow from 'l'exas 7JJOltld ,~ee'li to killed ~l' captured and through activities tor the town coeds. cbe.sis, women'l bonorary dan InC P'renb hazy sky, golden RlUlset. Wake up, Sleepy! It'll one in KalamtlfIJoo. the Rhineland ran currents that oreanizaUon, wlU be held w~es- \inlvenlly autumn in Iowa. added up to something. At last DEFENDING YOUR HOME The Network Highlights day, pI. 23 . • • • one man alone was lelt free­ AND MINI- I)()KOTRY "U Geor,Be Hehsler. G.eorge was alone Irving Weber, assistant director lO :30-Buddy F'ranklln's Or- Pri me Minister Fraser is 110t 11 1:'lew Zea­ NBC-Jled Pmlcleat in other senses of the word. He of the Iowa CiLy clvili~ defense WHO (1040); WMAQ (870) chestra lander by birth but he has lived there 82 of ,THE DAILyIOWAN was a strange-fellow, not lov,able corps, will discuss the general ll-News TtJDBNT8 his 58 years. He was born in Fearn, 'Ro88-shjre, anti yet the recipient of much love. course on the Defending Your 6-Fred Waring l1 :j5-Hal McIntyre's Band is Menl Wom~t Do you need Published every morning except ~o;p.c4y Scotland, and IJis story oni' of those we like One could only stay lree, he ]q1ew, Home and Mine program on WSUI 6:15-News 01 the World, with 1l:3D-Eddle OUver's Band money? List your free houri with by Student Publications IncorJ>orated at to ~l ~ "typically American" sa~a. by a series of miracles, (lnd al­ at 6:50 this evening. 12- Press News John W. Vandercook UI and let U8 help you tum them 126.130 Iowa avenue, Iowa Oity, Iowa. At 26, he was wo:rking on tli.~ doc'ks at though he did not expect ~e mir­ 6:30-Caribbeart Nights .cPS into prollt. AUCKland, a longeshortlqllln. He dug ditches. acles to continue, they did. A MVSIO H9UR- a. L. BALLANTJ'NB Board of Trustees: Clyde W. Hart, A. lie labored, sweat,e,d, read, and devoted w1].at man traded jackets with trlm; a qrahms' Trio, opus 6, for viOlin. 0:45-By the Way, with Bill WM1 (800): ~M (180) Dlvilion 01 Stu.ent I ...., .. ' Craig Baird, Kirk lJ. Porter, Frank Burge, oUler time he bad to politics 8S a member Catholic priest burned some tags; cello and piano will be played on ijenry Glenn HortoJ), Blaine Asher, Elizabeth Obar!­ of the Labor party. He became a member of a woman invited him in; a truck­ tbe Music Hour over WSUI at 8 7- Adventures 01 the Thin Map 6- Euy Acei NEWII'AN CLV. driver pjcked him up and uncere­ o'clock tonight by Professors 7:30- Tommy por:sey'S Orches~ Q:ls-G)cQ,rll'41l1er', Blind Ncwlmlll club will hQld. U.llrst tOD, DIW McLaughlin. pllrliament; a member of the New ,~eatUid moniously' turned him ou t; !I blind Philip Greeley Clapp, Hans Koelbel tru s :3D-Green Valley, U,S.A. mixer done. 1~lday trOllJ. II II cabinet, with the portfolio!! educatiOD, to ---- ot man happened by with a cloak at and Arnold Small, all of the' music ll-War Newt 7-Nelson Eddy p.m. In the rlver roo1lj Qt lOWI Fred M. Pownall, Publjsher health ah4 marine; and finally Maa: of his just the proper moment. deparitnent. 1l:05- ,Glen Gray's Orchestra 7:3D-Dr. Chrl tlan Union. Adml ion wJll be by club John J. Greer, Busineas ManNer party and prime mini8ter . . Obviously, Anna Selhers, who 11 :3D-Shep F'jelds' Orchestra 7:66-Cecll BrowD lind tbe N WI tntMberahlp lIcket. :MeJllbfrahlp Robert D. Noble, Editor Today, with his henily Jined face} his al. wrote "The Seventh Crass" and TODAY'S paOGRAM 1l:55-News 8-MlscQ~ The Mliinlflcent cards may be pure baaed at the most bald head tringed with white hair,. )lis was lucky enou,h to have it I-Mornin, Chapel, Prof. David 8:30-Suspenlle door, The II,. N.wJ1'lplll dub Entered .. second elau mailaatter at tilt spectacles, his l>8onehine$ll' U1d! . l'lIetl'rum sta­ chOsen by the Book-Of-the-Month C. Shipley BI~e ~Great Moments In M\.I8lc Sunday nlallt JVPJlfr wJIl be _tid poIttlffiee at Iowa City, Iowa, under ,tAe act ture, be eould paSs lor a;Down !all( 1fte~ c)ub tor October, is wtltln' an­ 8:1~'M4sical Miniatures KeO (l~80); W,INR (490) ,g:30--Mr. Keen, Tracer , Loi! .In the pine room of lUten', (lie ", CODgtea of March 2, 1879. and what aceent be hu wo'UMn't give him other story 01 esca'pe and d'llJ'lger. 8:30-New., The Dally Iowan. --- IPenons at 7:30 p.m, n.1et SundJlr. away. It her boOk were only' mate'rlal for 8:45-Xeep 'Em Eating 6-Easy Aces f:43-WM'r Band Wagon OATllUfNI HA"." Subscription rates-By mail, $5 per fear i an exciting movie, it wOllld not 8:55-Service Reports ~ : j5-Mr . Keen, Trllccr ot Lott ID-News 84C!W CIa.'...... , matter, but it is ~y carrier, 15 cepts weekly, $5 per year, more. ~alon Music PerSOns 10:20-Wllliam L, Shirer, News Its value lies In the Wf1.Y in 9:15-Marvel of Vision 6:3D-The Lone Ranger Analyst The A~iated Pre88 is ex(\l~ively tmtitle,d NY. TVlJCNTI which she has sJlown II lar,e com­ 9:3D-Mu:sic Magic 7-Earl Godwin, News lO:30-Trellsury Star Parade Please ,et your to use for repul)licatiol} o~ all news w.