- Yank, Cru',,, . Slightly Warme, ,r 8'. LouIs Brown., lOW A: Continued drar witb 8 ~ a !ill~h Uy waI'IIIfl' tempera­ See 8~ry on Paie , TH·E DAILY IOWAN ture I.Jl eut. Iowa City's M 0 r,n I n 9 New spa per rIVE CENTS '1.1 AllllOClATED ••1811 IOWA CITY,IOWA THUJisoAY. SEPTEMBER 10. 1942 VOLUME XLII NUMBER 200 e e rive· .erl, , , ·5 · .' ·>t' Enemy Legions Now 44 Miles Nazis. at Stalin Ga .es From Vital Allied Stronghold --~------~------~~ Terrific German Tank Assault OFFICERS WHO STOPPED ROMMEL'S LATEST DR_IV",.,.,.E,,, ~,. _..,. ..:~ "., ,,.,,...... Enraged Mexico City .': " Mobs AHempt to Kill Report Japanese Units Across 'Advances Closer to Steel (,ity f· j Slayer of 4 Women 1 'Toughest Pari' of Mountains ;. I Russians Also Admit Ene~y Troop. Have , I 27-Year-Old Honor ,EN. M81'All'rm'H'S lmAO R'I'BR!'I, Au tralia, Thul'll- j Outskirts of Novoro"isk, Sovhlt ~ Student Confesses; dll.Y (A P) '/UpOIW I' troop, h8" puh d tltroufl'h til Ow n lan­ I y mOllntains IIIHI now lin' It.. thall 11 rnill'li from tht big allied Black Sea Ba,.. Hint More Crimes hl\~t' of 1'01'1 ~Ior(·"h.\, kl'rtonc of NfW Guint'8 (h'f n "an allied MEXICO CITY, (AP)- Shout- cOmmlllli!(1I( said loday. MO Thul' day (AP)-Massed Gcrman tal1ks and ih· ow. ing men lind worn n tried to mob 'I'llI' ('fWUlY I, 1I(·!:('"sfllll.l' outflankcd ollr positionll at ~fyola" lantry smashing in a frontal a8lS8ult toward tho western gates of lin thr northcl'n ielr 0 thr mountain., r aeh d Efogi n tb Stalingrad forced the red army to give up two more poplLlated Mexico City's student strangler yesterday to l venge the slaying '0111h('rn Hidr Ollt~ 41 mil. from Port ~lor<'8by, snd did till an­ places in the third Russian retreat in as many days, an official of tour young women he gar­ uthrr outflllllkinl{ rnowlJ]('nt, thc lilliI'd rommalld IlnnOllne d. announcemenl said cady today. roted while diverting theIr aUen­ "~'i!l'hlinA' i now 10 lhl' 'ollth al llA' 0 narrow t rail which I ada Germall troops also" broke into the northwestern oulakh·ts" of tlon with test tubes cnd books, nero · II moUnIHin()lI~ (lividl'," tht ominolls communkl'IC said. Novoros.~isk , Soviet Black sea naval bllse in the Caucasua which and last night polic said his A IiiI'd nirpJIIIlI''I bombrtl /lnd lrdcd the n my in cooperation tbe Germans claimed capturing Sunday, despite "tremendous victims may actually number six with Jlround for 'r whi'h Wl'f fijthting lOt Ilaciouly Rnd gallantly mes losses in men and material," the communique acknowledged. or more. \Jndl'I' ('nnrlit iOllK of I'xl raordillllry har(l hip nnd difficulty." the Courageous red army men try,ing to make a "red Verdun" of The 27.year-old slayer, Gregorio ------. war bull till , id. Stalingrad were reported fighting against tanks with only rifles, Cardenas Hernandez,honor student in chemistry, a [ready has con­ Th aJlipd rl fen (' Cor 8 were I but the lr('mendol1s Gcrman armored columns attllcklng frontally t ed killing four women in Ie&; Mustang Veritable commaoded by Li lit. cn.,. F. were ere ping closer daily to the imperilled Volga river city. (The than a month. one o[ th m his Row 11, form r d puty hi f of Berlin radio quoted a dispateh as saying that sornc Gcrmlln troops .. nly love." He said he kept her til Au tralian crencral !ltoft had reach d the city iuelf.) body {or hours belore burying it 'Streak of Lightning' The drive to Efogi represented a outhw('st of ,talingrad the pt ddwn in a shallow grave in his 16-mHe advance trom Kokoda Russians said their troops were House Allows Service gardcn. New American P-Sl where the Japanese began their repulsiIl~ constant attacks and Last night police wcre trying dri VB several days ago. tllat at Ipast 21 more nazi tanks to link Cardenas with the strang­ Fighter Is Among Dlspatcbes from the tront said had been destroyed, and three Men Right to Vote ling of yet another girl and the Fastest in World that the enemy air ady "has cov­ German -Rumanian infantry com­ disappearance of a sixth. ered the toughest part" ot the tor­ panies annihilated. Lieu&. Gen. 'B. L. Monigomery (bareheaded), commander of the BrUlsh el,Mh army In north AfrIca, Angry women with brooms and --- --I tuous trail I cad In, to Port Without Paying Tax discusses a tactical problem wIth his offlCllrs at the tront. Standlng behind Monl,omery'5 upraIsed hand men with stones and pieces of LOS ANGELF-S (AP) A cam­ Moresby. The RUlIIIlans flrhtlnf &Calnst Is Lleut. Gen. Horrocks. It was the British elrhth army which forced back Rommel'. lalest erfort 10 reach metai attempted to rerch Carde­ ouflaged streak 0 Bahtnin. The mem,. is reJlOried uln.. numerical and mechanIcal odds the Nile valley. nas when police took him bock flashed down lrom the cast, whip­ special Jlll16le fI,hLers who par­ west of the city had fou,ht two Large Majority Okays to the garden to hear his slory but ped aero: the Los AnI( Is air­ ticIpated In the overrunnin, of dan to hold the two populated Legislation Changes, the officers held them back. port at 40 t t or I ,th n loomed Malaya and Innpore, and "'. places before yleldine, the com­ "Better to kill him h re nd up Into the hllte to the w st ye - tactl are the lame-a. leW munIque said. One rlne unit Ignores South', Plea now," the crowd shouted. terday. Infiltration and ouinankln, was said to have destroyed 10 0' The stofY as reported by police It was a North American fighter allied delendel'll who are IIUp­ German tanh, 14 ,uns, and 300 disclosed that three were strlln­ plied over mudd,. mounlalnollS WASHINGTON (AP) "':"'Disre- plane, the I,ype our armY air enemy troops in this losln.­ gled by the some cord as he mo­ paUlll from PorI Mil' by. batue. garding soythern democrats' pleas {ore s prosaically call th P-51 mentarily diverted theIr attention and the RAF more romal1tknlly Port Moresby's eh:ure would Nazi seizure of Stalingrac:J' would tor preservation ot states' rIghts, to .. book or a t ,t tube In his has labeled the Mustang. deprive the allle ot Its only well­ imperil the whole red army mili­ the house overwhelmingly accep­ rooms. Ife had met them in th developed base in New Guinea, Russian, British Air all·eets. "You may say," said the A.A.F. and open the way to a Jllpanese tary structure, since it dominates ted yesterday se'llate changes in F.R. Eliminates repre. cntotJve at this first public VIctim No.1, has bren Identi­ invasion of Australia. Cllpe York the Volga river supply Hne to the showing of the terrors of Dieppe, middle east and is the link be­ legislation to give :service men the fied as Berta Gonzoiez, 16, slain on the northern t.lp of Australia tween Russill's central and south­ right to vote by mail in primary Units Blast Germany on the qlght of Aug. 10, when she "that it Is very fast. You may. in is only 325 mlles tram Port ern armies. wes laken by surprise as she sat Iact, tetl anything that you clln More by which ia equJpped with and general elections without pay­ Double Rates s e While the plan is in flight." The Russian southern or Cau­ ing poll taxes. ( RAF Bombing Squad with him. an alrdromc whence allied bomb­ Her face was covered with her That is a sev re limitation, be­ ers have been striking at enemy casian army already was in great The 247 to 53 vote by which it cause the Mu tang In night is diHicuUies both at Novorossisk Strikes at Frankfurt own clothing. bllses In upper and eastern New adopted a conference committee's Army Will Exclude little more thAn a blur. YOll can and at Mozdok on the road to the VIctim No. 2, Cardena~ declared. Guinea. recommendations found 49 south­ For Overtime In Sixth Night Raid say it hos an engine-Allison, Grozny oil fields. All Persons Believed was neVCr known to him and she The strength of the Japanese ern members voting against the has not been identified. She was 1150 horsepower, liquid cooled­ forces now m nacing the base was Fighting now inside the city of LONDON, Thursday, (AP)- because you ran hear· it roar. You measure which they termed an in­ Dangeraul to Defense givCll 0 book to read- and then not. known, nor have any figures Novorosslsk itself the Russians WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi­ can say it has wings, ,square-cut, said their troops were temporarlly vasion of the right of states to Russian bombers again attacked the cord was drawn around her been released on the site or the holding by savage counter attacks control their own elections. dent Roosevelt signed an executive Budapest, Hungary's capits,l, dur- NEW YORK (AP)- Moving to throat in a swi rt stroke of d alh. not unlike th nazis' Me r­ Port Moresby garrison. and steady red army artillery bar­ 3 Chan,es order yesterday eliminating pay- ing the night and tnere were in- tighten military restriclions along VlcUm No.3. apparently about chmidt 109- b cause you can s e When the Japanese first landed it fly. rages. The conference committee of ment of double-time rates for dications that Germal)Y and other the coast, Lieut. Gen. Hugh A. 35 years old, was given a t t nt Bunll-Gona mission on the east­ tube from his laboratory study You can say it has armament­ ern side of the Papuan peninsula The Soviet Bl~k sea neet Is senate and house members was work on Saturday, Sunday or hol­ nazi-held contlnental territories Drum yesterday said he would ex­ believed ~ have ned to Batum were also under assault by the and then strangled as fi he looked because it was the first U.S. tighter late In July thei r IItrength was es­ appointed aCter the two branches idays, as such. red air force and British air- elude tram 16 sel\board states "any plane to bring down a German near the TurkIsh coast Ion. &&,0. fell out over senate amendments. at it. timated as high as 2,500 men. Re­ bat' some unIts apparently stm Tbe order permits double time planes. person whose presence in the east- VlcUm No. 4 was Cra('lela Arias Focke-WuH 190 over Dleppe, one inforcements of undillclosed num­ It recommended complete accep­ of the many bitter dogfights that were aldIn, the .trunle ashore. tance of the 26 senate changes in for a seventh consecutive day of The Berlin radio amourtced ern milltal1' area, or any part or Avalos, whom Cardenas avows he ber have been landed since then SlIvlet aIrmen also were .tratln, that Budapest had been bombed. zone thereot, is deemed dangerous loved deeply, yet who Is dead ot aceompanied the commando fold to participate In the overland in­ the original house bill, only three work, but not for any particular of Aug. 19. It also has been chosen Ihe sway In, battle lines oulalde of which wer of a major nature. Other places in Hungary also to the national defense." that s8me uncontrollable hatr d vaSIon. Novorosslsk where hundreds or day of the 'week as such. The days were attacked but damage was he said caused them all to die. by the R.A.F. for army coopera­ More than 1,000 cuualties have dead Germans and Rumanians Three major chang~s made by of the week-lose their Identity for described as slight. In a proclamation issued from Newspapers quoted OardenBs tionai work in reconnaissance and been Inflicted on the advancing bad fsllen. the senate provided tor absentee wage-determining purposes. Sudden radio shutdowns last headquarters ot the eastern de­ as declaring "I don't know what ground strafing. enemy, a communiquo said earlier voting for service men in primary night in Berlin, Paris, Budapest lense command and first army at happens to me. A wave of hat~ You can say it has detenslv,. ar­ this we k. Only at Mozdok did the Rus­ as well as general elections, gave Pledres and old Czechoslovakia were the Governor's island, General Drum red comes over me, the man in mor- because the A.A.F. SeeJI to U.S. and Australian troops sup­ sians r port successes, and these the mall ballot to men stationed The action, the White House were still indeciSive. The Rus­ first clue of possible two-direc- ordered 1,1'6 prohibited or re­ me disappears and is replaced by it that our pilots have the maxi­ posedly are well entrenched in abroad as well as at home, and saJc:I, is In line with pledges given the beast. mum protection possible. Port Moresby where construction sians for two days now have been exempted service men from paying tional assaults. strlcted zones and laid doWn dras- trying to annihilate a nazi force the president several 'months ago Aler' work has been proceedln, for poll taxes required by Georgia, by AFL President William Green The evidence of air-raids was tic regulations governing them. months. Which crossed the Terek river to Mississippi, Arkansas, T e x as, Protection SO FRENCHMEN LIKE NAZI RULE! the south bank on the road to and CIO President Philip Murray. most pOSitive in Budapest where General Rowell w.. named South Carolina. Tennesse, Vir­ the announcer in his last words They were designed to protect eOJUmander 01 "au ImPOriaDt Orozny some 60 miles away. ginia anH Louisiana. The CIO unite~ workers, at its before going off the ai r told of forts, arsenals, airports, dams, fac- The communique saId that "un­ Chicago convention last month, tories and vital military and de- COI'P8" last April and made HCJ­ Brea" Re~ess der the blows of our troops the served notice it WQuld not be an alert. tense installations from northern ond In rank to Lieu&. Gen. Sir Hillerites wllre forced to retreat," The house broke a six-weeks,in­ Next heard from the Budapest Maine to the Florida Keys. John Lavar~1I of 'he flnt Alii­ formal tecess to dispose of the bound by its promise to waive transmitter were slr raid pre- and tha t one unit had destroyed cautions orders in code. The proclamation designated trallan al'1ll)'. PrellIllUW, GeD­ three tanks, seven guns, and killed legislation. Efforts of opponents double time fates unless all other eral Rowell'lI headqaar1en II unions complied withIn 30 days. The German-controlled Czech 905 prohibited zones, 231 of which 200 Germans. to block consideration on the were described and defined. Loca­ based at Port MOrella, which But the big momentous struggle ground no quorum was pl'e8ent In a recent national labor re­ stations which closed down are at tion of the others wlli be known I wu aUaeked Taelda, It, Japa­ 8till was near the Votga river. failed when more than 300 mem­ lations board Cll e, the united auto Prague and Bratislava. nese bomben and fl&'llten. bers showed up. workers complained that a rival The Deutschlandsender cut off only by signs at entrances and "German planes are literally in the midst of broadcasts for exits along their boundaries. The Japanese apparently were hanging over our front line, bomb­ Before the final vote. Repres­ AFL un jon 'had campaigned Restrictions were set up on the not heavily e qui p p e d in their ing our positions" on the south­ entative Rankin (D-Miss). leader allainst it with an argument that German home consumption at 7:30 right of any person to eoter, re­ cross-mountain thrust becaUR of west fa ce of Stallnllrad. a dis­ at the opposItion, sought to re­ the UW A had needlessly waived p. m. and Budapest went silent main in or leave the eastern mili­ the nature of the rugged terrain. patch to the government newspa­ commit the bill but lost on a double time rates against the best soon thereafter except for code tary area. Even if the Japanese seized C01,l­ Per Izeveslia said. 244 to lI6 count. interests of tbe workers. mesSages teUing what to do in an Special individual permits, is- trol at the precipitous traila air raid. sued by order of the commanding through the Owen Stanley ran.., Praeue general of the appropriate service it is not believed they could move Passenger De,crl"', Heroic lescue As- Bratislava and Prague went out command, services of supply, will much heavy equipment over thole about the same time as Budapest. be necessary for movement in pro­ tracks. Other continental stations also hibited zones. Fire Guts U. S. Navy Transport were reported off the air. FIrearms Americans Blast It is the second attack of the In addition, all who enter e:ther war on the HUIlgarian capital. prohibited or restricted zones, ex­ Japanese Ba.. , WASHINGTON (AP)-Tales of clambering aboard to prevent any the transport to the other and WASHINGTON (AP)-~eri­ panic, a destroyer comIng along- completely enveloped the ship. Russian bombers rll ided Budapest cept members of the armed forces cool herois m and daring rescue last Friday night and left fIres of the United States, were banned can air forces, turning' once more Were told yesterdlly by survivors side and smashing her super struc- "We headed awak from the raging in the city. [rom possessing certain IIrticles, to the otreJlsive in the Solombn of the navy transport Wakefield tute against the towerinl hull ot wind, 80 that the wind blew the Russian and British bombers among which were firearms, ell:­ islands, bombed and strafed Japa­ -once the $10,000,000 liner Man­ the former liner, whJle the des- smoke and flames away from us launched a whipsaw bombing plosives, radio sending or receiving nesc: shore installations on GIzo hattan- gutted last Thursday night troyer captain said "To hell with instead of from stem to stern. campaign several weeks ago, the sets, signal devices, cameras and island, :U5 miles northwest of the by a fire which swept through thllt the brid,e--hold her in". RAF lfshing at German territory visual aids such as binoculars. U.S. bue on G llilalcanal, the naV1 gfeat vessel as thouih it t¥td been "It was shortly after seven ' "There were long blasts from trom the west and the Russians ______announced lut night. "a barn tull of hay ." o'clock Thursday ni.ht," said Ro- the ship's whistle. Distress flags bombing east Prussia. eutem :------. The operatJon was carried out bert Crabtree, of Pawtucket, R. were run up. last Sunday without any !'eIi8t­ Pil'l!t word of the tire which was Germany, and occupied Poland. I., a passenger "I was lyin, ~ "Almost Immediately a destroyer The RAF commentator. who CITIZENS' DEFENSE ance from the enemy and appar­ 8ornewhcl'e on the Atlantic while the deck near the bow at the ship and a cruiser started racing to our enlly marked tbe start of a whole the transport wall traveling tn con­ may not be named, forecast when I aw men looking over the resdue. Large cargo nets were "deeper penetration to more vi­ CORPS new phase of offensive activitJ in Voy to an ellst C08st port, was the rail. I didn't pay too much at- sw\lft8 over the side of the burn­ 7 p.m.