I 1943 = ""'" ... ,Talk Ration (alenCla; I' U ilL 0 J L couponl 0 expire Sept. IM/; TtRE8 o mus, be Inspecled b y Bel'l. 30; MEAT .lImp. X. 'i and Z and A and B meat , tamPi In Book 3 expire Cooler '~rtes Oet. J : PROCESSED 1'0001 l\ampi U. V AI>4 w ex­ pire Oct. 20; B.ROWN atamp C expire. OCt. 10: 8UG-\R THE DAloLY 10wa-OeeallouJ raW. eMler. Ilamp 14 and HOMIt CANNING Itamp. U and 18 IOWAN lIy one that expire Ocl. 31; S HOE BlImp No. 11 axpl... Oct. 31; IDr MCCloy FUEL OIL per. 1 coupons, '43-'44, expire Jan. 3. '44. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper I section 01 FIVE CENTS 'fBI ...OeIATED nlll IOWA CITY. IOWA THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1943 'flit ASIOCIA'f&O PUll VOLUME XUV NUMBER S lIDS 'sical tralJll, It the Ire~t tile lack ~I board Ihi~ e ter. Prof~ work Out a m on ahiPt ~5ce nt Ille~ gra m." PrQ. rhe eXllert. a es Inen has proVed !ed to ~helr the usual ne exercise Itliludes ot WOn With ' !d. For tOla Ie man Is "I 100 tOil. oviet Bor• er ! more Illen ~------~--~------. perience ot II COndition NAZIS WITHDRAW LINES AS REDS ADVANCE ON :: Fifth Army May Enter City lfes~or Me­ F ommUnltita Red 'Army Is Now 110 Miles · he facilities ave Worked from Polish, Rumanian Lines 11'~;~~jf====~~t~~'~i~;~~~i~;~~~~~~!~~~~~;Y~::~lAt Any Moment ~ -~z~Re~af , TERRITORY REGAINED IN 1943 rill be ;; o __~=S<:;'iiilf_-===:1_ By NOLAND NORGAARD schOOl for IGD LONDON, 1'hll1'Hday (AP )-l<'lying Soviet columns, more t.hon ALLIED IIEADQUARTER IN N RTH AFRJ (AP)-Th Am rican Firth army ra d h they wil! 400 mil e apart, 11!IVO pier 'ed to within 110 miles of both the old - la t night to within Ii f w mUes of ra\'a eu Napl and was expected to nt r tb terrorized city econd lieu. Polish bord('r in thA n Ol'th and the RumaDian frontier in the south at any moment after driving the ermall ' into full C1ight ac the oa. tal plain near Mt. V n· wllile f1 thiNI (Ii·iv!' roll crl into It Dnieper r ivor island little more vitL'~ with strong armorcd foree . lS co m~any thall 0 qll fl l·ter-mil(l fl'olll the gun -studded hills of Kiev, Moscow aRtell ammare, tJle mINal mil ft·om Naplt''' and tb wh01 orr nto pt>nin lila flanking lssle tl'llin. 15 aonollu ('ed INlay. fh e Bay of Toples to the south, were in alii d hand. C specialist In the nortb, the d al'Dly advanced half-way from Smolensk the affairs n pn Il brolldcast from London, Elmer P t rsOll of B said tb allied armi· 11oul<1 be 1'0' Vitebsk by capturing town of Rndnya on the SO-mile 1/ centers. to th rail­ tm'ing Naple!'! by today. mblic rela. >fay line between these two ci ties. Despi te raiD-soaked roads the (The Oerman-controlled Paris radio said Ole British fl 1 b8 approach d til Gulf f ' apJ crulting. or Soviets advanced more t han nine miles, killing 1,000 Oermans, ( nit. of Ih fie t. th batt rie of which can be exp cted to a si t groond rore in tit final pu. h, army oW. ea pturing 'much wal' materiul and oceupying 120 towns and ham­ hu\'e been pntrolling the gulf area for several days.) IS. lelB. The stont mountain u Cens. north of 1:)81 rno. in wlliel1 th! erm n for ix day gav ground , P ~m i er Marshal Jo. eph Stalin, in one of two orders of the day, grudgingly in the face of continuous attacks. /U1gA'~'d suddenly al'ly TueRdoy and th n vani bra, called Rudnya, ten miles fl'om the northern border of White Rus- headquart rs 8nnounc d Y lSt rdny. 'ia on the rail line that leads to 'fh vi ·to/·iOUR army of Li ut. Oen. Mark W. lark thcn roll d down On tb Nap) plain. II Riga, "a power f u 1 enemy threw into baUl hi tanks and stronghold and a center of com­ • '. • * * * mobil artill ry, which had. been ~laYic Army n11lnicatiollS ill the Vitebsk di· At the Front Imo. t u ) . in 1h pa t w k rection.' , of mOllntain flgohting. At Kiev. the RUilsians burst .out He was raclnl last nliht [or 'fHE CAUCASUS Plane Herds l through· German defense lines to the smokln, lind exploding clty Of Liberation capture the .bridgehead fortifica­ 'I of 925,OOO-lh first ven ap~ tions of Tl'ukhanov island. a river proachln, that size In all the vast bastion directly in 1ront 'of central Captives areal ot Alric., Sicily and Italy BaHles Nazis Kiev. The river is 1,400' feet ~ide already wrested from the Nad,. -___ J "- '" ...... Pilot, Radioman a t this point. TURKEY Rome and Milan are two only In the advance ~he Russians IRAN Round Up 150 larler Italian cltl . Patriots Kill 'Large '" The (Hrmans were In Iwln. also caplured Darnltsa. nine Prisoners-Alone orderl, retreat whleb may not OF m=fl!!ted war with Russia, In which the Nazis b ..ve now retreated behind ihe Number of Germans' miles east of Kiev after several Cf;)l1~~E GE~MANY\ S ' end until they reacb tbe Vol ­ fonner Polish fr~ntjer. '15 shown In the above map ot the lone eastern front. In I~aly, Yugoslavia days fllrh~lnc. The communltlue WASHINGTON, (AP)- A navy torno river line. %0 mil north said they killed more lhaD p."O flier lind his radio man captured 01 Naples and almOllt due west LONDON (AP)-The Yugoslav Gtrmans and desb:oyed 69 tankS of the ,reat For," air center 150 Italian soldiers and herded O~~1fIIIi II'IIl.Y of liberation battled crack and 71 tuns. Much ' booty -and siat~ :Subcommittee Sh-el-Ye-s -U.S-.. Bo- iD-ber-s R-.ii~- aer.,.. tbe penln ula. hleb feU them to American lines without German troops over a wide front many prisoners filiI to the Vic'. with I. 13 vlrtualb Intact ab letlvln, their plone during the yesterday. including the ItaUan torloUl SovieI8. Ileids Monda,. Sicilian invasion, the navy re­ "The enemy', defensive rln city of Trieste. where Its troops "Remnants of ,!lOuted (.';erm~n HOUse ::o Posi~War ' Policy'o 'Bill ; W~wak Base A9am ported yesterday. around Naples I, broken, a mili­ WId f killing "a large number of troops were hurled onto the right Large Munitions Dump • • • tary spokesman declared emphati­ Nazi soldIers." (west) bank of the river." it said. The airmen were Lieutenant cally. The Yugoslav p~triots continued " ... the fighting (was) for ' the Destroyed; Explosion (j. C.) Paul E. Courhlln. Ecnna, (The Britlsb Pre I association successful oper~tions In Monte- liquidation of the enemy bridge­ , May Come Up Again and there were indications that Biggest in S. Pacific Mo.. and radioman Richard aid the allies hod entered Pom­ negro, Hercegov1Oa . and the prov- head fortifications ... Our troops, the senate subcommittee would baler. Albany. Ore.• wbo di­ pell, the city at the foot 01 Vesu­ For Consideration rected the prisoners' march by i{lce of Saodzak, said a Yugoslav capturing the enemy bridgehead attempt to spell out in greater de- ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN vius 12 mt1es southeast ot Naple , ~~ ~()mml.lt\t

, 'AGET'WO THE DAILY, IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA THUllSDA y, SEPTEMBER 30, 1943 ~===--=-==~======~~====~======~r======~======~~~~==~==~======- THE DAILY IOWAN Savings and Taxes- 2,5, 10 Years Ago- OFFICIAL DA'ILY BULLETIN Publlshed every morning except Monday b:r I Student PublicaUona Incorporated at 126-130 Members of congress responsible for fram­ Iteme In the UNIV1:IIBl'fV CALJ:NnAlt ate achodule4 In thl .,.. ing tax measures seem to be unanimotls in "...... c!ellt'. OftlC8! Old Capitol. Item. tor the GENJ;RAL NOTleD ~ [owa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. ' ~, t'IlO.lted wI II me ~"nllu, edlt~ ot 'fh' Dilly Iowln or mIl'i the opinion that no really sub tantial addi­ \~ lac"ll In \~ box provIded fOT. thll~ dllllou~ In til. 'ollle" of From The , Illy lo,...n. -GENERAL NOTICE" mUlt be .t 'Th41 Dally low.. Board of Trustees: Wilbur Schramm, A. Crall tion to Treasury revenue can be r~alized 4:30 p. m. the day p.keellnr flr.t llUbJl~~tlon : notlc... will NOT '" I~llteel by telephon., Ind mUll be TYl'ED OR LEGIBLY warnu ~ Baird, Kirk H. Porter, PaUl E. Olson, Jack within the familiar federal tax structure. and SIGNED by I re~ponalbl. parton. Moyer&, Dan McLaughlin, John Doran, Donald No sum approaching the $12,000,000,000 de­ Vol. XXI, No. 1662 Thursday, September 30, IIU I Ottilie, Ed Bowman. manded by the administration will come from Iowan Files ---- tax: increases. Indeed, congress is adamant UNIVERSITY CALENDAR • By Fred M. Pownall, PubUaber again t an increa e of $B,OOO,OOO,ooO in in· De. Marie Nau, Advertising Manqll Sept. 30, 1941 ... come taxes, with withholding taxes at 30 in­ Thursday, Sept, SO vision and administration, Jtadio The J James F. Zabel, Editor Prime Minister Churchill re­ stead of 20 percent. 9 a. m. Conference on. super­ Statlon, lzed in ported to the English parliament V1Slon and administration, Old 2 p.m. Wlsconsin vs. Iowa, lowl Entered as second class mail matter at the post­ The income tax cow-at least the teat lead· that Britain's position ' was im­ ROme fe Capitol. stadium. present oWce at Iowa City, lowa,"under the act of con;; ing from the white coUar class-has been Thursday, Oct. '1 proved and that he was exultant 10 a. m. Hospital library pot oldest 0 of March 2, 1879. about milked dry. creu over the decrease in shipping luck luncneon, University club. 12 M. Luncheon, Universi\f nusl rE 2 p. m. Kensington (Red Cross club; speaker, G~U:'dner Cowl.. , • • • losses. An article on the editorial learl1in~ Subscription rates-By mall, $5 per year; by 1'wo other p,·oposo.ls-compulsory sav­ sewing), Unlverslty club. 4 p. m. In!ormatlon fir s I. page commented, "recent word the uni carrier, 15 cents weekly, $5 per year. ings and highet· social security taxes­ Friday, Oct. 1 Gardner Cowles, speaker, Senate The 0 Member of The Associated Preu have been considered. It is clear, how­ from Germany said that Hitler 9:30 a. m. Conference on super­ chamber, Old Capitol. science The Associated Press is exclusively entiUed to ever, that cmnpulsOl'y savings do not had told his people not to expect vision and administration, Old 8 p. m. University lecture, by drews, I Capitol. upton Close, Macbride auditorium. UIe for republication of all newl dispatches prodttce revenue. The money is bor­ news from the Russian front for and NUl the next few days. Tltis usually 4:15 p. m. The reading hour, ~rlday, Oct. 8 OIfIlze [ credited to it or not otherwise credited in th1J rowed. And collection of social secltrily o 0' University theater lounge. 4:15 p. m. The reading houri paper and also the local news published herem. taxes builds up f1tt'iu'B government lia. means that something big is brew­ sli'uctur ~ ing in Europe. It could mean that 7:45 p. m. Baconlan lecture: University theater lounge. The bilities of imposvng proportiO'll8. The Hitler is going to attack the "Social and Polltical Art and 7 :45 p. m. Baconlan lecture: spoken TELEPHONES "The Natural Sciences," by Pr9f, Editorial Office ... ____ .192 sound and healthy policy is, of course, American unanned bridge of ships Science," by Prof. Troyer Ander­ went bl to pay as nnwh of the war burden now as a that we have sworn to protect. son, senate chamber, Old CapltQL George Glockler, senllte ch1rubtr, It was Society Editor _. __.. U93 Saturday, Oct, 2 Old Capitol. Business Office _ .. _.. ______.191 possible. "Frankly we don't like this one of t .,.. 'no news for several days on the Dad's Day Saturday, Oct. 9 ern scll 9 a. m. Graduate lecture by 2 p.m. Iowa Pre-Flight VI, THURSDAY, SJP'l'EMBER 30, 1943 That the money is in the country to sup­ eastern front.' We don't like it jlubllo, because It bodes 111, it stands to Douglas McGregor, senate cham­ Iowa, Iowa stadium. t~e cam port higher taxes is undoubted. It is nOL in ber, Old Capitol. 8 p.m. Meteorology ball, Iowa possession of the middle class, the traditional prove all too .oon that unarmed nin, WE 10 a. m. Conference on super- Unlon. rn,s, an' victim of the income tax policy. It is in the bridges Ilre vulnerable, aDd that 'The Amerioan talk In tllnes of crisi. ..:..--- have bE Great Folly' possession of dsfense workers. 'rhe Federal (For bdormatlon tecarelinr dates be70nd &his Khedule, _ any mel is probably the cheapest talk In l'elern&iODS III &he oIllee of &he President. Qld Capitol.), Five years ago today the press was report­ Reserve Board estimates that total payments the WIOrl"," cept or ing to anxious Americans the final scen(! of to individuals are at the annual rate of Contemporary prints from 30 which . a great drama. The place: Munich. The time: $144,000,000,000, an increase of one-fourth famous European and American GENERAL NOTICES date. It .'-, The pap 1938. Th e character&: Hitler, Mussolini, Da­ over last year, and that $22,000,000,000 of it artists went on display in Iowa IOWA UNION PH.D. FRENCH I:XAMINATION read OUI ladier, Chamberlain. The argument: War or is being witllheld for taxe . Memorial Union today as the firs! MUSIO ROOM SOHEDULE The Ph.D. French examinaUon important gallery to be sponsored "buil-pe peace. There is concern about tho great hoarel of Sunday-ll to 6 and 7 to 9. will be given Thursday, Oct. 7 dlJcussi( .According to the American press, the na­ money Amel'jcans will have at the end of I!! . this academic year by the art de­ Monday-ll to 2 and 3 to 9. trom 4 to 6 p. m . in room 3l4, partment. Schaeffer hall. Please make ap. tion seemed satisfied with the outcome, al­ the war. Individual savings will reach Tuesday-ll to 2 and 4:15 to 9. SOOI The 1941 version of the world 11 though perhaps a trifle worried. Hitler was $35,000,000,000 this yeat·, it is predicted. WednesdaY- ll to 6. plication by Tuesday, Oct. 5, in Baconial serlls was to open toclay In New Thursday-ll to 2 and 4 to 9. room 307, Schaeffer hall. No ap. appeased in tile third act, and a minor char· Some observers are of the ouillion that Amel'­ " Yotl with the Brooklyn Dodg'erl ror the Friday-ll to 2 and 3 to 9. plicatio(l wlll be received. after litre th, aeter-a Czech named Mastny-who had icans will attempt to spend $20,000,000,000 opposinr the . that time. Saturday- 11 to 3. had a BC very few lines, was forced to 'give up the for consumer goods during the first six 3:15-Reminiscing Time ROMANCE LANGUAGE Sudetenland in order to facilit{l.te the happy Sept. 30, 1938 ... rick ca months of peace. 'rho problem is to divert 3:30-News, The DIlUy Iowan The Munich agreement made on the state of peace that's been DEPARTMENT Shambal IOWA STATE MEDICAL ending. some of these war wages, with their poten­ 3:35-Iowa Union Radio HOur this day by Europe's four major decla.red at Munich." Loos tor • • • tialities for inflation, into tax revenue. What SOCIETY- RECREATIONAL S~G erature, A script on "Rheumatic Fever," 4-Conversational Spanish powers provided for the gradual Prof. Harry Barnes of the speech 4-5:30 p. m. d ail y, except Thus, when the wrtain rang down on the method will be has not been determined, occupation of the Czechoslovakian en fOT( 4:30-Tea Time Melodies Wednesday, which is '101' Sella It The Great Ji'oUy" five years ago, two prepared and presented by Dr. Sudeten to begin on Saturday, department was named general cine, MI but the great white collar class will be lucky 5- Children's Hour club. of the pla.yers went hO'YI~e completely if it is not dragged down completely ill the Robert L. Jackson of Iowa City, I which was Hitler's deadline. head of the HomecornJng mass for engil will be heard ovel' WSUl this 5:30-Musical Moods A line from the news story is meeting committee. 7:30-9 p. m. - Tuesday and u a rep satisfied with theil' performance, two process. 5:45-News, The DIlUy Iowan Thursday. tIJere a little wOI'ried about the whole morning at 9 o'clock. almost pitiful: "Deladler, return- I From "Around the Town" by sily. 6-Dinner Hour Music inC to bis hotel said they spent . Merle Miller-After a year in 10-12 o. m.