1945 ~ MEATS. "Ars. rd llamp. If Ihr.a,b Zt no... U' • •• OCES8I1:D FOODR. bl .. ~Iamp. N2 Ibr•• ,~ ZZ ••• AI Ibroarb 01 .... r.o., 8UOIUl. bo._ lo.r .UI., Is Sf , ••• I.r live p.undl Ihrea,b Aa,. 51. 8 HOEII. boo. three airplane .tamp. I.. 2 and S rood l.ddJaltely. IOWA: Pa.rtlJ eloadr wUh OASOLINE, 16-A .uponJ ,.od I.r lour ,.UonJ ...~ tbr•• lb Jane :n and 8 ~ e, B ~l, ... and ·1 10•• 'or _UUetI she us IlIld I. "e ,allonl leach. f' EL OlL. per led ont! thra_lb It ... THE DAILY IOWA.N thandnstoJ'1DS. ••• pon ...... lhr··rb Aur· "; I.J! ) ..... period t ..r 0 a.a. five couponl abo esplr. ~, .... II. Iowa C"I. tv', • M r n 1 n '"1f ...." w spa p. r ~~====C=ENT==S======~==~======~=I1I=.=A=~===~=~=.=D =r=u=.=.====~====~======IO==VV=A==C=I=T=Y=.~.,~VV~A====~==THURS==~D~A~Y~.~~~~14=.=I~~~5~======~~===nm==M=~=~~na==~....==~==~ ¥=O~LUHm~~X=X=I~==~NUMB~~~ ;1 Time, Place DIAGRAM OF JAP BALLOONS Sel fo~ Ear', Australians Seize Airfield Big 3Meeling • Truman Says Results Of HODkins Mission Two Miles North of Brunel Completely Satisfactory (A P ) - Pres~d e nt ~'rllman jubilAntly di. closed yesterday the Mfinilp Yanks Smash Big Five Win Veto Control Over World Peace Enforcement !Fall of Labuan setting of tIll eal'ly "Big Tim' " ...... * * ...... meeting aud said lh. eI'e are pro I * '-I should be made by an af!irm t1\'e peets fOI' a complete s tlIelllt'llt SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Tbe ChurchlU-Stalin meetin( at Yalta this spring. vote of any ven members. of the Polish issue. Enemy Pocket longest and perhaps bitterest bat­ Field Imminent tle 01 the United Nations confer­ But 15 nations abstained from 3. Decisions on "a11 other mat­ laels Obviously elated over ('onfi­ ence ended yesterday in defeat for voting. lers" s.hoold be made by n ar­ dential "eports from Harry ltrmaUve voLe of ven members, 3,500 Japs Killed mall powers lind sealing of Big Not aU the delay on the veto Japanese Expected Hopkin and .J oseph E. bal'i :, Five veto control over peace-en­ including Ihe concurring vol of question was caused by 8m Il­ 11 the B g Five, provided that on To Give Up Brunei Far East. Iii special em issaril'S, thl' pl'('si­ On Oroku Peninsula forcement mechanism of a new power opposition. When the y deut announced to a news COll­ world league. pe ctful elUement a party to a Without a Fight III be th~ In Okinawa BaH'. asked for an interpretation of how dispute abstain from voling, ~cMichaels ference: Little countries, with Australia the vole would work. Russia was With the v to i ,U settled del - . r • 'lLA, TIm dAy ( P)- pealu at a 1. Wllile he cannot rlivuJ/I.'p GUAM, Thursday (AP) - The in the van. fought hard to keep at odds with the United Stat , gates w th path ot thelr delib- the lime Of place, upon which all 'irst Melh_ Sixth marine division smashed the Britain, Russia, China, France and Britain and France Dnd got in line eratlo smoothing out. Au trallan rOrCl" iz t.l 3,600- 7:30 p. rn. have agreed, he will meet soon Japanese Oroku peninsula pocket the United States from having a only after the United Stales ap­ Ru, I , however, /let a commo­ foot Brunr.i lIirfi Id, two mil /{ the lee­ with Marshal Stalin and Prime on Okinawa yesterday after a veto over peaceful settlement 01 pealed III Premier Stalin. tion goillJ in Bnother committee north or the Brili. h north Bor­ ,udied and Minister Churchill to iron out any fierce nine-day battle while the disputes. But they lost. The voting formula will requlre by suddenJy shifting her .land on n('() ('lIpitnl, and Ihl" c ptur of ~ the far remaining difference among lhe First marine and Seventh inran­ The bl, powers had put It unanimity emong the Big F,ve on charier provil ion to let memb 1'1 Ilnothl'r fil'ld, on Lllbuon j, land, Big Thl·ee. try division:s pressed back both squarely up to them to accept a all ballots In the league's cc.-urity ot the world league withdraw. off 1"U1l i bay, i. humin nt, 2. The result., or the Jlopklns flanks of lhe precipltou YaeJu ive Setre­ complete veto or run the ri k that council on action to preserve Previously the Soviets had op­ hI'SO!]III1I·t l'J'S onnoune rl todn . Federation • nd Davies missions have been escarpment. the great nations wouldn't ratify peace. posed a wllhdrawal cl u . Yester­ completely "satlslalltory and gra.t­ Fall of thl' vort city of Bru­ lppearaoct Maj, Gen. Lemuel C, hepherd the charter tor a new United Na­ Thl' formula applying to the 11~ day Ru. ia changed ov rand, ,d by Wes­ ifyln," and very pleasant yielding Jr.'s Sbth divtsion killed 3,500 tions organization. member council says: d legates r ported, asked for a nei, p<,rhllp. without a fight, ist student by Russia on some points has clar­ THE ABOVE I A KETCII created by a eattle, Wah" arU ~ from a Japanese on the peninsula, raising On the showdown, the opposition 1. Each member should have one broad on that would let any na­ may ('om at allY tim, JrfOO three power relalJonsWps McMichael description of the balloons which the J apanese are launchln, from 10 more than 70.000 the number mus~red a skimpy two votes vote. tron pull out of the world organi­ 'file landinWl ' uunay in Bru­ substantially. 1d when a their home Islands against tbe continental United tales, The balloons of enemy troops killed on Oki­ against the veto-voting formula 2. Decisions on procedural mat­ zation at any time and lor any n i bny, I ·lIok .. m n id, 3. He has evcry hope a free and carry 11 roechanlsm which releases sandba&"s or (as a the bar lose or nawa in the 75-day old campaign. lassador oj w 0 r Ie e d out at a Roosevelt- ters uch 81 d Is("u~slon of a dispu to renson. l'aulrht thl' .fllpanl'. I' by IlIlr­ m the Na­ democratic election among the I:"l1 ln altitude a nd whlllh drops Incendiary and antl.per onnel bomb hepherd's marines OverraD aD Polish people will grow out of a ------~------prise. It Is evident the enemy an lllove- at the end of their predetermined lU,ht, enemy ho pIta I on Oroku &lid expected an allied landing at Jes­ conference June 15 to seek a com­ round I SO J apanese df'ad Inside. selton, 60 miles Lo th(' northw t. prom Ise basis for the reorganiza­ The bodies presumably we r e President Opposes Interim Commission ! chalrrnan Dlt",er coluMIIlJ ad,,.» ed 14 tion of the provisional Polish gov­ those of wounded who wf'I'e Irtlff'Cl U. S. Planes Hil YMCA and At a Glanc..- ' mllrs from Brokf'lon In 48 houn ernment. Chinese Forces Cross by the Japanese before they with. e Madrs ~ to selz the Brunei alrfltld. Onl,. & 4. James F. Byrnes, former war drew (rom the ana, Cost .. Plus Plan Planned to Continue a tirne I mobilizatIOn director, wiJl accom­ tew d orlanJled IPPDM were ,m Union F,eiyun River Barrier It is a matter 01 poliCy for Jap­ tnl"oun~red. pany him 10 the "Big Three" anese not to permit wounded to For Farm Products Kyushu Bases United Nations Work New York, meeting along with Secretary of Today's The occupation gives th allied [a l1 lnlo American hands. e ChrisUaa State Stettinius; Hopkins; Davies; torc not only comm nd 01 the Reoccupy Port SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A 50- ! seminary. Fleet Admiral William 0 , Leahy, Maj. Gen. Archibald V. Arn­ WASHTNGTON (AP) - Presi­ GUAM, Thursday (AP)-Carry­ strip but al'o some 01 U!e Cinest McMichael president's chief of stoff, and Of Juian on East old's Seventh division doughboys dent Truman took a hand yestt'r­ Ing lhe air attacks on Japan man inlerim com m I sa ion ls rubbel' plantations in Borneo, day in the tight over wartime price universitr Charles G. Ross. In Drive on Wenchow Iowan advanced up to 400 yards on the through the sixth straight day, pi nn d Lo brldg the lIap betwc n withln the Immediale vicinity. a lecture Meanwhile the British radio said east aallk ot the Yaeju line to control, personally Opposlng and On Labuan i land, orr Brune! gain control 01 most of the e c rp­ apparently dooming thO senate', Okinnwe-b lied plane. attacked the United Nations confert"nce and of religion It was reported from Copenhagen CllUNGKING (AP) _ Chinese bay, Au~trolian cavalry comman­ room 101, AunrailaJ *capture * * alrlleld two men t rim in lhelr area. cost-plus plan for pricing farm Kanoya and Ku. hlra air bas I on th b lIinnlng of work by the d - m chanlzed forc!' - who without confirmation that the troops forced the broad Felyun Kyu hu Tu sdoy. 0 !leel commun­ mll s from capital or north With control 01 thal rim, llIe di­ products. world or nizatlon growln!: oul ot landed at Point fiamllton moved Danish capital would be the sHe river barrier and reoccupied the lqu reported today. Bombs and ~ake n Sun­ Borneo. vIsion III In • PDIIltloD to develop The plan, sponsOl'ed by Sen tor ollt'r ca. y rollin8 coconut and of the "Big Three" meeting. There ~ maJl 1)01 t of JLllan on China's ea,t rockets were tired, the conterent'e. Irk of the was no White Rousil commen!. (,ODst ye terday in a fast-moving a pincer arm around the eas1.em Wherry (R., Neb.), was eUached ElIch of th 50 nations signing rubb r plantation co u n I r y to for Social In one of his [ew co mments drive on 'Venchow, only 14 milps Yank smash J ap pocket on !ilde of t.he escarpment. There al'e as an amend mnl to a bill elttend­ The Kanoya naval base was II within two milcs or Tombalal air­ Oroku penln ·u la. targt't reccntlv of carrier plones th world charter would have onc r here, Me­ yesterday on domeslic [,rrair ~, lhe north, the Chincse hillh command me roads and draWl! In thk an.. ing the ottic ot price admlnJstfa­ strip-the lhlrd oirticld of im­ {r m Admiral Willt m F. (Bull) cornmi Ion m~mb t. [l would lesl of the pre ~ ident asked the b na to to 1"e- repoltl'd. and /lome maU vlllagf'S throu,h tioh's powers fOT • ye r. ;rh bill portan I' In lh lllvad d rea. off. Tlmp, place ror Big ThI meet- whlc)! tank, and Mit- propelled recently pllSled the senate. IT II I y's Third f1t'et. meet for perhApll 10 days in San The II plUT d airfield. Oil store a $17,000,000 house cut ill "'P- Closely supported by armed Chl­ Inll set 101' near fulure. will go to propriatlons for the orfice of war ne~e guerrill as emerging from guns CJln be broUlM up. The National Aasoclollon or The Tuesclay raiders d I v e d Francisco following the cloo of Labuan isl1md, wa overrun wlUdD conference On th e west flank, Maj. Gen. Manulactw:ers, while favori n through inten,e anti-olrcraft fire a tt\\1 hours of the Australian informalion. In a slat ment he coastal hills, Chincse regulars $250,000 expan ton proiram an­ this conferenr and then make I at Cornell said this was J'eqllcsl d in tho poured into Juian ailer a 10-mHe Pedro A. 0 I Valle's F'irst division OPA extension, asked the house to accompllsh their mt ~Io n , London ita headquarters. Ninth dlv on' landln". nounc d [01' Catholic Student "interest of a nation still lighting advance from captured Pingyang, mal"ines carried troop reinforce­ banking committee to write in an The virtual a round-the-clock. Jopan d malition teams work- Center, amendment requiring OPA to al­ The Interim commission would in in frantic haste in odvllnce of a war which is far (rom over and 24 miles soulh of the big former ment torward on tanks through raids on Japan, have been main­ mak th advanc aITana m nts mace in a which the people need to know is treaty port which lies 440 miLes heavy J apanese Lire to strengthen low "talr profits" with "prlc lain d by B-29's. navy ond army the swiftly advencing alii d forces. to snap high noogh to encoura8e produc­ ror the first sessions of the I ague's put the torch to the great Serls far from over." west of Okinawa. theIr positions on lhe KunL.shl flehten. general 8. mbly, security counCil, To abolish some of OWl's major I ' ridge. The relnlor ementa had to tion." The C[O demanded .nel Mid oil rI Id to the 1I0uth­ functions at this lime he said The J apanese :-wer~ failing b~ck 6tral&ht extension. Kyushu b air bo. es lrom which soci I nd conomlc council, tru- w L or Brunei Hud pre umably London Poles mov aero S op n rice paddie8 be­ enemy suicide planes have been 1 ship couDcll and an inl rna­ "would be a mistake." on W('n cho~, wllh Its 'populatIOn tore lhe ridge. The National Association ot Re­ dynomit d the w lIs. ol SO,OOO, wlth lhe Chinese close tail Growers called upon conir taking oU to &trlk at American llonal court. It would