~ a l",.nIa.t munity reactin, to a stimulus of II:SO-Prolram Calendar 7:15-Lum and Abner lO:46-Richard H.Im~r'l SaM or Investigat.ioft Shows- thl. oUk *x>n II' pouIbl" credited to it not otJlerw~ credited ill. ~ which it is bitterly afraid. Such a 100Iowa State Medical SOCiety, 7:30-ManhaLtah at Mldnlllht lI-News It L BALLAHTYNI paper and alao the local lIews pw>~ej In the editorial columna of. yesterday'. Iltl'ain produces both quiet hero~ Dr. P. Mabel Nelson 8-8a81n Street Chamber MUIIe 1l:16-Hal 'Mclntyre'. Band M...,." ...... 1M ,..,..1 urein. paper we suggested that the COlHlty ..lv.ge Ism and slimy treachery-the we~ lO:I6-Yesterday's Musical J'av. SOCiety ll:IO--Eddle Oliver',Band committee jnvMtirate tM ltut,e }ill' of bridge lui fed is thaf, as the author has ariles . 8:3D-Spot.lieht Band, 12-Prelll N,WI nCaBATIONAL ...... ' TELEPHONES written the stOry, Jt does produce lOlaG-'The BookIIbeU 8:88-Molluei and January aloDI loute & The pool at til. wo~!t DIll· steel situated tlae Orandi" lIbe)l't rl,ht before your eyes. She ask. It.-Introduction to Soclolo,y, 9-Hlllman and Lindley, Nevil MB8 Editorial Officle ...... ~192 distlLJlCe 'l0rtb ot North Li~rty. An inveilti­ JlillNM II Ql)an fot 1~aul1oT' fIc· Boolet, 'Editor ...... , , .. , ..•..... U98 a ,ood deal of her read~ at times. Prot. H. W. Slunder. 9:1&-Natlonall'tadlo Porum WON (71t) uUy Wivtt, will. of IF..... Itu· gat~on ~rried out by the committee eh*irman There are too many people in the l1:IO-Parrn Plaahel 9:46-Jimmy Dorsey', Orchestra ~U8iDe81 Office , ...... 4191 d.nta, lICIminl,tratlve ."It .'" UII­ and BpD.Ollneed yeBt~rcia'y, dist\~ tnat tile book, and she h,s not always 12-Ithythm Kamble. 10-1:arl Godwin, Newa 7:M-Trua lito,", ~ ..... 01 tlw der.radlil" '\udenta, d.flJ a.ept, Crapdic oompany has sold the steel to the HI:30-Vlews and Interviews 10:I8-EII8 Pitz;erald and tile Air -WgDNE, 'DAY, SEPTEMBER 23,194:2 troubled to join up the action ThUrsday, 4"':10 p, iii., '-'1 St,le ,Highway commission. tI&htly. 12:~Religloua News Reporter Four Key. 11:8 Po s In Review ~~~''''' ' '' ' .. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23.1942 THE DAILY lOW A N. lOW A CITY, lOW A PAGE T&REB

Catherine McCartney, Mrs. G. M. Hovey. creative writine; Helene tltherine Hrusovar Corp. Albert Tennes Wed IDr. l. l. Dunnington Newman (Iub Lieut. A. J. McKelway Putnam, Mrs. C. E. Seuhore and Miller, economic.' and legal ltatua P, . .' •• To Talk at luncheon Ruth UpdqraU of women; Mrs. Strother, ~hilcl ~ Rmg Ceremony m bUle Chapel Of I.C. Woman's Club . To Address A.A.U.W. The year's activities wlu be study, aroup I; Mrs. Lopez-MorU­ under the gmerallUidance of Mrs. lu, child study. group II; Mrs. ~ 1C.th erlne Hrusovar dauKhter of • . "A Newspaper Ma'n Looks at To Hold Dance Fred FeblI.n,. president; Prot. Mary Proesaler Brown, publicity. lir. and Mn. Joseph 'Hrusovar of BaSIC Wool Hitler" will be the ~Pic discussed At Saturday Meeting Luella M. Wright, vice-president; and Mrs. Charlell Looney, radio. All women in Iowa City holdinl ,.OIIn8, 111., and Corp. Albert b.y Dr. L. L. Dun~mgton at the Mrs. Theodore L. Jahn, ~retary; delJ'el!8 from accredited institu­ 'PIIli-, .on of Mr. and Mrs. AI- ~Irst !uncheon meeting of the soc- A mixer dance and a supper The Iowa City chapter of the Mrs. John M. RUlIa, tI'elllW'eJ'. and tions may join the local chapter of bitt Tennel ot Davenport, were 1D.1 sCience d~partmen~ of the Iowa this week end will be lhe first twc American Association of Univer­ Catherine Mullin, historian. Arnone the committee and aroup A. A. U. w. by callinC LueU. !dIrrled in a dOUble ring ceremony City Women s club Friday at 12:30 events on Newman club's social sity Women wilJ hold its first III the Little Chapel of the Conlre- p. m. in Hotel J efferson. Mrs. program for 1942-1943. chairmen are Professor Wright, Wri&ht at 5908. general meeting Saturday at 12:1~ ..ltonal church at 2 p. m. yes- Jessie B. Gordon is chairman lor The Avalon orchestra will pro· members.hipj Mrs. W. J. Petersen, I WIllY by the Rev. James E. Ihe meeting. vide the music for the "Kick-oft" p. m. in the river room of Iowa fellows!1.ip; Mrs. Erwin K. Mapel, ."Mry. New Officers of the social sci- mixer dance in the river room of Union. Lleut. A. J. McKelway, hospitality; Mrs. C. S. WilUIUJII To Give Breakfast D1, • .1 Vll'llnla Shrauger, A4 of At- ences department are Mrs. A. M. Iowa Union from 9 10 12 p.m. Fri­ chaplain of thp Navy Pre-night and Mrs. Glenn Houston, inter­ Mn.. Willlam Meanion, 1851 Eo j "nUc, wal maid of honor. The best Ewers, chairman, and Mrs. C. W. day. school will discuss "Morale and the national rel.lIons; Mrs. Dorrance MUleaUne, will entertain the Put JIlIn was Russell W. Miller, Et Wassam, secretary - treaSUrer. Admission to the dance will be Pre-flight School." White, education; Ruth Gallaher. HI&h Priestess dub of the White of Council Bluffs. Members of Ihe program commit- by club membership ticket only. Hostesses for the affair are Mrs. le8islaUon; Mrs. Charles Strother, Shrine at break1ast this mol'lliq at Bride Wore Blue tee are Mrs. A. D. Hensleigh, Mrs. However, a student will be admit­ Use P. Laas. chairman, Mrs. J . H. consumer problenu; Mrs. Juan 