-Saturday. At the thing, and one went home withOttt his 7-United States in the 20th Beginning Friday, SIIPt. 17, the ONE MAN'S OPINION- Utelr time explalninr to Mastny. Germany Gunberg is not as wor­ came e~ shirt- following an explanation by Mr. Century recreational swimming periods at too larg, Northern Italy- One Man's Opinion, the editorial CzechOslovak minister to Bedin, ded about Hitler as the rest of us the women's pool In the women', Deladier that the occupation of the page of the air, is presented over 7:30-Sportstime why they felt It was necessary to '" Gunberg says ... I'd call and thUi 7:45-0ne Man's Opinion gymnasium are open to alL wom· S1ldetenlanii was " Necessary to I keep Some observers have raised the question WSUI each Thursday evening at accept the agreement." him a benevolent despot .. .. . competJr 8-Navy Pre-Flight Band en university students, facllllr, 1 peace." I, ~ wllether the allies are determined to occupy 7:45 when W. Earl Hall, manag­ A feature story entitled "Ain't it S 30 1933 came fjr 8:30-Treasury Star Parade Wonderful" quoted Steve Vasi- ept., ... laculty wives, wives of graduate which in • • • all of Italy against Nazi opposition. One of ing editor of the Mason City students and administrative staft the war aims announced at Casablanca was Globe-Gazette, discusses a current 8:45-New5, The Daily Iowan lakos,. self appointed official pea- A dispatch from G e n e v a pbliosopl Oddly enough, the fifth character seemed 9-University Plays Its Part ' nut vender of the White House I quoted a. high German olficlal Husbands may also swim, in the political to sense that the play was not officially 'O"ler, to knock Italy out of the war. That 1138 been subject. Tonight's program, "The Tuesday and Thursday periodJ, 7 American Legion Speaks Again," lawn, as saying, "Look, the world's as sayinr that the crylnr need anyone and he feared that he might lose every­ achieved for all practical military purpose. in Europe was the disarmament to 9 o'clock. Students present their was thel will include a discussion on the Network Highlights yelling and pu~hing lilt each other thing in the next act. Suuh reasoning was '1'he Nazis will be unable to obtain any­ Of Germany's neighbors. identification cards to the matron ciub ill t recent national American Legion except here, here is peace and no at the desk. All others pay the conveniently doubted, however, "by other thing of value in that country 11enceforth, The foreign mlnl8t~r t 0 I d political convention held in Omaha. Red-NBC fuss. Big Shots are getting red in fee at the university business 01- members of the cast. and they wjJl be compelled Lo reduce the WHO (1040); WMAQ (670) the foea everywhere, here we ain't. newsmen that Germa.ny would poized insist on boldin, arms at a. Jevel fice. which w Today, in scanning the playbill, we see strength of their inner fortress to protect NAVY TIME- "Over there there are guns, MARJORIE CAMP it: '1'hc allies already have captured their Lieut. Louis P. Gregory of the 6-Fred Waring in Pleasure here there ain't no guns. Hete to which neighbors would de­ It was sc that only one member of the original cast· is seend. At this time the name a need II still intactr-and his performance is beeom­ greatest prizes-ports aud aidields. They' athletic department at the Navy Time there is squirrels on the lawn.' cm ALPHA cm 6:15-News, John W. Vander- Ain't it wonderful." "Steve was WILS still Chncellor lUtler. humaniti ing a little shoddy at this point. One of the Jll1lY have everything they need now that tlley Pre-Flight school, wiII be the Chi Alpha Ch1 will meet in met by guest of the Navy Time program cook referring to the United States The U, W. A. entertained 150 have captured Foggia, which is a center of women who registered irom an­ room 210, old dental buUding, at Hum8ni s characters died; two were swallowed up in broadcast weekly at 12:30. 6:30-The Fred Brady Show alono, bpt we'~e referring to the a moro d namic revival of the play sometime one of Italy's greatest clusters of ail·ports. other state or transferred to this 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 4. natural c 6:45-E:altenborn Edits the News world at large this mornlnr, to WILLIAM DRAKI later i and one fell from his balcony at the Oceupation of Rome may be advisable' for University, at a tea held in the the begb MORNING CHAPEL- 7-Maxwell House Coffee Timc Iowa Memorial Union yesterday. Secretary the fami l beginning of the last act. ' . purposes of prestige. Bllt northern Italy may Elizabeth Conroy, representing 7:15-Night Editor 11 :30- Ray Heatherton's Orches­ not bo worth the cost unless a large Nazi The Daily Iowan devoted four • was the • • • Ilhe Canterbury club of the Episco­ 7:30-The Aldrich Family tra ' columns on the editorial page to SOCIAL DANCING LESSONS leamed It took 1lS of that a1tdience a good long army can be trapped lind eliminated there. pal chl1rch, will be the guest over 8-Kraft Music Hall 11:55-News the explanation of a plan whereby W.R.A. social dancing leSSOl1l or less time to figure out the real and under­ • • • Morning Chapel at 8 o'clock this 8:30-John Davis-Jack Haley mass meetings would be held in will begin Monday, Oct. " All these .morning. lying morals of ] 938's leading drama. Cel·tainly the Nazis are gettillg pre­ Show CBS towns and cities throughout the Tickets for the lO-week C01lf1e, 'vate hOlT 9-Jimmy Durante WMT (600); WBBM (870) Some of 1LS haven't figt£1'ed it 016t yet. Ci01t8 little coopomtion out of the Ital­ United States to de t e r min e wbich a re sold for $1, are to go the lead NAVY PRE-FLIGHT BAND- 9:30-March of Time whether the people of America on sale tomorrow at the Women's participo There has been considerable 'switching ians now, fm' all their campaign of The concert band of the Navy 10-News 6-1 Love a Mystery back and forth, ancl a good deal' 'Of blood terl·orism. And whenever the Italians really want disarmament. The gymnasium. Tickets should be I Pre-Flight school features the 10:15-Harkness of Washington 6:15-Harry James findings would then be sent to obtained in advance of the first Baconi spilled since the play's first season. Even get outsidll 1M periphery of Hitler's in­ "Iowa State Flight Song" tonight 10:30-Words at War 6:30-Easy Aces Geneva for the conference to be meeting next Monday. All uni· central I !ltwnce, they help the allies. Already at 8 o'clock over WSUI in prep a- ll-War News a Japanese company did a neat job 'of 6:45-Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost beld there. (See BULLETIN, page 5) aU; but reviving the play sometime ba~k. But, I talian troops have aided in the ocou­ ration for the football game next 11:05-Three Suns Trio Persons being Bpi today fat· the first time, it looks as if pation of Sardinia and Corsica. Sautrday when the Seahawks will 11:30-Ellery Queen 7-Farm Ad Program nical or~ the drama is beginning to near the end • • • meet Iowa State college at Ames. 11:55-News 7:1S-WMT 'Band Wagon passed it It is unlikely thaL a penetration of Hitler's Also heard on the half hour I -- 7:30-Death Valley Days John Selby Reviews New Books- represen1 of its -a more s1tccessful run tkatt broadcast will be the "Song of the Blue we tltottght back in '40. fortress is intended ft'om bases in northern 7:5S-Bill Henry and News learning, Volga Bo,tman," a tribute to our KSO (1460); wENR (890) 8-Major Bowes lecture c • • • Italy. The Alps are too formidable a barrier. Russian ally. Other numbers in­ 8:30-The Dinah Shore Program scholarly The one surviving character of the original But southern and cenLral Italy can be profit­ clude: "EI Cal/itan," (S 0 usa); 6-Wings to Victory 9-The E'irst Line Scorming the~ Worl~ vailed. T cast is having a llm'd time of it these days. ably employed as bases in many ways. "Mignon," (Ambrose Thomas); 6:30-The Fighting Coast Guard 9:30-ConEidentially Yours was undl Rumor has it that he is about ready to leave With Sardinia and Cor ica occupied and "Wotan'<; Farewell and Magic Fire Dance Band 9:45--Fighting lferoes qf the was redu the stage for good-a. blow whieh might 'Well probably tlJC Dalmatian coast pet'haps next Water," (Wagner); "American Red 7-News, Earl Godwin U. S. Navy Gmduate mean the downfall of one entire school of to fall into allied }Iands, northern Italy will Cross," (Panella). ' 7:15-Lum and Abner 10-News, Douglas Grant Of Current Reading became I acting. And th/l.t would truly be sad. be outflankod in' any case. 7:30-America's Town Meeting 10 :15-News, FUlton Lewis Jr. under thE TREASURY STAR PARADE- of the Air 10:30-Meet the Seahawks lures." -----~~--~------Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra 7:45-Captain Midnight ll-News •"THE. AMI:RICAN,"*** by James to know what*** is difrerent aboul us,• The or will be featured over Treasury 8:30-Victory Parade ot Spot- 11 :15-0pen House was reta Truslow Ada.ms (Scribner'S; $3). and where we are alike. To that Star parade at 8:30 tonight. Vo­ light Bands 11:30-Boyd Raeburn's Band lectures \ Allies Aim' af Eoggia-Naples Line calists Betty Brewer and Skip 8:55-Sports, Harry Wismer 12-Press News James Truslow Adams' "The end he explores our roots, and he state of Nelson will orrer the lyrics with 9- Raymond Gram Swing American" IS an extreme.ly useful analy..: s our conduct. various j ~ ------.------"Somebody Loves Me," "Para­ 9:1S-Listen to Lulu MBS book right now, when many of us Mr. Adams is not a mighty com. universit~ occupation of Italy. The Mediter­ Germany. They have been secured. mount on Parade," "You Rhyme 9:30-Revlon Revue wonder Just what we repr sent, Simpson Calls This WGN (720) miltee from Bome far away "foun· partrnenL ranean campaign was inaugurated They also afford jump-off posi­ With Everything That's Beautiful" l(k- News, Roy .Porter and just what Americans are sup­ that ther, First Goal in Italy and brilliantly carried through for tions to strike across the Adriatic and "The Night We Called It a 10:15-News, Henry J. Taylor 7-This I<; Our Enemy posed to be like. Mr. Adams is dation." but. a man. Therefore providing By KlRKE L. SIMPSON a purpose, to secure closer­ at the Balkans or up the Tyrrhen- Day." 10:30-Les Brown's Orchestra 7:30-Human Adventure trying, very hard and very erl­ what he writes must be judged in &round I ASSOCIATED PRESS WAR up bases from which to strike at (See INTERPRETING, page 5) lO :55-News 8:30-U-Tell-Em-Club ously, to determine the things that tho light of what Mr. Adarhs II, graduate , i ANALYST TODAY'S PROGRAMS ll-Del Courtney's Orcheslra 9: 15- Dale Carnegie make us J\mericans. He wants quite as much as it must be judpd they migl Allied occupation of Naples, in­ --~>~--~------in the !igh t of his Iindlngs. Mr. velopmen 8- Morning Chapel Adams is a conscrvatlva gelltleman their OWl dicated in advice8 from General Washington in Wartime- Hollywood Sights and Sounds 8:15-Musical Miniatures who on October L8 will be 65 years Pu Eisenhower's headquarters to be 8:30-News, The Daily Iowan old. His A.B. carne from YaJe In In orga only hours away, will end the 8:45-Program Calendar 1000, and until 1912 he was on tbe lures the second phase of the war on the 'Buffalo Bill' Will Be Joel McCrea's Last 8:55-Service Reports New York Stock exchange. TIlt llOSeas 9- Iowa State Medical Societ)' Italian mainland. It alsO' will open Movie for the Duration Baruch and Manpower Muddle data furnished in "Who', Who" lectures • 9:1S-Life and Work in Russia include this item in the midlt 01 ,Primary 1 the still unpredictable third . act By ROBBIN COONS 9:SO-Music Magic it a considerable Jist ot honors: ''B1 I1'aduate of the great drama of the Mediter- 9:45-Keep 'Em Eating .wASHINGTON- Is possible By JACK STINNETT system of temporary deferments ranean which began with Ameri­ that the man who straightened out request 01 .enators appeared be­ under·gra HOLLYWOOD-Joel McCrea, a movie fan, and the influence of 9:50-Greek News (all of which are supposed to ex­ can landings in French Africa a oUf rubber muddle is going to this Baruch plan is successful, it tore senate judiCiary committee 1ft bers of little less than eleven months ago. big likeable chap who is 38 and the movie stars upon his own life. 9:55-News, The Dally Iowan pire the last ot November). OPl>a!1tiOD to president's Sup!1IIIe friends, II 10-;-Paging Mrs. America straighten 0 u t 0 U l' manpower will become a blueprint lor the In view of President ROOIIe- father of two boys, let it be known mUddle, too? • • • court plan, 1937." tivilies th Joel was a fan of George Itl:15-Yesterday's Musical Fa- entire country and would lorestall Telt's ~tlJnate of the VIlA stra- quietly not long ago that "Buffalo O'l3rien, the bulky western star I mean the veteran Bernard M. He suggest.q that some part-time It i to be expected that Mr, lions in t vorites Baruch, who is holding more con­ natiQ~al service legislation which schooling system be worked out to Adam would di.scover that tPt lented In teric importance of alUed seizure Bill" would be his last movie for and physical culturist. Joel met 10:30-The Bookshelf almost everyone agrees is a ne­ give .back to industry at least II Americal) "Is himself as yet I ian thus of Fonta, it can no lonrer be the duration. George one day at the Hollywood t'1-LittIe K now n Religious ferences on the benchlls of Lafay­ I ette park these autumn days than cessary evil if other efforts fail. portion of the more than 1,800,000 hodge-podgc"; tha t we h a I8nlzalion doubted that the Naples-Focgta He was quitting, he said, to see Athletic club, and later George Groups v' Une WIl8 the first b~ objective if he couldn't do some job about helped him- get on the movie lots ever he holds in his office. In view of this, some of the sa­ youngsters who have been con­ "raisect woman to an almost im­ l1'adllate , 11 :S0- Farm Flashes Recently, the war cabinet's dean lient pOints of the Baruch plan tributing to the war production possible eminence"; that Amerl· university of British-American armies. The the war that would help more than and pick up extra work. Joel still 12-Rhythm Rambles next prObable allied move il not making movies. credits O'Brien with helping to of advisers has laid It on the line are well worth recording. effort but who now arc returning cans "hove, to t1 great extent, noI tiQnofal 12:SO-News, The Daily Iowan in two red-tape slashing declar­ Most important is the suggested to school. been ure of thcmselves." ThJl era each 10 easy io I:lIseern. To liOme Here was H 011 y woo d badly formulate some of his own ideas 12 :45-Navy Time extent the initiative must- rest caught short on leading men, here of personal conduct and believes ations. In one he told congress ei­ system of labor priorities, which He wants ali war production last accounts, he belieVed, in peri 01 honori I-Musical Chats with the enemy. . - \ was a popular actor with a new that the western hero's IIbstinence ther to give Gen. George C. Mar­ would take out of the hands of communities to wage a real battle for our desire to "keep up ",ltIl those sch 2-Campus News Until allied leader~hip can <;letect hit, U'The More the Merrier"), here from alcohol and tobacco was a shall everything be asks in the the individual employer the right against labor turnover (more than the Joneses," and our tendenC1 Who were 2:10-0rgan Melodies in Nazi disPQsitiods and resistance was a fellow who in addition to determining factor in his own. way of manpower or fire him. to hire~ fire or hoard employ!s, 100 percent in some areas) by im­ toward being "joiners." Yet, Mr, I