pav the way In addition to the prize-package on Lh eir heels and battUng to clear Unita of lhe division's Seventh lor one-man control of all govem­ shippi ng oU Okinawa. tor establishing lh lcu ue f'cr­ regiment had taken the western ~eizure of Brunci olrrl Id, the Aus­ lhe n I Ire invBsion-threatened men~ functions pertainlng to lood. Oklnawa-ba~ed p La nell aiM lariat. for the lransf r of orne Question Big 3 hal! ot the cr t yesterday. lralian Ninth mad a . uccessful UnionlsOppose hine e coastline norU1west of the A second controversy popped up ranied outh to lhe en my­ functions and as ot lh old dayli,ht IOl1dmg two mil s east of Japanese island of I"ormosa. Wllh complete capture of Kun­ as howe R publicans launched a held 5akllhlm group in th Ryu­ Le0aue of Nations to the new one, Brunei town withoul OPPosition. There were signs that the Jap­ Ishl ridge, the marines wlll be able drive to limit the OPA constinua­ kyus. destroylni two grounded and for the nomination ot rourt Japanl'.e for c e s apparently anese wcre going lo pull out of 10 push down the western coast tlon to six months. planes, Ju ti es. pulled outh lind Int nd to relin­ Power 10 and develop the right arm of the Poslwar Drall Wenchow with the same lack of Acl qui h the river, port Bnd cepital resIstance that marked the i r pincers around the escarpment. ciLy of Brunei without a fIght. WASHINGTON (AP) _ Labor abandonment of Foochow, 160 LONDON (AP)- Poland's gov­ Catholic Student Center Announces- Sixly-one Japan e dead were unions expressed vigorous opposl- miles soulhwesl, three we~ks ago. ernm nt-in-exlle here eefu.ed yes­ cou nt d for the llrst day of the terday to recognize the authority Inva ion, Australian c ualtl for tion yesterday to peacetime draft I The Chinese were runnmg mto ot lhe lhr e major pow rs lo su­ De Gaulle to Fly proposals. tough Japanese opposition on t~e the hrsl thr days have been perVlse the formation of a new B f II hot T approaches to the former Amert~ Expansion Program "pl"actlcolly nil" an Australian e ore. le ous~ p s w~r mll- can air bases of Kwellin and Polish national unity administra­ To U. S.to Discuss spokesman said. tary policy . committee which has I Liuchow in south China and tbe tion at a conference set to open ...... ociuted Press Correspondent been studymg the plan. spokes- Chinese command admitted the Friday 1'h Moscow, Plana for a $250,000 expansion * * * James l1utchc.:.on, from the vant­ men tor the AFL the ClO I . London's Poles assailed the pro­ Syrian Problem of the Cathollc student center, In­ and the United Automobile Work- prevl~u s ly-reported . loss of Jshan, all point of a 1 Ping P-T boat's posed meeting as an outright con­ cluding a cbspel buUding to cost d ck, found th nighl ky aflame 1n ers (CIO) united in urging im- 43 miles ":est ,of LJUchow: about $100,000, recreational facll­ cession to Russia and clung ten­ PARIS (AP)-An offici.l in­ the S 'lia cc:t(1r. At Seria th wells proved health and educational fa- . Severe ilghl~ng was r~gmg out­ aciously to lhe hope lha t the Mos­ formant said last night that Gen­ ities and a business oftice, were extend into the sea a nd it is pre­ cililies instead of universal miH- slde Ishan, whJch the Chmese suc­ anllO\lnc d yesterd y by the Rev. cow negotiations would b rea k eral De Gaulle would fly to Wash­ umcde Ul e w re flooded by the tary training. ceeded in reoccupying for only a Leonard J, Brugman, pastor of St­ down. ington next week to discuss the .fapone, e. The AFL's views were presented day over the weekend. In a tense and troubled at­ Syrian-Lebanese problem directly Thomas More's student chapel and by Lewis G. Hines, national legis­ mosphere lhey planned tentatively with Presidenl Truman following director of the student center. lative representative; the CIO's by to hold an emergency cabinet ses­ a report that the United Sta tes Tile plans tor enlarrtlll' 'he fa· Nathan E. Cowan, chairman of the WFA Orders Quotas sion to place before the world­ had declined France's invitation to cillUe. for Catholic ~udenls al the WPB May Boost legislative commi ttee, and the and particularly before American attend a five-power conference on UniversJl, of Iowa were made .., . -== UAW's by Loren Gray, Detroit, of Poles-a formal protest against lhe the entire middJe east. a _eil.n& 01 the C&th.ollo advisor}' Whiskey Production the UAW-CIO veterans' depart­ For Sugar Refineries latest development in their rela­ The government was believed to commlUn, which includes repre­ ment. tions with Russia. be conSidering Lhe advisability of aentaUve l ..,men and Calhollc WASHINGTON (AP)- The war "We want the fighters and the WASHINGTON (AP) - The "Never, nev~r will our people alamnl of the anJversHy. eaeb this abandoning its five-power pro­ production board announced last workers to decide their children's war food admlnistratlon yesterday recOJllllle t.hls acreement," said a posal, The foreign oUice has Dot ,ear, '.lber Bruflll&ll Is ,en.enl nlght It may 8ulhorJle ullmJted future," Cowan said, "not the ordered Quotas set up for all pri­ spokesman for the croup. "Never, heard trom Britain, Russia or eIl&lnll&n of the eommUiee. -=- -: ploductlon" of whiskey and other arm-chair strategists far removed mary sugar distributors. The ac­ never wlU they recolnlze .. 110- China, and their Silence was in~ First project on the expansion tJon is designed to limit sugar use from the tragedies ot battles." called ,overnmen' formed In thlll terpreted as indicating they also program Is a new student chapel, "~;;~~.llii beverage alcohol indefinllely fol- A pl"oponenl heard during the to quantities aUocated by the gov­ manner." :lid not lavor the proposal. lowmg July's unrestricled produc- probably to be built of stone in­ tion. day was Dr. S. V. Sanford, chan­ ernment. It was learned in responsible Britain originally had' prapoaed a side and out, and to seat between cellor of the unjverslty system of quarters that Julian Zakowski, 4S­ The poasibillty was unfolded to A war food order, aimed also tripartite meeting of herself. 500 and 700 persons. The bullding distillers attending a closed con­ Georgia, who urged that youlhs year-old architect and one of will probably be bulLt to seat 500 at stretching as far as possible !"Tance, and the United States to ference of the industrial alcohol entering college or university be three London Poles not connected persons with rom to expand the th is year lhe shortesl sugar sup­ :leal exclusively with tire Syrian­ producers Industry advisory com­ -. permitted to take their training with the exlJe government who original building. ply since the war began, provides Lebanon crisis. mill e here. during summer vacation periods, fOI' control of distribution by sugar were invited to the Moscow parley, [n London Camille Chamoun, Father B rug man emphasized with lhree months of training an­ had decided to turn down the bid WPB announced, however, that cane refiners, beet sugar proces­ the Lebanese minjster who has that the chapel will be built en­ its proposal did not take into ac­ nually for four years. SOl'S, importers and mainJand on the grounds that he never had jusl returned to the British capi­ Urely from donaUoll3; there will be n connected with politics. count Lhe pOSSibilIty that lend­ sugar cane producers, tal from Beyrouth, demanded that be no mortgage. lease shipmenta of alcohol to Rus­ At the same time the WFA an­ Re,ardOO as a L1bera.l soclalllli End of European War Syria and Lebanon be invited to .a.rry Byrne has b,eeD colllMb­ sia might be resumed. nounced it had reduced civilian Zakowski was understood &0 have sit in on any conference to discuss ,kmed to draw the lIletches for Sbipments to the Soviet Union Prevented Production sugar allolmenls for the next three been nomlnakd lo attend th.e con­ tbe Levant situation. the new eIlapel. U Is hoped thU were halled last month followln& mOnths 10,000 tons below the cur­ ference by the RllllSian-backed Of Improved V-2 Bomb the pl&lll can be comple4ed b, the German surrender. WPB offi­ rent quarter. w.arsaw provisional lOVerttmf'nt. the tim of next ,.ear. The ebapel SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, The eXIled Poles obviously were Italian Prince Conf." Cials earlier m the day said Rus­ wiD be ttl lIIOCIem atructara! de­ sia bad requ ted some restoration AUied Expeditionary Force, Paris indjgnant ov r the fact that they ",_"Cbrls1.o ceDtrlc." The _Is With Socialist Lead.r If shipmen ,but that no arrange­ (AP)-Mass production of im­ IJune Comes to City I were not consulted aboul the pro­ wUI he amD,ed ill .. aeml-ctrcle posed meeting, '!len had been compleled. proved V-2 rocket bombs capable But Nobody Cares I ROME (AP) - Crown Prince areand the .Itar, avofcUq the I~ of pinpoint accuracy at a range of Umberto conlerred last night wiu! b.Ud.... , which Is lOina' oul of 3,000 miles was within reach of .-June--- came to Iowa City yester- Pietro Nenni, Italian Socillli.st R.turned to Sender German scientists when the Eur­ day allernon, complete with warm TUITION PAYMENT leader, on the formation of a new :,~e. o,?:'~esIp ~ e~Ic:!;a-:; THIS IS A SK.ETCH of 'he proposed Catholic IIWdenl chapel dnwn DES Mo[NES (AP)-A letter th' altar pe pi b, the archlted, Barry Byrne. pJalllJ all for a buIldln, to opean war ended, in the announced temperatures, blue skies and fluffy All studenls must pay tuition government and Neon1 said late\" an. Pr_n~ ~OIIt mailed in Des Moines Aug. 25, opinion of United Slates army white clouds. But were Iowa for this term by noon Saturday, he had advised Umberto to resign ;he final plans have DOt been uoe,ott to be bum of stone Inside and. out a«GnUn&, to modem struc­ 1939, has been returned unopened ordnance intelligence experts. Cltlans overjoyed at seeing June? June 16. A $2 tine for late pay­ and proclaim a republic. received and have not been BC- tural dl!8tl1l. The chapel would seal 510 persons In a RUlI-clrcle about after six years, to the sender, Sam Within another six months, Ger­ They were not. Did they hold ment will be assessed the first Umberto, Ileulenant-,enerlll of cepted. the allar wI'h room 10 tha' the orlcinal buUdin, coald be expanded Bassman, Des MOlnes tailor. many would have been able to wild celebralions in honor of her? day and $1 lor each day after lhe realm, was attemptin! to form Byrne ls also workJng on plans to Rat , ... The Dew Ilhapel I. pari of a 'ZH,'" procram whlch In­ The letter, with an enclooed N produce this bomb- the "flying They did not. All they could say that. Students holding exemp­ a new government folloWln, the for the extension of Calvert club, dude. recreational raclU"..,. and bu!dneu offllle5. money order, was addressed to a telegraph pole"- on a scale which was "Gosh, ain't it hoU" tions, including graduate stu~ resignation Tuesday night of Pre­ the Catholic student center at the rabbi in Wilrw, Poland, who had the Nazis believed would have This thundersLorm act i v J t y dents and veterans, must go to mier Ivaooe Booomi. The crown University of Chicago. He has de­ McEleney and the Rev. J . Ryan advisory committee are L. M, B. been caring for Bassman's nieces been great enough to "neutralize should be cleared up by noon and the treasurer's office 1.0 sign prince also conferred duling the sllned several Catholle cllurch Beiser, Ph,D., associate professor Morrissey, Davenport; Herbert J. and nephews aller the death of his any advantage our airplane super­ aller lhat it will be partly cloudy vouchers. day with Mcide de Gasper!, for­ buJldlDga In Iowa. In the school of religion and chap­ HoHman, Dubuque; William F . sisler. It was marked "held dur­ iority had given us," communica­ wilh not much change In the tem­ HARRY O. BARNES eign minister in the Bonoml cabi­ The priests who are working on lain to the Newman club and 8t. Riley, Des Moines; Richard F, ing the German occupation and tions zone headquarters said yes­ perature. Yesterday's high was UnivenUy Registrar net, and Palmiro Togli.tU, Com­ the program, in addition to Fatber Albertua Maanus &WId. Mitchell, Ft.. Dodge, and Mrs. now released by French author­ terday, 82 and the low was a warm 63. '------...:. munist leader. .~ are the Rev. J. Walter The membera of the Catholic I Bruce E. Mahan, Iowa City. Ities."