-Meeting of air raid the conquat of the Solomons. Ever liven out by the navy bete. It tal targets" by the bl, American !.entlon because I thought they In, transport. We began clawing bombers and 2.dded that "nelther wardens In the chemistry audi- since the Solomons Invulem laid 8 preliminary checkup indloa­ were watching the destroyer or at the ropes of the net as thoUlh the German prell nor radio has torium. , started AUlu,t 7, It hu beeu ex­ ted that RII the crew and plpen­ looking for submarines. It was a rope ladder. been allowed to tell the people 7:30 p.m.-~embers of the peeted tbat ronaolidatJon of Amer­ civil air patrol will convene in .~, totalUng about 1,600, had "Then I saw' a thin w~p ot "Some of the men feJl from the that American IIlreraft are at­ ColIabo...... " ' ican posltlona In the southeaatena been laved, although "verai Were Arnoke, and, 1 thought somebody', net into the water, but navy men tacking them in the wat now." room 106, law building. world bell.. U of Ute VlehJ Pre.. lovernment would bave tbe section of the islands would be Injured. mattress had caught fire from a quickly pulled them from the wa· He predicted that German bomb­ Corps members who have not FraIlce B· eo-o,...atloa with Geraan, Is best for conquered followed by attaclu on Jap poat­ .....,., .;,..... oWner, it woald .."... from Ute above that a clilrttte, ter onto the destroyer. I don't be- er, would rejoin the aerlll battle had theIr finaerprints taken are pho~ tions to the northwest. At an eR~t coalt port, lurvlvon ur,ed to do so at the lowl\ City an appeal ~t of tbe Frencll popglatton thinks otherwile. J'ollowlaJ The navy communique dllclo.­ ••ve vivid word plcturea of the "While I was lookin" probably Ueve any of the paasenten were in the west at their el.rllesl oppor­ tUnity, meanin., apPllrently, .. police department u BOOn as 1..... Prell Gee Charles tie Gaalle. leader of the ....lit .... Freach, Ing the aerial ...ult on OlIO IIIJd r.cue scene - quick action to onlY a matter of two or th.... lost but I am sure a lot of ~e crew possIble. In i.,_ U eta eltlsena ,aUlered. above, in the 11 ue de Ia. BepublJqae that the procca of moppln& .up minutes, the amoke and tire mUllt have been burned, the fire lIOOn as they may be .pared from flOOd the exploe!ve. ml,allne .nd W81 ....; • FrIuIae, to eeleltrate Bastille na,. The pho~ enemy units in Guadalcanal w .. ...Ritd to race from ont end of apread.o fast. other fronts. I------!"'-~--I ..:..,..p1e41 to.. .hella lJ)to the .e., marin .. "' 01 Fnaee ... IuIa Jast beeD reeelv" contlnUinl. PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA THUIISDAY, S~PTEMBER 10, 1.a.2 'I'flUR: r:::::= • THE BOGEY MAN OFFICIAL UI Iteme In the UNIVERSITY CA1J!!NO"R "It """'I!u1ed In Grad N.ew· ~~ I)'Qii Of the Summer seillon, W.g Ellt HIli. Iteml lor the I1 NOTICES ar. depo Ited with the .ampul edllor of '!'be 'Ii I 1\ Or may be placM In lhe box &>rovlded for their depo.1t in III " ,f The Dally Iowln. GENERAL NOTrC!S ' moo be .t ~an • I~ lowan by 4:30 p.m. the day &>recedln, Ilrft PUbllcatlo'b' ., NOT be accepted by telephone•• nd mu.t b. TYPED R:--:;=:::-_I>II THE DAILyIOWAN WRl'l'TEN and SIGNED by • r ••ponllble penon, Published every morning except Monday • On Rushing to Aid 'ike by Student Publications Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. lady in Distress­ By ROBBlN COONS UNIVERSITY CALENDAR .e' Boal'd of Trustees: Clylle W. Hart, A. HOLL YWOOD-The phone To Craig Baird, Kirk II. Porter, Frank Burge, rings. An excited feminine voice Saturday, cptembcr 12 Macbride Audltorlum Me Glenn Horton, Blaine Asher, Elizabeth Oh,arl­ with a bewitching accent, high 1n 3-6 p. m. Allies Party fot' nil 7:30 1'. m. Lecture: "TllIj foreign or faraway stUdents, Mor­ ton, Dan McLaughlin. anguish, . Ic::nl Sclling of the Present. ra ' • Roosevelt's Wage.Price Program "This is Martha Eggerth. We tar Board, A.F.I., and representa­ 9 tive Naval cadets, at home or Disorder." by Profcssor Troyer 1& ' fer Still a Mystery ta Americans- Fred M. Pownall, Publisher met at the stu(jio. You 'were ~o nize to me and r am all alone here, Dean an\i Mrs. Carl Seushore, 815 Anderson, Room 221A lICorl< ' I WASHINGTON-Mr. Roosevelt did not John J. Greer, Business Manager I have no one to turn to ... These North Linn Street. Hall. ",111 be D. Noble, Editor snbmit hi wage· price prografll to congress Robert t'ings they say about my hu 7:30 p. m. Business meeting, Saturday, SePtember 19 ~ Jan Kiepura, they are not true, Triange club 2:00 p. m. FOOTBALL: !ie.sllo Labor day a, planned. All he aid to con· Entered 811 second class )JIail matter at'the He is ny hus-bond and I lollY hin'll Sunday, eptember 13 ington Universily VB. Jowa, has an gress was (in effect): p05toffice at Iowa City, 19wa, under the act and when they say these t'ihgs I 2:00 p. m.-Freshman orienta­ versity Stadium. . rbl. • • • of congress of March 2, 1879. die... Would you, cou ld you see tion, Macbride Auditorium 9:00 p, m. University p~rty, , ••1' tl "You l'C)peal that obnoxious farm-price in­ him when he comes home '0 he 3:00 p. m.-Transfer orientation, Union. • lIveD. Room 221A Schaefter Hall Tuesday, ept.ember 22 psycllO :£tating law within thl' e weeks, anel allow me Subscription rates-By mail, $5 per year i can say his truth? Please, so Idndly?" ... Tuesday. September 15 4 p, m. OrIentation Group « 6 p. m., 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. hull. toward inauguration of a11 overall economic ance of "Carmen"-in which Kie­ Friday, Sept. 11-]0 to 12 o. m., P OBLlCATrONS DEPARtlID!N'II1 control board, I11ade up of various gov rn­ ., pura's Don Jose tossed Gladys 1 to 3 p. m., 4 to G p. m. went departmeul chiefR, (McNutt, Heuc1erson, Swarthout's Carmen fOJ' a loot­ Ph.D. It£ADlNG EXAMS light loop. Marta, eX!-Vienncge, Davis, Eccles, Nelson, Wickard.) Over the Dam- 'J\ MAN " l\~QUT. NEWMAN LUB The Ph.D. French readin~ - had read into the reports a ques­ The first general meeting of Oct.. 1, 1942, ih room 314, • • • Disclosure after the I alit. war of incl'ed~ble tioning of her Jan's chivalry. but Newman club will be held at 8 f L' hall. Please make "PI~JJCaUQIII Mr, Roosevelt, tired of creating super­ now she has stopped "dying." She p. m. Friday, Sept. II, in the beror Monday, S pt. 28, wa te of public funds inspired solemn 1'­ boarels on top of failur S, and mindful of some MANWATTAN is full of laugh ter even. cafeteria of lown Union. All Cath­ 307, Schaeffer hall. No innor'criticism, then seemed to swerve toward solutions to be wiser next time. But the cu!'­ Before· Jan came in, Marta olic students ar urged lo altend. (ion will PC accepted after naming a chairman of th baal·a with such rent evidence that money is being fh~n g to gave me :m illustrative perform­ A reception will be held for ,father dutl'. strong powers that he could be popularly ance oC Carmen's thit'd-act CUt'­ Joseph ('ode, the new eh(lplain. PROF. S.II. BUSH tbe winds with far mQre abandon than in tain: Don Jose spurning Carmen known as a CZ!l1' over prices and wages. New membership cards will be Romall e La.lLgdaceS uel~arl:lllflil. • • 1917-18 prompts Natioll 's Bhsiness to StlY'thllt • Answers on Questions pistols, rifles, can't be SOld with­ "Jan:' said Marta, "always pulls issued rot' the comjng yeur. • men seem to learu little by collective etper­ out a release from the WPB or an back his skirt-I mean shirt!