advancem 2:30- Radlo Child Study Club signs that the enemy has reached payini big taxes from pictures Then Joel became a s~r, and This is very muc/l in line with and Ol,lt of the hands of the proving housing, transportation, Adams writes, "the American W their repr ground where he proposes to stand was running a producing ranch of he had his own youthful fans, 3-The Bookman Baruch's idea of occupational de­ worker the right to work wher­ day nursel'ies for the children ot One of th. (l'eatest indlvldullilU This Is 8,gain, the maneuvering Of both 3,000 acres which this year has among them a kid who had fol- ferments 1irst and dependency de­ ever he chooses. The Baruch plan working mothere, a maximum en­ in the world." We are inclined 10 the funct allied IIrmies must conform"'in turned out IPO,OOO pounds of badly lowed him at Pomona college, physical culture and improved ferments second. But even more suggests that WPB determine, on forcement ot price and rent ceil­ want to ,et abead, and at tile under this some fueasure to the enemy's needetl beet for Uncle Sam-and known to pictures now as Robert their health. than the statements of General a basis of production needs, what ings, adjusted shopping and per- .ame time to deai r. "equaUty," I Graduate movements, unless the Naples- he WII5 stepping off the screen to Taylor. Taylor and McCrea are "I don't take any credit or feel Marshall and other military and factories should hire and which 80nal service schedules. dichotomy of con Iderabll ocIdl)eIL Wltk, the P'oggla line turns out '10 be the do "more" .for the war. friends now, but in those days self-important about it," he went selective service leaders, it put might even have to turn loose He favors wage incentives but Mr. Adams thinks our lmpeclal' bulletin b pte-selected IIllied frbnt in Italy ' It didn't make sense, and It (Taylor has since told him) the on, "because it's just a question of congress on the spot by making the some workers they now have. thinks they should be determined tic tendlncies worked thl'OujI' 8!id then tor the time being while other doesn't 'mlke much more sense would-be actor copied McCrea being before the public. No one father-draft vote a: vote ot confi. However, Washington would locally, not by a blanket policy. flUt our continentai exp.ruion, ,ad Whom We oJilerations are set in motion. And after you talk to Joel--except that from a distance-observjng him can doubt that the careers Of dence for our military leaders. only determine tlJe factory prior­ He want, a re.exarnJnation of the l topped sbort at our prlltnt boun' fO!' leader political rathel' than strictly mill- /you're dead sure that this is how on public appearances and noting gangsters influenced others to gani .., . Ity ratlnali. The actual details farm Labor d!lfel'mentl to be lure darl . Our humor i. Ixa"mUOIl fields, all< tary considerations may play - a 'He · feels about it. As he says, his manner, his clothes, and how life, just as a iood comic strip His second and more extensive would be , worked out by local farms don't become hldeawaye for (I), we like 100d Umet, notae, at\II orin, the major part in determining just "EverY man's got to decide things he wore his hair. character can influence youngsters statement ot manpQwer polley was committee$, for Baruch is In unessential wOl'kers. arl bother.d by subtlety. We 111 Thil ye how 1al' up the italian boot the for himself." • • • to eat theil' spinach, mind their a rebort to War Mo/,)iUzatlon Di­ apostle of decentr9lization. And he preters a change in the hospitable, expanstve, In~ Jlrl have beer IIll1es intend to drive at this stage I • • "And over a period of yeal'.3," mamas, and gl'ow up strong." rector James F. Bymes, recom­ Bllruch III so would, have a mOre costly cosl-plus yslem of letting Ad.ms beUev 1\ .our bAckgrouad lecturetl a of the war. You could get a hint as to the said Joel, "about a dozen different And all of this could be the why ~en!Jing ways and means ot positlve policy on essential lalJor contracts-a system tllat many "apt to be limited." h,O\tr, and It certainly is not in alll~stra- why of It, though, from recalling men have told me that I have some of MoCrea's proposed departure breaking the manpower bottleneck deferments and suggests even re­ others also feei opens the door to Th Is 18 both II picture of Mr, 18(110 In tegic books to Immobilize any more an earlier daY'when Joel was talk­ definite effect on their conduct. from the screen-as he "decided in welt coast airplane factories. turnIng to essential indUBtry men waste, extrava,ancc and labol' Adam' Am rica, and of JIr, Olel Caplt ~Op8 than absolutely, necessary in .log about hie own days jB a kid Qthej.'S were fellow5 w.ho took uP, things for hix.n:>elf." . Th._ important ,thin, is that U now in liervice., lIe opposes the hoarding. AClama. '~·teco ' fOIIo~ed 1'Ht1MDAY. SEPTEMBrn 30, 1943 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE THREI ¥ EYE-CATCHING TOPCOAT A tuxedo topper with a big soft Lieut. louis Gregory Oldest Organization- muff and a saUCJ' fur trimmed hat Among Iowa make an eye-catching trio, but To Be Guest Speaker definitely! These Cur trios are On WSUI Navy Time Bleonian Club Enlers 5_~h Year at University City People popularly made in ~ver-dyed coney, mink-dyed coney, lapin and Lieut. Louis P. Gregory 01 the -Friday Night Meetings Arriving tonight, John Thiel of sable bended muskrat. The tuxedo athletic department of the Navy btr 30, l'ea I Wooster, Ohio, will spend a two coat. designed with its flowing Pre-FliCht ~hool will be !.he JUest *** *** ••• weeks' vacation in the home of spe er o\'er Navy Time at 12:45 • By CARL E. SEASHORE Chick, 1887 ; Animal Intelligence,• free lines, will top any uit beau­ his brother, O. B. Th.iel, 626 tifully, and there you have a so- this afternoon. Lieutenant Grel­ Dean 01 Graduate Colle,e 1888; Observations and Experi­ ,tion, Radio Brooklyn Park drive. phisticated outfit, interchangeable. ory will describe the new pplica­ The Baconlan club was organ­ ments on Living sea-Urchins, Lieut. Guy Groff of Cedar of course, with d ilierent hats. tion ot track in lTaininl cadets for 1888; Skeletons of Invertebrate Rapids was a guest in the Thiel ,IOWII, Iowa ized In 1885, nnd has operated in muffs and suits. naval aviation. some form without break to the Animals, 1889 ; The Significance home yesterday. Lie ute nan t Aceeuories la Far t'7 , present day-58 y OI·S. It Is the of the Geographical DistributioJl Grott, a former University of Fur accessories, too, add a note Lieutenant Gregory won the Na- oldest organization devoted to an­ Iowa student, is stationed with UnIvel'8l1t of Certain American Mammals of glamour. Silver fo)( and ko- tional A A. U. distance title last 'r COWlet nual reports of th progress of lin armored diVision in California. linsky fur scarfs are moderately spring. a competitive race he had and Birds, 1890; Are Mammills the Ion 11 r~ learning within various fields of He Is spending a three-day fur­ priced, yet give a luxurious effect. tried to win for 15 years. In July Iker, Sella~ the university. Highest of the Vertebrates? 1890; lough at his home in Cedar Rapids. Separate collars of flattering lon, The organizers were the leading Can Acquired Characters Be In- • • • haired furs will work wonders for he won th 2 -mile marathon title lecture, b, IJclence professors, including An­ herited? 1891; Jelly Fishes, 1892 ; Mrs. Edith Welt returned to your last year' dressmaker uit at th famous F U River, :Udltorlum, drews, Calvin, Macbride, Leonard, her home in Kalona yesterday or coat, and a fur mult orf\Jr contest. During more than 20 years snd Nutting, whom today we rec­ Deep Sea Investigation, 1893; In- after a five day visit in the home trimmed hat wi11 always add a of running against the best dis­ adlng hll\ll' oanlze as plUak's of strength In the lormal Report upon the Bahama of her son and daughter-in-law, charming and dramatic touch. lance runners in the nation, [Jeu­ 'Die. ' structure at the university. Expedition, 1893; The Epiblastic IMr . and Mrs. Dale Welt, 1610 'E. Persian lamb. ga.lyak, sheared tenant Gregory has \Ion national an lecture' The organization was ral'ely Structure 0 f the Mammalia, College street. beaver and silver fox are candi- and Canadian tra~k till aIm t I," by Prot. spoken of as the Baconlan club; it Weapons of Animals, 1894; The • • '* dates for hat trims. Mink dyed every year. te challlber went by the name the Baconian. Origin and Significance of Sex, Mrs. W. V. Orr, 730 N. Linn furs and long haired furs uch as , It was appropriately named tor 1895; The Naples Zoological Sta- street, and Mrs. S. A. Fitqer­ lynx and kunk provide elegant .9 one of the great founders of mod­ tion, 1896; The Fur Seal and the raId, 436 S. Van Buren street, left trim for the front panels of the Kenneth Kurihara -Flight ern stlence. It was' open to the Seal Islands, 1897; Do the Lower yesterday evening for Iowa Falls, tuxedo coat. VI. public, and all scholarly men on Animals Reason? 1897; Observa- where the:v are aUendina the Color, color everywhere-yes Carl E. Seashore To Teach Japanese ball, Iowa IMe c~mpus attended. Friday eve­ tions on Young Chicks, 1898; The Grand Encampment convention. even in something so supposedly nln, was set aside for the meet­ Phosphorescent Light of Marine * * • CQIlventional as an 0 v ere 0 a t. Kenneth Kurihara, ~'ho received I",S, and fol' thh-ty years It would third, the lectures will be pub- Animals, 1899; The Eyes of the Mrs. Vernon Hostetter arrived Brown is the color of the y ar, not his Ph.D. degree in economics from J..... have been in very bad taste for lished individually and as a series Blind Cave Animals 01 North recently from Atlantic City, N. J ., ordinary brown, but rich caramel the University of Iowa in July, any member the faculty to ac­ America and their Bearing on .... ). oi for extensive circulation; and, to make her home with her and rusty shades and deep wood- J942. will leave Iowa City Oct. 1 cept or o!fer any engagement Evolutionary Doctrine, 1900; Jelly mother-in-law, Mrs. James Hos­ land tones. Blue, rang in. from for Yale university, where he will which would conflict with that fourth, this year the lectures will Fishes and their Relation to the tetter, 511 Ronalda street. Her smoky tones to aqua, Is another instMlct Jap n in the army spa­ date. It was the Baconlan night. gather around a central theme­ Hydroid Colony, 1900; A Visit to husband, formerly of Iowa City, favorite. AB always, mo y greens cialized training program. MINJ\DOH The papers wel'e called essaysj we "American Learning When Peace the Home of the Cliff Dwellers, are good while kelly green is Kurihara, who was born in read our essays and then followed Comes." 1901 ; Life on Board the United is now in the North African ~lCa mination theater of war. Mrs. HOItetter will classic. Clear tones of red are Japan, e rned his B. A. degr t lay, Oct. 1 "bull-pen " sessions-very lively Timely Move States Steamer Albatross, 1902; still a "must." Did you thi.nk grey Ohio Wesleyan in 1935 and htl discussions of the papers. The going to the radio is a Some Principles of Protective Col­ assume a position with the North­ A FUR TRIMMED tuxedo coat such as this one deeked out In leoparcl , room 314 western Bell telephone company was too drab? This year it has M.A. d gr at Ob rlin college in , make Learned Society timely move so that we can reach oration among Animals, 1903; The will add clamour to any wardrObe, and It's prnetical \oo! This eoat a~ here. become as Important as the clas.lc 1936 . He rved s a lecturer In Oct. 5, In I soon became evident thut the alumni and other friends of the Salmon and Salmon Fisheries of has the new deep armhole cut which makes It UI)' to sUp on over beige shades! economics at the University of the all. No al!­ Baconlan was the learned society university. Arrangements are in Alaska, 1904; The First Fauna of • • • ),oar IUlts, spelllne a warm serviceable outllt for cold weather. When Fabrl f Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Bonfield of Foc... on Ph'}' I th elved after 111: the entire faculty. The doors progress for the extension of the the World, 1906; ScientiIic Results worn over your 80ft dresses, It becomes an entlrel, new ensemble un­ Fabrics have a great deal to 1 IPP nes or r were therefore opened to all who coverage through other stations of the Hawaiian Cruise, 1907; A Grand Rapidsl Mich., will arrive rivaled In sophistication. A saucy fur trlmmd hat or a laree mufl of do with giving that smart new tomorrow for a short visit with ~NGUAGI had B scholarly interest. Thus Pat­ This is taking advantage of the Zoological Puzzle and Attempts at matchlne fur wtu add a dramatic touch, thUI provldlne a three-piece look and this year smooth 81 k iNT riek came In lor philosophy, modern means of communication its Solution, 1908; Some More Mrs. Bonfield's Sister, Mrs. Will­ Iur ensemble. materials Dre coming to the fore, DIVRY'$ Shambaugh lor poJilical science, Even Iowa City listeners need not about "La Jolla" and its Biologi­ iam Horrabin, 316 S. Capitol especially fOr fur trimmed or HANDY Loos [01' sociology, Ansley :tor lit­ come to the lectures unless they cal Station, 1910. street. Mr. and Mrs. Bonfield "I'll wear my overcoat," is no It's the newest thing-n back- tailored casuals. Particularly at­ ~G were * * * * * * I y, except erature, Wilcox for history, Teet­ are interested in the discussions, Ruued Naturalist married Tuesday and are en longer a purely masculine phrase, belted, -breasted coat styled tracUve are the fabrics with a which, by the way, may prove the Here is a delineation of an old- lor Beab ers for pharmacy, Dean Lor medi­ route west on their wedding trip. lor this fall the overcoat has be- after an army officer's. The sueded tini:sh--doeskin, ca hmere, Spanish· center of interest each evening, school rugged naturalist-a spe­ cine, McClain for law, Magowan • • • come the byword duvetyn and suede flnish d twill. and a center of JeUowshlp. They cies which reached Its peak in his of fashionable smoothest versions are dark mono­ ENGLISH esday aM lor engineering. and the President William Edwin Myers Jr., sea­ women Irom coast to coast. Over- tones or military gl'eyed-blue and Of course 10r classics, shetlands, .as a representaUve of the unlver~ can tUl'n on the radio every Fri- Hfetime. The world was his labor~ man third claBS, and Mrs. William fleeces and Harris-type tweeds are AND Illy. day evening for ten weeks and get atory. We have seen him as ex­ coats irl fur lined, tuxedo and un- all are cut, of course, with the IY. Edwin Myers Jr., seaman second trimmed styles will make you new deeper armhole. still unrivaled for good taste. At the turn of the century it be­ a broadening education in these plorer, systematizer, commentator, ENGLISH· Ipt. 17, IA\ class, left Tuesday after B 111 day smartly and correctly dressed for That SUver Llnlne A serviceable yet sophisticated came ~'\Iic.en'.. '..hat the dub Willi reviews of the progress of learn- and seer in the realm of the life periods at visit 'in ' the home of Mr. Myers' cold days ahead. Something new has been added garment that can be worn on .ny SPANISH Ie WOlllen', too large for intimate discussion, Ing throughOut .the univ/!rsity- sciences. parents, Mr. and Mrs. William E. occasion-a garment that'a busi­ the best that the university can The nine volumes of minutes re- No more twisting and pulling to give you D coat that is warm Dictionary a all WOll!. end thus began tbe tormatiOn of