I r 0' J Pl,GE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY;IOWA THURSDAY. JUNE 14. 1945 ..-:; SCHQOL IN AACHEN OPENS FOR SUMMER SESSION o.F.lttltL DA:lL Y' 8U1[E111 y a.- Ia 'II_ mnVlaury CALIH•• .,.,. _ .... ,- lh .... :rbl!.. ~.J~~.!.!-! .. !2~~;~. P[::JU' ~...... _ H.i\·, 0I1l,oe" 01' Cn&&.!. JIe .. I ...... VIHIIAL NOTICI .... incorporated at 120: 130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City. Iowa. ..,...... IUI .111 ....." ..."., ., Th. D.U, I •••••r _r .. ~.\,~.~ •• fa tile u .....I." lor ...... U ,. III•• " ...., hi Board of trustees: Wilbur Schramm, Kirk H. Porter, A. Crail • D~ I ••••. QINla.u. NOTIC" .aM h .1 'rll. DoUr ...... , Mol1o . ,so ...... all. ~r ...... 1.. 1Ih1 ..1111_"1 ••lIet ... W Hew- .. Baird. Paul R. Olson. Donald Ottilie, Mary Jane Neville. Mary BeUl n •••••Ied b, 1.1.'...... 1 be TYPED oa LIOIBLr Walftll Filmer, Karalyn Keller. Ja('k Moyen. ••• 810NED ., ...... 1 ...... Thurlllay. Juae ... ltd Fred M. Pownall, Publisher John A. Stichnoth, Editor Wally Strinaham. Adv. Mlr. -Feeding Europe * II • UNIVERSITIY CALENDAlR Entered as second class man Subscription rates-By mall $5 WASHINGTON- Without a fan- matter at the Dostoffice at Iowa per year; by carrier. 15 cents Jare or even an audible mute note ... T ...... '. Jue .. operation sponsored by Child Wei· ,Clti, Iowa, unaer the act of con­ weekly. $5 per year. •. or th.e bUiles', Mr. Truman has W\l{kshop~ UQme and Sf,:hool Co­ fare and PTA. Old CapilD,. pes. of March 2. 1879. , \ eued the' handling of European operation, spon.sortt'& ber-~ed ,AYm' ,1hon. their jo~s in search at jops whicn Mr. Truman a few weeks back? 10b•. will mean steady employment for The meeting was sealed air tigfit - But They're Hell'lsh Phi . O~ltp Kappa members will I. O. ICIOODII for the reception station n,earest Iqnch tegether Thursday nOQj1, INDEEP, THE END OF T~ them. against pUblicity or speculation in By HELEN ClllP .WN!- WITH JAPAN COULD public, and no mention of it has B, RUSSELL BRINES I AP Newsfeatures your homes." June 14 ~ at Iowa Urian cllfeteria. The situation has become 10 IOWA UNION flOME WITH SUCH SUDDEN­ been made since the former Euro- WITH THE 24TH DIVISION, NEW YORK _ Every man's a In the barracks the men are All rpemb~rs are urged to attend critical that mllitary leaders have this lurchepn 01 the MlJ81C ROOM 8CHlDULI THAT IT WOULD CAUSE pean food administrator walked ¥indanao (AP) - The la t few hera when he comes home from bertbed according to the station for fir~t mee~ng ;Niss made special appeals to war sum!l1er session. ¥onday-1l-2. 4-11. 7-'. ,: PANIC AMONG LABOR. out and told newsmen that, in view minutes in the tank deck of a land- the battlefields of Europe. whkh they are bound so that all workers to stay on their jobs. in men from one area are together. RA YMOND SCm.ICHER TuesdaY-1l-2, 4-6, 7-1. There ace many straws in the of his own presidential experience ing ship crawl by slowly. It is hat, ih j Presldenl WednesdaY-1.1-2, 4-6, 74. wind point'ing to an almost ove 'r~ navy &hipyards, the- situaJion is ~~ Whlt,e ,Hause y.-ith talKing and sweat beads the faces of green- The New York port of embarka­ Then comes their first American so serious tHd navy merl' c~n nat c~ers, ,~hey could gel' never any- clad infantrymen, stooped to sup- lion staft does everything except meal-the best the army can beg, ThursdaY-ll-2, .~e. 7-11. night cessation at war produc­ Frlday-U-2, 3-11. 6-8. reveal \he actual acts because t1l1ng about this conference from part the packs on their backs. stand an Its head for returning barrow. oc-weU, get. Appetizer, J1)NE COMMENCEMENT .tion. In a Chicago war plant ' Sunday, June 17 at 1:45 p. m., Saturday-Il-;!, 3..Ji. they wOl.\ld be valuable iiJorma- him. It is gloomy. too. aIte the hard servicemen. And If the men asked souP. steak or roast beef if possi­ which had been attected by a degrees a/ld certi1icates will be Sunday-I-5, 6-8. tion to the. enemy. . Stories were published that Mr. morning sunlight of the boat deck .. for it. or even indicated it might be ble, potatoes, fresh vegetables, ·cutback. the workers came to Truman mlght have' o~fered Mr. These men have iust aescenped nice, they'd probably do that, too. bread and butter, salad, ci\ke and conferred llPOP medical and dental The Philharmonic .and NBC their jobs one morning to nnd BAT;l'LE-DA¥AGED SlUPS Hoover the EuroP'!an feeding jab. below to board fue amphibioll3 The brass band is out. American pie, ice cream and milk. Seconds students and nurses who have symphonies may be hellrp ,in tilt .Iiens on the walls stating that at ARE BEING DELAYEn IN RE­ This is extremely unlikely. Mr. tanks. after their last look as girls-the GI's fondest dream-are and thirds - tenths if they want completed their work. The Com­ mu:si,c room S\lnday l\fternoon ,I mencement program will I:>e in the 2 lind 4 o'clock respectively. jtbe end of the day they would no ;r:uaN~NG TO SEf\ ~:FtCf\.USE Jfoover's age (70) would exclude "tourist" at the island beaches there. And, mast important of all, them. main lounge of Iowa Union. Dr. longer be needed. There had been SO MANY WORKERS l,IA VE him from conSidering or accepting they are to invade. red tape has been slashed right Baggage is claimed. Helmets :\nd LEn THtIR JOBS THAll' RE­ 'such a vigorous task. My informa- The ramp slides down. and the and left in an effort to get the men gas masks are turned in. Emerg­ Morris Fishb~ln will deliver the WOM~N'8 RECBEATlON4L no pr,evious hint that the plant Commencement address. Tickets PAIRS ARE BEHINb SCHED- Uoh is ti\at'this subject never cam landing ship is ready to disgorge home as soan as possible. Half the ency Items 01 clothing are issued so SWIMMING would close. It suddenly found of admission will be required up ULE. , . u):l. its cargo. Human cargo. Men no men from Europe come through that every man has one well-fit­ "-5:~0 p. m. Daily. i~IiJ!Jf without a war contract, and The real purpose at the meeting longer interested in scenery, but New York. ting, complete uniform. to 1,30 p. m. A limited number 'a could no longer continue oper­ This nation, however, can nat 01 tickets will be available at the 10-11:30 a. m. Saturday. was to discuss who could handle who can see now a patch of blue When the huge tfansports and Foreign currency is exchanged, Recreational swimrnlllf perlo4e ations. afford to relax it. production .ef­ this botched Eutopean food job water and paler blue sky meeting hospital ships plow into Lower small checks cashed. traveler.:; alumni office in Old Calitol. be­ ginning June 12. are open to all women .ltudtoil, SUPPOSE, TOO. THAT THE forts. A preponderance 01 weap­ best. Singularly. both the Republi- in the green shoreline jungle and New York bay, eevry harbor craft checks and money orders honored. faculty. faculty wives. wivet 01 WAR WITH JAPAN ENDS As ons will mean less lass of li'les can ex-president who did it so suc- the thin slice of white beach. does a dress ship. Sirens and Telegraph and telephone facilities F. G. mGBn Direc.lDr of CODvoeat!ona graduate students and admlnlllrl· .s 'liD P ENL Y AS THE EU­ for us in the :Pacific where each cessfully last time he ",on interna- The alligators have been roaring whistles blow. The guns of Fort are waiting (or the first "hello• Uve ltaft members. Studell.. tJ ~OPEAN WAR ENDED. THEJlE Jap must be Qlas~d .fr~~ ca~es lIOnl\l. fame that eventually put for hall an hour. Their clamol: 1n- Hamilton sound a salute for re­ Inom. SCHEDULE Ibould present their Identltlca"CIII .WILL NOT BE 'ENOUOH 'nME and pillboxes. him in the White House and the Icreases. The lead tank climbs up turnin& generals. A flag-decked Service ribbons and deeQl'ations UNIVERSITY LJBRARY,I;I01)Jt8 cilrd. to the matrElo for admlttaace . TO SET UP AN EFFECTIVE Thus, President Truman's ap­ new Democratic PI' eside~t agreed the Incl.ine of the ramp. then slides welcome home boat brings a WAC are available at PX's nnd volun­ . " ,une i3-Au,.. ~, .1945 M. GLADYS 800ft teer civilian women ore waiting PROGRAM F'OR IMMEDIATE peal for legislation to assure war this time the only agenq fitted dawn mto. the water. T.he In- band to greet the men with their lteatllnl ROjlm!l , l\fac\)r~ Hall ~ to undertake it was the army. It !antrymen m the well behind the favorite jive music. to sew them on. News stories are . • .Llbrllry ;\nlle~ COMMENCEMENT OF RECON­ workers.26 w~eks at unemploy­ hilS the shipping faCilities, the machlne~uns b~unce agains! each "The mu ~ ic's swell." shrieks noe written and sent La home town FRENCH READING EXAMINA· VERSION. ment benefits. an\! .to extend ~jlnda.y-ThU~y know-how. and, InCidentally, most ather. 'Ihey gr.1n sell conSCiously. happy soldier, "but look at those newspapers. Movies , shows. ath­ 7:50 p. m.-12 M. TION Last December, when our these ben~its to federal em­ of the available food fo r the pur- mumble apologies. silk stockings!" letic facilities, libral'ies, and 1-6 p. m. The Ph.D. French rea run, u­ troops were fighting the Battle of ployes, jllariUme wor~er's and pose. Then. as It some invisible A transcribed welcome address chapels are provided for the men's 7-10 p. m. amination will be given in room the Bulge, no one could have others not now insured. is a The political ~hase may not have starter has waved a. f~' the by Maj. Gen. Hamer N. Groninger, amusement before b'ain time. Frid.. )' 314, Schaeffer hall. Saturday. foreseen that the nazis would realistic approach to the problem been discussed between the twa. race Is on. The m,alDn part commander, makes the greet- And when train time comes. 7:50 a. m.-12 M. June 16 from 10 a. m. to noon. ~ 'surrender in five months. of keeping production at the de­ 'let it seems to me the'taH'est and some,how have sw~ng- Into line. ing official as the ships neal' the there's a helping hand (rom every­ 1-6 p. m. plication must be made belote hey one. It is unlikely that we will be sired level until vidorr is com- cleanest' job which could be done are roaring- In formation st!\ tute of liberty- the "famous old Saturltay Thursday, June 14, by signing the r sheet posted an the bulletin board able to predict with any greater plete. I . , along thjs Une in Europe will be b~:~dw~:~e ~:~~. tra.lllng a. lady" that means home. 7:50 a. m .-12 M. outside roo.m 307. Scha.eUer hall. accuracy the date Japan will sur­ . "A sound, uniform unemploy­ the most popular, will gain us the ••• .. . . A "welcome home" edition of 1-5 p. m . m.ost perrnan nt friendliness, and xou ve seen thIS many t.lmes m Charles Ross Wise Government Doc~J,lts DepC., The next examination wiU be 'render. And even if we could ment policy, which can be made lil thl c hn ctlon also the arm newsr~els and he~rd about It oft.en. the NYPE News, containing crisp Library Annex given at the end of the summer know five months in advance. we nation-wide onl1. br Jede\,a) l,ei~ II alII: ~ ~' y AmphIbious landmgs are old stuff directions fOl' theil' stay in the part. Monday-Friday se,sion. ,1ill could do little in setting up isla tron , fs insurance agains.t p6s­ u eS taB. f II f d t tl 1 mill tarlly, slightly repetitious to Is distributed. Form telegrams are Selection to Handle 8,. m.-12 M. PROF. 8. IJ. .uSI Th e sh or ge a a 00 5 usn read about. ready at a fee of 25 cents plus tax. sible dlsruptlon of vital war pro­ aOID&DCe LaDI'IlaIei a' program to solve tHe problems this country today also precludes But how do the kids in the As the ships tie up at one of the 1-.6 p. m. Saturday Departmea' 'of a sudedn cessati\ln at war duction. and it is the only method any reaso~able possibility of ~oing amtracs feel? eight port terminals - golly dec- White House Press production. by which a fair measure of se­ through WI.th the dealers pro- On the clear, hat morning when orated in red. white, and blue­ 8 a. J)1.-12 M. ~ew 1-5 p. m. . It certainly will require mare curity can be provided for those gram of unprovmg the diet of this c;livision landed on Mindanao, other bands jazz up the debarka­ IOWA M.OUNTAINEEB8 By JACK TINNETT E4ucallGD - PhUOIOphy - P.,choI­ than five months lor the massive men and women who . sUck to evreryone everrwhere. .Indt:ed. the Ptc. Lawrence L. ;Ruck of Over- Han . American Red Cross repl'e­ Members registered tor or in­ W ASHINGTON-UnJess you are on Library. ~ HaU mpl'ovement oj. our dIet at home land, Mo., and eighteen others sentatives are waiting with news­ terested In participating in Ibf industries of the United States to their emeri~ncy tas~s to the from the territory served by the I\f.ond.,-Frld., begin diverting any sizable num­ end." said" Ralph M. Blagden, has been tur~~ by .events into.a were aboard an alligator nick- papers and mag a z i n e 5, coffee, St. Louis Past-Dispatch you are slxtn aI}nual summer outing of the 7:50,a. m.