­ ED BOWMAN FOREIGN TUDENTS 1"01' that job he possibly had decided upou You'd Not Have Asked order from the FBI. A gun that so that Carmen can stab him if President The Jnternntionol board a man, not too much of a labol'ite, or farm ience. By GEORGE TUCKElt has never been shot is a new gun, she will. This lime Miss Swarth­ foreign and raraway bloc man, to be suspected of favoritism in • • • NEW YORK-Q: What has hap- A gun that has been shot just once out asked Jan to throw her away. UNlVERSITY DlRECTORY I an allies P[ll'ty to meet memb!1I1 administering wages and pric s. TIle house milifOI'Y affairs con'tnit/ee pened to NY'S garbage scows? is not, teChnically, a new gun. She asked him to, you see?" Copy for the UnivE-rsity dirE-C- of Morlor BO(lrd, A.FJ., • • • reveals that, in the c01lStl'ltctioli ' of th.e Are they braving subs or is the Chiselers as once bought up a flock At coHee on the terrace Jan tory is now being prepared. Stu- presentntive naval cadets, Pre llmably he wanted someone who would LOllisia.na orcZnance plant, the groaning city dispOsing of its garbage oth- of guns, fired them a couple or himself-slocky, big-chested, ex­ dents wishing to make corre~tions day, Sept 12, from ~ \1) f> p. establish the confidence of lhe coutltry (Ba­ erwise now? times, and put them on sale at pansive, his Polish accent heavy or additions on theIr registration (See :BULLETIN, oage 5) taxpayers wel'e assesse(l $3,409 each for A: New York hasn't dumped its exhorbilant prices. Since they mcb and Lehman being mentioned in most -gave another spirited perform­ building .little . ten-foot . sqlta"e . sentr'Y garbage into the sea in eight years. weren't "new," they escaped the ance, lIe hurled an imaginary of th newspaper account~ , although some houses just pig enough to 7wLd t'UJO me7~. The gal'buge scows were ab"n- freezing order. However, these Carmen to imagin:lfY footlights, threw in the names of Jl\stice Douglas, and A fOltr-car gamge cost $9,425. S~veral doned in 1934. Garbage is dis- "secondhand" guns cost plenty. A with gestures. But on th whole, other left-leaning new deiJI'el's who did not of th(J buildings at this ternpOl'U7'Y plant posed of on Rikers Island, at Colt police positive .32 with a list he was inclined to be magnani­ fill the I'equi'l'ernent, Or McNutt wbo lS al­ ran to-more money pet· Cllb'ic foot titan the. Sound View, in the Bronx, and in price of $27 was offered for $45 mous about the arIair. IIe would Be l' actx l'llnning for PI'\' ·ident in 1944. ) mal'He palace that houses the Tl. S. incinel'atol's in the five boroughs. Q: How's Clark Gable getting be willing to overlook that Swarth­ Should Japanese.Americans • • • S IIpreme C(ml't in Wasltington. Q:What does a (reezing order along in the army? out on previous occa.ions, had had When MI'. Roosevelt tried this program from the war productions board A: Okay, or else we'd have stage accidents, and he, Kiepura. Mod r.t"elers, asaH moments of to be no more publicity on Gable lines. All he, Kiepura, would say Foundatlun 9£ them, . like Benuto]' Norris, of Nebraska, A reasonable sense of I he vainI' of a dollar is privation do, One of these orders Iuntil he completed his officers' was that the publicity was worth As Debated By spoke out publicly. in no way incompatible wiLh the most aggres· has resulted in a firearms racket training course. Gable was grate­ at least $20,000- "and I wish she Norman Thoma ltex Stoul Chairman, Executive ommltt~e Celebra.tl'd Author and Chall'llWl • • • sive conduct of Will', lJOwev(>r. that have made guns available to ful for this. would give half or it to Polish re­ A day 01' two befol'e the pl' sic1ent was citizens who are willing to pay Now, howeveL', there is an effort lief!" He told of the time in V1- Pust War World CouucU of thl' Wrltus' War Board l scheduled to speak, NO\'ris openly warned him buH pricc3. being made to bring Gable to New enna that Jerilza, in "Cav;]lIeri;] Cp'ngr~ss would "mise hell" if 11 tIm Here's an example: There's a York for a dramatic appearance Rusticana," had beE-n furious with THOMAS OPEN : 70,000 Am 1'- tunate r ct of war that to prevent trampled on its constitutional prerogatives. freeZing .Gl'd~r on Col fir~rm6, t t~ Garden ill a gigantic relief Picaver for not hurling her dOwn ielln citizens plua $ome 40,000 the destructIon of·rt!any it (s oftell So tile president decided to give them Greater Importance- . and on most other makes as well, show to be staged there this the church steps, thus robbing her Japan,born relatives (inellgible nece.>sury to visit hardship ' on a three weeks to do it th r gular way, their This means new arms, such as month. I hope the army refuses. of her big scene. for naturalization), are in cl)ncen- (ew. Among tho Japanese-Ame~i­ :way-if they could. On the bottom I'ight hand cOl'ner of a ------tration camps behind barbed wire. cans now interned in the United recent Czeehoslovakian ll t'wspapCl' printed Not a slngl charge has be n filed States- many u{ whom owe allegi. • • • here in the United States there was a one line again t them. Th ba. le authority once to Jap n as well as the Ullited His threat to do it anyway October 1, im­ story which, though seemingly unimportant, tor their evacuation from com, States - there ore undoubtedly plied his own doubt that 'lhe farm bloc would gives liS anotller glimps into the tJlOughts of munities in which they demon- loyal citizl'ns. , relent and let him do it. strate in How~ii? NBC-Red 10:20-Quincy Howe, News An- I then told the White IIouse. • • • SIONAL WOMEN nurtured by racial prejudice and Before Japan attacked the United WlIO (1040); WMAQ (670) ~'Ilat was an nnimportant little story, ex­ Persis Sheldon, radio chairman alyist desire to acquire farm ' and busi- State. , there w r Japanese Nayal It shollld llave bern clone l/1st spring when 6-Fred Waring in Pleasure cept fOJ' the last phrase, from which we can 10:30-Man Your Battle Stations nesses made prosperous by J apa, oftlcers In the mpan fleet, Japa. the \Jl' sent H endersoT). pri.c setnp was insti­ of the Iowa Federation of Busi­ Time 10:45-Carl Hoff's Band nese. (As would be expectcd, the nc e sub idiz d prie ts and ·W!ch· tuted hy congr ss ovel' two-third~ of the prices conclude that the Gel'lIlan~ , UO not believe n,ess and Professional Women's 6:l5-News of the World with Il-News vegetable sup ply wcnt down; ers proomting loyalty to Ihe em'l of the nation, leaying one-tllil'd tmtouched this P8mpaign will come Lo nn end iu tlle clubs, will discuss the war pro­ John W. Vandercook 1l:15-Harry James' Band prices went up.) peror in tn hrln and ,schools 01 an I encoul'aging farlTl pI'ices to run up_ 'rhe nelli' future. gram of lhis organization over zG:3O-How 'M I Doin'? ] 1:30-Eddic Oliver's Band Although a guard shot a child the plantation, and Joponese fifth wsur at 8 o'clock tonight. The 7-MaxweU House Coffee Time l2-Press News "esqllping" while pluying in the columnisl~ dqubling us merchants, Henderson system has been It brazen political discussion will be divided into 7:30-The Aldrich Family bUShes, American conccntration It. was not by accident thaI tb~ makeshift compromise with thc unions and four main topics: the battle of farm bloc. 8-Kl'aft Music Hall MBS camps nre free from overt cr·uelly. Japane~e, with no reconna iSlillnct Ideas; the battle for production; 9-The Rudy Valleee sealtest WGN (720) But the temporary assembly cen- whatever, were abl to bomb l'earl • • • QUiefly and Efficiently~ community offensive; and the bat­ Show tel's are shockingly overcl'owdC(\ Harbor with a precision that indi· tle for the peace. 'rhe Pll rt of it t~at MI'. Rooseevlt did not 9:30-The March of Time 7-Sin!onietla, with Alfred Wal­ and insanitary, The permanent cntcd &n unfanny knowledee ,01 Since the day the war began the nited tell in Ilis message, and the story with which 10-News lenstein camps now building aren't much the dispo ilion of the U. S. Ilee~ the farm bloc men have jnstlfi d themselves States railroad companys hav,e, been quietly NAVY TIME- 10:15-Dinning Sislel's 7:30-Jt Pays to Be Ignorant, better. Wages range trom $12 to With Japanese farms on the wes for their own selfish politic!), is tllat Mr. and effectively speeding up ~chedllles auc1 re­ At 12:45 this noon Ensign 10;30- Maxwell Howe Colfee with George Shelton $20 per month. coast so invnrinbly localed cI Roosevelt waf:! not holding down the onions. arranging their org'aujzation' to ellllblc them­ "Babe" LeVoir of the Naval Pre­ Time ]O-Boxing Red Cochrane Vs. This disgrace to our democracy to oil fields lind industrial estab His various Labor boal'Cls let some milon selves to deal wit h the country's growing Flight school will interview Cadet 1l :30-Moon River F'ritzie Zivic cannot now be curd by a return to lishmenl!, i{ i. not inconceiva~k' wages case up highet' llLollg a cost of living tl'anspol'tation problem. 'l'h ey've ' broken all Richal'd M. Smith, FaI'go, N.D" 11 :55-News what w:lS; it can be wiped out by that sueh precise dl!struclion as and Cadet John D. Stith, SL. Louis, full I'cstorlllion of rlghl~, com pen, OCCUlTed Il~ Pearl IInt'bor could yardstick- and ill the .p nding General Mo­ standing records jn wnrlilil{! trll.llRpOl'tation. * * * Mo. , on the Navy Time program. Blue Real Thing ~a tion for losses, nnd rapid relocs. \ be I'epeotl'd here. tors case a labor board panel eveil went be­ • • • KSO (1460), WENR (8941) tion of families