Myers, 620 N. Lynn street. Mr. n ssllke yet dr y - one that until you look like a circus COn- and practical during the day, yet B)' J. Dour.... :s, fac\ll\y, competing divisional clubs. There offer. veal many other Baconians like Myers is stationed at the naval matches your other costumes, yet came IJrst the Philosophical club, Each speaker will be expected him. To have lived with such men tortionist-biggest style news this dressy and luxurious lOr alter­ Ph.D. anel A.. If graduate air school in Patuxent River, Md. has an Individuality that will last which included those interested jn to outline the scope, role and ob- is in itself a great education. Wit­ year is the deeper armhole with hours gadding. Yes, we mean the Lomo, Ph.D. ative staff. • more shoulder fullness, which lets new lurJined coats. Silver musk­ for the duration- that's what you pbilosophy, education, psychology, ligations tor activities of scholars ness the splendor of this array: • • Th mOIL ~<))npl 10. reliable a1\4 up-la­ Lieut. Charles L . Homewood, want In a coat this taUl vim in the ' political science, and history, and in the post-war American recon- Andrews, Calvin, Macbride, Gil­ your topcoat slip on comfortably rat, Tingona lamb, lapin and nutria dal" J) head the list. Rapids. ,ullplng, It Humanist SOCiety, which had Its When Peace Comes." procession goes on. To many of Alaska dOing construction work ======~~==~~~====~== t natural constituency. This was but Significance these the Baconian has given an on the Alaskan highway. Mr. DR~ /he beginning of the branching of Let me say a few words about audition. Which 01 these will his­ Horrabin will remain in Iowa; the family tree of which Baconlan the significance of the early Ba- tory acclaim as leading actors in City during the winter months, was the root and the stem. These conian activities. The minutes of the' building of Iowa? resuming his former work as con­ LESSONS learned clubs subdivided more aU meetings are on file in the uni- Long live Baconian traditions! tractor here. 19 leSlO\ll or less into departmental unlts. versity archi ves in complete order; • • • • Oct ~ All these new clubs met in pri­ and, up to 1910, they have all been A son, Robert Gill Kin" was I Strub-Wareham's just received an assort­ ek course, vate homes or in laboratories, and published. The publication by the Hillel Foundation Has born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. are to go the leading members continued Historical SOciety carries the rec­ King, formerly of Iowa City, Sept. ment of New Junior Frocks such as these ! Women's participation in Baconlan. ord up to that date, and it is hoped 25 in St. Luke's hospital in Cedar that the society may continl!e this .hould he Central SUI Club Jewish Holiday Rites Rapids. Both Mr. and Mrs. King pictured original Doris Dodson Styles. For Baeonian thus continued as the publication !rom time to time. : the first attended the university. Mr. King central university club, open to These minutes furnish in high- All uni­ has been visiting his parents, the game, the date, or any school activity age 5) all; but the constituents were lights :I picture of the develop- Rosh Hashana, the Jew ish belnf split up in to so many tech­ ment of learning in the univer- New Year, began at sundown yes­ Prof. and Mrs. Robert King, 212 nita organization that the club slty, both as prOfiles of each indi- terday and will continue until Ferson avenue, 10r the past week we have the Frocks for you- See them. paSSed its peak of effectiveness as vidual partiCipant, and the pro- sundown Friday night. and will leave today for Hemet, representative of the progress ot cession of learning as represented This is one of the most awesome Calif., where he is stationed in learning, and became a popular by the speakers as a group in of Jewish holidays, for it is at this the army air corps. lecture course which lacked that terms of biographical exhibits. time that .the names of those who e • • scholarly intimacy which had pre­ Let me iUustrate this by refer- are to live are inscribed in tbe Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wilkinson, valled. Therefore a reorganization ence to the role of One member. Book of Life. 431 Brown street, left yesterday was undertaken in 1926. The club For this I choose that of Protes- At this time a ram's horn is for Mason City, where they will was reduced to a committee of the sor Nutting, because he was one sounded to awake Israel to repent­ spend a week in the home ot Mrs. Graduate college, and the essays of the most Illustrious and color- ance. Rosh Hashana also ushers in Wilkinson's parents. Mr. Wilkin­ rng beCame Graduate college lectures ful essayists and disputants in the a 10-day period of repentance, son, who haa beeq employed here under the title "The Baconian Lec­ Baconian. I take him as an ex- which is climaxed by the Day of by the state banking department, tures." ample because we have this week Atonement, or Yom Kippur. Yom will be inducted into the army t about us,• The original Bacon/an purpose had the pleasure ot seeing a very Kippur is the day on which the sometime next week. Mrs. Wil­ was retained; namely, that these charming and true biogra~hy of Book of Life is irrevocably sealed. kinson plana to remain in Mason ~. To thai lectures were to pass in review the this scholar in the current number Holiday services for service men City. ts, and he state ot progress In each of the of the "palimpsesl" and members of Hillel foundation • • • various fields of learning in the Intimate Picture at SUI will be held this morning Mrs. John J3lake and daughter, ghty com· un iverSity. Specialization and de­ That sketch is an intimate pic- at 9:30. Similar services were held Barbara, of Greene will be the partmentalization had gone so far ture of this scholar as a person, last night at 8 o'clock. 'ay I foon· weekend guests in the home of that there was a general need of telling of his zoological explora- Students and military men will Therefore Dorothy Grapp, 1217 Keokuk providing a com m 0 n meeting tions, not only In his own country, be welcomed at the services this street. judged in ground for the professors and but in Europe, South America and * • • Adams is, the Arctic regions, the South Pa- evening at 7:30 and tomorrow l1'aduate students "to the end that Visiting this weekend to attend be judged !bey might keep in touch with de­ elfic, the Central Pacific and clus- morning at 8 o'clock at the syna­ the Iowa-Wisconsin football game lings. Mr. velopments in other fields thnn ters 01 islands in the Atlantic. He gogue, 432 S. Clinton street. will be Mrs. Gerald Rugger of ,efl lleman their own." had a habit of spending his vaca- Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman of the ,e 65 years PurpOse of Lectures tions in expeditions with a se- school. of religion will direct the New York, who will be a guest in n Yale In In organizing the Baconian lec­ lected group of stUdents, and the I services. He will deliver a sermon the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd vas on the tures the laculty stated the pur­ Baconlan lectures reflect these in Ithis morning in English and one A. Knowler, 2 Woolf court. Mrs. inge. The POse as follows: "The Baconian his reports from year to year, in Jewish tomorrow morning. Rugger is a graduate of the Uni­ 10', Who' lectures are establlshed for the showing what he was thinkinll versity of Iowa. ! midi! 01 .primary purpose of providing for about. He was rated as one of the I • • • 'DOrs: ''BY lI'aduate students and advanced most productive representatives Invitations will soon be issued eared be­ under-graduates, as well as mem­ of the Smithsonian institution in Today by Mrs. Virgil M. Hancher for an ~mlttee ill bers of the faculties and their Washington, D. C., for which he afternoon reception which will I supreme friends, a survey of scholarly ac­ collected material and kept du­ 3 Local Organizations take place Oct. 13 in the presi­ tivities through original investiga­ plicates for Iowa. Large tomes' of dent's home. The purpote of the that Mr. tions in the various flelds repre­ his records have been published Plan to Meet reception is to introduce new wo­ th.t th. lented in the university." Bacon­ by the Smithsonian institution in men faculty members to wives os yet a Ian thus become the official or­ quarto foUo, richly lllustrated. Red Cross - American Legion of the deans. e have ..nlzation repre enting the entire With these collections he built the rooms 01 the Community build­ • • • lJ'IIOit !Jll­ l1'aduate college and therefore the Iowa museum, and vitalized the ing, 8:30 a. m. until 4:30 p. m. Mrs. Merton Tudor, route 7, left t AnIeri· llniverslty t n CI'OSS- ecti on. Selec­ Instruction in zoology throughout University club - Clubrooms of recently for Denver, Col:, where ~tent,noI tion of a limited number of speak­ his lifetime. Iowa Union, 2:15 p. m. she will vi.it her son and his =:a." this era each year served as a way The minutes are divided. into St. Mary's P. T. A.-School audi­ wife, Pfc. and Mrl. Keith M. IS, In pari of lIonorlng from time to time two parts: first the topics and torium, 2:30 p. m. Tudor. P~vate Tudor is ltationed UP will those acholars In the univerSity dates of the set lectures, and, sec­ at Lowry field. tendent1 Who were most outstandina in the ond, the reports of Informal com­ On her way home Mrs. Tudor advancemen t of learning within munlcaions called voluntary re­ will spend several dayS in Nor­ Yet, Mr', IIltjr representative fields. ports. Of the latter there Is a list urlcan II 19wa City Clubs man, Okla., visitiDi another son, L"lduall. 1I ThIs is 1J0w the 27 th year ot of more than one hundred titles, the functioning of the Buconlan and they are of a largely bio­ Robert, who is an aviation mach­ ~cllned 10 inist's mate in the marines. While ci at tilt under this new organization in the graphical interest, more so than ST. MARY'S P. T. A. r Graduate college, and, within a the set lectures because they show The first meeting of St. Mary's there she will ~ttend &.Iallty," a graduation exerc1les. .oddn- Week, there will be seen on the with more detail what aspect of P. T. A. for the lall term wlll take -iJn~' bUlletin boards the list of topics learning was 10remost In his mind place this afternoon at 2:30 in the th-' IIId the names of th 8pokesmen trom meeting to meeting. school auditorium. Mrs. A. H. Leinfelder, proarams, and Mrs. ~.IOII,·JIIi wbom we are honoring thi s year Title. of Lectures Harmeler, president, will conduct Philip Enalert, IOClal Ent boUJI' for leadership in their respective Let me quote here the titles of a short business meeting and fields, and who in turn are hon­ his lectures for the firat 25 yean Msgr. Carl Meinberg will wel­ ClVtc NEWCOMER8 Iowa Plays .. . predall Wisconsin ~oA.e, aDI orin!! the university. of his membership In the Bacon- come the mothers. Succeed ina the The night group of ijle Civic W.trt Thla year four new features ian. business meeting a tea and social Newcqmers club w111 hold a bridge 8atftrday -.n~ JIr. have been Inaugurated: first, the The Relative Merits of the Pan- hour will take place. party ~morrow nlght at 7:30 in 2 P.M. 8ladil&1n ckgrouJlli lectures are reduced to one-half ama and NlcaralUa Canal Routes, Mrs. Harmeier . has announced the lI8Iembly roms of the lowa­ hour, and will be given over the 1886; Observation on Central the following committees: Mrs. J. I111nols G.. and Electric eonapany. radio In the senate chamber in American Birds with Reference to J . Meyers, Mrs. Leo Chopek, Mrs. Mrs. J. K. Schaaf and Mra. ·L. G. " Old CapItol, before a local audl­ Theories Advanced by Darwin Larry Mullen, Mrs. T. B. Tookey, Tucker will serve 88 hOltesses. 'lite; second, the lectures will be and Wallace, 1887; The Firat Three ways and means; Mrs. Margaret Reservitlons mould be phoned to Iowa CI~'s Department Store 'followed by II pllnel discussIon; Day. of the Emb!,),olol1 of the DeFrance, nursery: Mr.. P. J. Mr.. Schaaf, 4722. tAGE .FOUR Maior Pi,ek Pacific CADET -CAPTAIN; ., ." .By Jack~Sords . Hawkeyes Mastering4 • Four e JIlore to Leo~ Durocher Baseball Stars ,t . .. New Maneuvers . TRI DAILY IOWAN ,,~tben! gro ..... inj Iowans Will Not Rely iea in II Visit Troops Given Release all ot i Upon Leist Saturday.'s , tions al Def.nsive \Record )IIUSic \ Six Yanks, Thr.e P. O R T S writer's s rval Cards Lead Two The Hawkeyes are mastering From .(onfrad ob6e new maneuvers, calculated to stop The Leagues' Teams the runs and passes of the Notre Rickey Wants Maj'l e?tnln Dame style, as presented by the lOW. 1 By SID FEDER young men of that old Four Horse- Who Holds Dodgers ,.\'l1li NEW YORK (AP) - The big man. Harry Stuhldreher. They wnl TIME OUT O~ lOW A Above All Else ella1ll1l4 leagues yesterday picked a pair not rely upon their defensive .,.d J- of IS-player squads tor the post- reputations of the Great Lakes caoltus: PITTSBURGH. (AP)-Leo pu. ~ 8eason exhibition trip to our troops game to stop the Badgers here by "fen On. Iowa. Proudly at the fore, rocher will bo given his uncondi. in the PacifiC. including practte- Saturday. Dolores Rielly tlonal release from his pll7'r. II is r ally every top performer in the The Wisconsin team was scouted On, Iowa, OD forevermore. contract with the Bl'OOIt. to use s business for 1943. in its first two · games and the Today we're in a campaigning tic.1 pel mood ... ,and it's about that sad, Ev'ry loyal IOD w:U1 qive a rouainq tOallt to you. Iyn Dodgers, effective with the Managed by . the results of those expeditions have close ot the season S undo,., 'bill proSr, Pittsburgh Pirates' pepper-pilot. been taUlht an Iowa eleven which old story of "school spirit" among Ev·ry loyal dauqhler love. you true. ,pprec1 the Iowa students at football may negotiate tor a retum 11 ,and round Joe Gronin of the Bos- is now offering its version for Oil. Iowa. with your wealth untold, bench manager. President Btaadl !IIi Ihal ton Red Sox. the all-star collec- the education of the first· team. games.... fleult c Seems as if the Iowa grid fans A herltaqe to us you did unfold, Rickey announced yesterday. f tions include nine of the bii guns Special attention will be paid to Talking to a press conference tiM in trom next week's world series; 18 the two slippery Wisconsin half- ought to be willing to exercise Love of fcmilly, love of friend, of fine their vocal cords a little now and after yesterday's game with tilt et the aces from last summer's backs. Donald Kindt. 