-l0 p. m. club to Grand Teto,. NatlOll11 ber of workers into peacetime editor at the SI. Louis Star- primary adminIstration responsJ- named "St. Louis Blues." They be- doughnuts, ice cream and milk. meeting Charles Griffith Ross for Sdur'aY park, Aug. 11 to 26. jU'e askt4 to Times. bility. longed to the veteran 24th (Vic- By train or bus convoy, the men the first time. , operations. Th ere will be,' at 7:50 ~. m.-5 p. m. \Ittend the meeting MondaY, .JIJIII Yet I hear n,e..y dealers here tory) division and were part of the are moved immediately to a stag- In the next few years, the name Schedules of hours tor other de­ ~ourse, more and more peacetime Congr~ss ,should ~c.t on fr!si­ _mdintainilig tha,t this nation is eat- second wave. ' ing area at Camp Shanks, N. Y .• 18 at 7:30 p. m. in studio D of the of the tall, g r i z z led, slightly partmental Ubr~[ies will be post~ jobs as a result at the actual con- \!!,nt 'rrur,nan:S~ !l'&i~s/tl2n ~~fp­ In8 ~\t,er ,t09a,Y than ever in its T,he rocket ships, close 11l- Camp Kilmer, N. J ., or Fort Ham- stooped, 59-year-old chief of Presi­ e.ngineering bulldi.ng. A color 1110- vet-sIan work. - , oui delay. The' co!! at his Jlio­ 01) t)1,e doors of each library. tlon picture of the regioD to be )1Ii toi'y-an~ they can contriv.e 1i- lihore. were layll1&' dGWD thefr ilion, N. Y. Never does the time dent Truman's press corps will be­ Reserve books may be with­ What is labr to do in'. this ,ram' Is l,ik~ly to be 'JDuc~ - l!SS -BUres to shed a truthNl light on hellish b a. r r a I' e. raklne the from transport to camp exceed visited will be shown and outiDI come as well known to you as did drawp 1,0r overni~ht us~ (It 5 p. m. than the cost an impaire\! war equipment will be rusclJ4Mll. period between war proauction ot m1s Impassibility. - beaches wll.h fire. ' three or four hours. that of "Steve" Early, who per­ on Fridays pnd at 4 p. m. on Sat­ edort. .. • ' . • ..., 0 , Thelt story is that th.e under- They were so close to the alJi- At the camps the soldiers who Bring pencil, paper anc! lOe fot ~ nd peace production? Millions , i"- formed the same service for Presi­ urdays. prlvl1ege~ are buying and eating gator that their gunfire sounded have been carrying the war all reireshmel)tI. dent Roosevelt for 12 years. R. E. EJ,LSl"ORTB i more. They mention Negroes. Yet like shells coming the ather way. over western Europe find they are The name of Charley Ross may DJrec&or s·J·!Bllf 'ns Contl'denr" 01 'Ri,. aU \~e Negroes I know are In the One bay ducked at an unusually nat even allowed to cany their become even better known. Pre.>i­ ODtilll' PIree1er Truman Gal ,~ • ,.", same thin soup as any other citizen, perce burst. awn luggage. dent Roosevelt h Id his press con­ senate from Missouri. Charley was , • ~ , ,.,." 'unaele to get more ' ths'n a spare The al1i~ator ground ashore, First official event is an orienta- (erences twice a week and when he a lrej;juent caller at his office ¥lJd SUMMER S!SSIDN ()BO&tlI ·e for ,..,1 bone for it. Their most famed food S.t 0 P P ed, Lt. Troy Stellrecht, lion meeting where the veterans made interim press announce­ intimates of both insist that the First rehearsal of tht summer Three. to Prepar ",., ...: ~ . wak pork chops (and I have heard Adams, Wis., led the boys to the hear the welcome words: ments, they generally were made advice veteran Ross handed aut 01) session chorus will be Thurada7, I Idew dealers in years past shed b~ack sand, up over a cocorut tr~ "You're going home fast, soldier. in his name. President Truman capitol atfairs and politics was June 14 at 7:15 p. m. in the loutb ~1 J(JJtltE J.. SIMr.S_ON int~r.estini . Wlt,h .Secret;z ~~~,- verbal tears because Negroes had knoll and baclt into the <;lesJlrted We'll keep you 24 to 36 hours at has indicated that he will hold to a easily worth any Dews that was rehearsal hall. All interested In "!Mllated fee .. News Ana17.d .timu,s ~nd 10rmer ~ar Obl~r , to eat thli meat of less nutritious town at Parang. NYPE. After that, you're /"leaded single press conference a week­ handed him in return. President choral singing call at room 101, Byrnes foppl~g th!! list ~~ Hbp- content than beef), but they get no ------A-RA-B-IA-=-N- N-I-G-H- I ..------mare if needed- but even fewer if Truman and Ross had been work­ music studio building, Welilleidl1, Aside from his own Immediate kins and DaVlei also to go If th~ir , pork chOP~ now. oJ he has no pressing new.>. This anq ing together for quite a while. June 13, or Thursday. June 14. policy 'declarations as he took 01- ,heal.th Pe.rniiti; it 'appears weigh,~Q ' No 'matter how high the, new a few other factors make it almost 'Ross was born in Independence PROF. HERALD 8T,u1: ~{ce on' the death ot President Jor' discusslons at post-war pr!lH'- o.;afer! m/iy pile their statistics, certain that Ross will be the presi­ in 1885 and took his degree at the D&ree&lr Roosevelt, perhaps the most im- le.ms In Eur0p..!l. or!or Im~.lem!'n~ lf1ey' ~annot disprove the fact that dent's moulhpiecefor the press state university 20 y~ars later. One portan! step in international af- tallon ot the' worJd peace' orga1\l- 'few ~t6hs in my little town near and radio men mare frequently of his sons was named Walter S1JMMEJ' SESSION OIlCBI8IU fairs 'President Truman has taken zadon tali in, Sha~ in San Fr!\n- here n&ve had any meat. except than Early, whose responsibilities Williams', for tile lonl-time dean First rehearsal of the sumllltr 'was his 'selection of Harry Hopkins CIsco': . ~ -. bblognd, siric! last wedn~sday and along that line were &reater thaq of the journalism school there. session symphony orchestra will and Joseph E. Davies as his emis- ]leporl' 1rom Ca'pl~ol hill in~i- i)Je"A~ ~)ose<;l its ,butcher t;oun­ any who had preceded him . . After several years of ~ractical ex­ be Thursday, J411e 1. at '1:111 p.lII. laries respectively to Premier cale that Mr. Dutnan' is so en· ~Jh ~~st Saturqay. TlIlk, cit diets to A canvass of the Wa:s hingto~ perience, Ross spen~ 10 years on l in the north rehear8al hall. AI) J;talin and Prime Minister Church- coura'g~d ~1 ~ ''hi,s persqrthl Pflv ' I~~ed ' or hl1derprtvit~ged be­ press and radio correspondents the university journalism faculty. interested in orcheitral playinC m leading up to the next "Big 'scdl1t .. · hav, to' . ilk Irom t/lll} Ji!brtJe bherous. when o,n1y bolp,iTla makes it plain that in their opinio~ but turned aillin to active news­ call at room 110, mU&jc ,tudlo Three" meeting. 'sector as ~':~ as ~.m San Fr~JI- ,c~l.r.t b~ ·obtai!l~4 by anydne, ~rld a President Truman couldn't have pap,ring when he became chid ot buildina, Wednesday. Jun_ 11 tt He could have found no two men cisco, Moscow and L'oi\4on iliac iie 'iit'adJ! veaUy inferior to pre-war dane better than select Ross. the Posl:-Dislliltch Wash/naton bu­ ThursdllY, June 14. better qualified to reassure 10108- even h'oplIs io 'have ' actual o~ ~: it '!!lite Ross started his Washin&ton reau. PJOF. P. G. CLAP. c~:.v and London that Mr. Roose- sur~ 'AmerJean ' )!g1fliI~lve ~l!R . - r ~!-ll to a n~~ ~,e&fr. eveq.thing career with the Post-Dispatch 26 In 1932. be woI) tlill Puijtz,r DlrN" velt's passing meant no change catfon Of ~)'Ie' world 9rJa~zaJ.}!ln ' is a c)ass pro~I!!!'l a~ !I !loclal years ago, and e)[.cept for ive prize for his Washil)gton repol'ti whatever In' Amerj.can purposes c~art~r -in ~fs ~cJ{~~ ~ t11~ '1~ ~u~s~or ~fd there rs no" ~ide to years when he edited the paper's and has otherwise hlld apout ai' PI LAMBDA TUnA " war and peace. Both 'been of the meetln,. anything except tbe one they have n4 t?r' ha4 "~lg Three" editorial page, he has been in the the hOl'1ors capital newsmen cal) All women who are realslt.... too tong' and too intimately asso- It was ~ol ,;e~tJy ;tre~ put J~!~~ ' 'fttey canr,

• • '. ~ 'AOI!IIItII ::jntU===R5::D::A:::Y=,-==.JUN==:. =E==14:=,=.,19:4::::5=:======T=8:::E=::D::A=I::::;L:s::.rT lOW AN. '() WAC IT Y. lOW A £ r N SMART FOR SUMMER Bar Auaclation Plan. Workshop Public AHairs Bureau Traffic cou .... Meeting Symphony Orchestra OHers TraHic Survey With Short Course Needs More Players To Open A traffic courts conference For Iowa Communities ponsored by the junlor bar sec­ To Fill String Section tiqn of tbe Iowa Slate Bar associ­ Registration to Begin A traffic survey recently com­ Se\'~ violin, viola and cello in a lion wDl be held in ronJ unction pleted Sioux City is the first players are n~ed in the &UI1Uner Today for Home-School of a series of surveys which the w!fh t.br peace officers libort ion sympbony orchestra to Cooperation Study TO university bureau ot public aUairs courw at t.br UniVCl'Slty or [owa expects to make in Jowa commu­ June 25-21. complete the tring sectioo and bal­ The workshop in home-school WED nities. James P. F..tonoJnoos of Chicago, ance the reed and brass sections. cooperation sponsored by the Jowa The survey rvi~, given with­ n.Uonal c:hairman of tbe 'unior Players who ha\'e bad one or more child welfare research station with JUNE 27 out cost to the city, j in charge bar conference of the American years of high school or colle,e ex­ lbe National Congress of Parents of Prol. Richard L. Holcomb, who Bar aSSOCiation, wlll partIcipate perience In ensemble organiza­ and Teachers will open with reg­ joined the bureau of public af/airs in the local mHtinl. tions will be welcome, said Prof, Istration this morning at 8:30 in of the exteruion division In April Other tpeakers and panel mem­ Philip Gr~ley Clapp, director of Old Capitol. to work undel' the direction of bers lnclu.: lusUc:e Frederle M. No rigid schedule will be fol­ Prof. Rollin M. Perkins of the col­ MIller- ot 1M Iowa Iupre.me court, the on:h tra and head of the lege of law. lowed for morning sessions of the prHIdent 01 the state bar assocla­ mu ic department. workshop group, since lime is to Professor Holcomb, whose pre­ t n; Harvq D Booth, secretary vioUs service included work as as­ The orchestra will make two be allowed for work on individual ot lhe tnttk COlIrt division of the public appearances during the projects.. Each morning at 9 sistant director of the Kansas City, NatlOlJ.al Safety counclJ: In pector I;ummer lon, a /iYmphony COD­ o'clock the entire membership will Mo., police school, worked In col­ D. W. lUyburn, Dt'I Moines pol­ laboration with J . L. Lingo of Pur­ cert July 11 and a join t concert convene to discuss problems or lee department, and C. Edwin with the summer Ion ehOl'US questions that may have ari en and due university in the Sioux City Moore, judJC 01 the dJatrict court, project. Aug. 1. The symphony concert to hear general announcements. Des Moine&. will be conducted by Professot' The members will then proceed MR. AND ~fR8. Forre , Theobald of Raub, N. D., announce lhe en­ Traffic system, laws and en­ forcement, aecident investigation, Clapp. The joint choral and 01'­ to their Individual work. I[ two caa-emen' and approachlna- ~l'1'la ..e of lhelr daqMer, Helen, to Nkk ch IraJ concert will be under the Fasslno, pharmacist's mate second class, IOn of Mr. and Mrs. James personnel and tralnin , and quar­ or more workshop registrants wish ters and equipment were point Rebekah Lodge direction of Dr. Thompson Stone to- work on identical projects they ,Fassino or Benld, III. The weddlnc wlU lake place June 27 at st of Boslon, IU t member of the Thomas More chapel. Mills Tbeobald 15 a ..radude or Minot hl.. h school considered. A detailed report will To Elect Officers may meet togethel'. All sessions be riled with city officials, with music faculty durin .. the summer will be held in Old Capitol. In 1\lInot, N. D., and Is now a Junlor,ln the IIClhool 01 nurslnr at the ·on. University of Iowa. Mr. Fasslno wa I'l'aduaud from Benld hl ..b school the main objective the reduction _flection of oUicen will take l"ollowing is the outline for th is oC the traffic accident rate. place at a meeUnr of the [owa The fint on:hesLra rehearsal wiJ1 morning: and attended the Vocue School of Photorrapbr In Chlcaro before en­ City oWcials In Iowa can re- I crty Rebekah I~ No. 4111 at 8 be this evening at 7:1:1 in the North 8:30 Registration, senate c1fam­ terln .. tbe 5tlrvlce. III' Is now tatloned at the Navy pre-nl .. ht IIChool here. quest a survey along sucb linCII as o'clock !.bill ~enJnc In th Odd rehearsal hall of the music bulld­ ber, Old Capitol. traffic or police department or­ Fellow ball. The charkr will be Inc. New members hould hand 9 Convening of workshop group ganization. The service will be draped tor Mary Strub and Ann in thelr names at the departmental and staU, senate chamber. Greet­ expanded as fast as possible in line Lolack., dec&!BMd members. In of!lce, room 110, music bulldinl, ings by President Virgil M. Seven Engagements, Weddings Announced with the university's policy to aJd cllarp at lhe ceremony will be durin/! offlee hour.. They Ihould Hancher, the director of the sum­ city and county officials. Mr$. NaUIe Wilson, ~. Cora An­ then be pr ent this evenln/! be­ mer sesSion, the presidcnt at the Professor Holcomb 1$ pecially tbony, Mrs. Allee Fountain and tween 7 o'clock and 7;13 for aJ­ National Congrt:ss and the direc­ Of Former University Students, Graduates interested in tUna up police Ellubeth McLachlan. i,nment to chairs. tor of the child welfare research radio systems. He said that this can be done for Ie thin u tlJou­ ItaUon. Announcement has been made of where he was aUiliated with Beta General plan of workshop. sand dollars and the communlc:a­ the weddings of six Cormer uni­ Theta Pi fraternity. He entered TilE TYPICAL IOWA coed will wHh Introduction o[ staff. versity students and graduates and tJon r ults in greatly increased al.