FAMED INSTITUTION TURNS IN OLD GUNS FOR NEW who have not reached their 28th $1800) examination contains three Graduates With Less Hillel Club to Begin birthday are urged to cootact the optIonal branches, fllgineerin&. Today V·7 Interviewing oflieer at the of­ metallurgy and phypcs. For tile than 1S Hours Must Services for Jewish Five Organizations fice of naval oUicer procurement, $1,100 grade. three years of colle,e Roanoke, buUdlna', Minneapolis. study Is required; on17 two years Will M.. t are neeessary for the ,1,600 grade, like Special Exam Holidays Tomorrow and one year for the ,1,440 grade. Marine Recruiting To qualify under anyone of the Coralville Heights. . . 0 U I ited 8a . options in any grade, certain re­ R.cord Examination The Hillel foundation will con- ... club will meet wJth Mr~. A. n n im' SIS quirements as to hours of stud,. In . ' f th The United States marinC3 have d uc t reguI ar services or e J. Roberson of Coralville at 2:30 specified subjects must be met.. To Begin Saturday J eWIS. h h11' h h 0 I'dlay! beginn' Ine a t this afternoon. resumed recrultin".. on an unlimited Morning in Macbrid. 8 o'clock tomorrow night at the basis, made possible by expanded Provision is made for the .c­ Community building, Rabbi Morris • • • fadUties for training, according to ceptance for the technical assl­ tant applications from persons who 9r8duate students with less than N. Kertzer of the school of religion Electa Circle. . . Capt. Lawrence J . Denmire, head announced yesterday. . .. of Klng's Daughters will meet of mlrine recruiting for Iowa and have not completed the required 15, semester hours of graduate The Rosh Hashonah holiday, the at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Nebraska. years oC study, but who expect to f(ork ' at the University of Iowa finish the courses within four New Year of the Jewish calendar, Ihome ot Mrs. E. J. Lewis, 332 S. Alter Pearl Harbor, rr rine re- will be aaked to take the graduate will open at sundown tomorrow Linn. cruitJo, was unHm1ted, but there monUts atter application. Appro­ ~ eltamlnation, Dean Carl E. and will continue for two days. • • • was luch a 1I00d of enlistments priate training cour may be sub­ seashore of the graduate coUe,e Rosh Hashonah services will also that quola$ brd to be ~t.abllshed stltuted for college houn required hal announced. be held at 10 o'clock Saturday IGarden department. . . frorn last February to the present in any optional branch. This Is the th Ird successive morning at the Community build- I ... of the Iowa City Woman's lime. There are no age Umits for these rear the eltamlnations have been ing. club will met at 2:30 in the club- Applican is fOr service with the examinations. No written tests 'Iven. Prof. Dewey B, Stuit of the Rabbi Kerlzer will lead the ser- rooms of the Community bulldln,. marines do not need to be super- are necessary. Applications are psycholollY department will di­ vices and wiU be assisted by Cadet 0 • 0 mm, Captain DenmJre points out. not desired trom persons engllAled ~d administration of the tests. Howard Cheslar of the navy pre- They must be In lood physical In war work unl a change of The enmlnatlon will be JI • tlight school and members ot the Iowa City Rebekah. . . condition, 17 to aG years of .,e and position would r ult in the uUII­ •ij In two parta, with the fir" Hillel foundation. All students and . . . lodge No. 416 wlll meet at ot good charllcter. ution of higher skills possessed b7 bIIf IIlheduled for Saturd., cadets ot Jewish faith are in- 8 o'clock this evening in Odd Fel- Mal'lne recruitin, stations In the worker. .0l'Il1111 from 8 to 12, and tile Theie obaol~'e tun. and olh~r military equipment, Smithsonian Institution relic. of other wan, are .oln. vited to attend the services. lows hall. this district are located in the fed­ Announcements and application 11110 lbe' meftlrl' pot to make new cuns for today's war. Dr. Charles G Abbott, seeretar, of the InstUnlon "bOnd half, Saturday, Sept. It, • • 0 r r,l buildings of Des MoJnes. Cedar forms may be acquired at the Iowa I, IIhoWll al he' tUtned the e4ulpmenl over ,In Washln,ton to Maj. Gen. Milton A. Reckfol'\l, eOQlmaD1lht, frOID • &0 12 a. m., both IlectioDl' Rapids. Waterloo, Sioux City and City p in this rating for about two months, A.-I~ is the highest individual PEN REPAIR MATERIALS lests 'are being given this year in d,uring which time he acquaints the fields of biology, chemistry, sealjOp's , series of , do.ll~~-a-couple the' country's race to win the war, Tes'ts have previously been' given award an enlisted man can receive. dances. These dances wtll . be ·the I asserted. at the beginning of tlje school year himself with the navy generally. It is awarded by the President of GETTING SCARCE ••• MAY SOON ecnomlcs, engineering, fine arts, he During an emergency, many men ~nab, geology, German, gov­ usual· .aU-uni':'i!rs.ity party ~ched- ' ''We toust make our tires last instead of at .the end'l the director the United state. to thl! man who, erpment, history, English litera­ ule ·for. duration tlJe·war. ))y spending the miles that are in are enlisted in the naval reserve In action Involving actual con­ t? 01 pointed out. , " with a rating and sent to active hire, mathematics, philosophy, ",,:ho do not belong Ito them wisely, conserving them in Wct wi th the enemy, distinguishes S.tu~el'!ts By 'becoming acquainted ' with duty immediately. Ph.1slcs, psychology and sociology. ~ specifiC ' t::eslden~e Jrou~ l!re al~o , every way that individual ingen­ hlmselt consplcuolusly by gaUan­ , After the eltaminations have IDvlted to . sub~t can~l. dates If uily can devise" Chansky em- the equc!lt,i?~al q~~eI9Pro~ni ot try and intrepidity at the risk of been scored a detailed profile wlll 25 s.ul>po,tmg slgnat~res can be phasized, ' each pupil, administrators will Q.-What are the steps through his own Ufe. be sent to- each student. This pro­ ~hlch a sailor advances I to a obtamed for th~ no~l~ee: . 'A fiOe-point program designed have a basis for disc6,ve~ing : need higher rating? file enables the student to com­ ~nly sophomores, JUnlors and 'to ,conserve tires being worked for curriculum revision whith will Q.-Jf I have some specialized pare his performance with that of sembrs ~ay . lie ~onsidered. Of t~e out. for Iowa City includes the el- A.-You advance to higher posi­ be better adapted to his changing tions through seniority in rating, tralnine must J serve as an ap­ .ra~ua Ie students in general and 16 ~o~mlttee. members,' .three wlU imination of careless and needless prentice seaman it I enlist In the also with that of other students be !UDl?rs WIth full voting powe.r . driving, share-the-ride, conserva­ interests, needs, and abiUtles. salection on the merits of past work and competitive exam Ina­ naval rE'perve? in h'ls field of concentration. for the years, 1,942-1943, an~ 194,3- tion' th-rough selective enforcment, rhe nine, tests ~injI given, con­ lions. A.-No. Any man with previous . It is the hope of the various 1944, Nonilna~lOns should lDclud~ the improvement of stl'eets and sisting of 62 pages of !T\at~rial ,raduate schools that by provid­ the grade ~o~n,t ot the , nominee, highways and the staggering of speclalized training will be en­ for each pupil, wilt be administ­ Q.-How about age limits? lisled in a special naval reserve itlc ·the student with this objective campus activities, . ~n.d the rea- hours to eUminate congested traf­ ered in -three halt-day sessions of sons the groups conSIders the nom- l' A.