183 pounds, Love of country too, make. us proud fot what you .land. Pitates. Rickey said Du'rocher as IOJlie all star game; the year's batting and Clarence' Self. 162. These then and show that bunch of ur scrapping Hawks they're behind Our dear Old Gold. would be "free to negotiate 'for til! Of co bosses in both loops- freshmen have been hard to· stop • • Dodger managership. or some be mad of the St. Louis Cardinals and , in both games. Len Calligaro. the 'em ALL THE WAY! • Furlhermore, If COllch Madl­ ~LL: other job in baseball, or in radio it il is Luke Appling of the Chicago White only vetetan. operates at, funback. or Hollywood." icla Sox; the Amel'ican league's No. 1 using 'hlB 190 pounds to outtK>wer .,an·s boys were able to Pllt 'Up Who, ~. wah: Who. wah, wah• JIlus elbower. Spud Chandler of the the defense. sueh a magnificent flgM agaInst "I prefet to have a manaaer aboUI 0 the power-laden Bluejackets • without a contra~t.,. Rickey ex. paci8on . Yankees; and the season's home Like Madigan. Stuhldre- plained. "I do not want a man .rno Prot. run king, Rudy York of Detroit·s her is a coach in the Noire Dame away fro'm home without even Iowal lowal . l feels that he is managing the Dod. Tigers. The two outfits will leave tradition and his resourcefulness a handful of Iowans In the stands lIans Who, wah. wah: Who, wah, wah. gers because he is tied dowllt by :for the Pacific thea:ter as soon C can be counted upon to be evident plugging for them (although the 0110 J l-O-W·A. a contract that keeps him from duced after the world series as the war ~ AS) Ml~~ : in offensive maneuvers which have sailors did give ihem several going somewhere else. My manal't been M'x R department gives them the green M"/C"L NS not shown before this season. . rouslag cheers) 'hey really ought must be a man who wants to min· light. . ~ 1 V I ri It begins to ,look as if Coach to go places with a whole stadium works Headed by six of the American ,,~.,. _ ~ Madigan's lineup chaoaes will bold full of noisy fans yelling LOUD age the Dodgers more than he they ha N,ew York Yankees Trade Shutout W·lns wants 10 do anything else. league champion Yankees and / A fAP1'Arl'l ANt>ce~ up, These include Harry Frey at .... lor . t~e Hawkeyes. Followi three of the pen- OF' ~H~ A~~. "'j'V .> . ;:::- left tackle, John Stewart at quar- An ambitious crew of cheer- 'rh·· Wh·t S · D bl h d 1'1 have not thought of hirinc which ~I nant-winning Cardi.nals.the , /I terback. and Jim Hudson at right le~ers, a larger gr?UP than ever I '\,; Ica~ I e OX In OU e ea er anyone other than Durocher, bIIt diJ8pPOl With , ' , by giving him his release we wfll squads list virtually all the Se-I- halfback. Hudson's speed and drive thlS year, are holdmg some st11;!: daIltim ---- both be tree to talk about nex1 son's "all-star stars" with the J)OII~ are too valuable to be left on the practice sessions these days to be White Sox Win Fint Tucker cf ...... 4 0 1 4 0 year without having strings at- odic 5tr sible single exception of Mort bench. as has been the case with aU ready to "call the signals" for v k Curtrlghtlf ...... 2 0 1 1 0 ached. If he wants to make a oorf. !ling wi Cooper, the stylist slinger ot the 'Bill Gallagher at fullback and the c:o.wd S~turday afternoon ... :. Game, 3-0;' an s Appling 58 ...... 4 0 3 1 2 nectlon elsewnere he will be free by Pro Cards' staff. And brother Walker, ------Hudson as his understudy. and It s gcomg to be too bad If Take Second, 4-0 Hodgin 3b ...... 4 0 1 0 1 to do so ... qu icken the National league's No. 1 B k b II L Hawkeyes were warned yester- they're. just some vo~ces crying in Kuhel 1b ...... 4 0 0 6 0 ______asy, wi catcher. will be along to bold up SP 0 R J S as et a eague day that the Badger line is de- the WIlderness. while eleventy- Webb 2b ...... 4 0 1 4 2 lo order the Cooper family interests. , veloping fast and bas weight and thousand "fa~s" a~t d?ll: ...•. NEW YORK (AP) - The New Turner c ...... 3 0 0 5 2 The All eight of the National league D· PI mobility. Some of the better men Then there s thIS smgmg bus~- York Yankees were shutout 3 to 0 Wade p ...... 2 0 0 0 1 Giants, Chicago ~ubs _vem clubs are represented. The Ameri- ., Iscusses , ans are Ralph Weiger. 191 pound left r:ess, .. '. ten to one, m~re radiO by the Chicago White Sox in the Swift p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 around can league picked lts squad from , RA I L tackle formerly of Georgia U· hstenel's In far-off collntles know first game of a doubleheader yes- Hanskl - ...... 1 0 0 0 0 Battle 14 Innings; wbleb six of its outfits. for 1943 44 Season Joe Keenan, 211 pound cent~: !;lore of t~e w~;ds to '.'On ~r1Wa" terday. but they snapped right Haynes p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 If be In addition to the players and • • • - once of Notre Dame; .sid Fisner, Old Gold and Iowa FIghts than back to administer a wbitewashing -- - - - boanei managers. the squads will include right guard. 193 pounder formerly do Iowa stUdents themselves •. ' . . themselves in the second game, 4 Tetals ...... 82 0 7 24 8 Game Tied 3to 3 .t extr umpires Lar.ry (National league) * * * Team managers of the city of Colorado Aggies; and John Eul- Of course, the old .ans~er to thiS to O. ·-Hanski batted tor Swift in 8th. counte Goetz and Bill (American league) • b bIT berg 190 pound right end. equally old accusation IS th.at n6- The loss in the first game New York CHICAGO (AP)-The New lIent By WWTNEY MARTIN asket all eague met uesday , b d h r 1 th AB It H 0 A York Giants gave the Chicagc 01 Summers; trainers Charlie Jor- 0 Y as any way 0 earnmg e scarcely could be charged to the enJoya gensen of the Pirates and Ralph NEW YORK (AP)-C aug h t evening with J. Edgar Frame. Cards Defeat Boston words . .. .On this page today are pennant party the Yankees held S-t:-81~·n-:b:-a-c':'k-c-:f:-.-...- ..- ...- ..- ...-4--1--2-1 0 Cubs three runs yesterday, ODe Joinin McCarthy of the Red Sox; and Leo short: director of the Recreation center. the words to "On Iowa" and Sat- Tuesday night. They simply were Stirnweiss ss ...... 4 1 3 3 6 on an error and two on walks quartet, Ward the Cards' secretary, and Headline: "Washington Senators to discuss plans for the approach- urday morning they'll appear unable to do anything with the Johnson 3b ...... 4 0 0 1 0 which forced over scores. and as I was at h Earl Hilligan, American league ing season. In Close Game, 3-2 again ..... pitching of bespectacled Bill Diet­ Keller If ...... 4 0 1 2 0 a result the teams battled 14 in· JOOd re S erVlce. B ureau dIrec' t or. as t earn pickh apple cropd on C 01£d' dayI ." Well.k d Teams represented at this meet- =~======rich. who kept seven hits scattered Gordon 2b ...... 4 1 2 5 4 , nings to a 3 to 3 tie which can not accord seC(,etaries. t e Yankees an ar lOa s pic e while Joe Ruhel spOiled an almost Etten 1b ...... 3 0 1 11 1 be played off because the cluJ. The two squads: the world series plums. Just wait ing were Millikan, Mullins. MO!fs. ST. LOUIS (AP)-Alpha Brazle. the few equally good performance by lefty Hemsley c ...... 4 0 0 3 2 do not m~t again this season. giv Pitchers until the fans start calling the Sen- and Navy enlisted men. Managers making his last start before an MAJOR LEAGUE ean • Marius Russo. Lindell rf ...... 2 0 1 1 0 Hiram Bithorn went the route piano fr American: Chandler. New York; ators apple-knockers next year. of these teams decided the first expected world series assignment. FOl' six Innings Russo matched Wensloff p ...... -..... 3 1 1 0 1 for the Cubs, giving 14 hits. three !COre. h L d, W h'ngton' H gh Anyway, it was a swell idea, and won his eighth victory of the sea­ _ _ _ _ _ of which produced two New York eonar as l , u son, games of the 1943-44 season wou1d STANDINGS Dietrich's shutout hurling, allow­ Dotes 0/ Boston; Trout, Detroit; Grove. Chi- won't do baseball any harm, par- son yesterda:y as the Cardinals de­ Totals ...... _...... 32 4 11 27 14 runs in the seventh inning 10 dead· ing only two hits. but in the leased I cago; Reynolds. Cleveland. ticularly in its standing with the be played Nov. 1. feated Boston. 3 to 2, but he came AMERICAN LEAGUE seventh Luke Appling singled. Chicago ...... ~._ ...... 000000 000-0 lock the__ s_c_or_e_ . ______National: Sewell. Pittsburgh; farmers who visioned their crops The deadline for entry in the the pro up trom under a hard pounding W L Pct. Ralph Hodgin doubled and Kuhel New York ...... 100 120 OOX- 4 New York Vander Meer. Cincinnati; Walters. rotting on the trees. or under league is October 22. Anyone in­ to do it. New York ...... 95 55 .633 singled both home. Kuhel also ABRBPOA Errors - Etten. Hemsley. Wens­ Cincinnati; Javery, Boston; Ger- them. Dizzy Dean has been turned teres ted in entering a team may The dogged Braves gbt at Brazle Washington ...... 83 66 .557 singled to score Appling in the Rucker. cL...... _..... 6 0 2 4 heauser. Philadelphia; Bithorn, down for military service because call Frame at the Recreation cen- for nine hits and waited out six Cleveland ...... 79 70 .530 ninth against Johnny Murphy after lolf. Runs batted in - Keller. Small. Go r don, Stainback, Stirnwelss. Wilek. 2b ...... 5 0 1 2 quartet Chicago. of a perforated eardrum, which ter on or before that date. walks. Fine defensive play by the Chicago ...... 78 72 .520 Russo had been removed for a Jurges. 3b ...... 6 1 2 1 Detroit ...... _...... 75 76 .497 Two base hits-Wenslo:(I, Appling. vigor to Catchers seems to be something of an oc- Qualifications for entering a Cardinal infield and a flurry of pinch batter. Medwick. If-1b ~ ...... 6 1 2 14 0 SI. Louis ...... 72 77 .483 First Game Three base hits-Stainbacl\:. Stlrn­ be play American: Dickey, New York; cupational affliction with ball team are as follows: Any service­ base hits for two runs in the sixth weiss: Lindell, -Gor­ Mead. rL ...... 6 1 3 2 0 A for Hemsley~ New York; Early Wash- players. was re- man may enter a team of the inning saved the day for the south- Boston ...... 68 82 .453 Mancuso, c ... _ ...... 1 0 o 4 Philadelphia ...... 49 101 .327 C_hl_ca_g_o____ A_B--:-R_H_O_A don. Double plays - Stirnweiss. by the s mgton. jected for the same cause. Maybe City league but according to the paw rookle. . Ott- ._ ...... __ ..... 0 0 o 0 Yesterday's Results 4 0 0 ' 0 Gordon and Etten 3; Hemsley. kled wi National: Cooper, St. Louis; those two talk so much because rules set down at Tuesday's meet- WII1ker Cooper kept to his tor­ Chicago 3, Washington 0 (first Moses rf ...... 0 '" Stimweiss and Hemsley; Web ' Berres, c ...... _... .. _.... 2 0 o 4 0 of brilli Mueller. Cincinnati. they don't know they're saying ing. officers and varsity college rid slugging pace by doubling game) Tucker ct ...... 3 0 1 1 1 Appling and Kuhel. Lett on bases Reyes. lb ...... 4 0 1 7 G Infielders IInything. We wonder what the men are not eligible. home Lou Klein in tbe first in­ ' t 4 Ch' 0 (sec- Curtright lf ...... 4 0 0 0 -Chicago 7. New York 6. Bases Maynard. If ...... 2 0 o 2 0 Was hmg on. lcago li 4 2 3 3 2 American: York, Detroit; Doen. percentage of ear drum rejections Beginning Nov. 1 each team ning for a lead that held good until ond game) App ng ss ...... 1 on balls - Wenslolf 2, Wade 1. Kerr. ss .•• _ ...... 5 0 2 2 I Bonston; Gordon. New York; App- would be among umpires, who are plays one game a week. Fifteen the fourth frame. st. Louis 4. Boston 3 (first Hodgin 3b ...... 4 0 2 0 1 Haynes 1. Strikeouts - Wade 2. Chase. p...... 0 0 o 0 0 ling, Chicago; Johnson. New York. the receiving sets day after day. or 20 games each season have been Mana~er BillY Southworth an· ) Kuhel Ib ...... 4 1 9 1 Wensloff 3, Swift 2. Hi ts - ot! Wittig. p .. , ...... _...... 3 0 o 0 0 National: Klein, St. Lou i s; scheduled in the split season plan. nounced Mort Cooper 'Suifered a ga~~ Louis 3. Boston 3 (tie game Webb 2b ...... 4 ~ 1 5 6 Wade 9 in 4 innings (none out in Lombardi·· ...... 1 0 o 0 0 expressi Fletcher. Pittsburgh; Miller. Cin- Add war vldims: College Winners of the first half play slight soreness in his pitching arm 11 d) lTreSh c ...... 2 0 5 0 5th); Swift 2 in 3; Haynes 0 in 1. Mungo, p .._ ...... 2 0 1 0 3 Like cinnati; Elliott. Pittsburgh; Bartell. bands. Pittslturgh has no school second half winners for the city while OPPOSing the Braves Tues­ ca V:aShington 6. Cleveland 2 (first Dietrich p ...... 3 0 0 0 1 Pas sed ball - Turner. Losing Pbaelo New York. Outfielders band. Ditto Northwestern. Mln- championshlp.. day. He said it was believed to be game) -- - - -:- pitcher-Wade. Umplres- Weafer 'rota Is ...... 49 S 14 4Z II ,._1 nesota has drafted coeds to aug­ nothing serious and prescribed di­ PhHadelphia 8, Detroit 2 (first Totals ...... 32 3 8 27 12 and Hubbard. • Batted for Mancuso in 7th. the lin American: Keller. New York; ment its lean masculinc supply athermy and massage. Southworth •• Batted for Wittig in 9th. game) , rreat :F'ox, Boston; Case. Washington; of musicians. The Gophers pro­ Trojans Half..8aked? added the portly hurler would rest D d R d Detroit 9. Philadelphia 1 (sec- New York AB RHO A 0 gers egain 3r ehlu 0 AB R H POA riIIal Spence, Washington. hlblt gals from marching In the Fergus Falls H. S. until the world series. ond game) Weatherly cf ...... 1 0 1 1 0 PITTSBURGH, '( AP ) - The National: Musial. S1. Louis; Di- stadium, 80 It's a sItting banft. Inr vol NATIONAL LEAGUE Lindell cf ...... 3 0 0 2 0 Brooklyn Dodgers regained third Johnson. 2b ...... _...... 6 1 1 5 9 slowly Maggio. Pittsbw'gh; Galan. Brook- Not a bandstand, In other words. Gridders Think So Boston lyn; Walker• . Brooklyn; Medwick. W L Pet. Metheny rf ...... 3 0 0 7 0 place in the National League yes- Schuster. ss ...... 6 1 2 410 Ipell8." New York. An)'Way. there's no horn of St. Louis ...... 101 50 .669 Johnson 3b ...... 4 0 0 1 3 terday by scoring nine runs in the Pafko. cf _ ..... __ 5 1 I I :P Allan plenty this year, the assumption FERGUS FALLS. MINN., CAP) Holmes. cf...... 5 0 ' 2 2 0 - Potatoes will take preference Joost. 2b ...... 4 0 0 4 3 Cincinnati ...... 84 65 .564 Keller 1I ...... 4 0 1 1 0 eighth inning to bcat the Pitts- Nicholson, rL...... 4 0 o 4 0 BeIlted being tbat all the available male Brooklyn ...... 79 70 .530 Hemsley c ...... 3 '0 1 4 1 burgh Pirates 14 to 7. 2 I over the otters. Fergus Falls high Workman rf...... '4 0 2 1 0 Cavarretta. lb ...... a 0 o Brahms' students have been recruited for Pittsburgh ...... 80 72 .526 Etten Ib ...... 4 0 2 8 0 WhiUow Wyatt started the gamc Livingston, lb .... _._ 5 0 1 17 ,I school football team. At least, that Ross. If...... ~ 0 1 0 0 28, "Fina Wildcats Relying football. It's just a choice of get­ Chicago ...... '71 77 .4S0 Gordon 2b ...... 3 0 0 2 4 in search of his 11th straight vic- Ostrowski, If .. _...... 5 0 1 3 I Ing their brains knocked out on is the way the Barnesville high Farrell. 1b ...... 4 1 1 7 2 Boston ...... 66 82 .446 Crosetti ss ...... 3 0 2 1 0 tory. but lelt in the seventh inn- Trojans feel about It. Masi. c ...... 4 1 3 3 0 DaUe sandro" ... 1 0 o 0 0 On Graham to Give the gridiron or blowi11l' them oat Philadelphia ...... 62 89 .411 Russo p ...... 1 0 0 0 1 ing with a 4 to 2 delicit and Fritz Elko, Sb...... 5 0 2 I J In the band. We'd like to have a A game with Barnesville, sched- Wietelmann. ss ...... 2 0 0 4 2 New York ...... 55 94 .369 Dickey - ...... 1 '0 0 0 0 Ostermueller benefitted from the Wed for Saturday was called off Heltzel. Sb ...... 2 0 0 0 1 Krettner, c .... ~ ...... 3 '0 '0 Z • couple of those Brooklyn Dodger Yes~erday 's Results Murpt1y p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Dodgers' big uprising in which Hack· ...... _ . 1 0 o 0 • Iyesterday when the Trojans sent lOutU· ...... 1 0 O' 0 0 () Wolves y,mpefifion outfielders moved into the In­ St. Louis 3. Boston 2 - - - -- BrooklYn made six hits and routed McCullough, c... .. 1 0 1 3 0 word that they were loing out to BurDS. 3b ...... O 0 0 !l. '0 field just to hear an al)nouneer Brooklyn 14. Pittsburgh 7 Total ...... 38 • 7 27 9 three pitchers. Three of the Dod- Bithorn. p .... ~_.. 6 0 0 I EVANSTON, ILL., (AP)- This o play around with a double play: Pick potatoes to belp the farmers Tobin, p ...... 4 0 0 2 4 New York S. Chicago 3 (tie game --Batted for Russo in 8th, gers runs scored on an error by Saturday is the day 1he North­ instead 01 play football with the - - ..l...... "Gillenwater to Bordagaray to oalled) Chicago ...... 000 000 210-3 catcher Al Lopez with the bases Totals ... _...... • , S 9 t% n western chapter of the Minnesota Otters. I Totals ...... 15 2 '9 U 12 Gillenwater." Philadelphia at C in c i Jl nat i New York ...... 