-ned to tr_ temlDbdlJ. Ua the service in 1941 and has served efIiciency of the police depart.­ find IOmeUel1ll' espedaUy aC/.rac­ (((ted wWtllne, lull dlmdl IIkIrl. 111-124 SouIh CllDtoa Street Phoa. -01 Brief outline of requirements the engagement of one student. three years overseas with the 34th lor individual projects. ments. Even medium-sized towns &lve and pl'&Cl.Ucal In this peuant­ and pulled. aleevs Parllell­ division. style dreM of blue denim. trtmmed .,..,rt STRU8·WARfHAM Description of resource mate­ Friend-Schamp can benefit Crom such installa­ larly popalv Utt. lIU1111ft' t. &he rial. tion. with whlu I18S&nl braid and deep In a candlelight service, Sarah Marlln-lIalnllne blae rltkraek. The dresa IJJ de- hl.. h, l4u.are n«kline. Iowa Caty'. Dcpartm Storti-Ed. 186'1 Meeting of adviser and stu­ E. I'riend, daughter of Mr. and n' dent. In a single ring ceremony, Ruth Mrs. Wilson B. Friend of Harlan, Eloise Martin, daughter of Mr. and Picnic, Hay Rid. Ends All afternoon sessions will br became the bride of Lieul. Donald held in the senate chamber of Old Mrs. Sterling B. Martin of near Junior Farm Bureau R. Schamp, son of Mr. and Mr~. R. Melrose, became the bride of Capitol. Problems relating t:J L. Schamp 01 Des Moines, at 4:30 Iowa little Affecle~ by ICC Freight Rate Gel Ready for Ihe Lieul. (j.g.) ~iehard Pearson Hain­ Membership Drive children's behavior and attituoe p. m. May 8 in St. Paul's Lutheran will be discussed today, with Dr. line, D.C.U.S.N.R., son of Maj. and • church in Des Moines. The Rev. Mrs. Fore t A. Hainline ot Rock The John on county Junior Robert R. Scars, director of the Eric Biedermann read the vows of Decision, Prof. H. H. McCarty Tells Lions - research station, as chairman. Tile Island, m., Feb. 14, in the naval Farm Bureau closed their mem­ the ring service. bership drive Jun 6 with a wiener following problems will be con­ chapel at Naval Training center, Jowa doesn't sLand to gain or As a re ult of the recent ICC de­ Opening of Lake McBride The brJde was graduated from roast and hay rack ride at the slderecl: What the teacher needs Sampson, N. Y. ]os con Iderably by lhe recent de­ clbion, first cla Ir Ight rate from Waterloo high school and the The bride attended the Cbarlton home of Wesley and Edith Hotk trom the home to interpret and school of nursing at the University cision of the interstate cornm rce Cedar Rapids to Chicago wil1 'b , guide child's behavior and atti­ public schools and Chariton Junior of Iowa City. commls 'ion regllrdlng freight rat THIS WEEK-END of Iowa. She recently enl [stcd in The membership drive gained 32 decr a ed trom 96 c nts per hun­ tude; What the parcnt needs from college. She also allended Iowa odjustments, according to the vi w dred pound to 94 c('nI9; from the army nurses corps. State college at Ames, and the new members for the club bring­ the school to guicie child's be­ Lieutenant Schamp was gradu­ ex])rc cd by Prot. H, H. McCarty Sioux City to Chic go, 156 to 143, Bathing - Pi nirking! havior and attitude efrecthrely: University ot Iowa. Ing total membership to 72. In a spe h at the Lions club ated from Independence high Lieutenant Hainline attended the The m mbership drive was con­ nd from Denver to Chlcallo, 279 How these nceds of teachcr and lunchcon lit Reich's Pine room ycs­ to 251. ThWl the further we t, the school and from the College oC en­ Rock Island public schools and ducted In the form of a conlest p~ent can be met. A geneJ'al dis­ gineering at the University of terday. great r th percenta, in ir IlIht L()()k lIf'r for- cussion will conclude the meeUng. took pre-dental work at Augus­ b tween t am . The membership Iowa, where he was aCtiliated with tana college in Rock Island and divided into team No. I, head d by Prote or McCarty at the collelle rate r ducUons. •'larks Pi Tau Sigma, honorary engineer­ was graduated (rom the college of Eddie Kaspar k, and lcam No. !, of comm r ,who wa on ot the On the other hand, the lirst c1ass • IIorll ing fraternity. He enlisted in lead In, wltne. s at th ICC h ar­ fr Ight ral for goods going from June, 1942, and went overseas the dentistry at the University ot Iowa hended by WeB liotka. , hirb Henry J. Dreckman, in 1944. During the drive a barn dance lng, said, "It seems likely that n w Clinl Il to Chicago will be In­ following August, where he has m nulacluring mighl appear in I'W attl" Lieutenant and Mrs. Hainline frolic wall held in Howard Foun­ cr II~ from 70 «'l'Its per hundred Plrlysuill served for three years in North Iowa if It Is the type that can s rve pounds to 77 «'Ilt. The furth r SUI Empl~ye, Dies AfrJca, Sicily and Italy. are now residing at 155 Nursery taln's. barn. A numb r of new avenue, Geneva, N. Y. memb r lind prospecUve members mark we·t and outh of U5, but ell t, the gl aler the percenta, of tho plan in Iowa who. e plant inercase. Henry J. Dreckman, 72. died ~ers-Ptelffel' attended this party. Ferris-Morley ar mainly in the eastem part of Proteosor McCarty said th t the yesterday at ~O a. m. following a In the chapel of the First Prcs- Wes Hotka's team No.2 won the In the Little Church of the contest by a very small margin the state may xpariencc even rnllronds can bc expected to tight long illness. He was a resident of by tel' Ian church in Cedar Rapids, IIreater dIWculty." Iowa City {ol' 22 y aI's and hap Betty Jean Rogers, daughter of Flowers at Forest Lawn. Glendale, and will be ('nt rtalncd at a pic­ the fr Ight rate ('hang s order d been employed by the univerSity. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace K. Roger.! Call1., Lulu Mac Ferris, daughter nic at Lak Macbride July I, by Str Ing that it will take at by the ICC through court action, He was preccdcd in death by of Fairfax, became the brJde ot of Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Ferris of Eddie Kasp rek's team No. 1. least II year before any definlle but regardl!!! , the act Is a fore­ his wife in 1918, one son and one Pvt. Robert E. Pfelfler, son of Marquette, b came lhe bride of conc1Wllon. regarding th ecauali- runner 01 what I~ to be cxpected daughter. Mrs. Alta Pfeiffer and Dr. H. E. Herbert Donald Morley, pharma­ Mrs. Covert to Review zaUon of freight rates can b ap­ In th future. He is survived by six sons, Leo Pfeiffer of Cedar Rapids, May 9 cist's mate first class, son of Mr. preciably liS rtained, Prof or A., Floyd and Ambrose, all of Iowa at 4 p. m. Dr. Robert LitUe read and Mrs. Lane Morley ot Glen­ Book at Vespers Mc arty expr ed the opinion City, Joseph of Colorado Springs, the vows of the double ring dale, May 13. The Rev. Dr. James _____ that thc west and the south stand Col., Ray of Hollywood, Calif., and service. Whitcomb read the vows of the The book "J Begin Again," by to gnln most by th commission's PaUl now in the ail'forces; one The bride is a graduate of double ring service. Alice Bretz, will be reviewed by d Islon to incre eastern frel ht daughter, Mrs. Ray Smith of Chi- Roosevelt high school in Cedar The bride received her educa­ Mrs. B. N. Covert, assistant di- rates by Jo p r (' nt and d cr as cago, and ninc grandchildrcn. Rapids and attended Cedar Rapids tion in the Marquette pub I I c rector of Pr sbyt rlan student ae- southern and we t rn rates by 10 The body was taken to Beck- Business college. She has been schools, the University of Iowa, tivltlc.s, at the W tmlnst r ,!i'el- per cenl. man's where it will remain until employed in the office of Dr. and Iowa State college at Ames. lowshlp vespers Sunday afternoon Profcssor McCarty stateci thai the time of the funeral services. P feWer for the past three years. She Is now employed by the For­ at 4:30 In the parlors of the First the aim of the comml~slon'8 tar­ The rosary will be said at 7:30 Private Pfeiffer was graduated est Law Insurance company. The Presbyterian church. reaching order w s to decentralile p. m. today. Funeral services will from Lake Forest academy and bridegroom recclved hls educnt!on Muriel Burnell will be student! industry and aid oth r see lions be held at 9 a. m. tomorrow in St. Lake Forest college in Lake For­ in Salem, OrC. chairman and worship leader at which hav b n handicapped by Mary's church and burial will be est, 111., and has taken pre-medic Ha rrlman-WbJtehoUSf: the v pel's s rvlces. Supp r will high fr ight rates. lie cited that in 5t. Joseph's cemetery. training at the University of Iowa, Word has been receiv d of the be served oller th v p rs by a the west trunk line wns handi­ Our Breakfast II Tops engagement of Mildred Harriman, cllmmltl consl Un of Claire capped by 28 per cent higher ANNAPOLIS HONOR COUPLE WEDS daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Str et, Jean Mathers and Harry freight rat s, the southwest by 75 With the 7 A. M. Crowd ,, - Harriman ot Jersey Shore, Pa., to Auchter. per cent and the south by 39 per cent. Grant Whitehouse, son of Mrs, U, U ita a quick cup of G. Whitehou:se of Henderson, Ky. Services for J. H. Weir The freight rale adjustments, The wedding will take place June which go Into effect arLer Aug. 30, coff.. or a delicious 23 at Trinity Episcopal church In To Be Tomorrow apply only to manufaclured com­ breakfast of bacon Williamsport, Pa. modities and not to aarlculture or and 89911- you will The bride-elect is a graduate of Funeral services [or J. H. Weir, mining. Th Pacific area is unaf­ WJlliamsport high school and who died early Tu day mornin, fected by th order, Qa' quick courteous Dickinson junior college at Car­ act rash r~ illne , will be held ProCessor Ml' arty said lhal due Mlmca at Racine'. at the Ilohenschuh mortuary at 2 lisle, Pa. Formerly employed by to its proximity to the eastern fountain. the chemical control department of p. m. tomorrow. slates, [owa , particularly eastern the U. S. Rubber company, she is He was born March 24, 1887, In Iowa, can hardly hope to make at present employed in the chem­ Cedar Rapids, th son of James gains of any great xtent. As a Ical laboratory of Armour Leather and Anna Weir. He was employed foundation for his opinion, he cited company in Wl1l1amsPQrt. by the Rock Island railroad for the freight rales for various cities in Racine's Fountain Mr. Whilehouse is a graduate of past 40 years. Iowa and other western stales. Barrel high school In Henderson, He is survived by his widow; Ky., and received his college two children, James H. Weir Jr. education at the University ot of Los Angeles and Mary Louise AQUATIC FASHION8-glamorou or 8 date are .hown Kentucky at Lexington, Vll ., M.I.T. at home; a b.rother, S. K. Weir of here as .e~pted by tars of the cin rna. They're at Boston, Mass., and the Univer­ Cedar Raplds,and one sister, Mrs. sity 01 Iowa. He is employed as F. C. McCay of Wichita, Kan. smart, but not extreme , .. with a long-lived tyle II.nd research scientist for the United Dr. Ilion T. Jones wUl be in Stales division 01 war research at charge of the services and burial long-wearing quality typical o[ Jantzen' at trub'. New York City. will be in Oakland cemetery. BradlcY-Manllllh Announcement has been made 01 Knights of Columbus PASTEL B .... THING SUIT5-0f heavy jer­ the marriage of Catherine Anne To Have Eledion -7 with fitted waist and full lathered Bradley of Los Angeles, Call.f., tlUrt for fllUre nattery. Ut," niece of Mr. and Mrs. Henry F, The Marquette Council No. 842 Bradley of Newton, to Capt. Ar­ of the Knights of Columbus will FLORAL PRINT JERSEY-new one-piece lhur J. Manush. U.S.M.C., son of hold an election of oUlcers at their Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Voigt of Bur­ regular meeting to be held at the atyle with protecting shoulder cape. lington, at the Church 01 the club house at 8 o'clock tooight...... Precious Blood in Los Angeles, A stag dinner for members only June 7, at 8 p. m. will be held at 6:30 p. m, Mrs. Manush attended the Uni­ BERMUDA PRINT SUIT-with elastic for versity of Iowa where she was af­ a two-piece suit. Desiped lor fliUI'e filialed with Gamma Phi Beta so­ naval air slaUon at Jacksonville, eOlltrol. ts." cial sorority. While living in Los Fla., was the setting for the wed­ ding of Marybelle Carolyn Green­ Angeles she was employed as an TbeR and many other suits awalt your assistant accountant in the office man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. or the Bechtel-McCone corpora­ Donald R. Greenman of Mason inspection •.. here you'll find a areat tion. City, and Lieut. Stuart A. Ashton, nr.,.! Before entering the service, U.S.N.R. of Owens, Va., whJch took Manush was graduated place April 7. from the college or liberal arts at The bride is a graduate of the the University of Jowa where he Mason City b.igh school and the was affiliated with Delta Tau University of Iowa. Delta social fraternity, Be served Lieutenant Ashton is a graduate with the Third marine divisioll..in of Staunton Military academy. He INSIGN ELDON KNAPE, winning company commander at Annapolla'" recently returned ,trom two years . tor the elalS of 19.6, Is shown above leaving 8t. John'a Lutheran the south and central Pacific for the past two and one-half years. service in the south Pacific and ls church at Napoleon, 0 ., with his bride, the rOnm!r MIlS Lillian stationed at the naval air station Cordel, who prealded !'S "Color Girl" at the Naval academJ'1I June Greenman-Albion at Pensacola, Fla., where the ~ •• I Jee ....._t f. Dell tII_ W_ ...... -V :Week_ festlvili~ . (I ntfl n.tiouJ\ The All Saints chapel at the couple will fnide. _ ...... '" ------_.. THURSDAY. ;; " A~EroUII .., ~ fR't"An. 'Y rOWAN, lOW 1 orrT.I'OWA . JUNE 14, IS45 ••....,======~ .... -= ~.~~u=~~====~~~ -- ~ _:::::>~~~~~~~~~~~~====~======rr==~======~==, ~~.~f= _ · ======~==~~~:======~~~======~:::u Prot. V