-The age requirements tor class and will receive petty offi­ informa tion they will be able to 2~ hours each. After the returned inee a suitable candidate. , IC. the regular navy are from 17 to lIl, cer's rating and pay. do' a better job of educational an tests are checked, the resultS will vocational guidance and wlU be All nominatibns must be, left at and from 17 to 50 for the naval Receive 8ame Pay the Iowa- ' Union 'desk not later 2 Pro-Flight Cadets be reported by the unlv~rslty to reserve. Regular navy enllstment Q.-Do seamen in the nllval re­ of Ireater assistance In helping schools not later tl1an the first Itudents attain their particular than 12 noon, Sept. J 5. Will Be Interviewed Is tor six years. Those between serve receive the same pay as the week of October. their 17th and l8th birthdays seamen In the regular navy? loals. Titles of the test are: under­ Today Over WSUI must enlist tor a minOrity enIlst­ A.-Yes, the men In the naval el... "ne wriun, Ieml po",,. witb • 1. 'ilia ,."., .• Irt ...w 'orlo_r QvIrtIr standing of basic social concepts, ment, reaching untll their 21st qWlll You ",a, be-l1ol ,OU prOled clluoIv.... dim.", ond do· ability to do quantitative thinking, re erve receive the same pay, food, t_, 15 Russian Studenfs Two cadets from the Naval Pre­ blrthday. Parents' consent is neces- entertalnment. free medical and ,our "'. from wanimo ,.iJure.. R,poif' ~" left by Irtlorlol' Inl/ Bt .., a-,t fourth battalion, attended the Uni­ petty oUicer, second class, $96; saiiors? "--' Hr" ....., &.I. ",A IIA B L iii ...... I ..... " .. 'AIlIIt... ,.. ce., ••• Martin Drobner, all Al of Dav- Applications for government po­ versity of Minnesota and North Announce 4 New Pledges petty oUlcer, first class, $11.4; chief A.-No, there Is no difference in fir' PERMANENT. enport; Elroy Gellerman, C4 of silI.ons· for the 15 men and women Dakota Agricultural college. Cadet Beta Theta Pi fraternity an­ petty officer (acting) $126, and the un'form worn by the naval ~ock Island, Ill.; WaUace Fried- who have enrolled in the IS-week Smith attended st. Louis univer­ nounces the plE!dging of Tim Scott, chiet pel,ty officer. permanent ap­ reservist.- and tbat worn by the Parker man and Bernard Hallgman, both course in Russian being offered sity and was on the footba\1 squad Al of Rock Island, II],;, Ed Hig­ pointment, $138. These are pay regular navy seamen. Al of Sioux City; Harlan Wit- this fall for the first time in the there. Various aspects of the Naval gins, Al of Davenport; Don Sokel, rates p!!r month. te~tein, A I of Des Moines; Mil- ' history oC the univerSity, will be Pre-Flight school wiIl be discussed Al of Maquoketa, and Don 'Mor­ Q.-What are P. T, boats? ton Kattelman, E2, and Doullas filed with the American Council on the program. rison, A3 of Washington. Q.-Does the training cost me A.-P. T. desl,nate! the new Kooler, AI, both of Council Bluffs; of Learned societies by the end of ------anything? type motor torpedo boats. These Quink Aller! Siellel, Al of Ottumwa, and the week, Prof. Erich Funke, Seven Former Unl'versl'fy Students Alumni' A.-There Is no cost involved, boats are capable of speeds In elt­ COITI ... IOn-s Sid Weisman, Al of Waterloo, chairman of the univerSity schopl , . ., and an apprentice seaman's pay cess of 50 miles per hour and Sam Edelman, E4 ot Sioux City, of letters committee, said yester~ M begins the day he is C8 lIed to (carry two or more torpedo tubes, wu eJected president of Phi Epsl- dllY. Officials in Washington will Announce Recent Engagements,' arriartAs active ~crvlce. deptb charges, smoke-screen ap­ Ion Pi to replace Sam Goldenberg pass upOn the candidates. ~" paratu:;, and rapid fire anti-air­ who enUsted In the air corps. Mil- The new course, which starts Q.-Vlhat kind of special train­ craft guns These boats have not yet ton Mazie, C3 of Sioux City, will Sept. 17, wl11 be taught by t::'rof. Word has been received of the ViIIa de Chantel in Rock 1slllnd ing is needed? been I nt'orpora!ed into the flgh t­ .saume the duties of scholarship John Posin of Ithaca, N. Y., a nat­ engagements and weddings of and was graduated from Daver\­ A.-None Is needed prior to en­ Ing fleet in any creat number. Proctor. ive Russian who is now an Ameri- seven former students and alumni port high school. ot the university. listment The navy provides a can cititen. Iowa was 'selected as Mr. Stoker attended the lIni­ period or recruit training before TraHic Controller one of the few universities to spon­ versity of Mississippi at Uni­ assignment to duty aboard a ship sor the training of persens in the , Jeffryes-Chapman Position Available No Foolin', G.A.R. versity City and the Univenity or station is made. Government employment oppor­ Russian languale with a view to The marriage of Helen Mar­ of Iowa following hi. graduation Hal a New Member using them for possible war mis­ garet Jeffryes, daughter of Mr. and tunities tor the poIIltion ot traiJIee from Davenport high ·school. He Q.-How much lIeneral edul. traffic controller (airway and air­ slo05. Mrs. W. L. Jeffryes, to Walter is a member of Sigma Chi ,SEATTLE (AP)-Four days af­ The 13-week course has no con­ Chapman, son of Mr. and Mrs. cation Is necessary? port) at $1,800 a year In the ijfth fraternity. He enlisted In the A.-It has been found that a region of the CAA have been an­ ter his 98th birthday, William De· nection with the regular program Russell Chapman of Ft. Dodge, navy air corps in September, 1941, ~y 'Freeman became a mem­ of the university. For university took place August 11 at Buffalo, high 5clJool education is desirable nounced by the civil service com­ and will be commissioned an en­ but not absolutely necessary. mission. btr of the Grand Army of the students, an elementary course in N. Y. sign this month in Pensacola, na., a.publi~ here. He JOined the Russian wi11 be taught by Profes­ A graduate of Greenfield high Ex~jnations for these jobs are where he is taking advanced train­ Q.-What about dependents and open to both men and women. Union forces at the ale of 17 and sor Posin. Fifteen students have school, the bride will complete her ing. foulht thrOUlLhout the Civil war. enrolled in this class, which will nurses training at the University sea dut,y or forel¥f1 service? Full information regnrdlng the Hta daughters said he belonge8 of Iowa this year. She is a pledge r-­ A.-Add 20 per cent to the above requirementa 8 n d Rppllcatim meet three times weekly. This Traak- Blollll'rell I to the G. A. R. in Nebraska years class may be enlarged later, Prof­ of Sigma Theta Tau sorority. base pay for sea duty and toreign blanks may be obtained from the 110 but WQS not very active. and essor Funke said, to accommodate The bridegroom is a graduate Aleen Helen Trask, daughter of service. Also tor those ratings be- board of civil service examlners In 100t Ihterest after coming to the large number ot student. who of Ft. Dodge high school and junior Mr. and Mrs. Archibald H. Trask low petty officer, second class, add the Iowa City post oUice. &elttte. applied for admission. college and received his B.A, and of Black River Falls, "'~, and $28 for wife, $12 tor first child and AppUcations may be filed with B.S. degrees from the university. Paul Brown Blomgren, son of Mr. '10 for t'ach additional child. For the manager of the ninth civil ser­ SMAIT STUDINTS CHOOH After a short wedding trip' to and Mrs. Lawrence L. Blomgrl!'ll of ratings :1bove third class, the de- vlce district, New pederal build­ THt IUPIl-CHAIlGm J. Taylor Weds Ensign Rogers Jenkinson fJlagara .Falls, Mr. and Mrs. Chap­ Winterset, were married Augult 21 pendent allowance Is $34.50 per Inc, st. Louis, untlJ the needs of man are at home in Buffalo. in SI. Louis. month I't',ardiess of the number of the service have been met. Mrs. Blomgren attended dependents. "P• .3cep' Tuesday Evening in Single Ring Ceremony Nelson·Schnelder Stephens college at Colmubia, Mo., Medical eare Specialilts May Try ...... before entering the University of Q.-What happens If a sailor In 'The wedding of Ethel Mae Nel­ It', the pen that never son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Iowa. the United states navy gets sick? For Commissions Dr. Ilion T. Jonel dress with a rose-colored trim. Her A.