000 00'0 0'00-0 loaded. gridiron, alumni ass~iation 'meets I ' - Batted for \ ~eltzel in 7tt1. the Michigan chapter of the same (nigh~) Errors - None. Runs batted in ~~•• ~~r~n~;:r,. F lions are one-deled. What St Loah 'AB R H PO A TODAY'S PITCHERS - Kubel S. Two base hi ts - I blocking ·and tackling society. We are waiting patiently to see too y: ~ I ~ j End, Tonightl I which Saturday the colleges will happened te all the' talk about • ; National Leacue Weatherly. Hodgin 2. Stolen base ~7!' t~ None-the-less it·s a native son. Otto shifting the Arlll)'-Navy game Klein. 2b...... 1 1 2 5 New York at St. Louis (night) -Crosetti, Sacrifices - Hemsley. ______-- "50 Proudlv We HQW' Graham, on whose passes the Wild­ set aside to give their football re­ ceipts to war charities, Our New to a metrepoUtall area? JUghtWaIker.' cf...... 3 0 '0 12 '() - Voiselle (1-1) vs Krist (10-5) Russo. Double plays-Gordon and NOWI Ends Sunday cats will rely to keep them in the now it is sclleduled for West Hopp, ct...... 1 0 0 '0 '0 Boston at Chicago-Andrews Etten 2; Appling, Webb and Kuhel. game against the Wolverines. Haven colleague, Lou Black. says Point, and If the army can be MUllal. rf...... 3 0 1 0 0 (14-19) vs Wyse (9-7) Lett on bases - Chicago 6. New ENGLERT Northwestern will have five there is considerable agitation' up Innueneed as easlJ,. as It has W. t:!ooper. c ...... '1 2 S 1 'Brooklyn at Cincinnati-Higbe York 6. Bases on balls - Russo 3. tarts former Minnesota gridders in uni­ that way for a Yale-Harvard (12-10) vs Riddle (21-10) Dietrich 1, Murphy 1. Strikeouts "war bond bowl" game, with of­ been In o'her matters, luch as Kurowski. Sb ...... 3 1 1 '2 -4 TOMORROW form, and while Michigan can in trying to ,et It to allow Its Ganns. Sb ...... 1 0 1 0 '2 (Only games scheduled) - Russo 2, Dietrich 4, Murphy 2. counter with only one, he's a very ficials either iss uing tickets with Ol\e WOIUII qI wllere tralaees to play football, Sanders,' Ib ...... 3 '0 1 14 0 American Learue Hits - off Russo 6 In 8 innings; important fellow- fullback Bill the sale of war bonds or letting cour_1!. . It will be played at West Point. Litwhiler.II1f ...... ~ S '0 1 0 '0 Chicago at New York-Smith Murphy 2 in 1. Losing pitcher- .1'.'1 Daley. the public in free and selling the 1101 01 1III1IIoII. • --- , Mation. 811 ...... '3 ~ 'O 1 3 4 (10-11) vs Chandler (20-4) Russo. Umpires - Hubbard and But when it comes to lay those bonds after the fans got there. S1. Louis at Boston (2)- Mun- Weafer. Time - l:tlO. with a hWUII We witnessed an intriguing ~razle. p ...... 3 0 0 1 2 aerials down the alley, the Wild­ Every cent would go to the bond crief (13-11) and Sundra (15-tO) Setond Game of love for a _ sight at Pittsburgh last Saturday------cats know their own teammate of cause. Harvard has what is termed VB O'Neill (1-3) and Ryba (7-5) to remember! •.1 the cheer leaders holding a dummy To"" ...... 11 3 ' 9 27 18 the past two seasons. Graham, will an "informal" team. but it has a I I ' Detroit at Philadelphia-Over- Chlcago AD RHO A be the lad doing the pitching. regular schedule. from which Yale scrimmage before the ~ m p t y W...... 1IIes DrW mire (6-6) vs Harris (7-20) ------The durable Otto was the na­ is missing. The Elis have kept stands. practiclrll their mlU)euvers ANN ltJU30R Mlch (AP)- . Cleveland at Wa s bin J!: ton Moses rf ...... -4 0 0 S 0 ...... ,..... tion's No.2 sharpshooter in passes Nov. 20 open. just in case. before the ga~e. The . ~ Coach H.' Or (F·;i1Z). Crisler sent (night)-Bagby (17·13) VB Hea!­ completed last year. with 89 good from the .lIaplllg seats wasn t JUs 'Michigan squad throtlCh an- ner (10-4) leu. for 1.092 yards. Against Michigan We have an Idea &hat If the hearty. but 1t was nearly as great other long seuibh of defense he clicked on 20 out of 29 for a war continues through another as it was from the fans duting the agalst Northwestern plays yester­ ~i i~~~I'] DA,II new Big Ten record. but even so fan. and the service training In game. The Panther followers just day NOW·Enda Frldayl the Wildcats took a 34 to ~6 thump­ colleges continues as It Is this didn't have anything to cheer __' _~;. ___~~~~, Pial ing which they well remember. year there will be considerable about. In view of the attendance .III tJToday ~ . thru Fri~ay VIIS Coach Lynn Waldorf pOinted resb:.rnIng of scbedules with at major league games the last ''''l!1 out to Northwestern today that schools not b1e_d with navy few days they might as well fake "trom all we're able to learn from and marine trainees dropping ' some box scores and let it go at the scouting reports undoubtedly schools with sucb materIal from that. Nobody would know the dif­ this Michigan team is better than &heir schedules. roo many of ference. It's been practically secret the one which beat us last year." the games between luc.h Instuu- practice. ======Plus , ()e-Hl& "Last Will and TettBment" -...... "Double TaIk"-lIiovelty • sorREll "SCOTLAND YARD" (Jolor (Jar1cMm-LaIe News ~T10\.· l.tllnTOI with Naney Kelly fSul'prl.e Mystery Co- . J~hn lmder · ~U5E666 Lew An_Laraine Da~ STAI'SI•• 'TI.... en at the Window" 666 lMI.ET$, SALVE. NOSE DROPS Buy War Bondi aDd-, Stamps! ~SD.AY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1943 THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE FIVI

tension 274, and ask for Mrs. classes and use an instructor's SOCIAL DANCING Adelaide BUJ'(e. certificate may sign up for this Social dan~ classes will begin 5 University of Iowa Graduates, For,mer Mooda3', Oet. 4, the women', W8ilnesday Evenina ,ncerl ~~:~f:::~:~ ::: C. WOODY THOMPSON, special course by telephonin& the It Dlreetor Red Crass office, 6933. JYDmllllum. Tickets tor the entin Id BIIII t [' t' Students Announce Engagements, Weddmgs tion in Post-War Readjwtment," nOF. MAltJOIlJll: CAMP uon of 10 weeks through Dec. Id S Prof. E. T. Peterson, acting dean HOCKEY CLUB 10 may be obtained at a future PrOYI es rl lin IS enlng Word has been received of the University of Iowa. He received of the college of education. Sen- Hockey club meets every Mon­ TENNIS CLUB date. Further announcements will recent enaa,ements and marriages his commission in the navy at ate chamber, Old Capitol. day, Wednesday and f'riday after­ Pairings for tbe tournament appear in The Daily Iowan. J'JIYLLJ8 PBTEaSON I of five Iraduates and ;former stu- Northwestern university in Chi- noon at 4 o'clock. Thi club .tMtin, Tuesday, ~ 28, will be Br JAMES R. BURNSIDE • • dents of the University of Iowa. cago and has been st.tioned at the FELLOWSHIP OF open to beginners as well as more posted in the women', ~um IOWA MOUNTAlNZII.as le her Four men last night contributed City to Burn Leaves Dinner Key navy aviation base RECONCILIATION skiUed players, and a tournament Monday. The peniOOS wh names The weekend horseback outinf • InOre to the legend of lawn as the f 'd C' 8ehuUI-Meyer in Miami, where the couple is re- The Fellowship of Reconciliation has been planned. Ten practices are in these paIrin are ccepted for the Mountaineers will be Sal­ "Athena of the Midwest," the faat- I Resl ents an t The marriage of Marie Schultz, siding. will meet at 619 East Market street are necessary for membership in as members of the Tennis club. urday and Sunday, Oct. 2 and 3, pwiDi cultural center of Amer- daughter of Mrs. Orma Schultz of at 7:30 Thunday evening, Sept. 30. this W.R.A. organiaztion. First round matches are to be fin- at the Upmler riding stables. ica In the fine arts ot music, than This year the city wlll collect POIItvUle, to Willard Meyer, 80n of ZUtrow-Noah DOT'I'IE BONN i!hed by 5 o'clock Thursday, Sept. Reservations aud more demled in- lease t • WILLIAM D. BERG I all of the manuscripts, compost- 1eaves 0 f res Id ents w h 0 are no Mrs. Louisa Meyer of Clermont, Married recently in Fresno, Prealdent 30. formation may be had by eallinc , vons and renditions of excellent able to dispose ot them, according took pjace Sept. 18 in the home CalU., were Helen Z a 9 t row, BOUSEHOiDii'S' MEETING A tea will be held Thursday 3701. Outdoor leepinf eqJipmenl )l\Ullo which have come to this to the office of the city engineer. of the pride's mother. The Rev. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Z. W. An important meelin, of all INSTRUCTORS' COUIlSI IN after the match at 5 o'clock in wiU be required by thase partid­ writer's attention in four years of Residents are urltted by the en- Frederick R. Ludwig performed Zastrow of Charles City, and Statf householders who have under­ FIllST A.ID the social room of the women's patin,. The group win leave from observation. gineer to burn their own leaves the ceremony. Sergt. ,Keith S. Noah, son of Mr. graduate women in theIr homes Edward Cram ot the American gymnasium. AU new members will the engineering buildlna promptly The occasion: the Wednesday If possible If they are not to be Mr. and Mrs. Meyer are both and Mrs. Stanley S. Noah, also of will be held Thur day, Sept. 30 Red Cro s is to conduct an in­ be introduced officiaUy lth.!n the at 5:30 p. In. You will need to pro­ evenlllf Music hour; the place: used as fertilizer for victory gar- graduates of Postville. hiib school Charles City. at 2:30 p. m. in room 221A Schaef­ structors' course in first aid Oct. club, and lint round winners of vide most of your own food, and Iewa Union; the event: .. per- dens. Leaves can be burned on and Mrs. Meyer was graduated Both were graduated from the fer hall. If you are unable to at­ 18-23. the tournament will be announced Ieatint and cooking utensils for the 'ormanet of lOme of the flnelt dirt but not on asphalt .treets. from the University at Iowa lChool Charles City high achool and the tend, please telephone the office Students or faculty members MARILYN ClfB.IJ\UEll three meals. eUlDber muaio of Max Rerer Collections wlll probably start of nursinl. She hal served 811 a University of Iowa. Mrs. Noah is of stUdent affairs, university ex- have an opportunity to teach Prell4Ieat J[. NE ZIL, IDd Jollannel 8J'ahml by the after the first frost. nurae at University ho~ltal, at a member of Alpha Delta Pi so- tlrIJ!r quartet and trio of the the Decorah hospital and at the rorit.Y and Serpant Noah is al- POPETE uivenlty muslo faculty. Postville hospital filiated with Delta Theta Phi legal I ~~:~:.~~~~~;r::-~~~~ ]\ is not the habit of thls writer SUI Speec hI nstructor The couple is now making its fraternity. to use superlatives describing mu- home 01) Mr. Meyer's mother's aiCiI performances, but last nilht'. Writes Story Printed farm. Word ha~=;=IVed of the program left him and a small but Tralner-IteUeher engagement of Luanne Coo k, appreciative audience with a feel- I ThO W k' 'P t' AnnouncemeDt has been made dauihter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ing that the fine handling of d!!- n IS e~ S OS ot the man;.lale of Geneyieve Cook of DeWitt to Serg!. Rex ticult compositions and the beau- :,r'rainer, daughter of Mrs. Fred- Peters, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. 11M interpretations of the work erick Mahoney of Arverne, ~. Y., Peters, atso of DeWitt. 01 fine masters can be considered Bill Porter, formerly of the to llobe.\'t Kelleher, SOI\ of Mrs. Miss Cook was iraduated from 81 lOme ot the best in the midwest. speech department at the Uni- Carrie Kelleher of Postville, Sept. St. Joseph's high school jn DeWitt Of course, no safe comparison can verslty of Iowa, is the author of 18. The ceremony took place in and attended A. I. C. In Daven­ be made of such a statement, but a short story entitled "Clancy Miami, Fla. port. She is a member of Beta it it is our privilege to hear such and the Old Maid" which wns The bride is a graduate of Rock- S i g m a Phi sorority. Sergeant mUSicians, we need not wOrry published in this week's issue of way hiah school I\ea~ New Yprk. Peters was graduated from DeWitt a mana~ about other performers for com- the Saturday Evening Post. Ensign · Kellel)er was arlJdl,lllted high school and I\ttended the' Un i- Rickey et. perison. "Clancy" is the co-pilot on a PBY from Postville high school and tM versity of Iowa...... a man W'no t Prof. Arnold Small, violin; Prof. !Lying boat, "The Old Maid," in the Dod. Hw Koelbel, violinceUo; and this wartime story ot navy filers dowro by OIto Jelinek, viola, first intra- in the Southwest Pacific. 1I'OIlI duced the "Trio in D Minor," by Porter was graduated from the PLANE, HERDS-. Use of Radar in War BLONDIE CHIC YOUNO Max Reger, a composer whose University of Kansas in 1939 and (Continued from ' page 1) "grits merit more attention than received his MA trom the Univer­ they have been gj ven in the past. slty of Alabama in 1941. He then jammed. I told the radioman not E~plained by Reed Following an allegro movement came to Iowa and worked in the to let them know for they might wbich was interesting in style but speech and dramatic art depart­ try to escape. 1 circled low arpund The process of using radar in disappointing in eHect, the an- ment. Last year he talllht school them and told him to point the modern warfare to detect objects dlntlf movement, a delightu] mel- at Washington State college In gun in their direc~ion. As we got In the distance was explained odic strain, was presented. Begln- Pullman, Wash. close to one Wh9 was making II .. un by Prof. H. R. Reed of the elec- for it, I heard some shots fired, Ding with a singing theme carrled While worlting here In the un i­ trlcal engineering department, to by Professor Small, the tempo verslty, one'ot his plays, "Nothing Looking back: I saw the radioman quickened for a Debussy-like fan- Half So Sweet," was produced aiming the machine &Un. and firing the Lions club yesterday noon. tasy, with a tune ~emingly made by the University theater. his forty-five be$iQe it, making The direction, distance, and ~ order for an elfish dance. He gave up speech to write and the fugitive run in the othe.. di­ elevation of a plane from a cer­ The vivace, third and la t two years ago he wrote his first rection. tain point can be determined by IIIOvement or the piece, evolved story that was published in the • • • this procen, the speaker said. aronnd a lively, boppln,. tlllle Saturday Evening Post entitled "I went back over the bID and wblch one would like to wblstle "Three Hours Flying Time." strafed the other JIOIIUoIIII, this This is done by the use of waves if he could keep up with the His latest story, "The Sea Going time coralllnK about 30 straK­ sent out in straight lines. When bounclDr Dotes. Flne handlin.. Cow," will be released in a No­ ..lers. As the group reached the these rays strike an object such ~ extremely dlrtlcult Umlng and vember issue of the Saturday crest of the hill, I noticed a as a plane, Professer Reed ex­ conntermelodles made tbe move- Evening Post. bDrst of antiaircraft fire on my plained, they ,are reflected, and :starboard 1Ieam. "Ulokln,. quIckly the distance of the plane is de­ HENRY CARL AlfDERSOH ment one, or the best and most ------h- around the sky, I saw two enemy enjoyable of the evenln,.. Money From Mac ines termined by the length of time fighters (GerllllU1 MeQersohmltt taken for the energy of the waves Joining the group for Brahms' Confiscated in Raid U9's) clOlIn.. on my tall. [ put to return. quartet, OP\lS 60, Professor Clapp the plane ioto a steep dive. Five­ was at his best, giving the audience To Go to School Fund Even the course which an Inoh shells from my cruiser be­ enemy plane is following can be JOOd reason for the high relaId «an breaking between me and accorded him as a pianist. One of The money found in the slot determined eventually by the the enemy flrhters, forcLnr them continual sending of radar waves, \he few men in the country who machines confiscated in the raid to turn away. can give a perfect rendition for in the Paul-Helen building Mon­ • • • Professor Reed said. piano from a complete orchestral day night wiU be turned over to "As the planes disappeared. I score, he attacked the voluminous the county treasury to be used as went back to find my prisoners DOtes of Brahms with vigor, re- a part of the public school fund, gone, but a few shots and a little leased them when he saw fit for as the law decrees. strafing of the buildings and vici­ INTERPRETING- the proper effect, and came out The machines obtained in the nity soon rounded up most of them (Continued' from page 2) II.B an easy winner in a difficult con- Monday night raid have not as again." test. With the fine playing of Yet been opened, according to ean from Corsica at southern o 2 4 0 Small, Koelbel and Jelinek, the Police Chief Oliver A. White. France. o 1 2 , quartet gave fiery Wagnerian The 29 cases of alcohol ob­ That three-way allled tbreat 1 2 1 Vigor to Brahms' work, as it should tained in the same raid will be from Italy Is already profoundly 1 2 14 0 be played. • disposed of either by the sheriU InfJuencln,. Nazi army disposi­ 1 3 2 0 A forceful allegro was followed or by distribution to hospitals. tions not only In France, Italy and on the Balkan peninsula, o 0 -4 1 by the scherzo, which fairly spar-I Hospitals are sometimes desirow BRICK BRADFORD CLARENCE GRAY o 0 0 0 kied with the brilliant exactness of accepting this alchohol to be but in Russia. It 15 forelJu" the o 0 4 0 of brilliant music. An andante used for rubbing purposes and German hia'h command to keep FOIt~T It I la'S GO- wl!'"", o 1 7 0 substantial elemenis deployed GOT11) aREAl< fH! 8.ij) ~"V04S movement, smorth flowing with as an antiseptic. 