' "lUI 11m _Ill-WHO Sec'ond Vogel Hopes to Retunl c,II-IU'" '-15 :~-' l :n~in -gs: Jlrot. \II Phillies, -Battle~.I" ~ . . ' .. . . ' ,~ch dcP Guess tOuterence hearing rei ,cribed Vi( SUI After D~scharge ,&Tam at 12 Wartlm. To fessor Johr Bra·ves. I 0' ·J.o ·. A' ~cord bY Dick Yc To Whip'· MediI With An~ Ball Ch;b- .. , Says ·Athletics "NervoUI Sch~ !ott R. Wo AIRTIGHT/ DEFENSE) SDlrl~ the subject Lose First Ital society MOlor Leaguers Star Morale'Builder this aftern By ROY LUCB presen t the Ev Dally Iowan Sporia ••'ter By WHITNEY MARTIN nals; Enos Slaughter. Cardinals; 1 , Tilt, 8 to 1 NEW YORK (AP) - You can , Braves; Charley Gil­ Former Hawk Bas.ball Mrs. All WE HAD LUN()H with pad take a diamond out of a bracelet bert, Cubs; M ike McCormick, ,nd Mrs. ]I Scllroader •. Carl Ljeb and alld It·s still a diamond. so it's logi­ Reds; Willard Marshall. Giants. Mentor B~lieves Vets be presente Break Winning Str.ak Clem Crowe yesterday alld aome cal you can lake a major league o Will Return to CoUeg.· \lIle progr At 16; Mort Cooper very Interest~ng points were dis- slar out of the majol' leagues and Mrs. EIJeil cussed concerning Iowa's athlMlc he's still a star. : Tex Houghson.' Red 'time" (Gel Hurls Sixth Win futurll in the Big reno Which is jllst using the servant's Sox; C hub b y Dean. Indians; By IIELEN HUBER With the Li llo~)1 Lleb aJJd Schroeder.treAetJ entrance to the fact that a service Luman liarris, Red Sox; Sid Hud­ Dally lowl1n Sports WrltM' t.r) . Mrs. BOSTON (AP)-After losing the fact that they cOllBldere!l the baseball game, or series of games, son. Senators; Al Lyons. Yankees; Lieut. Com~~t Olto V 0 g e 1. their 16th game in a row. the Uaw~I!Jes'. at,lIetie reeorll 4lH1n&, planned for Honolulu can very Ted Lyons. White Sox; Bob Harris, former baseball cOll ch al the Uni­ Phillies snapped the B 0 s ton tlte Pallt few yean al w .....rfili. w~ll be a proxy for tl)e cancelled Athletics; Walter Masterson, Sena­ versity of Iowa f"om 1925 to 1942, Braves' nine-game winning streAk cQIIBlderlP( ,be ffUlt ~~t 19Wa Was major leagu.e all-star game this tors. was on the campus for a few hours yesterday by capturing the 15-in­ 'orct'jl to INH!rate wtth@ut Ul~ )I.~p yea)'. The teams will be made up of Catchers: Bill Dickey, Yankees; yesterday. He was weU-tanned ning second hall of a double­ lIf aby army 0.- navY 1JI).l1e. O'~r major leaguers, many of whom un­ RoJiie Hemsley, Yankees; Birdie and ready with a broad grin header, 5-4. Mort Cooper gained I1lb.ool~m\lllh lu.er IIch~ u... queetionably would be chosen for .Tebbetts, T i g e r s; Ken Sears, and a hearty hanpshake, which, it his sixth straight win while hurl­ lowa, lUI a maiter of fact.-ba.ve all-star teams were they still plty­ Yankees. is understood, w as always his ing a six-hitter for the Tribe~­ been fpree4 to IIhut d...QWU on aUt- ing baseball for a living. First base: J 0 h n n y Sturm, custom. men's 8-3 triumph in the opener. letlcs, 'a '~t tlaai Daa CGlnaiders On top of that, the rival teams, Yankees. Chuck Stevens, Browns. Vogel was founlt where every­ The victory-starved Phillies had Second base: J oe Gar don, very lmJloriant U. any Illllool'a ttI- according to the plans of Lieut. BrU one else in Ihe past, present, or ~-1 Yankees; Dario Lodiglani, White a lead in the first game, only ture aihletie prorrUIL Dickey, will be made up of Ameri- future of Iowa ath letics is fou nd­ to have the Braves set a seven­ We can easily see their point can and National leaguers. re­ Sox; Tom Carey, Red Sox. ott Dad Schroederjs ,office. Ot course. rlln Plast in the fourth against in that case. Any school that has sp~ctively, so in theory at least it Third base: Billy Hitchcock. the biggest question hanging Dick Barrett, who was creqited been out of athletic competition will be the VB. the Tigers. with the nightcap decision. for several years is going to nave American league. ' . : John Pesky, Red Sox. around was, "Arc you returning to Iowa next year?" The Braves made seven errors in one iieUce of a time geiting back on. Here are a few of the players : Taft Wright. White Nothing Definite 10:30 eight innings behind Bob Logan in its feet-both athletically speaking who will be IIvailable for thi! Sox; Walt Judnich. Browns; h 'ed­ )1:00 the second game while the Phillies and in school spirit. Athilltes are competitiqn. which will be two out die Hutchinson, Tigers. Answered Vogel, "Naturally can say nothing dNinite. but I )1 :30 were building up a 3-2 lead but naturally • g"oing to other schools of three games: Add to these rosters the names of )1 :45 will say ·that If and when I am dis­ tied it up in the ninth. in order to play and school spint j'oJationfll Le&&,ue gents such ns Walker Cooper and 1l:50 Against Ira Hutchinson in the will consequently drop to a new Pitchers: Howie Pollett, Card!- J ohnny Beazley of the Cards; Ted charged. I hope to come back 10 Iowa." Which sentiment. of course, 12:00 15th, the Phils scored twice 0)1 a low level. h!lls; Clyde Shoun, Reds; Hugh Williams of the Red Sox and Dick is mutual here. ' 1%:30 pass, Whitey Wietelmann's third Dad admitted that onaalast ,"i', Casey, Dodgers; Vern Olsen, Cubs; Wakefield of the Tigers and possi­ 12:45 miscue on a double play ball and he thoul!ht that Iowa would be Russ Meers, Cubs. bly others Who might be available Vogel declined to make a state. ment. optimistic or peSSimistic, on 1:00 singles by Vince DiMaggio and forced to drop out of confj!rence Catchers: Ray Lamanno. Reds; for the games and you'd have a 2:00 competition, but the Hawks man- Dee Moore. Phillies; Cliff Dapper, walk-away pen nan t winner in next year's teams. However, he did Rene Monteagudo. who connected ~:10 say that he tho\.tght it was a fine with the bases loaded. The Braves aged to ~uU thrQugh illd survive. Dodgers; Marv Felderman, Cubs; either league. Naturally some of 3:00 idea that Iown ,.jas continuing its scored once in their side of the , He believes the WQrst is over now Bob Schllffing, Cubs. the players listed are comparative­ 3:15 ly unknown, Qut shucks. there afe athletic part iCipatidn beca use, "it is 15th. after having what appeared and that athletics are definitely First base: Gil Brack, Dodgers; 3:30 enough real, grade "A", 88-proof an essential p.lrt of education and to be their winning run cut off by on the up grade a~ far as Iowa is Don Lang. Reds. 3:35 .concerned. Second base: Bill y Herman, stars included to satisfy the most is definitely .a morale builder." 4:00 Tom Maun~y in the previ.! critical. ous sessiop. Sc400l s"trt, Dodgers. O. I. Bill of RljI"hts to Help 4:15 In t~ cOllrse of the discus~ion. Third base: Lew Riggs, Dodgers, Dates oj' the games had not been First Oame Many sports Lims have been 4:30 Ilad brougl)t up the question pf Stan Rojak, Dodgers. announced as thi s was written, but wondering if fell ows who are now 5:00 PhUadelp'hla AB R H Ii: schQol spirit and sportsmanshltl Shortstop: Nan n y j'ernandez. they are to be played for the enter­ in service will feel as though they 5:30 between schools. l:verybodf kr}OW8 Braves: .. tainment of service men only at are too old to rfJ !T\ back to school, 5:&5 Flager, ss ...... II 1 1 9 Marsh, Champion Fox Brownie Wins- that school spirit on this un\ver- OutfIelders: Stan MUSIal. Cardi- Furlong field. therefore impairing sports. Vogel 6:00 Antonelli, 3b ...... 4 0 0 0 ,Ken sity was sadly lacklPII lqst fall at ------­ claims. " It WB, n't t,rue in the last 8:55 WasdeIl, 1b ...... 4 0 0 1 Indians Get the footb!l~l ga~s. However, when war and I dOIl 't th in k it will be 7:00 Crawford, U ...... 4 1 1 0 Swimm~r, Returns the basketball season rolled around Hoop true this time. The G. I. biU of Monteagudo, rf ...... 4 1 3 1 anc! the Hawlts started winninl{ Jr" Established rights will stimulate mnny of them Dinges. cf ...... 3 Brown1s Bow 0 1 0 Hils; Racing a\1d kept on winning. the sclloOI thal might not go utherwise." PeacQck, c...... 2 0 0 1 14 Fall To Hawkeye Camp. spirit improved. As Preakness Favorite Vogel who has been stntione.lli Seminick. c ...... 1 0 0 0 What SehfOleder would like to St. Mary's Pre-Flight jn California Daniels. 2b ...... 3 0 0 0 Kenneth Marsh o( Cedar Rap­ .nstall in ~h" mind of the ~u4ent To Tigers; left last night. fie!" 's to the ifs and Barrett, p ...... 1 0 0 0 Roundup With 3to 2Odds ToChisox,S·3 ids, winner oi 10 championships Is the fact that fowa' ~am 'II hi, whens and to Vogel's return to Lucier. p ...... 2 0 0 0 as a sprint swimmer in A.A.U. and .... * * team-win. lillie, oir draw_Dd Iowa. Triplett· ...... 1 0 0 0 high school competition, has re- NEW YORK (AP)-With four tbat rerardless of hQw the team BALTIMORE (AP)- The Ken­ CHICAGO (AP) - Cleveland's turned to the University of Iowa of the 11 starters in the featured II farlJll". lae $hould aupport It til York Stars tucky Derby king, Hoop Jr.. was Totalll ...... 33 3 3 Indians hammered three Chicagll after receiving n mec!ieal dis- Oyster Bay handicap at Belmont the ulmotit. established yesterday the slight Brooklyn Climbs 10 Seco.nd ... Batted for Daniels in 9th • pitchers for 14 hits. including two charge (rom the marine corps. park yeslerday hitting the wire On the matter of sportsmanship favorite for the 55th running of BROOKLYN (AP) - Brooklyn homers and three doubles yester­ He enlered service emly in nbreast, J. B. Theall's Fox Brownie DETROIT (AP) - Big Rudy the hisloric Preakness stakes at climbed into a secord plnce tie with Boston All R H E petween scnoqls. Dad said that ath­ 'day, but could get only three runs 1942 after spending a semester at· emerged lhe winner by a short letic heaos from all U"\8 confer­ York's bat boomed yesterday for Pimlico Saturday at probable odds Pittsbu rgh, only onc )101( game out of first place. by nosin g out the Culler. 3b ...... 4 0 0 1 acrOss and dropped a 5-3 decision the university, but did not have a head over the favoreO Unchal­ ence school ~ had definitely decided the . who grabbed a o( 3 to 2, but ther!" were many who Holmes. If ...... 3 2 3 0 to lhe While Sox before 2,314 chance to compete for Iowa be- lenged, from Henry Lustig's barn. tnal conc!itlons cQuld be iP1proved. 6 to 4 decision from the St. Louis thought that F. W. Hooper's cham­ New York Giants Inst night. 3·2, Mack. 1b ...... 4 1 1 1 fans. fore leaving. Marsh wns Iowa high B. F. Lister's Eterbity and R. S. He sllggested that the students BrQwns and stretched their Ameri­ pion would be about an ven choice behind Hil l G r!l~lf;s 5-hit pitching. Workman. rf ...... 3 1 1 0 It was the Indians' second loss school and Y.M.C.A. champion in Clark's C.olchis were next past the should try &nd make members ot can league lead to a (ull game over at post time with Walter M. Jef­ A crowd of 3J ,673 pay mg Can s. Gillenwater. cf ...... 3 1 2 0 in the cUTl'ent series, with Joe the 40 and 100-yard free style wire in the exciting finish, wit­ the opposing tealJ1 feel that they the idle . ford's Pavot, the 1944 juvenile largest nigh t turnout of the season at Ebbets (ield , wl\trhed the Dodg· Masi. c •· ···••·· •.... ·.4. .. 4 1 1 0 HaYl1es winning his sixth of the events and also won the Iowa nessed by 27.847 fans. were being honored to play here York rose from his season-long champion. ers score 011 of lhei I' suns of! Drews, 2b ...... 4 0 0 0 year . A.A.U. outdoor 40 :lnd 100 and the Fox Brownie ridden by jockey and that I~wa wae _onored to have b'ltting slump to belt two singles Pavot, which made a big im­ Wietelmann, 55 .....•.• 4 1 1 0 A.A.~. indoor 100-ya rd titles. . . Eric Guerin, paid $20.50 and nego- them. and a t1)fee-l"un homer for a per­ pression hereabouts T\lesday in a slarter Harry Jo'eld I11 BIl . The fir;l Steve Gromek kept the Sox hit­ tally Cilme in the secund inning 01 Cooper, p ...... 