-There Is a dispensary at leu you down in &II shoulder corsaie was of .ardenills. A. Nelson, to Joseph W. Schneider The bridegroom was itaduated The scope of the v-7 olficer s'on of Mr. and Mrs. William M. from iWnterset high school and're­ every stlltlon manned by medical trainlnc proaram haa been emergency. Full Tde­ Performs Service ~'!rvIM the bridegroom as best en­ Schneider of Wiltton, took place ceived his degree at the Univenity officers who give complete and ef­ larlled to make elgible many men yision Barrel warns daya In Home of Bride man was hll brother, Louili Jen­ ficient aid to anyone who is feeling in ad" ance to refill In kinson. August 29 in Cedar Falls. of Iowa. He is a member of Theta previously dlsquaUfled, according The bride was graduated from Xi fraternity and Gamm.. Eta ill to a bulletin from the oUiee of poll alter poll, year Ilter lfUests ...... At a bower of fern., palmi, Twenty attended the Iowa State college at Ames and Gamma le,al fratemity. He will n a val officer procurement In year, Parleer pens hue white IIladloli and candelabra irl wedding and buffet supper which ...... ,... hal been teaching in Randalia and enter the navy as a radio techni­ Q.-h there any Insurance Minneapolis. been the ovctWhelmin~ ~e library ot her parents' home, fOllowed, All were relatives of .. .., ..... Brandon for the past two years. cian in September and will be .ta­ available to sailors In the navy? In addition to the trainlni of ,..11 1 ••• -. choice on the campi 'f.. n Taylor, dau,hter of Mr. and the bri~ai' pair. Mra. Leonard G. The bridegroom attended the tioned at the Great Lakes Naval A.-Yes, Government insurance deck oUlcerl for ceneral service, Mh. Roscoe Taylor, 521 N. Du- Smith of, Cedar Rapids and l\1r, from Maine to Southcm University of Iowa and was gradu­ Training school for eight weeks. policies l!P to $10,000 are available the V-7 procram wl1l alto train '1 Z·7I Cal iforoia. bliqUe, became the bride of En- and Mrs. JerrY Saffleld of Rock ated trom Iowa State Teachers to en1is~ men. men for lpeelalilt commi.Isiona. uan ROllera Jenkinson, lIOn of Dr. Island, Ill., were the non-resident college at Cedar Falls. He is now FalkeDlOn-Flck ---r The phYllcal requlrementa for OTHER PARKER SETS FROM ." and Mrs. Harry Jenkinson, 220 cueats present. employed in the oftice of the John The wedding of Violet Falkenson Q.-How does the navy and the general service have not been All P_ at sa.7S and Up are Guuaateed f. We ., ~~er, In a 10:30 ceremony Tuea- Univenlt1 8todent. Deer Tractor company in Water­ of Des Moines · to Lieut. Horton naval rl'Serve decide what type chanced; however, the pbylic.l PARKER'S BLUE DIAMOND ""1' evening. Dr. IlIon T. Jone. Mrs. Jenkirison, a IIraduate of loo. Fick, son of Mra. Electa Fici', took of work a recruit Is best tltted tor? requirement. tor the specialiat .... It the Ilnale rlnc ..rvlee. Iowa City hl'h IIChool, attended The couple wll1 be at home in place August 19 at Fort ~nlni, A.-Bt'fore being asslllled to branch are much more liberal Ia Mn. r. B. Whinery, harpist, tile university liere lind was aUIU­ Cedar Falls. Ga. duties, recruits are ,Iven the to vision, teeth. helJht and weilhl Pla1ed nuptial music prectdll\l ated with PI Beta Phi ,sorority. The bride was formerly em­ O'Rourke classlflcatlon test which Men appl7inl for enllttmeDt Ia 'lid durin. the ceremony. EMI.n JeriklqlOn wal ' IIradu" Kennedy ·Sloker ployed by the Bankert' Life COM­ reveals ~elr Individual talent.. speclau.ta must poaaea or be can­ Th. bride chOie a wine-colored ated from Iowa .City hllh sehool Mrs. J08ep~ P. Kennedy of Rock pany. Lieutenant Fick ,Wa. ar~du­ dldalea for a B. A. decree with a "001 COItume lult trimmed with 1M attended the univerllltY for Island, Ill., announces the engage­ ated ' frpm ,1tooseve1t Wlll\ '~ool Q.-Who are the ltaff officers In major in en&lneeriDg, naval arch­ liar. She wore an orchid aholllder tllree yeaN: He received his com- ment and approaching marriage of and attended the 'Unlvenlty of the navy? Itecture, matllematlCl, p h '1 • Ie. , cot.... and brown accellorl... mi ..ion In the nlival air corps ~t her daughter, Mary Ellen, to Jack Iowa. Before enterl", th~ aerv/ce, A.-There are four statt officer electroniCl, meteoroloiY, industrial AU-...d bJ 81,"r CorpuB Christi, Tex., In May. I H, Stoker, son of Mrs. and Mrs. J. he was employed aa an, aC90untmlt. corp. In the navy. TheT are medl­ ~allement or businell admlnt­ D£PARTH£NT STORE "arr Helen Taylor attended her The coupte ire In ChlcBlo await- A. Stoker of Davenport. Lieutenant and Mrs. 1'1c:k are ~l officers, dental officers, supply stration. IIat.r "'Mrl", a ,late bl\l' )VUOl I~ tM brldelr09ll\'. orden, Th41 brid41-el~ct attended the UvinS a~ Camp R\lckef, Al" offi~r, aed chaplailll. Collese ft\lCl~p" aDd Vaduatel =- - --=------=---~-=-----=-=::;-~------~- - -.:.-- THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, iOW' A' 1HURSDAY , SrPTEMBER 10, 1942' PAGE FOUR yg·nkees Overpower St. Louis ~------~---- .. Ernie BOnham Takes Farmer Looks Good . Sea hawk 11 Will Get Wildcat Hopes Big Ten THI .DAILY .IOWAN 19th Pitching Tri~Jllph Rest on Otto Graham At Quarter as Hawks Intensive Grid Drills Allowing Eight Hits This Seqson Run Mock Scrimmage Briefs Before Opening Tilt By DAVE HOFF (This Is one or a series of Joe Gorc:lon Ho'meri stories on the prospects of major Jerry Kubal, Kane Bierman Emphasizes MINNEAPOLIS, (AP) coUeee football teams.) I" Opening Frame At Tackle Positions Minnesota's lootball team got its Offensive Practices, With Bases Loaded · EVANSTON, Ill. (AP)-Foot­ In Ibt Team' Line first taste of real contact yester- Frequent Scrimmage. ball legend tells of a tactless sports day, Coach George Hauser ro- fCONYERTED ' GUARD;:- .~ By Soids) a.s 'lIt... .., .. 'Jacle ST. LOUIS, (A,P)-The New writer who once interrupted a With Iowa's opening game tated his first tour lines on both Joe Louis Leaves A week of tootball ariJIs fUilJ York Yankees overpowered the busy coach to ask him what he against Washington university of offense and defense in a light as intensive as the routine « St. Louis Browns, 8 to 3, yester­ needed for his grid team. The St. Louis only 10 days away, their da fly activities has been 01 . day to increase their American scrimmage. On 37 -Day Furlough coach answered somewhat heat­ dered tor members of the NaVY'1 league lead to ten full games over edly: Coach Eddie Anderson yesterday Hauser had a reserve back­ the idle Boston Red Sox and sent the Hawkeyes through anoth- Pre-FIi"ht school Seahawk gr~ "I don't know about my needs, field of Wayne (Red) William.s, Will Start Training squad by Lieut. Col. Bernie W. bring big Ernie Bonham his 19th but you might go over and talk eL' mock scrimmage in an effort to left hall; Dave Thomas, right Bierman, coach. pltchJng triumph of the season. To Meet Bill Conn to the band director-I hear he perfect the Hawk's iiming and half; Mike Welch, fullback; and The Seahawks open their season • • • needs a trumpet player." play assignments. Frank Johnson, quarterback, do­ For Oct. 12 Battle against Kansas, at Lawrent't, Joe (Flash) Gordon 8DI&1 a tion a week ago that this is Ih! jus$ a breeze. • • • to the first team line during the back and Gopher trackman, journey that will lead to a right greellest squad I've ever hnndllll • • • He is Otto Graham, Waukegan's drill to give them their first spelled Williams at the tailback with Billy COM in New York still atands. I imagine that an, They completed aU their scor­ second noted musical son-the first taste of offensive play. spo t. The Gopher track star, who October 12 in defense of his thir(i team I ever had at ?l inne. of course being Jack Benny. Otto heavyweight boxing crown. sota was able to start its first ing belore .Bonham gave the Offensive Line was the fastest man Minnesota has Browns a hit or a run, enabling sounded a number of very sharp had since George (Sonny) Franck Louis was promoted from cor- day of practice with a better For the husky righthander to coast to notes as a sophomore passer last the most part of the light hung up his football togs in 1940, poral to sergeant just a few background of organization than victory while parcelling out eight year, completing something like 36 scrimmage, the offensive line was hours before he departed for I've been able to give this team.' composed of Bill Parker and Al broke away for the best run of hits. out 01 75 attempts. Around the the day on a lateral from Thomas. Kansas City. At thll' same time he Colonel Bierman was referrm, handsome young Mr. Graham the Mannino at ends, Kane and K;u­ was granted an emergency 37 -day to problems surrounding organi. Most of the Yan)(ee damage was Bucks Slow Down Wildcat olfensiye is b!!ing laid this bal at lackie, Del Dickerhoof and furlough, which will give him zation of his Seahawks which, at done against knuckleballer John­ Gen!! Curran manning the