8 o·clock. Places will be let tor The bride wore a two-piece Emmett C. Gardner and Mrs. Her- ted it accompanied by a date who Arnold, Alma Hovey. Ada Hutch­ Lopet-Morlllu, the ar1l; Mrs. J. twelve, and the mornin, will be Jlriit lenllth drc:ss at blue jersey bert P. Cormack. holds a membership card and inson, Mrs. J Garth Johnson. Garth Johruon, drama; Alma tpent in playinl br1dle. ;llb hlllh neckline and fuJI length membership cards may be pur­ lleeves. She carried red roses. chased at the door. All Catholic , The maid of honor wore a street students are urged to attend the lenrth dress of soldier blue wool dance. Isid a corsage of gardenias. Today The club's first Sunday night IluJic was furnished by Helen 18 Local Organizations SUpper wiU be held next Sunday Lltch, A3 of Renwick, who played at 7:30 p.m. in the pine room of For America I "!tomance" (Rubenstein) j "Wed­ Plan to Meet Reich's cate. There will be danc­ diDI March" tram the opera "Lob_ ing afterwards. An appetizing eyeful at fraternity dinners is this black rayon crepe Throw Your Scrap ~In" (Wagn r), and "Wedding AUrusa clu~luncheon lIIfeting, Reservations fOr the supper shown above. The novel lacing ..areh" from the opera "A Mld­ Iowa Union, 12 noon. must be made belore Saturday nool'l by calUng Catherine Har­ through sequin eyelets plays up l1IJIImer Nlllht's Dream" (Mendel!­ Art clrcl~Board room of public I~to the Fightl the froot of the gown and high­ /)EPAR TNENT' toM). The bridegroom's sister, library, 10 a.m. meier, 4472, or Ed Bowman, 7122. STQRE Disabled American VeteraQ ­ lights the smartly scalloped neck­ IilirJorle, A2 of Davenport, sang line. "Ich Liebe Dich" (Beethoven). Keeping tabs on fashion-and . Court house, 7:30 p.m. Carnation Rebekah, I UnivenUy Graduates black velvet ones at that-is this lola Oouncll No. 54, Decree of Po­ Iowa City Rebekah, . Mr•. Tennes was graduated from new recruit for your all-seriric~ cahonta&-K of P hall, 7:30 p.m. Un I!iJh school In Moline. The bride­ wardrobe. It's basic dres:s for all Lions clu~R eich's Pine room, 12 To Meet This Week Hillel Reception to Be If'OIII finished high schoolln Dav­ occasions, stunning in black as noon. Your ~rt. Both Corporal and Mrs. an understudy for furs. This is the St. Wenceslaus Ladle!! - Church The two local Rebekah lodges Ttnnes received their B.A. degrees perfect investment for your pam- parlors, 2:45 p.m. are holding their meetings this Tonight at Iowa Union Charge pered pennies. W.S.C IS.-Unlt A- Home of Mrs. trom the University ot Iowa. week in Odd f'ellows hall. Account The couple will spend a week G.L. Whitaker, 425 S. Gorvernor, Iowa City Rebekah lodge No. The annual Hillel reception will In'Three Bears, Wis., before leav­ 7:30 p.m. 416 will commenrate the an­ be held from 7:30 to 9:30 this eve­ lnI tor Alexandria, La., where the U. W. A.lnformation W.S.C.S.-Unlt B-Home of Mrs. niversary of the foundi~ of the ning in the river room of Iowa brI~room Is stationed at Camp B. J. Lambert, 4 Melrose circle, organization tOmorrow evening. Union. Clayborn. 2:30 p.m. The business meeting will begin New students especially are Board Will Interview, W.S.C.S.-Unlt C-Home of Mrs. at 8 p.m. and will be followed by urged to attend and meet mem­ II Leona Pearson, 308 S. Johnson, a program of historical informa­ bers of the taculty and upperclass­ 2:30 p.m. tion under the direction of Eliza­ men. All those Interested in par­ Among For Sub-CommiHees W.S.C.S.-Unlt D-Home of Mrs. beth McLachlan. ticipating in Hillel activities will H. R. Jenkinson, 220 River, 2:30 Priday Ihe members of the Car­ be given an opportunity to desig­ The vocational inform1'tion p.m. nation Rebekah lodge No. 376 and nate their committee preferences. Our clothes are wise in stadium strategy . . • .~ . Iowa CUy People board of U. W. A. will continue W.S.C.S.-Unit E-Home of Mrs. their families will hold a potluck Co-chairmen of the reception the its series of interviews today and J. A. Swisher, 710 KirkWOOd, supper at 6:30 p.m. committee are Marilyn Glassman, and sparkle with enthuliasm of an All-Star tomol'row from 8 to 12 o'clock in 2:30 p.m. The program, under the direc­ A3 of Iowa City, and Sylvia Lurie, Mr. and Mrs. Olto Dolezal and Ihe morning and from I to 4 o'clock W.S.C.S. - Unit F - Methodist tion of Mrs. Ralph Rayner, will A2 of Ft. Dodge. Other members team! We've gay mix and matchables that 1IIfI, Allan, and Mrs. Emma E. in the afternoon in the women's church, 16 a.m. consist of sevel'al · musical selec­ of the commlttee are Pauline will give you Iturdy comfort at the game or on Neared, 409 Ronalds, spent Sun­ lounge of Iowa Union. Any uni- W.S.C.S.-Unlt G-Home of Mrs. tions. These inc-lude a drum solo Pomerantz, A2 of Des day in Cedar Rapids with Mr. versity ·wome.n wishing to bef?me P. W. Richardson, 116 Gol!view, by Dick Larew, son of Mr. and Marcia Izove, A3 of naVf'11noort, the campus . . . and you'll love their trivial aod MfS. Jerry Syrp. members of the sub-committees 1 p.m. . Mrs. Telford Larew; a piano duet John David, A3 of cheer-rousing prices. • • • of lhill board are . urged to ilIke W.S.C.S.