4 1 1 0 less until the fourth, when singles WhIle statIOned on the PaCIfiC tiated the six furlongs in 1: 12 3/5. NoT", lect day . driving in four trinl by covering the Preakness coast in the marines, the Iowan • • • Dad emphasized that he didn't Tiger .tallies. ,foe Hoover homered distance ot a m ile and three-six­ Howie Sr hult1' nnuhl l' and Eddie by , Kerby Fanell, Basin ski 's singl . ::lnd two more Totals ...... _...... 3S 8 \0 2 Johnny Dickshot and Tony Cuccin­ took the P acific COust A.A.U. 50 Mt. Desert Stable's Yes Or No IIpprove of servin/J tea between in the first inning with nobody on teenths in 1:59 lI5, was second Philadelphia ...... 011 001 000- 3 and 100-yard championships in romped ho in the fifth on ell 0, followed by Gromek's error scol·ed by lwo lengths in the halves ot a grid game, but sa~q and Roger Cramer punched acroa! choice in the early line at 3 to 1. 1943 and the 50-yard crown in Billy Jurgcs' rrnl'. 0 double by Boston ...... 001 700 00x- 8 on Leroy Schalk's sacrifice. let $2.000 Jamaica plain purse of a that relations could be much mol·a the other netroit run with a sharp followed by Mrs. P. A. B. Widen­ 1944. Basinski and a si ngl/' by Goody Second Oame four runs across, and erased a one­ mile at Suffolk Downs. cordial than they have in the pa~t. double. er's Polynesian nt 6 to 1. St. Louis, after driving Joe Or­ Rosen who hil. aCe)y in his 12th Philadelphia jI run lead. The winner. with jockey J . Mijl"­ He c\teq C&s/!s where fanatical R~ord Crowd ABR E rell frQm the bOl in the seven th, consecutive go me. After that burst, Chicago was ,. BI"g ('how lin aboard, ran the mile over a Iowa fans hac! insulted opposing Saturday's Preakness program. Flager. ss ...... '1 2 2 0 able to get but three more hits, The J fast strip in 1:38 1/5, despite an players as they came onto the krlOcked out his successor, Zeb which will bring tile bigJ;lest racing Autonelli, 3b ...... '1 1 2 Ii one of them Cass Michaels' first ~ ______impost o( 120 pounds, and paid floor or the field j1.1st pefore game Eaton. in the ninth and Les Muel­ day in Maryland's history, is ex­ 1:52 3/ 5, Dnd a flnnl decision on ler had to retire the last man Wasdell, Ib 6 0 0 0 homer of the season. American League $4.20. time as 81) example of what ath­ pected to draw a record crowd of }vhether he would mn ke the tenth after the Browns had scorlld twice Triplett. If ...... 5 I 0 0 0, Dutch Meyer and Frankie Hayes Teams W L Pet • letic depijl"troents here and else- around 50,000 10 the old hilltop starter was expected lasl night. Bo­ • • and put two other men on base. Crawford. rf-2b 6 1 1 0 both homered for Cleveland to ac­ Detroit ...... 27 17 .614 Mrs. Emil Denemark's Fire Dust, where are strivi~g to banish. strip lo spe a (ield of 10 probable banet was listed at 25 to 1. DiMaggio. cf ...... iI 1 1 0 count for two runs~Meyer's (irst Pimlico off icia ls Ml id that Col. New York ...... 27 19 .587 a (ive-year old son of Firethorn, We d!!finitely allI'ee with Dad, St. ).,ollis AD a H E starters shoot for glory and a win­ Mancuso. c ...... 7 0 0 0 And Hayes' seventh-but the rest Boston ...... 23 23 .500 scored an easy victory in the fea- Lieb. and Crowe and are going to ner's purse or aboul $68,000-alsu C. V. Whitney's J eep, a Derby Daniels, 2b 5 0 2 11 of tne way scoring threats were Chicago ...... 23 24 .489 tmed event of the Lincoln Fields strive to the utmost to produce bet­ Gray, If . _ ...... 5 0 0 0 a new mark . contender, shipped budly to New Monteagudo, rf 2 0 1 0 nipped by double plays or runners York Dnd is out of the Preakness. St. Louis ...... 22 23 .489 at Hawthorne m eetin~. Backed into ter school spirit ano sportsmanship Schulte, 2b ...... 3 0 1 0 Other Entries Lee.p ...... 30 0 0 j) were halted on the bases. Cleve­ Washington ...... 21 23 .477 a 3-5 (avorite by a crowd of 13,587\ between schools. As both Schroeder Kreevich. cf ...... 0 0 In addition to Hoop Jr., PavOl. Mauney. p ...... 2 0 0 0 land's first run came on Hayes' Cleveland ...... 20 24 .455 Fire Dust paid $3.20. and Lieb el\lphasit~, competitive Stephens, ss ...... '" 1 0 0 and PoJynesian. they are: Barrett. p ...... 1 0 0 0 double to left anq Lou Philadelphia ...... 17 27 .386 • • • sports is a part of an educational McQuinn, Ib ...... 3'" 2 1 1 C. S. Howard's Sea Swallow, Judd. p ...... 0 0 0 0 Boudreau's s ingl~ to center. National League Occupy. John Marsch's two­ tl-aiping and should be treated as Martin, rl .....- ...... 3 0 2 0 20-1. E. R. Bradley's entry of THEBESTol Pittsburgh ...... 27 20 .574 year-old Fulurity champion rart suci") and not as a major bl\ttle ~ Clary·· ...... - _.- 0 1 0 0 Totals ...... 57 o 'ClevelaDd l\B R H E Burning Dream and Bail Bond, mE BLUE Brooklyn ...... 27 20 .574 the fnstest six furlongs of the which "upconditionl surrender" is Christman, Sb ...... 4 0 2 0 20-1; Mrs. W. G. Lewis' Darby Mancuso. c ...... - ...... 3 0 2 0 Boston AB • • E Meyer. 2b ...... 5 1 2 0 New York ...... 28 20 .573 Churchill Downs meeting to cap­ th41 qltimate !lim. Dieppe. 8-1; Christiana Stable's st. Louis ...... 26 22 .541 Byrnes·" ...... -- ...... 1 0 0 0 Rocco. Ib • h • •••• ••••••• • 5 0 4 0 ture the featured ·offering. In tak­ Alexis. 15-1; and P nlagon Stable's 1540 Potter, p ...... Culler, 3b ...... 6 9 o o O·Pea. rf ...... $ 0 1 0 Chicago ...... 23 . 20 .535 ing his second straight, the winnlir 2 0 0 0 The Doge. 12-1. 50,000 WATtS C) Boston ...... 24 22 .522 defeated B. J . Bax's Sigma Kappa. Moore· ...... 1 0 0 0 J Ulisney.... • Q o o Hellth. 11 I················ 4 0 0 1 City League Bobanet Stable's Bobanet still is Holmes. U ...... I 2 o Hayes, c ...... 4 2 2 0 Cincinnati ...... 22 24 .432 with Mrs. V. E. Smith's SiriUS With ChUck Ulc.nes leading tbe Sllirley, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Schulte·· .. a t Delew::lre park.. where trainer Mack. 1b ...... 5 o 1 o Bo~dreau. ss ...... 3 0 2 0 Philadelphia ...... 11 40 .216 third. way, the University Veterans' 4S­ 0 0 0 0 Gutteridge· .... ,Albert Dunne worlied him a mile Workman, rf ...... 6 o 1 o Ross, 3b ...... 3 0 2 0 YESTERDA Y'S RESULTS Occupy. with jockey B. ThOmp­ :sociation marched to its third win ..... 0 0 0 0 and one-eighlh yesterday morning • Gillenwater. cf ...... 5 o 1 1 Mackiewicz, cf ...... 3 0 0 0 National League son astride, covered the distance in of the season ia ~ t night and a 1 covering the distance handily In I (.1\ 1£1 Kluttz, c ...... 5 1 3 o Carnett, cf ...... 1 0 0 0 Boston 8-4, Philadelphia 3-5 l:12 and paid $3.40. share of the top 'berth in the City Totals ...... 33 .. 8 TODAY TIIR FRIDAY Masi, c ...... 2 o o o Gromek, p ...... 2 0 1 1 Brooklyn 3. New York 2 • • • league, downing GeQrge's Stan­ • Ba tted for Potter in 'i'th VAN JOHNSON Drews, 2b ...... 3 1 o Wheeler· ...... 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati 2. St Louis 1 War Strategy, tbree-year-old dal'd Service, 5 to 2. •• Ran for Martin in 9th l ... Batted for Mancuso in 9th Ramsey· ...... 1 o o o Klieman, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Only games scheduled daughter of War Admiral and Uknes started the ball rolling American Lea...... Batted for Shirley in 9th l1!1 ;\11 DEnd~~~ay Shemo, 2b ...... 3 1 Steiner·· ...... 1 0 0 0 Sqllellze, proved best of seven at for the Vets with 8 long holne run o o ..... Rail for Schultz in 9th Wietelmann. ss ...... 6 o 2 3 ,..... Chicago 5, Cleveland 3 her age at Delaware park in the in the first inning and *hen con­ Detroit 6. St. Louis 4 Logan. p ...... 3 o o % Total, ..•...... 37 3 14 2 leatured Amstel Purse at a mile tinued in his starring rQlfl py tak­ AD a H E Nieman" ...... 0 o o o • Batted for Gromek in 7th Boston at Philadelphia, rain and 70 yards. Ridden by jockey ing over the pitching chores in the Hutchinson, p ...... 1 o o o •• Batted for Klieman in 9th Only games scheduled Johnny Gilbert. the $4.70 favorite third inning. Cebuhar started for Hoover. ss ...... 4 2 2 1 T~: 'HiFA!(,OIl Tobin··...... 0 covered the distance in 1 :43. the Vets, but lIPpatently developed Mayo. 2b ...... 9 o o o o o o IN Earley ...... 0 1 o o ()hlcalo AD R ~ E a sore arm and was relieved by Cullenbine, rf ...... 2 3 1 o H()IIYIf()()f) TodlY's Games Uknes. Ukneti beld the George's York, 1b ...... 3 1 Moses. rf ...... 3 1 1 0 3 o American League i ten to one run and two scattered Cramer, cf ...... 4 1 . PLUS . Tota1~ ...... 5. .. 11 " Hockett, cf ...... 3 0 0 0 Didiikson Bar" o o St. Louis at Detl'oit-Jakucki ,. !I bits tne remainder of the way. Outlaw, It ...... 8 1 • Batted for Drews in 8th Farrell. Ib ...... 4 1 2 0 o o 'Rockabye Rhythm' (3-5) vs. Trout (5-4) , Tbl! GfQrge's IlWlllatlon outhit Maier, 3b ...... o 1 .. Batted for Logan tn 8th Dickshot, If ...... 4 1 1 0 O· B dT ' ne · o -Frankie Master's Ballll Boston at Philadelphia - ltyba . pen on our y the Vets II to ~. Qut tj\. Vllts Swift. c ...... 2 o o o Comedy - L.te News ... Batted for Hutchinson in 15~h Cuccinello, 3b ...... 4 1 1 0 (1-2) vs. Jlfewtom (1-6) HELD. QVER! •••• Ran for Tobin in 15th bunched their hits for rUlls when OI'ri!U. p ...... 3 o o o Schalk, 2b ...... 3 0 0 0 Cleveland at Chicago - Bagby PHILADELPHIA (A) - Mrs. th'l!y CQllnted. All of the George's Eaton. p ...... 1 o o o Bol:: Office 0_ ... l :15 - 9:" ..... Batted for Culler in 15th Michaels...... 1 2 0 ss 4 U-5) vs. Grove (6-3) Mildred (Babe) Didrlltson Ziha- hlb were sinllas, while \he Vets MueUir, p ...... 0 o o o Philadelphia- Tresh, c ...... 3 0 0 0 Box Office Open 1:15-18:00 Only games scheduled rias of Los Angeles, and h~r part- turned in two 11I~l1\e tUIl8--\J~nes' ,., i;,':I. M 001 001 010 000 002-5 e • ••• • ••••••• _ __ Haynes, p 2 0 0 0 National League ner, Lieut. Patty Berg of the circuit clout in the first and 70a.11 ...... 1.. • 1 Boston- " ENDS Johnson. p ...... 0 0 0 0 Chicago at Pittsburgh (2) - United ·S tates marine corps~ nosed St Louis ...... 020 000 002- 4 OQOOGOO 200 001 000 001--4 Cebul\lIr's 10lli blow \1) ~he sixth. FRIDAY CGu Caldwell, p ...... 1 0 0 0 Chipman (2-2) a nd Der ringer out Dorothy Germain and' H\!len Detrolt ...... :100 010 30x-6 NOW . Ttle victQrY gllve the Veterans a STARTS ENDS TWO:TON (7-3) V'3. Sewell (7-5) and Res- Sigel. both of Philadelphia. Qn~ up TO.DAY first pI lice tit;! fqr the lell8\1e lelld­ Satllrday Totall ..•...... 31 5 '1 0 cigno (1- 1) or Butcher (5-2) yesterday in a best-bap exhipition BLOCK aUin;R OF ership With Williqm's Delta Si~s. The Oreate., Cleveland ...... 000 111 000-3 Philadelphia at Boston-Sproull matoh. ' lUck" Ptleads LiNY ENTioJUmNlW.ENT Four Hawk Athletes and 13rewerli. Love Story of All Time! Chicago ...... 000 400 01x-5 n-4) vs. Tobin (5-7) . I Played through alternate down- The Delta Siss wlll mllet N'lIvy p RQ 0 KL Y N . (AP)-Branch New York at Bl"ookl:yn-Voiselle pours nnd Qright s\lnshine. the EolistQ<\ tonight lit 7 Q'clock on the Rickey, president and gen/lral To Receive Degrees only in their senior year. (8-4) VS. Davis (5-4) match served as II curtail\ raiser Benton street diamond. mllna~r 01 the Brooklyn Dodgers. William Kridelbaugh of Chari­ Only games scher:luled fOI" the secQnd I\hnl.\aJ PhiJ.de~~hla LiJle Icorj!: defend~ his firebrand Illanaaer, Four athletes from three aports ton. captain of the 1942 gymnas­ ------Inquirer wllr qond tournament University Veteran's LeQ Durocher yesterday. on his al­ will become UniverSity of Iowa tics team. is the candidate for the Oreenoorlr Out of AflDY Whi ch open" at the Llanerch Cqtln- association ... loO 01~ 0-5 II 3 llged .Uaclt IIgainst John Chl"/s­ alumni Sunday when th4lY 8radu- M.D. degree. He led the last team FORT DIX. N. J . (AP)-Capt. tr ~ club today. , • Geprge's /3tat)allr" Uan. II baseball fan. alter Christian aW from professional cplleges. in that sport developed at, Iowa, Hilnk Greenberg, formel: fir~t Fj;!atul·ed among the 1811 com­ Service ...... lOO 000 I-a 8 2 repute~l)' sl\O"ted eplthetR at 01.\­ From the 1945 basePa\l lel\m starring in the side horse event. baseman' for the Detroit American· petitol's will be Sammy, Snead. rsecond baseman, and Eu.ene ia Willlilm Miller of Cparles City. Jhe sePfll"ption center here Tues- United Stlltes OPen champion C~al. ST. LOUIS tAP)-Joe Bowman, tllllrq of ferocious geot\emell 8Ijd -Flnt B-19 BomblP. Hoffman of LaMotte, pitcher, both winner ot i swimming letter last day and may be out of the army Wood, Sam Byrd, Gent &Ilruen, veteran Cincinn,U IUdi hllrltr. will stand as II unit against inde­ of Taba of whom will rtc,lv. den... de- ~.. Miller will receive the by Friday night, an army IpQkIjS- Henry Picard and . crooner-actor lI't"~ the st. L9\lia Ga~"ala I clnt and vullar remarks from ':"Lat.t Na~ grees. They' completed at Iowa dental degree. man said yesterday. BinS Crosby. to 1 lut nlgh t. . $IIos. 41 tJw .*~," RiCKey .Ii!;l. ~------....;