1"0 JUNfl o 0 2 0 expression, was a pede~t e~ample ------and all but ~dle In southern o 2 2 ! of typical chamber mu ie, employ- William H. Loan Rites France, Greece and the Balkans when they are vitally needed In o 0 0 0 Ing varied solo voices with a com- T Be H Id T o 0 0 D bination of unity and individu I 0 • omorrow Russia or to bolster threatened o 0 0 • expression. fronts In the west from the o 1 0 I Like a mu ieal description 01 The funeral service for William Eqllsb channel to the north cape of Nonv~y. Phaeton's drive throlll'h the hea­ H. Loan, 69, 408 S. Dodge street, who died Tuesday afternoon, will Berlin may be convinced that veu ill the sun ~od's cbarlot, !he finale was presented wUh be held at . 2 o'clock tomorrow the winter season is too close for creat vl,or In varying themes, afternoon in the Oathout funeral a major allied invasion of the con­ chapel. tinent this year from Britain. It NIDI to ..reat beI~hts of sweep­ can never be certain, however, ill&' volume, and movlBl" down The Rev. L. L. Dunnington of the Methodist church will conduct that a lunge of limited objectives 1 1 ~ , Ilowly for short "breathl ... the services. Burial will be in might not be attempted in the west 1 2 4 iO IpeUs." Oakland cemetery. at IIny moment, or several of ti)em. 1 1 1 , As an encore, the group pre­ Such a lunge might have as Its o 0 4 I sented the last movement of objective gaining a sufficient con­ PAUL ROBINSON o 0 2 I Brahms' quartet in G minor, opus lively, lilting composition, at once tinental brldiehead to provide o 1 17 I 28, "Finale in GypSY Airs," a very plea ing and fa nciful. bases for fighters to escort bombel's o 1 3 I operating against Germany. o 0 0 • It is against the background of o 2 1 I that ever growing and menacing o 0 2 • allied pressure from the west and o 0 0 I south that the crisis in Russia is o 1 S I Daily Iowan Want Ads approaching aloQg the Dnieper. o 0 0 4 What hap'pens along the ~nleper and above It tc;> the Baltic In th\! s 'U 1'1 LOST ***AND FOUND POSmON*** 'IIANTEI> next few weeks will go farther CLASSIFIED to furnish a better clue to the ADVERTISING LOST-Beta Theta Pi fraternity EXPERT COOK and housekeeper probable duration ot the war in pin. Name W. M. Bush on back. wants position in Iowa City. Call Europe than any foreseeable de~ RATE CARD Dial 3169. 24273 Cedar Rapids or write Daily velopments on other fronts. Keep your eye on the Dnieper. CASH RATE WANTED Iowan box 225. lor 2 days.- WANTED: Salesman - with drug 10e per line per da7 INSTRUCTION I eonsecutlve da:rs- store eXperience or pharmaceu­ OFFICIAL BULLETIN tical education. Drawlng account (Continued from page 2) 70 per lIne per dl1 DAN C E INSTRUCTION - tap, BY GENE AHERN 8 consecutive daYI- and commission. Permanent posi­ BOOM AND BOABD ~c per line per daJ tion with unlimited possibilities for ballroom and ballet. Harriet versity students, both milital'Y 1month- the future. Only those with above Walsh. Dial 5126. t and civilian, are eliglble for these 4c per llne per da, qualifications need apply. Reply lessons. LOOI<:. , UI'ICl.E HOMER.'' " WISH 1 COULO -Figure ~ worda to line­ C. O. Box 110, Decatur, ruinois. Brown', Commerce Collete PHYLLIS PETERSON NOW ilIAT 'WOURE I" HELP 'IOU, suo.' WHEN I w...s MIn1mwn Ad-2 lin.. lowl City', Accredited 'TME ~I(""" WANTED-Late model car in good BUSINESS, ...... ~ 'IOu ~ \(.ID, ""-l-OU" Busillelll School tl IOU" ME PO 'TMESE ~NI<:ING . w.o.5 condition. Phone 2950 noons and EIltablished 1D21 BUNDLES FOR ~RITAIN CLASSIFIED DISPLAY after 5 \OA~ PIiIOIILEMS Day School Nl,ht School Tbe re,~lar meetllll of the ON PER CENT INT1!llESTT IIOc col. Inch "Open the Year 'Round" Bun(l)es for Britain cluJ> Will be Or ,MO per month IE'AMILY LAUNDRY. Dial 9486. li5 Lila WWCf Dial q82 held at h~dquarters, 216 IOWi TtlK'f co IN State Bank and Tru~t building. Ail Want Ads Cash in Advance LAUNpRY-Shirts Dc. Flat finish lW-IK5/ PI1able at Dally Iowan Bu,l­ 5e pound. Dial 3762. Lonptreth, DANCING LESSON~- at 10 o'clock thll morning. ballet· tap. DJal. 7141. CBAIQIAN - offic. daUJ unW , p.m. MImI Wanted-plumbln, and heatln,. Youd. Wurlu. Larew Co. Dial HPI. CIDctllatlonl must be CIIlltd In before II p.m. America Need, CONFERENCE ON ADMINIS­ ROOMS Foi RENT TRATION AND SUPIRVISION 1ieIpoDaib1' for ODe lDcOrrect More Trained inlertlon on11. FOR RENT - Comfortable large TQuraday's Schedule: ,Ingle room In quiet home. Close WQrkel'$ i8:45.,W45-.Elementary educa­ in. Dial 4932. tion discussion and demonstra- Learn Shortl\and, Tfptpg tiona, room 132, Univel'llity ex~ DIAL 4191 FURNITURE MOVING Machln~ Work aDd BookkOtp!nl , perlmen~l lChoal. Enroll Now. PaU aa- II-ll~ondary educalion Beglh Sept. 7 ' . deMon.trations · and discunsions, MAHER BROS. TRANSFER room 224, 1.1n!vIl'lity experimen­ 1'01' Efficient J'urnlture MovtDa tal Ichool. WHO DOES IT AaIr About Our Iowa City 2.... Roundtable, Senate cham­ ~OOL BL A NKET S cl1aned. WARDROIB SERVlCB Commercial College ber, Old. Capitol; Prof. Ernest "Guaranteed no shrlnkBfe. N.w DIAL - 9696 - DIAL Horn presidin,. , , froceaa Laundry. D1al 4177. liS*, I, W&lhlD&1oll. DIal1H. 2-Roundtable, House cham- I , PAGESDt ==_. THE DAllY lOW AN, IOWA CITY, 10WA 'MtUl\SDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 194:i Conference on Admi~istration, Supervi~ion Q)"pens Ihi~ " MOlining 29th Annual SEAHAWK DANCE BAND IN ACTION Ilowa City to Have No Formality \ODT Holds Up Gas Allotments Two 'Sacrifice Days' Meet Starts Today and tomorrow Of Five Local Taxi Companies sacrifice days in Iowa Clty. Per­ sons who have purchased their full Lack of Proper Signs At 8:45 A. M. quota of bonds but wlll 3tlll make the sacrifice of buying one more Delay. OHicial O.K., Three Foreign·Born during this time, wlll be iiven a Investigator Say. The 29th annual conference on tag to wear, accorqing to an­ A.SJ,P. Trainees adminlstration and supervision, Jlouncement made yesterday by Five of Iowa City's seven taxi Rponsol'ed by the college of educa­ Marion Means, secretary of the tion and the extension division, companies have not yet been ap­ Granted Citizenship senior chamber of commerce. proved by the office of defense opens this morning at 8:45. A de­ These tags are to be distributed tailed program and preview of among the various bond issuing transportation to receive gasoline Three foreign-horn soldiers III demonstrations is to be outlined agencies. Individual solicitors may allolmenls for the next Quarter training with the A.~ . T.P. in Iowa at an elementary education' con­ obtai n tags from there to present City became United States citizens ference in room 332 of the uni­ year which begins at midnight to­ to anyone who pledges an extra night, J. J. Green at the Daven­ yeeterday. They are Pvt. Stephen versity experimental school. This bond. v'ill be followed by a discuS3ion port ODT office said last nigh t. Erwin Wright, 19, of New York, period at 11:35. The DeLuxe and Diamond com­ :formerly a citizen of Hungary; Over.Subscription Gerhard Walter Esther, 30, of New The part of the conference deal­ panies were the only local taxi ing with secondary education be­ Of Community Chest York, formerly of Germany, and gins at 9 o'clock this morning with concerns which had complied with Mark Solomon Tuck, 20, of San demonstrations of war-time phys­ Placed in Reserve a federal regulation requiring FranCiSCO, who was a Russian citi­ ical education activities for boys signs on the Side' of each cab In­ zen. and social studies teaching prob­ Any over-subscription in this dicating that it il a public convey­ Ordinarily, citizenship examin­ lems. A discussion period will be year's collection of funds for the atlons are held only twice a year, held after these demonstration3, community-war chest beyond the ance, when Green made a check­ up of taxi companies here this in May and December, but under ali of which will be in room 224. Johnson county goal is to be held week. a special provision In the law, At 2 o'clock this afternoon In .In reserve account. aliens serving with the Un.lted he senate ~hamber of Old Capi­ This amount will apply on fu­ Pablt Simi Since Green's inspection, all States mllltary forces lind who tol, Prof. £toest Horn of the col­ ture campaigns of the community have lllrl!ady begun clth.enahip lere of education will preside at other local cab companies, which PICTURED ABOVE IS the Seahawk dance band as l~ played recently at Iowa Union. In the front row, chest or war charities, it was an­ proceedings may take the 1lnal' a roundtable discussion or post­ nounced by the war chest com­ include the Yellow, Checker, City, left to right, are Leonard Brcka, Walter Lukashuk, Robert Lowry, James Greenwell, Wilbur PeterSon, Varsity and Hawkeye taxi con­ examination lind become United war problems suggested by a mittee yesterday. States citizens Immediately, upon poll of superintendent!. Gordon Terwilliger and Doren Damitz. Dick Koupal Is at the mike. In the back row are Eldon Pari­ cerns, have pljlced the required zek, Dan Tetzlaff, Lloyd Foster (the leader) James Brlehtwell and Leroy Stryken. The campaign, wh\J!h is port petition. . Topics selected are: Wlll the of a notion-wide drive, opens Oct. signl on the sides of their cabs. -U. S. Navy Photo Each of the three newly natur­ demands of the post-war period 4. The goal for Iowa City is $32,- Green said that ODT officials force a complete and fundamental will return this week, and that It alized citizens hod received first 000, and lor all of Johnson county, citizenship papers in another state re-organization of the high school? * * * $47,000. \II the signs are approved and the What will happen to the balance INFORMALITY RULES, above, &I companies meet the requirements prior to entering army service. between general and vocational IJeut. Comdr. C. Ruasell McAu· for careful driving, mileage, limi­ The examination was given be­ education? Student Help to Aid ley Burke, commanding officer of tations, and proper cO)ldition of fore Judge H. D. Evans in the Versatile Navy Men 'Swing Out a large bomber strip In the South district court by Stephen Durisch, Should the school maintain and New Catholic Center I cabs, the gasoline allotments will extend service to the community Paclflc, dries himself atter a bath be approved. naturalization omcial from Chi­ involving initiative in meeting , . J At the Tuesday nIght meeting in the ocean surf. Before the war According to the ODT repre­ calo. Officers in each of the men's community needs and integrating Marchmg band, concert band'T By DORIS* *CAMPBELL * , ~eatured over* *a national* hook-up Burke was sales manager at a regiments served as witnesses, as of Newman club, the Rev. Father sentative, local companies were work experience with the educa- string ensemble, dance band, salon about Jon. 1. Fifth avenue establishment, lived notified July 6 and again this required by law. tional program? In the face of in- orchestra or choir.-that's the club. On the Qne remaining Satur- Dave Robertson, former head of Bonaventure Schwinn, chaplain, In a New York apartment. Now The new citizens were presented urged members to continue the month that they must immedi­ evitable expansion of federal par- Iowa Navy Pre-Fltght school's . the school of music at Hendrix he Uves In a tent. (lnternationalJ ______...... 0.--.'--_ ately place letteNl two and one, with manuals for citizenship by ticipation in public education, band. These 45 versatile musicians day mght of each month, the Sea~ college, Ark., is one of ' the :first membership' drive begun several a representative of the Daughters what can be done to force the have displayed their talents in hawks play at the U. S. O. dance musicians in the band and' serves wieks a·go. . , half inches high and one inch AII·Girl Highran'ders apart on the side of each cab in­ of the American Revolution, Mrs. channeling 0 federal relations some 390 public and cadet per- at the Community building. as assistant conductor. He'received A group ()f eight students volun­ Margery McDonald. teered··to -help· with preliminary dicating that it is for public hire. through the existing educational formances since their arrival here The dance band is under the dJ- his mast'ers' degree ·from 'the uni- .To, Perform Saturday Carson Sweeting of the Varsity structUl'e at the state and local in July, 1942. rection of Lloyd Foster, who re- versity and for several years'was work il'\ con)'lection with the con­ levels? The school's responsibility The marching band is undoubt- ceived his master's degree from 'on the sUmmer session :faculty of versi.on of the former Psi Omega . At First Home Game Cab company said lilst night that house at 108 McLean street into the notification sent to him this in expanding programs of adult edly the best-known combination Iowa State college, and features the school of music. For the tir3t time in its history, Captured Jap Sub and continuation education. of the Pre-Flight musicians since Dick Koupal as vocalist. Dick has .Obrecht, a former member of a center for Catholic students anq month by the ObT did not state At the same time, Prof. L.)