-Unit H-Home of Mrs. by Dick Lllrew and Wilma Larew, Mass., and Irwin Katz, Mil. Mary B. Turnipseed, 432 S. advantage of the interviews . . ' Ed Slaby, 907 Fairchild, 2:30 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A\ J . Bayonne, N. J. Johnson, has a her guest her Vocational board members con- p.m. Larew; a pian!! solo by Dortald Guests .wlU be rl!Ceived at the Brushed Rayon ~t1Ihter, Mrs. Mamie Miller of ducling the interviews are Louise W.S.C.S. - Unit I - Methodist Wagner, son of Mr. lind Mrs. door by President Ted Landsman, Fancy LoulsvlUe, Ky. Mrs. Turnipseed Franks, A2 of Oak Park, Ill.; June church. 12 noon. Harry Wagner, .and a tap dance AS of Rochester, N. Y.; Miss Lurie, All-Wool Sweafers _Ill return to Louisville with her Knotek, A4 of Washington, ]a.; W.S.C.S.-Unlt J-M e tho dis i by Norma Jean Seaton, daugbter David, Roslyn Myers, A2 of Wat­ Head carfs daughter the latter part of this Shirley Mereness, A3 of Lima, church, 12 noon. of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Seaton. erloo; Shirley Rich, A2 of Ot­ There'll an expression of ,allan try In the e $1 Up week to make her home for the Ohio; Jennie Evans, A2 of Mes; Youn .. Lutheran Dames-Home of She will be accompanied by Mrs. tumwaj and Rabbi Morris N. Kert­ button-front sweaters which are alorltled "Inter. Terry Tester, A2 of Iow;l City; and Mrs. Sigmund A. Newmann, 330 Mayme Neen. . zer of the school of religion. with 0 shallgln of brushed wool. They • • • Luella Swanson, A3 of Red Oak. McLean, 2:30 p.m. , Qua Hinrichs Jr. has relurned One of the chief purposes of Women's Alliance of the Unitarian are bl, and warm. sturdy and smart. \0 S t. Lou i 8 after visiting the vocational board is to Ilromote church-Home of Mrs. Sudhin- Coralville Club Womer"! ICh'~Pter HI of P.E.O. hown in ree., blue. brown ...reen and putel pink.. bit parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gus a year-around vocational program dra Bose, 825 Otto, 2:30 p.m. Hinrichs, Route 1. for university women here. It also Will Meet Tom~rrow Will ., Have Meeting Other Smart Sweaters at $2.98 Up • • • I Mrs. E. L. York of GrinneU has ~~~~::~ c~~er~~~.al vocational War Plans Discussed Mrs. Lorallce a. Evers, 321 Chapter lU of .P, E. O. will h ld Chapman, wlll entertain the Cor­ been vil!tlna h parents, Mr. and In promoting this yeal'-aJ:Qund a business meeting on Friday at MZ$. Lee Na,le, 817 E. Collelle. I alville Heights club at her home 2:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. E. vocational project, the board .hopes At Open Meefl'ng at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow. It will be M. MacEwen, 315 Fairview. • • • to place uppermost 10 the mmd of New Plaid Skirts Mr. and Mrl. . A. Gunnetl.?, 512 a social meeting. Mrs. C. E. Loghry wil be in • every university woman her vooa- Of W ' L . Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. N. Gilbert, entert ined Prot. and lion, ho": to select it and how charge of arrang~ments, and Mrs. omen s eague Ray Eval13 and Mrs. Lyle Eck­ JUST IN )11$. James Cl1Ift at dinner in their to follow It after she has chosen it. • William D. Cannon will assist the You've a priority rallng on warmth and Aome Tueaday evening. Mr. and hardt. hostess. charm when you don one of the colorful, IIrs. Gunnette have recently re­ Mrs. Charles Okerbloom ex­ all-wool skIrts. They're shown in red and IIIrned from a three weeks' trip plained the war service program blue; yellow and brown; tan and brown by automobll through the Black Women's Pan-Hel of the League of Women Voters at lind many other combinations. HUla, the Bad Lands, and Yellow­ a tea yesterday afternoon, opening alone Park. the league's activities this year. Pure 100% .Wool MaterialS in STRUB'S Oth.. Sldrta at sua Up • • • CommiHees Named Mrs. Paul Risley presided at the STRUB'S-Flnt Floor. Ellen Anderson of Lincoln, Neb. meeting. ' will arrive Saturday momilli to Commiltee ::oppointments :tor Discussing war plans, Mrs. Oker­ BIOUIet b,: viJIt Mr. and Ml'I. Charles An­ Women's Pan-Hellenic association bloom said that the league, which Deberal$ demo, 415 Clark. were made at an organizatioili is open to all women qualified to New Plaid Blouses HeHan • • • meeting Tuesday afternoon in the vote, will hold study sessions on Joan Keole, Steven Stookey ot Ft. Worth, river rooro of the Iowa Union. current problems of local, state suns an.d· CUATS Ud. Tex., 15 visltlna for veral days Kalhleen Davis, C4 of Des and national importance. Alter de­ For Campul Wear WraCie in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Moines, is chairman of the elec­ termining what action will best That Are Good line and Beautiful at These new smarties have utilized Kadglbn, 411 S. Summil tions committee, assisted by Clare suit the interests of the commun­ the colors ot autumn . .. they • • • Sherman, A4 of Farley, and Jeanne ity, the league will publicize its simulate the lumberman's shirt of I Mr. and