• • PAGE FIVE : 14, 1945 -==' ='=TH=U~R=S=DA=Y=,=JU=N=E=}.4=,':;::1 9=45=. ======:e======~!,;ft;,.;I~-~J)-~A;;;I;;,.;L~Y~I~O;..,;;W~, lOW A C I-T y, lOW A • _:::tt BULLETIN Fight'ng 'Japan On. , NOTORIO~S FASCIST TORTURER QUESTIONED IN ITALY Prof. Wendell Johnson to Be Interviewed- (Continued trom palle 2) 'More Year Will John W. Wilk1nson .. WESLEY FOUNDATION 39' Music Hall (WHO) COlt Billion Rites to Be Friday Jrrn Wesley Foundation, Methodist America's Town Meeting student group. will meet at the WASHINGTON I (AP) - The . J!rof. Wendell Johnson 01 the (KXEL) Funeral services for John W. Methodist Center for supper at 6 I army proposes to spend $39,019.­ Ipetch department will discuss tl)e 1:15 Wilkinson, 65, who died in a local Music of Morton Gould (WMT) p. m. Sunday, June 17. Instead 790,474 fighting Japan alone in the hospital at 3:15 a. m. yesterday conference seL'i on speech nnd ot the usual 4 p. m. vesper. stu-I ., • hearing rehab!lHri'l.ion on a Trans­ Mmlc Hall .(WHO) dents will attend the lecture by year begJ~mng July 1, o~e-fourth after an extended illness, will be America's Town Meeting held Friday morning at 9 o'clock ICribed Vicw3 and Interviews pro­ Jack McMichnel to be held at the ' le3s than It required in fIScal 1945 ge (KXEL) in St. Patrick's church. Burial ,Fam at 12:45 this afternoon. Pro­ Methodist church at 7:30. for war in both Europe and the lessor Johnson wJll be interviewed 1:10 MC-: will be in St. Joseph's cemetery. Corliss AUher (WMT) Michael will speak on "The F'uture Pacific. He was born in Iowa City July by Dick Yoakatn the WSUI statf. of the Far East-Colonial or Medical So I Prorram Bob Bums Show (WHO) President Truman, submitting to 10, 1879. He was an orderly at Ftee?" the Univernlly hospital for many "Nervous Ex Ii stlon" by Dr. Spotlight Bands (KXEL) congress the war department ies 8:t5' VIC GOFF budget for the next liscal year, years. Lee R, Woodard of Moson City is Stadent Oounsellor pointed ' out thal the figure rep­ the subject of the Iowa State Med- CorlIss Armer (WMT) Mr. Wilkinson is survived by lid resented a cut trom the prelim­ four sisters, Mary C. Wilkinson of leal socletY'R P!'o8 m at a o'clock Bob 'Burns Show (WaO) IOWA MOUNTAINEERS inary estimate ofl $45,500,0.00,000 West Branch. Mrs. Eliazbeth Con­ I ef 1hb afternoon. M~l Boker will Coronet Story Teller (KXEL) i present the program. t:te Iowa Mountaineers will meet at made when the late President ley, Mrs. Ella Franklin and Mrs. the engineering building Friday. Roosevelt submitted the regular Sadie Aye)'s, all of Iowa City; nnd Evenlllr Mu Icah~ Il'he'Flrst Une (WMT) I June 15, at 6 p. m. to go to the budget in January. That prelim­ lSels.belli Mrs. Alexunp . Ellett, soloist, Abb, linked wit h two flew 35 combul mi ssions us pilot Burge, 911 E. Washington streel, and wounded American fighting not later than today, Tue&day n i g 11 t 24 JohnsOn pressed to rind clothing for inCants mHcs o( conveYOJ'b, are utilized to Barefoot Kid Party men being evacuated to hospitals of a B-17 I~lyin g Fortress in t he is stutioned with lhe 942nd field Capt. Cecil Walters, directing counly men left fur finaT induc­ and children face even lougher produce a single 155 mm, pro· Saturday at 7:30 P. M. European theater i.lnd wears the artiliery butlalion neal' T rier, Ger­ in lhe United Sta tes, rescue operati ons, said the trio of tion into the army at Jefferson shopping days ahend, jectile, many, Tn a letler dated June 4 he su rvivors of a party of 23 perso ns, \ Ail' Medal wilh Five Oak Leaf Barracks, Mo, This gloomy news was pa:'Sed on ------A "Barefoot Kid" party, featur­ clusters, ~tated he was at Paris university First Lieut, Leslie C, Landfes­ would begin the long trek from the yesterday by John C, Goodall, gl'n­ ing games and prizes in the child­ sludying a slaff officers' short ser, son of Mr, and Mrs, Ora N, mountain saddle, where they are Those leaving were Johu Aub­ eral manager of lhe merchandise To Be Air Chief? hood spirit, w ill be given for COLil'se conccrning poliCies for the strllnded, to the valley floor by rey Robcrts, Lyle Grant F'ount~ill, / Pvi. Alfred M, Stutzmun, son of Landmesser of Iowa City, is cre­ mart, afler a survcy among the Methodist students, cadets and army educational program, dited with saving the life of h is today, Forest Dean ConneI', Robert Wil­ 456 manufacturers and dealers in their friends Salurday night starl­ Mr, a nd MI's, Ralph Stutz­ Meanwhile the WAC, Corp, Mar­ liam Becicka, Harry Hill Waters man of 1117 N, Dodge street, is observer in his :first direct con­ \\(omen's, children's and lIleents' ing at 7:30 :It the Methodist student Pvi. Lawrence E, Urban, son of garel Hastings of Owego, N, y" was Jr., Donald Joseph Seydel, Ed­ weal' and accessories hou~ed in the now fighting with the veteran Reel tact with the' Japs on Oldnawa as center, 120 N, Dubuque street, Ml'. and Mrs, Henry Urban, 224 S, pilot of a Cub artillery Observa­ enjoying a box of candy dropped ward Duane Yoder, John EdWald mart. Arrow divi5ioll's 126th infantry in Bushman, Dean Robert House l, Three deep and hide and seek Lilln sLL'eel is a member of a rifle tion plane, Reconnoitering the by parachute, Her stranded com­ "Unlike some indu.;tries momen­ Norlhern Luzun among the Cara­ Maynard Joseph Zeman, Donald played in couples and other Javor­ company in the 127th infantry area around their landing strip paniOI)S are Lieut, J ohn B, McCol­ tarily anticipating at least a par­ ite games of childhood will be ballo mourHains, Privute Stutzman regiment with the 32nd inIanrty lom of Trenton, Mo" and Sergt. Clarence Ruppert, Harold Alan entered the army in Octoper, 1944, near the Okinawa front lines, lial comeback into the civilian dressed up for lhe occasion, Relay elivi ~ ion iu northerll Luzon, Infan­ Kennelh W, Decker, of .Kelso, l1a rtvigsen, and wenl overseas in March, 1945, Lieutenant Landmesser and his field, lhc appal'el industry sees no winners will receive suckers for trymen in this Red Arrow unit companion surprised two Japs in a Wash , Walters said they were in Gene Robert McNamaril, Evan green ~,f(ht ahead for some time to excellent spirits, prizes, Refreshments will be ice ha ve secn action in six major en­ cave, The I Q wan shot and McKim Tallman, William Harold come," Goodall said, sream cones and pop corn, On lhe valley floor Filipino P romotion of George B. Lea­ gagemenls in ~he past 37 months wounded one of the Japs and was Johnson, Jon B. Dunnington, Wil­ No real relief can be <;ountcd on Students in charge of the party paratroopers are constructing an verton, 28, of Boone, fOlmer uni­ and hold the Distlnguished Unit able to carry his comrade to a lard Loren LeGrand, Willi"m before the finish of lhe war with airstrip from whiCh it is planned to are Irene Baldwin, Eugene Bur­ versity student to major was re­ badge Ior their performance in the place of safety, where he sum­ Greer Ramsey, Richard J ames Japan, although there may be meister, Billie Jean Jacobsen and Buna baltle, bring out the party aboard a gli­ cently announced by the 307th moned medical aid, The lieutenant Ford, Dwight lJ ulan Shaffer, Rob­ some temporary ea ~ lng of the der, Virginia Varnes, bombardment group of lhe Ninth is a veleran of the Leyte cam­ ert Russell Evans, Chester Allen fabric situalion from lime to time, A charge of 20 cents wiil be airforce, the first B-26 Marauder Receiving, storage and distribu­ paign during which he flew over Walters said the nativcs, fearful Miller, Merle Richard Lindley, he predicted, charged for this opening social group to be based inside Germany. tion of mail to ships of lhe Pacific 100 low altitude missions over Jap of the trio who invaded lh eir val­ and Chester GoLtlieb Heberling, The real pinch or curtililed civil­ event of Wesley foundation, Meth­ A pilot and squadron operations fleet are the duties of I ~ra nk L, territory, ley, "treat us like while gods ian production llcs nght uhead, he odist student group, officer, Major Leaverton flew over Taylor, mtlilmdh t h i l' d class, dropped out of the sky," He gave added, beginning with iall and 50 combat missions before V-E USNH, of Iowa City, now at Pearl the first complete report on the Pvt. Charles E, Seemuth, son Three Traffic Fines winter merchandise now in de­ day and wears thc Air Medal and Harbor, The averagal day's hand­ inhabitants of lhe mounlain-bound mand, Fire-Fighters Deluxe of Mr. 8Jld Mrs, Charles A. See­ valley, Three people paid fines in police JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, (AP)­ nine Oak Leaf clusters, ling includes 1,500,000 pieces of muth, 722 S, Capitol street, has "The natives around here so court yesteL'day for traffic viola­ A friend dragged Pvt. Harold first class mail and 3,500 space been assigned to the 127th infan­ far have been friendly," said the tions, They were Clarence Studt, Marriage Licenses Johnson off the blazing bed in his Master Sergt. Carlton A, Cham­ tons of papcrs and parcels. try regiment of the 32nd Red captain, "It is hard for t hem to 426 N, Dodge slreet, $1 for over­ Three marriage licenses were is­ GEN, IRA C, EAKER, who dIrected hotel room and called for help to berlain, former SUI student, re­ Arrow infantry division and is sued by the clerk of the districl the Allied air arm In lhe Medlter· put out the fire, cently was awarded the Bronze Capt. John n, Ahrens, medical understand us, however, We lried lime parking; Sanford Lisley, fighting in northern Luzon, He has n Campus holel, $1 for ov!'rlime court ye~terday, rallCan during tho conquest of A mob of extemporaneous fire­ Stal' for meritorious service in corps, forme! Iowa City doelor as­ every type of communicati been in the service since October, Those i. ;sllcd Iicens s were Rol­ Europe and just recently was re­ men jam m e d the room and connection with military opera­ signed to Harmon general hospital, known to us and still they don't parking; and Reich's cafe, $l for 1944, lin W, Roth, MiI(ord, Wis" and called to WashIngton, Is being smothered the flames, When it was tions against nn armed euC'my I ,ongview, '1'cxl" since April of this understand," alley parking, Doris M, Kacfring, Iowa City; Don mentioned by capital observers III all over Private Johnson dis­ during the period April 24, 1944, year, was presented the Bronze 0, Newland, Belle rlaine, and the mlln who will succeed Gener&1 covered his wallet was missing, 10 March 31, 1945, in England, Star medal J une 8 for meritorious UniverSity graduate before en­ SOMEBODY GOT A TOOTHPICK? Bal bara Smilh, Iowa Cily, and of lhe Army Henry H, Arnold, Police got lhere 100 late to France, Belgium, Luxembourg sorvice in action against the tering the army airforce in July, Robert F , Vollurechl, Riceville, who III reported to be retiring gearch the volunteer fire brigade, and Germany, He is tile son of enemy in lhe Norlh Bur ma cam- 1943, First Lieut. Thomas A, Hay­ and Mildred Harrelson, Cedar from hI s job as chief or the AAF don, 28, of Tulsa, is navigator of chaser Rapids, duo to lIlnesa. (I nlernalioll.l) an Eighth airforce 8-17 Flying destro, POSTWAR FARM TRACTOR UNDERGOES STIFF TEST Fortress at a bomber station in fleet c England, Lieutenant Haydon, who Sumal flew 34 missions with the 385th mand )ombardment group, shattering RAI supply lines and upsetting German operal efforts to move defense forces, attack holds the Air Medal with foul' Oak no cal Leaf clusters, munic 5101 lied-h University graduate in 1932, Max Brittsl W, Burke of Denver, Col., has ar­ the JI ei ved in Ha waH for further as­ Thalli signment In the Pacific ocean area enem: as an American Red Cross as­ east c sistant field director, Until his Mawc Red Cross appointment, Burke All! was director of the Colorado Na­ tackei tional conference of Christians of Sh 1nd Jews at Denver and director of Grinnell Institute of Interna­ Welt,ome nlc~ti north tional Relations at Grinnell col­ lege, miles From tho Bost Cafo In Townl Moull . HQlder of a B,S,C, lrom the uni· Whera the Food Is tho Finest! versity in 1936, Frank R. Sheldon Jf Grinnell has been assigned to the Pacific ocean area as an 'merlcan Red Cross assistant field RO ifirector, and has arrived in Ha­ Dine With I&-ye waii. -.wleade Babette Frankel of Des Moines, ahlp 1938 university graduate, has ar­ DOUG & LOLA Bono rived In the middle East to serve "0, HERE IS A PREVIEW of one.llkely 'Verslon of the PDstwar farm tractor, combining the sleekness of B as American Red Cross staff as­ AT REGULAR INTERVALS, Marino Pte, Gilbert E, Balloy of Hunting­ (TI raclnr auto and the runed truck-laying ability of the famolls milUary halftrack. The endless-banll sistant. She was employed by ton, W. Va" shovels the OkInawa mud tl'om the tracks of hIs "cllt" (CW' track, deslrned by B. F. Goodrich enrlneer8, is shoWIl on a test rlln on a Cletrac experimental model Best and Company before her Red In order to maintain a snall'lI pace along the 'roads of that RyukyJ 'orll\i In Doriheastern Ohio. This kloCk Ia said to have twice as much drawbar Dull as wheels. Cross appointment. ~lI. :l'b14 ~ an o1f1cial p, S. MarUle Corps phoLo, (Illiernationai) lin I Ilr.. thlp, CQIJUl ,-...