\. they played a colorful part in the peared with the Song Fellows the music department here, as seryice·men. The house was pur­ the' Scottish Highlander drulT\ and when the requirement would go Van Dyke, director of University half-time entertainment at last over WHO. head.. librarian of the . P.r.e-flight chased last week for this purpose. bagpipe unit of th~ University ot in to effect, or exactly what sort of Will Be Displayed high school, will preside at a year's football games. This same For radio broadcasting, strings band bas collected one of the fin­ Iowa will be composed entirely ot sign the ODT wanted, and that The 94-foot Japanese submarine roundtable diSCUSSion In the group performed at last Thurs- recently have beep. added to the est' music libraries owned by any Men ' girls when it presents its first he had been awaiting more defin­ house chamber whJch Is to In- day's bond rally and have partici- four saxophones, three trumpets, service' band. Ali ' U~i .v~rsi~ performance of ' the year at ·the ite word before taking action on captured at Pearl Harbor will be on display in Iowa City Saturday c:lude: WIlI the current emphasis pated in r e c r u it in g drives three trombones, drums, bass 'fia: Chief Bandmaster 'J. J. Court­ Invited ·to 'VI Meeting lawi:j-WiSconsin foolball game in the request. on the practical and utilitarian throughout this part of the state. dIe, piano and percussion which is ney 'was s'ent to the Iowa Pre­ Iowa stadium Saturday. Yellow Cab morning, Oct. 16, the state war continue and Increase? Will Headlining the band's perform- the regular dance band'. This 30- flight school in May of last year AI) univ~~~.ity . men are invited to The 66-piece aU-girl organiza­ The Yellow Cab company re­ bond headquarters has announced. there be more terminal bleh ances is Drum Major Jean Hed- piece orchestra features ' s.wing-. to' recruit a., band. for this base. attend a meeti~~ of the y . M. C. A. tion will appear in . pre.gl\Ine and ported that seven of their 10 cabs The interior of the two-man school courses of the vocational lund, former University of Iowa symphonies in the best Artie S~aw , He :' a",dition~ 500 men, andt the tonight ~l7:3 0 . m .1he ·.'~X" rQqm of half-time exhibitions after less carried the required siiOs when lIubmarine may be seen at that type and less emphasis on col- drum major who has probably ap- style. ' ' '. ; -_.' ' 4~ . v:th6 ·, w..e~e selected tht1~ ' \lnder­ Iowa . Union tor a discussion of than a month of practice, accord­ 9reen made his inspection. time by persons purchasing a war lege preparation? peared before more people than The entire band stands \nspec:" ' v,,'eht l'iaot tr'aining: at th'e Cteat oPRortunities '· op~n . to civilian 'male ing to Pipe Major William Adam­ An investigation ot taxi rates bond, or by those who can certify How can needs for community any other drum major in the Big tion every Sunday ,morrun.g 'Snd l. Lakes Naya'l Traiping slation, re­ stuBenf8 'on carripus. s6n, diredor or the- gr(;lI'\1).: Lell,ding is being made by the c:i.ty council, that they are putting at least 10 education at the adult level be Ten. National baton twirler for then leads the cadets . to It~ei~ in: 'Pc.>hing .here July 10. B~dmallter Clarence Elliott, secretary of t' Y" the Highlander~ in the half-t,ime because complaints have been re­ percent of their salary into bonds. met and financed? Will the pres- two years when still in high school spection at 10:15. ChapelJfollows Couttn~y. is .third man' c;li\ the'sta­ work in the entire north central ceremoni,es will be Drum Major ceived concerning a variance in Charlie F. Smith, commander of ent expansion of physical educa- at Des Moines, Jean is in charge immediately and in additi9rl to ti\;ln in .length ot serVice, having area of five states, and former Edna Price of Jefferson, ,while the rates among the different com, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and tion continue? What is a proper of the smooth drilling of the band supplying hymn music, band mem- been in the navy 32 years. During general secretary of YMCA at Dorothy Wayne of Nash.ua will panies for hauls of the same dis­ Harold B. Lyon, manager of the · I dl on the football field. bers form the nucleus of the choir World War I he was . stationed at direct the pre-game drill. Englert theater, were named yes. b a Iance be t ween p hYSlca con - Jean is only one of 20 members tne Univ.ersity or Indiana, \\IllI be tance. tioning and a broad health educa- of the navy band who are native which is supplemented by cadets. Great Lakes and worked 'Under guest speaker. Mayor Wilber J. Teeters said terday as co-chairmen to handle tion program? Iowans, 15 of whom attended the The choir, directed by Preus, who John :?hilill Sousa, who was in Army Ordnance Plant in the last meeting of the council details of this war bond event. WI'II or should we return to the received an M.A. in music from charg" at the five or six bands with the mechanized cavalry from At Burlington Seeks Monday night that "the city coun­ Fronk D. Williams, general war former pattern of extra curri'cular University of Iowa. Other Univer- the university, usually has 100 then .-stationed there. bond chairman for Johnson coun­ - sity of Iowa musicians in the navy Shreveport, La. cil has the power to regulate taxi activities? Will the demand for band are Eldon Parizek, cornel; members. Following convoy duty at sea, Sergeant Dur06' brothers, Ptc. 4000 New Employees cab rates." ty, named the committee he lids. acceleration be carried over into Carl Parmann, bassoon; Lawrence Wilbur Peterson, a graduate of Bandmaster Courtney served as Nick Duros and Technician Fifth Recruiters from the army ord­ the post-war period? Ales, cornet; Robert Bates, cor- Auguslana college, leads a male a~sist.ant director of the navy band Grode Andrew Duros, are serving 'clock Prof E chorus made up of 20 voices which in Washington, D. C., .fOr '1,0 years. nance plant at Burlington will Ex-Court Clerk Fined Tonight at 8 O , ., net; Leonard Brcka, clarinet; with the cavalry at Ft. Riley, Kan., Red Cross Will Teach Q~tl g d a t the is planning to appear on the navy The only changes in personnel visit Iowa City sometime in Octo­ T . Peterson , - n e n 0 Doren Damitz, clarinet ·, Robert and the infantry at n. Benning, ber as part of an intensive can­ Fof Drunken Driving coileI' f education 111 .... e band's radio program soon. The of the band occurred last month, Ga., respectively. Accident Prevention , eo,.... In th w ... te- Driggs, bass; Harry Hilton, french radio \t;0gram at present is broad- when three regular navy musi- vass of northwestern Illinois and 8 Id e a t a mee tl __ e sena horn; Harvey Lynch, sousaphone, To New Instructors Frank Volkringer, 602 E. Mar­ cast 0 er WSUI Thursday night cians reported aboard after :foreIgn southeastern Iowa to secure ket street, pleaded guilty in dls- ch ambe r a. t w hi ch D r. FI oy d W. Robert Rutenbeck, drums,' Eldon Eugene Fitzpatrick, son of Mr. workel,'s, John H. Patton of the R f th Un! It t Chi at 8 o'clock but is expected to be service in Panama for 20 months. and Mrs. Edward Fitzpatrick, An instructors' course in home trict court Tuesday to the chaI"le eeves 0 e vers y ° - Obrecht, string bass, Paul Preus, ~ited States employment ser­ cago wlll speak on "The Con- drums; Russell Ross, clarinet, and route 5, was recently home on vice announced yesterday. rhe and farm accident prevention will of operating a veh.icle while in­ trlbutteSn of Education to the Russell Sapp, trombone. furlough from El Toro, marine air be held by the Johnson County toxicated, and was fined $300 and base near Santa Ana, Calif. He plant has 4,329 jobs open. Post-War Readjustment." As a whole, 18 differenl col- Former Students- Housing is available in Burling­ Red Cross every evening of the deprived of his drivers' lleeDle Professor Reeves was chairman leges and universities are repre­ has been promoted to corporal as week starting Oct. 25 in room for 60 days by Judge H. D. Evans. a marine air corps mechanic. ton at moderate rental fees, it of President Roosevelt's advisory sented. Arnple proof of the fact is reported. Husband and wife 221A Schaeffer hall. Edwin C. Half the fine was suspended committee on education from 1936 that music isn't the only thing who want employment can work Cram 01 St. Louis will teach the on 10Qd behavior and Volkrlnger to 1939 and director of the Arneri- they do well, two band members Serving the, Nalion Tech. Sergt. Martin J. Gerber, course. was paroled to his attorney, Will- on the same shift. can Youth commission, 1939-41. were Phi Beta Kappa. son q£ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ger­ Members of this class will teach lam R. Hart. From 1941 until 1943 he was con- The band performs at the cadet -Former Iowa Citians ber, 481 N. Van Buren street, now courses in home and farm accident He was arrested May 6 at North rs:tatiO'1led in England with the Historical Group Adds sultant on education of the na- Happy Hour every other Friday :II- :II- :II- prevention this fall aod winter. Dodge and East Market streets in tional resources planning board, night. The graduating battalion • • army medical corps, recently com­ Five New Members The Red Cross recommends that Iowa City. and 1942-43, chairman at the con- provides the entertainment and Lyle L. Frazier,* * son* of Mr. NAVAL CADET pleted a course in political science those enrolling in the accident pre- Volkrinler is a tnember of the ference on post·war adjustment of although a great deal of talent has Mrs. F. E. Frazier, Muscatine offered soldiers at the University The board of curators of the vention instructor course have collateral inheritance tax board, civilian and military personnel. been uncovered, many of the avenue, is stationed as a second r""'- , ... ~''1. - _ .. of Glasgow in Glasgow, Scotland. Sta te Historical society elected first aid certificates. and for many years was clerk of Professor Reeves will preside at cadets having played with top lieutenant in the army alrforce at Sergeant Gerber has visited five new members to their society the dJstrict court. a roundtable discussion of the is- bands in their pre-navy days, the Eglin field, Fla. Lieutenant Frazier London, Edinburgh, and Stratford­ yesterday afternoon at the monthly sues presented in his lecture to- band manages to hold its own. is an instructor in aerial gunnery on-Avon, and says of the English meeting. night, tomorrow morning in the This same band, in addition to in addition to being test pilot. people, "They couldn't be more New members chosen were F. senate chamber. Special emphasis supplying music for pep rallies Ogden Frazier, brother of Lieu­ hospitable." E. Bissell Jr., Dubuque; Grace will be placed on the recent report held the night before the football tenant Frazier, is with the navy He was formerly a pre-medical Douma, Northwood; Ruth Miner, NOTICE of the nat~onal resources board's team leaves, gives the Seahawk Seabees at Camp Perry, Va., and 'student at the university and a Waterloo; Mrs. Emma Prescott, conference on post-war adjustment gridders a big send-off at the sta-/ Lynn Frazier left for basic naval member of the Scottish High­ Davenport, and Harlan E. Snyder, of civilian and military personne!. 1tion. They're on hand to welcome training at San Diego, Calif., Sept. Janders and the R. O. T. C. Cedar Rapids. In keeping with the full spirit of At 2 o'clock tomorrow after- the team home, too, win 'or lose. 5, noon, Prof. E. F. Lindquist of Biggest part of their working the occasion, the banks of Iowa the collere of education will pre· day, however, is playing every Pfc. Ivan H. Goddard, son of Mr. sent for roundtable dlscUAlou week-day morning, Wednesday and Mrs. William Vorbich, 1707 the problem, "Evaluation of excepted, from 8 to 12 o'clock E. Court avenue, is stationed with City will transact no businell Educational Experiences In the while cadets march on the drill the marines in New Zealand, armed torces." field. where he has been recovering from after 12 o'clock noon on This conference will be in the Wednesday is devoted to an all- malaria. ' senate chamber of Old Capitol and day practice which is climaxed by in the house chamber. Prof. H. F. a performance at the Quadrangle Robert Erikson, former student SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2 Spitzer of the college of education that night. If the weather isn't at the university, has been trans­ will preside at a discussion ot making like weather, the band ferred to the naval air training in Observance of post-war curricular problems in plays a concert outdoors. If they're center, Pensacola, Fla" for the elementary schools. . forced inside, the dance band mediate flight training as .. a MJllKlSlJJ\,'L ll' C.' BNtE., Keokuk, Tomorrow night at 7:45 Prof. comes into the limelight. aviation cadet. Hi:s home ' is ~terniecibite nl,lIl tabl­ Troyer Anderson of the history The Seahawk dance band is Waterloo. . t~e i ua~~l ~r. 't'r\,lnln, , ~en- DA,D'$ DAY department will present a Ba- perhaps only slightly less :familiar '~cola, ~ •.. Prtor to, .en­ conian' lecture on "Social and Po- to the university student. They've Jack M. Smith, Des lVlOilnell, naval servlce, . he ' attended lilical Art and Science When played at all-university parties commissioned a second "unJy~nit' 'Cor three Pe8'Ce Comes," to which all per- and will continue to make on ap­ in the marine corpS this \ . , "ears.·' sons attending the conference are pearance at those dances once a ~ . J '1 "', < I . ' • f \ ... ' • completion of the. flight invited. m6nth. course at the naval air der" the section of Sicily. in .which The Fir s't·(a pit aI A premiere IIhowlng of a re- The 14-piece swing outfit really center In Pensacola, Fla: he is stationed was .. world-famous cently completed motion picture shines at the formal dances of the Smith, former universlty stlllOent, to.uris~ attraction ~rior ~o .· the war. of the phYSical education program graduating battalions which are will go on active duty at one In Iowa schools has been scheduled held every two weeks. In addition the navy's alr operatipnal traiftlna . . CtlarIes Droll, brother of A. J. for 10 o'clock Saturday morning in they play for an officers' dinner­ Ha·lional Bank centers before being a.88lgneo ~ a D~ll; 5,13 S.' J6hrison . street,. has studio E of the radio bullding, with dance at the Anchor club and also combat zone. • " recently been tri the of Iowa (llty Pro/. Bruce E. Mahan, director of supply the music for an enlisted pro~oted' Crandle'. eleetrlc pow,r and steel Ures offer you eeonoml. the extension division, presiding. men's dance at the Bluejacket In Iowa City on furloulb ~ re: grade ~f private' first 'class. He Is -cal, I",dy trau.poriaUOD. Dial 3283 for IChedulea. At 11 o'clock, Flo y d E. cently was Sergt. Henry Grady, stationed ~th the arml!d tank bat­ Brooker, direcior of tbe visual two travelling aid exhibits, "Our son of Mrs. H. P. Grady, 905 Web­ talion at Ft. Benninlf, Ga., whde Hear Cranllic's "Bound-Up of ·the News" each WedDllda~ • aids for war tralnllll' pr~am of Neighbor Republics" and "Art in ster street, trom the tank destroyer his brother, Pvt. Linus A. Droll, and. Saturday at 5:30 P.M. over WMT. the federal Jeclll"lty SleM, of the Countries South of Us," loaned battalion at Camp Claiborne, La. '15 serving with the army enllneere Iowa SII te B'I n;' k the UnJted States oftlce 01 edu­ to the university by the United in Enaland. cation, will present "The Re­ States office of education and the Corp. Harold Elder, SOil of Mr.: CEDAR RAPIDS' AND sponslblllties of Executives and office of coordinator of Inter­ dnd Mrs. James Elder, 4111 Bowery Mr. alld Mrs. Tony Dural, 121 Adminlstra.tors for tbe Wider American affairs, will be on dis­ street, is stationed with the quar­ W, Burl1nrton street, have re­ . IOWA CITY RAILWAY Use of Audio-Visual Material.. " play In the house chamber of Old termaster corps of the army In ceived word that their lon, serst. and Trust Co. During the entire conference, Capitol. Sicily. Accordilli to Corporal EI- Spero Durall, is on rDlneuven