Mrs. Keith Smith of Kutzner, A3 of Garner. conclusions and support legisla­ Y01·e ... warm. serviceable, BJoomileld announce the birth Members of Ihe petitions com­ tive action. colorful, cheerful! See them in a ,"day ot a dauahter, Linda Sue. mittee include Shirley Gillett, A4 "Broadsides," the league's paper variety of color combinations. Ill'. Smith wa ,taduated from of Ft. Madison, chairman; Shirley on current problems and group the colle,e ot pharmacy in 1941. Bieg, A4 of Davenport, and Arlene activities, will .be published, and Other bloUHS ill wblte • • • Fowler, A3 of Brooklyn. radio broadcasts, public displays and colora at S US up. Home on furlough Is StaU SergI. Heading the program committee and talks to other organizations Irarold J. Hlrt, who I visltilll his is Kathleen Hennessy, A4 of will be presented to publicize the STRUB'8-F.... I'Ioor. lither, Wilired V. Hirl, 1634 Council Bluffs. league. Mornlnplde drive. Serlleant Hirt A new plan i~ being formulated A speakers' bureau planned this lI.tationed at Atterbury, Ind. to take the place of the exchallle year will allow groups to obtain Dtelle1l • • • dinners this year with Kay KIrby, the services of a public speaker fa ",1I'te Word ha been received 01 the AS, of Naugatuck, Conn.., as chair­ qualified to discuss current issues. aail b(rth of a dauahlcr, Patricia Joan, man. Asslstilll her will be e~tte Prof. Troyer Anderson of the eo ..... 10 Mr. and Mr•. Edward C. Beard Rakow, A4 of Muscatine and Mary history department, who came to ., ,of LoI AlIIel . Mrs. Beard Is lhe Langland, AS of Nevada. . , the University of Iowa faculty fermer Ellaabeth Rodman. Both this year from Swarthmore col­ Plttnt.. are form r tudents 01 the \. lege, will address the first lunch­ univellity here. Group to Sew Quilts i' eon meeting of the league Oct. 12, • • • it was announced. . Qorp. Luke Misllman, who unlH Tomorrow, Thursdoy: DOEVEL* rteently WB stllloned In Ireland, In Church Parlorl baa been a guest In the home of GLOVES Mr •• nd Mr•. Verne G. Hefte, 811 b,VaNt Th Friendsh lp circle of the K'aalte. 1 Colle.e. Corporal MlssmaD, a f1rst English Lutheran church will at $1.25 lormer .tudent of the university, meet in the church parlors tomor­ to ,pend some time al his MaRY O&ber IIlaIll row at 2 o'clock and Thursday at 8blel && hame In Woden before he leaves 9:30 a. m. to make air raid shelter tor offIcer'. \relnln, In New Jer­ quilts. A potluck runner wlll be ..,. held Thursday noon. - Women are urged to brina clean , ~ 'ar.nt" Teocherl pieces of wool material, scissors, needles and thread to help 11\ the ~ Of Roos.velt School work. Portlble electric sewlnll tPair Plan to Me.t Friday machines are allo needed. Wear It Doaml Mrs. George L. Freyder II In 'nI. Inlthll ';;;Una for the cur­ char,e 01 the meetinp, Weekly Witla entire leather bacb or with leother ....t year of the P .T.A. of Rooee­ mee*lnp of the ,roup will be touch". Th... aM glove. you ."lU t~ure . vill Khool will be held PrJday planned. ThelClbric !lve!velf, hut ,turdy rayon $125 IYlnJn,. At 6:30 p.m. there will Triln tailored Sui. hi 10ft 'Caaual Coats on the amart Doeve'- .' . ~I POt luck supper lor the mem­ nO'leby woolen. that will serve and ple

. ~ .. ,~ ,.,. WEPNESDAY. SEPTE!MBf:R 23. 1942 1'HE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGEFlVE

shopping and mDny other business NO HELP TO ROMMEL NOW! flotillas, the combined strength IVON BOCK Route Auto Trips trips, Shopping closer to home will would oUer a substantial threat - also save tire mileage," to the British home fleet. I (Continued lrom page 1) The best plan ot all. accercting The observers expressed bellef, T~ Conserve Tires to Chansky, is to arrange your re­ however, that even a rein!orced Germany's greal \'ictories, but has creation and non-essential busi­ Unused Tire Mileage ness so that you can leave your ~~i ';!~:e w:i~~ ~~ ~~~ts~ :~l~ often been in trouble with Hitler, Will Be Needed car at home and save the tires for instead, use such strength against He WIIS relieved of his duti travel that is really essential, This north Atlantic cOQvoys, ]a t December, along with several During Emergency plus swap riding to and from work The Til1llta, blneit Ind cost- other I~ading army figures be- 14, 1940, marched into Paris. For may make the average sel 01 tires "eat weapon at Hitler' com- c~use he disagreed w!th Hiller thi achievement Hitler m de him Planning your trips may save a last ~hrough the emergency, mand, wa reported yesterday to have quit Tr~ulClhe1m, where over the Q.uestion of attacking a field marsh I. lot tire mileage, Charles J. ot ~ had reful'e4 between the Moscow, but early this ye r was In the war in Ru ! he won Prr!lideDI CbanBKY, locol administrator tor l ~.v walla III a Norwewn called back nnd placed in com-I fam a the victor of Smol ·ruk the Iowa hl"hway tr\lfflc advisory AERlAL- fjord tbrolll'b \.he swnmer. and ma~ ~t the Iirst. army group and during the winter wa in MES TUB. committee, sUl/"ests. The idea can (Continued lrom page I) to be operatinl' In northern Wa - whIch Is ~ow flghltnJ at Stalln- h r th d r n r Kh _ v ral board jobs ~ a\'ailable, .