guardS, COLUMBUS, OHIO, (AP)­ ny Niggeling. In the first year, and Coach Waldorf has an tour days to return to camp after the outset of practices. he con. idea the program will pay some with Tommy Hand of Emmets­ Coach Paul E. Brown slowed the th e figh t. trasted to the organ iza tion of I he served singles to Buddy Has­ burg at the center position. Man­ pace for Ohio State University sett and J oe DiMaggio and walked h\lndsome dividends in a brisk 10- He planned to leaye 'Kans as college squad. Those obstacle, gllIl\e schedule. nino was running at the right end footballe.rs yesterday to prevent City at 11 o'clock last night tor of course, include the absence rI Charley Keller to fiIJ the bases position in place of ailing Bill them from going "stale" from ov­ ahead of Gordon. Northwestern lost 19 lettermen Chicago where he will meet his any previous familiarity In tlR by graduation in June but even so Burkett, who was taking things erwork ear Iy in practice. manager, Julian Black, and fight squad with the Bierman system In the third inning Roy Cul­ has 17 "N" winners returning, of easy because of a pulled muscle. Monday's and Tuesday's stren­ promoter Mike Jacobs. The three or in playing together, as throu&\ ]enbine and DiMaggio led oft whom four were regulars last year. The initial backfield was com­ uous conditioning workouts were are to go to New York and then spring practice. with singles and Keller again That quartet, including the artful posed of Ted (Duke) Curran at followed yesterday by concentra­ Sergeant Louis will go to De- Matters are complicated in ad. walked to load the bases, bring­ Graham, will be the nucleus of leh hali, Bill Stauss at right tion on two new plays and pass troit for a 10-day visit at home. dition by personnel, cadets mOl'. ing Stan Ferl!flS to the relief of the a~gregation Waldorf began half, Dick Hoerner at fullback offense drill. He expects to start fight train- Ing out bi-weekly and o!ficeq Niggeling. molding last Monday. and Jim Youel as quarterback. 1IUni Scrlnuna,e ing September 21 at Greenwood subject to transfer. Despite bri~ Ferens walked Gordon, forcing One of the happiest coinci­ Throughout the workout, how­ Lake, N. Y., where he has trained workouts which preceded the op­ across a run, Dil\Jaggio scored on CHAMPAIGN, ILL., (AP)-The dences connected with the re­ ever, the backfield was subject The University Ql Illinois football for most of his fights. ening of formal drills last Vleft,' an infield out, and aiter Gerry turnin. veterans is the fact bQ.th to constant change. "Twenty-one days is all that I team practice is at a minimum, be. Priddy had been purposely passed squad got a surprise yesterady­ of last year's ends are backs­ Successful Quartet a 20 mipute scrimmage in which need to train," he drawled. "I'm ing limited to less than two houn to jam the bases again, Keller two boys welI versed In the art The most succe$sful quartet was all but the f irst string backfield in better shape than I've ever late in the afternoon aIler til! scored on a wild pitch. Q.f snaring Graham's passes. Tommy Farmer at quarter, Cur­ candidates participated. Coach been before a fight." rigorous routine which !-very man Red Rolfe opened the fourth They are Bob Mot! and Bud : ~ ' DoVSI' ran at left hali, Hoerner in the Ray Eliot had indicated earlier on the station is required to dis­ frame with a double and tallied Hasse, and when they a-o to work • NO"'R~ DAMe- ~ND ~AS1' "If. '. on a single by Cullenbine. fullback slot and Stauss at right tllat the first COntact work would Challenger Conn charge. with youna- Otto there's rarel y half. With Farmer doing the not be held until the end of the FAL.L. 6e:IN<:r COillv~~eD IN'fo - leaves for Home Content, at least for the pres­ · . .. a mistake. great part of the passing and ball week. .A 6~ARO foR "(HIS' 'i~ARS CAMfAIGt-I ent, with the defensive progTel With this ample mara-in, Bon­ NEW YORK, (AP)-Pvt. Billy Northwestern lost last ,year's 01 his squad, Bierman has ordeml ham relaxed and the Browns handling, this backCield with a Not one 01 the three sets III Conn received his order from the first three quarterbacks via the bacldields used in the scrimmage scored once In their ba If of the pass receiver in every pO!;ition war department at Fori Wads­ Prolonged emphasis on oHell!! diploma system, which is a gap could mal

CASH RATE SMALL furnished apartment. Two FURNITURE MOVING adults. Also cottage, fireplace. lor 2 dayll- 908 E. Washington. BLECHA TRANSFER and STOR- 10e per llne per da7 , AGE-Local and 10D, dista nce a consecutive dayll- SMALL FURNISHED apartment hauling. Dial 3388. 7c ~ line per da1 - Dial 3354 evenings. INSTRUCTION e consecutive da:y_ TWO ~ ROOM furnished apts. Grad­ DANCING LESSONS- ballroom­ Sc per Une per da1 uate ~t udent girls and married ballet-top. Dial. 7248. Mimi 1 month- couples. 517 Iowa Ave. 4c per line per da,. Youde Wuriu. -Figure S wordl to liM­ Furnished three-room apartment M1niml1rn Ad- 2 liJlM lor rent. 125 S. Clinton. ALL TYPES ot dancing tor chil- ~ ___._ dren-adults. Dial 5126. Hariett LOST AND FOUND Wa Js lh. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY LOS'l' Black nnd white Checked' 50c clll. inch ---- ======BROWN'S COMMERCE COLLEGE Or ' !I.OO per moutla rain coat. Reward. Extension Trains in all commercilll courses TilE FRUIT ORCJ.l~R()5 HAVE 696. in the shortest possible time con­ BEE~ ClEARE() A~() 11o\ERe sistent with thOrough ness. l&NO T ASlt-IGLE VE6ETABlE All Want Ads Cash in Advance LOST. One large Tackle-Twill Day School Night School RE MAINlfIIG OUTSIDE Til E ayable at Dally Iowan BUIi­ slorm jacket. Reward $2.00. Dial "Above Penney Store" CITY WALLS! D_ office daily until • p.m. 2173, Kane. Dial 4682 LOST. The~ pin at Mayflower, Cancellation. muat be ~ Sept. 6. Reward. Return Daily Defore 5 p .rn. r Iowan. ReI))onalble tor one incorr.:t LEARN TO EARN insertion 0017. WANTED We Have Scheduled Training RADUATE WOMAN to chap­ For Many S.U.I. Students r... eron {or room. AddreS's N. J.­ And Wives of Students. ;Uaily Iowan. Now, as Never BeIore, 'YOUNG female kitten. Good You Too, Need This Training! home-best food. Phone Smith, I:.~HOLI. NO\\-lll:\L ,(j!4 • • • 2083. * * * WANTED - LAUNDRY . Iowa City ROOMS* FOR* * RENT LAUNDRY; shirts, 9c_ Flat finish, Commercial Collele ---SINGLE ROOM lor girl. Graduate lie pound. Dial 3762. Longstreth. student prelened. 312 E. Fair­ field PARLOR BEDROOM lor profes­ sional or business man. 416 So. Clinton. ROOMS AVAILABLE for men students. Double and half single rOOI·lS. Close to campus. Dial 7241. " LARGE DOUBLE room tor men stUdents. Reasonable. 72 1 E. Washington. 4861. ATTRACTIVE suite - approved tor n<:w students-Dial 6664. ------FOR RENT To two graduate wo- WE Bf2O.J6~r men 0 1' slaff members, nicely HOf()065 N' furnished living room with bed ~E0ITl-\11\G , davenport and bedroom with dou­ fOI2. A ~''\J''_ ble bed. Rooms opening together and adjacent to modern bathroom. "Sure I sold myoId textbooks Dial 7l0)' 319 N. Capitol . .. through a Daily Iowan , ONE-ijOOM f------urni$hed opartment.- Want Ad." Rooms for men. Dial 2327.

ATTENTION MEN I Burk! y Hotel is r nUng rooms lIy th month for men. Prices .20, $25, $30 PCI'. month. Hot Whether it's textbooks, ice skates, golf clubs, and old wuter in each room, OLD HOME TOWN also mold SCI' vice. old furniture" nomatter what, you can buy or ROOM AND BOARD BY GENE AHEM

'tOll oro " GRE."\T " tit> sell quicker and more economically through S""Y, ""'RD ..... [ STILL SAY : HELP WANTED J08, CHIEF !--- '86-rH 11" 1)fEYRE GOI< NJ'o Of' 'IOU WILl- H1\VE 1'HII.T ~I . \ BOy to Cu re tor furnace In, ex­ BE HUNG, PUT IN !\GENT Plt>tENT who has h-8-d~.-x-pe-r-- FORMER lencll In selUns shoes. Afternoon Sale" and "W~nted" merchandise in the •• SCOTL'lND YAA:D and Sntul'duy work. Montgomery , INSPECTOR,! Ward ond CO. STUDENT BOYS for odd hours. Cash wages paid. Apply at Maid-Rite.

MEN----- WANT------ED. Pllrt Ume job. DEAR THE Good pay. Call 9762. PROI3L-1EM OF -rliE BEE 11): READY - TO - WEAR salesladles. eE oR ~ 1l:) a£E: '1

B'ull ond part-time positions ~~­QAv&"PcMItT,.~ available. Apply Three Sisters. III E, Washington. OI£AR NOA~ -IS ~E CLOCIC ouT WHEN IT STRIKES -~------WANTED-Student slrl for room, THREE 7 ~:.!';.-:-...... QHIi:I. • board and wages. DiaL tall. DEAR NOAH-IS MARBL-!!: N4WWI &:.ND HON THE ---~~--~~~--- CAKE CuT WI~ A MISCELLANEOUS JUDGE IMC)ULD CHISEl- '1 A"T _ .. - BTtmlNTS: Wanl to bUJ', ..U or LI~ 10 1lETlJRN poos.,-c .....o l--KRt... 1aC ..... fJnd aomethll\l? Dial '111 ... ~E, A HERO ~ "UMHO'Tlor