&en. peru., from NarvQ[ or grad and In the Caucasus. c arge 0 e e e. 0 ar momin" noon and enlOf hout&. be IlPplled both to the re"war and . the big Baltic base, apparently even Tro~, on the Norwe_ Von Bock, report~ (0 have r _ Jeov, whi h h laler u: d a R. L. aALLANTYNB wee!sl trips, ready for service, aiaIa north coast. mained a st unch momrrchil iJartiog b for the clrh' in ••na~er, loIItat Em)llo ment ,~eI' SOn8 followin, a regular Russian sources previously i')ad Pour German raiders swept .in both durini the republican and the C.u us, route to wOI'k or other places f~e­ reported the Germans tlsing the lower over the soutbeast coast or nati pel'iods. was a lieutenant q,uently vlsltcd may find a better Graf Zeppelin as a <ic trans­ England late yesterday, unloaded general when Hitler ame to route by II little study," Chansky port, having given u)l hopes or their bombs and sped back to power In 1933, In 1935 Hitl r OFRCIAL BULLETIN says, He advises motorists that, al­ completing it as a carrier, France, A movie theatre was hit. picked him (0 he=d the eiehth (continued trom pq. 2) though in some cases the route If such a force could joIn the The building was emo!y at the army and Inter h was as iilled may b the same len"th or even a 35,OOO-ton (or bigger) Tirpitz, the time, but !be manager and an ush- to bring Austria "home inlo the little longer, It may be a smoother 10,OOO-ton cruiser Admiral Hip­ eretle were belieVed trapped in Reich," iiUrface, les tra fIle, tewer stops per, the 10,OOO-ton pocket battle­ the wreckage, Three workmen in It was von Bock also who led or bad tums, In either case, the ship Luetzow and Admiral Scheer another section ot the lown were German troops into the Sudeten­ road that ave. your tires should and their destroyer and U-boat killed, land of CzechoslovEkla, Hi n me be u cd, In planning trips over unfamil­ iar road or streets, whether they be long 01' short trips, it is well to study map or ask someone wbo knows the way, In ordinary times there may be a certain thrJJJ of adventure in driving around untl~ R, A, J'. planes saw to It that this axis supply ..J]jll delivered no aid 'au tind the plac you are looking to Field Manhal Erwin Rommel's I;orces in north Atrica, They for, but with the present rubber bombed it and it Is Ilhown Illnklnr, above, as it blazed from stem to shortage no one can afford to wear stern , (Central Press Radiophoto) out tires on a wild goose chase, "A few minutes getting road inIor­ unused tire mileage may come in Ioften do a half a dozen errands on mation may save both time and very handy next year, one trip, instead of making a trip tire mllenllc," he declared. That "With a little planning you can for each errand, This appl ies to Daily Iowan Want Ads

* * * * * * FOR* * SALE * CLASSIFIED HELP WANTED • ADVERTISING WE HAVE substantial earning op- FOR SALE: 1939 Black Tudor RATECABD portunity lor housewives and Ford V-B RadiO, six reasonably other women who want to earn but good tires. Pbone 4167. Larry CASH RATE unable to devote time to ofrice or Butler factory work, Address A, p, Daily ------~­ lor 2 dayll- Iowan 1934 Chevrolet Cabriolet, Classy Uk per lln.e per .sa, looker, good tires, Must sell this eonaecuUve day-.- WANTED to care for small child­ week, Will take $95 cash, Dial ren in my home Dial 6466, 5995, 7c '*' line per da1 colllCCutlve daya- SALESLADIES to sell Avon Pro­ 1936 Nash Tudor Sedan-a good !Ie per ilDe per da1 ducts, Does not interfere with one with good tires, Motol' runs llDOnth- smooth-worth $300, but must be 4c liDe per day horne duties. Good pay-Perman­ per ent-Box A, Daily Iowan, sold this week, Will take cash­ -FiCure 5 wordl to liDe­ $195.00, DIAL 7246. IotInfmwn Ad-2 liDIIII PLUMBING WANTED - PLUMBING AND ______WANTED - LAUNDRY __ CIASSIIlED DJSPLAY beating, Larew Co, 22'1 E, LAUNDRY; shirts, 9c, Flat finish, 50c col. Inch Wuhington. !'hoQe 96B1. 5c pound, Dial 3762, Longstreth, Or 15.00 per mQDtb BRICK JlRADFORD CLARENCE GRA'! MISCELLANEOUS INSTRUCTION KING 1>t-.1.lSt. ,.. arT, so \ MtW FEt>.ST ~v E.'C~ERY AGE-Local and lon, dlJitsnce Dial 4682 * * * haulinl. Dial 338B. 9 ·1)3 * * * TRANSPORTAtION WANTED ; 'LEARN TO 'EARN . HENRY WANTED : BOYS interested in MAHER BROS. We Have Scheduled Training carryln, paper routes, Apply For Many S,U.!. Students Daily Iowan oltice, TRANSFER -~------For Expert and Efficient And Wives of Students. WANTED TO TRADE for '41 Furniture Moving- Now, as Never Before, Buick Sedanetle, Coupe, or Ask about our Wardrobe Service You Too, Need This Training! Convertible - Cash - Write Chet DIAL - 9696 - DIAL Jenkinson, Barracks 5 R-B, Iowa Jo:XROI I. "'OW-DIAL 76H Ordnance Plant Burlington, Iowa, . Iowa City . PASSENGERS to Washin&ton D,C, Use The DAILY IOWAN 58;:aving Wednesday 23rd, Phone WANT ADS DIAL 4191 Commercia~ Collele 6,000 STUDENTS , GET HIM OUT FIi25f CAJ2EFtJl.:· H~S'N­ JUf2ED!' ;=~~....:,. , ARE LOOKING FOR A LAUNDRY!!

And every one of these studenls will get and BOOM~BOARD O~ ~OUS - read THE DAILY IOWAN I If you do home THIS WE 'lCLO 'EM 'THE 1U!ST -, laundry and want more customers. advertise oc:c.a.slON OF 'lOUR JOINING "T~"~£ OF'EN.lN "TH'E GREAT I'JWI;( Of" ~'IOU~ THIS HOUSE I with a Daily Iowan Want Ad, For a "quick-ra­ v.oRK65, 'ROl!IIN, I HAVE ' A l'OIJR-,voTOIl. AlUOGOING ' ault" PaJly Iowan Wanl Ad just dial BEEN CHOSEN 1IY "THE -­ ~IJIE/1IUT , 1Oa:w.E IN ' INIMTES OF "PUF1"LE THIS IS I'oS 1I1

PEOPLE IN TEAAS ~A'IE FORE FAT'HILR.& WITH 51)< GUNS? ,_ R . M __...... DAILY IOWAN :-___SAH__ GAL,pr. 0I£A12 NOAI-I-16 STI[.4I.I' MAP&: Ol.iT ~ 1SEASONED ~ '? WANT ADS , ...,...... "c£ "...... PAGE::'1X THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1942 W. A. Doppler 10 Be Speaker FIRST WAAC OFFICERS REPORT FOR DUTY IN CAPITAL WSUI to Air Boy Scouts to Coiled R. Bane Wins Phonograph Records AI Local Tuberculosis Meeling Brahms' Opus 'Kids' Melar e Proceeds to Furnish Records, Equipment Tuberculosis Control 2 Wedding Permits Brahms' trio for violin, cello and piano, opus 8, will be heard For Boys in Camps Scrap Drive In Wartime Industry Issued Yesterday over WSUI tonight at 8 o'clock Will Be Discussed By District Clerk featuring Prof. Philip G. Clapp, Boy Scouts will collect old pho­ piano; Prot. ~rnold SmaH, violin; nograph records In a hOllse to Boy Colletts 2,470 William A. Doppler, director of Two marriage lIccnses were and Hans Koelbel, cello, in the house campaign between 4 and 6 third program of the Wednesday this Pounds of Salvage the ind~strial relations service. 01 granted yesterday by R. Neilson o'clock aitrnoon and tomor­ Evening Music Hour broadcasts. row .fternoon. Residents are For Rally Prize t~e na~lonal tuberculosis assocla- Miller, clerk of the Johnson county Com pie t e program for the tlon, will be the guest speaker at district court. asked to leave their old records broadcast, the first to feature a on their front porches, and they an all-day conference of leaders One license was issued to Joseph chamber group, is as follows: Rodney Bane, i'On of Mr. and from the Iowa City tuberculos.is Albert Tennes, 25, of Scott county will be picked up by scouts living Trio, opus 8, for violin, cello In the neighborhood. Mrs. Irvin Ban , 1900 N. Dubu. group to be held tomorrow 10 and Katherine Josephine Hruso- and piano ...... Brahms Lawton J. Petrick, head of the que, won Irist prize of $7.50 in Iowa Union. val' 23 of Rock Island Ill. Allegro con brio record dri ve, has asked lor all war stamp . Cor th 2,470 pound8 The meeting is one of ten being Edwin Luther Milis 18 and Scherzo: Allegro molto kinds of records, regardless of of scrap meLo I which he brought held in Iowa during September Ruby Douglas, 19, both ~r Johnson Adagio their make Ol' condition. The old to lhe city scoles Saturday as his tor the purpose of discussing the county, received the other certili­ Allegro records coUected will be re­ contribution to the "Kids Scrap problems of tuberculosis faced by cate. Brahms' original eighth opus, claimed, and the proceeds will buy industry in war time. written early in his musical career, new records and electrical phono­ Metai RaJly." Counties which will be repre­ was one of his major works. To­ graph equipment for army camps Running 11 close second was sented at the meetln, Include Marine Corps·Offers night's rendition, however, is a at home and abroad. John Hora, rou te 2, West Branch, Cedar, Iowa, Johnson, Linn, complete revision of the O'I'lglnal Almost 7.000 records will have whose collection of 1840 pound8 Louisa, Muscatine, ScoU and music completed by Brahms later to be collected during the two­ made him IIglblc for fhe $5 de. Washinrton. Tuberculoels lead­ Course for Reserves in his life. The second version of day drive in order to fill the John­ fense stamp booklet. Third prize en In these counties have been the opus 8 has since become one son county quota of 10,900 records. in the contcst wa awarded to Issued InvUatloll$ to attend the of his most famous and most per­ The drive, which closes at the end Phyllis Stika. daughler or Mr. and Iowa City meetln,.. Correspondence Study formed works. of this month, has so far resulted Mrs. James Stika, route 8, Iowa City, for 1790 pounds. C. W. Kammier, Iowa tubercu­ To Orient Candidates in the collection of approximately losis association executive secre­ 4,000 records. Pri~e were donated by Ran­ tary, is also scheduled to speak For Active Service Persons who are missed during dall Implement co., Rlns 1m. along with Margaret Pfeffer, Iowa The war department in Washlngton gets Its first rroup of WAACS officers, above, who are shown re­ Prof. C. Updegraff the drive today or tomorrQW are plement co. and Ihe Cline rarm state field director and Kathryn A correspondence course is now porting for duty to Capt. F. H. Clark. 81&'11lnr the officers' register Is Third Officer Bernice Kepllnrer, asked to call 3550 and their records Equipment co. Winner maT reo Kenny, chairman 01 publicity and available for college studenLs who wlll be called fOr. celve their prhes from Dale education for the state. have been enlisted for the officer Speaks to Kiwanis Welt at the Well Jnsur'Dct The national tuberculosis asso­ candidates' classes of the United AIR SUPPLIES FOR ALLIED TROOPS a,ency, Savlnrs and Loan baUd_ States marine corps reserve, ac­ rownsmen. Will Hold Members of the Kiwanis club In ... ciation is interested in fostering heard Prof. Clarence Updegrall AbouL 40 Johnson county the control of tuberculosis among cording to a release received here Engineers From SUI 01 the SUI college of law speak boys and gir'" responded tQ the wage earners through the mutual yesterday. Organization Meeting on his experiences as a federal rally, bringing in more than seven cooperation of employers, ern- The course, which 'Was pre­ labor arbiter at their weekly Unite in Washington tons oC 5crap. J,ck White, co­ e ployees, the medical profession pared by the marine corps schools, luncheon meeting yesterday in the chairman with Welt of the county Quantico, Va., is offered to pro­ In Macbride'Tonight and official agencies. The Indus­ Jeflerson hotel. Engineers who have attended scrap metal committce, estimated trial relations service, 01 which vide the candidate with an orien­ Professor Updegraff is a mem­ All town men not living in a the UniversUY of Iowa and are yeo terday. Doppler is director, was organized tation which will help him mate­ ber of the club and has served as now connected with the war ellort OLhers who brought in large tor this purpose. rially after he has reported for dormitory or fraternity are re­ arbitrator in several labor dis­ near Washington, D. C., have amounts of s rap were Shirley Although Doppler was born in duty. quested to meet in Macbride audi­ putes in the states of Washington formed a permanent organization Lewis, 1090 pounds: Junior Hat­ California, he received his Ph.D. Subjects which will be offered and Oregon recenUy. which will hold monthly dinner cher. 750 pounds, Richnd Olson, from the ' University of Zurich, include "Marine corps as a com­ torium at 7:30 tonight in order to work ollt a new plan of town or­ The speaker explained briefly meetings in the capitol city. 500 pounds; David Amold, 487 Switzerland, after attending pre­ ponent part ot navy," 2 lessons; the functions and problems of the , At the lirst meeting of the group pounds; B. Burge, 454 pounds; liminary education in the United "Military discipline, courtesies and ganization. war labor board and the national Aug. 15, Dale R. Morgan was Paul Fiannery, 343 pounds; Ed. ' States. He received his Ph.D. in customs of the service," 4 lessons; Having scholarship, entertain­ labor relations board. He also dis­ elected secretary. Graduates of ward Spencer, 278 pounds; Whitey 1914 and his major was bio­ "Map reading and military sketch­ ment and intramural sports as cussed the Wagner act and the the university. now in the vicinity Michael, 253 pounds, and Crail chemistry. ing," 8 lessons; "Fundamentals of its three main purposes, the new wage and hour administration. of Washington, present at the first Maha[fey, :W6 pounds. They reo He dJd post-a'raduate work at chemical warfare," 2 lessons; "Or­ program wliJ provide for division Speaking of his job as federal meeting were F'orrest G. Baker. celved OIle-halC cent a pound for the Pasteur InsUtute in Parls. ganization of marine .infantry of town students into 11 districts, mediator, Professor Updegraff Richard D. Borlstadt, Huber O. their scr,p. and served as " ba.cteriolorlst In regiment," 5 lessons and "First aid each named after a former SUI said, "One seeks to attain an atti­ Croft, Miles M. paw on, D. E. A mor txten lve conte I or World war I. After the flnt and field sanitation," 4 lessons. president and directed by a proc­ tude of complete impartiality and Farr, Lloyd Flickinger, A. H. Holt, the ame type I. beln, planned, World war he worked wlth Enrollment and study of the tor. tries to make decisions in accord R. L. Jewett. Wllite ald. Herbert Hoover In post-war re­ course are entirely upon a volun­ Donald Mallett, associate direc­ with his own conscience. He L. W. Kohe, Charles Looney, Plans are now being formulated habilitation in central Europe. tary basis. There will be no tor of student affairs, will talk on 'calls 'em as he sees 'em,' like a Thomas E. McVicker, James C. by a committee of American Le­ His return to a business career schedule of study proposed al­ the responsibilities of proctors and baseball umpire." Moravec, Dale R, Morlan, Francis aion membel·~. haded by George In the United States was inter­ though the corps plan states that will introduce the proctors to the Murray, R. H. Nies, H. Noble, Sterba, (or a r.p metal drive rupted in 1933 when he fell ill of the submission of one lesson a individual sections. After the for­ throughout the city. ColJeclions Roman T . P 0 tth0 ff I J • M. Robert- tuberculosis. After recovering he week is desirable. mal part of the meeting, students son, Waldo E. Smith, John C wlll probably be made in a house­ joined the staff of the national The subjects selected for the will have a chance to get ac­ 65 Draftees Leave Smith, R. E. Vierck, Lyle D' to-hou·e canva , wilh coverage tubelculosis association in 1936. course require no previous mili­ quainted with their proctors .. Wylie, F'. G. Young and L. J' based on the four air-raid dis­ Doppler is a fellow of the Amer­ tary training. Text books and all Upperclassmen as well as fresh­ For State Center Juska. . trict, it w£s stated yesterday. ican Association for the Advance­ study material required will be men and new students are uf(ed lerba's commIttee h pes to ar· furnished each student free of ment of Science, the American to attend. Sixty - five Johnson county range Iran port.alion facilities for Public Health association, and the charge and may be retained by him tre t ervice, c mparable to that after coJ'npletion of the course. draftees left this morning for the IConference of School adult education association. He Allied troops baltIinr advancinr Japs In the mountainous interior state induction center, Walter Sho- • USed by the boy couts in the has written several popular pam­ The marine corps is now mak­ of New Guinea must be well 5uPDUed with food and ammunition io quist, chief clerk of the county SupervIsors Cancelled alummum drive some months ago. ing arrangements . to contact di­ phlets on tuberculosis which have carryon the firM, so transport planes have been used 10 drop sup­ Art Guild to Discuss selective service board, announced had an aggregate distribu tion of rectly all University of Iowa men plies. Crew of one of the cargo planes Is pictured above tossing For the first tlme in 29 years, the who are concerned and will pro­ yesterday. over 25,000,000 copies. bundles til troops on ground below. The Japs are trying to capture At the army center the men will annual state conference on ad­ Will Lecture Tonight vide them with all the necessary the vital Allied base at Port Moresby. Program Tomorrow ministration and supervision, Prof r J. Van del' Zee 01 the information for enrollment. take their :final physical examina­ tiOn and will be inducted into the which usually brines nearly 400 political Jenre department will The Art Guild will hold its first United States army. After induc­ superintendents and principals ot deliver the third in the series of Suspect Mrs. Madsen First Aid Instruction Sophomore Engineers Department Heads ' meeting of the year at 4 O'clock tion they will return home to be­ Iowa schools to the SUI campus, lecture ror "The World Toda)," tomorrow afternoon in the audi­ gin a l4-day furlough belore en­ has been cancelled. counHILADI Under the Iowa law the names ..., ...... , f_ -.""" -r'...... -.Pri4or -r .... ate credit by aUendl ng classes at ~ ~alled of the indicted persona muat be Vanderbilt Fortune Mounts withheld until their arrest. the university may enroll tor the Will Represent SUI tit! SPIller! Saturday cia" plan up untJI Oct. Prof. Clarence W. Young, assi- BALTIMORE (AP}-Boatswain ~"'~1. ~ !i!J-Mt! ~S'-" ~ ,"etodt , hi 8. stant professor of psychology at Alfred Gwynn Vanderbilt yester­ ~, Salurdl .EI ected to Ch a Irmanl IP Clauea wlll be held on 8 dozen Colgate 4nlversity, Hamilton, N. day automatically inherited $5,- claleago I." ~OU ' II 0 Pro!. George H. Coleman of the Saturdays between Oct. 10 and Y., will represent the University 000,000 on reaching his 30th birth­ ~ thin .. , chemistry department hal been April 3. A total of 43 courses will 01 Iowa at the inauguration , 01 day to add to the $10,000,000 he lbfO\lI nl elected chairman of the division of be oltered by 18 departments and Everett Case as Col,ate's ninth already has. F'lve years from now, he'll receive another and final In­ III • dtlk suaar chemistry and technololY of Itudenta may earn a maximum of president. Prott880r Young is an • tl'\lCU the American Chemical locieb'. I!x aemestet: hoW'. of credit, alwnnua of S.UI. heritance of $1i,000,000, --' -. --- .. --