FAT , ~IEAT8, b ••1< '.ur red • .!aU'P. At Ihr•• ,h iii Cloudy. , .... Ibr.arb Oel. HI: FI Ibro.,b Itl , ••• Ibr"llo Nov. 10: Ll Ibr.. ,b Ql I .... 11.... ,10 D... III al IOWA: lllereutnc eloudinHII and Ibrou,b VI I .... Ibroa,1I laD. St. IUOU, b ••• 'n. • llomp U ,00" •• r five p ..Dd. IlIutllll D ••• 11. BHOltll, warmer &ocJay wUh a few boo .... lhree alrp'ane liamp. 1, !, S an4 • (OM 'a.el,. DAILY IOWAN lla'ht showers, nlltly. THE Iowa City's Morning Newspaper ~?=nffi==C=EN==T=S======~~======T:=B-I=A='I:O=C="=T;ID==PU==1='======:===~:======~I~O~VV~A~C~ITY~~,;IO~VV~A~==~TH~URS~~D~A~Y~,~OC~T~O~BER~~4~,=1~9~4~5======~T.:'I~AI~I:oc~"~~T&D:::pu~I:I~==~~VVO~LUUME~~xxn~r=:=:=====NUNU~MflBn;~ ~======~~~~~~======~~~~==~- -;~~~~~~=====~~======~===~======~ • • • • • overnment· I elze I e Inerles * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * President Truman Urge,s 011 Atomic ·Bomb ------~------Congress Considers White House Requests Life Is So Short Fans Urged to Give rUse Energy Grid Team Send-Off 'Bad Neig~bor' Policy Conciliation Fails Confiscation. On Atomic Energy, Sf. Lawrence Program Iowa fans are ur;lc,t to turn Of Argentina Attacked . -. , . out tomorrow mornmg at 9:20 to give the Hawkeyes a rousing for Welfare WASHINGTON (Af) - Con- business. The tax was intended to send-ol.t as they depart for their By U. Sa Government Orders to Be Issued Today take from corporations most of gress got requests from President Big Ten debut against Ohio their extra wartime profits. State. The team will leave Iowa Truman yesterday to lend a hand Rio Inter-American The house itself discussed gov­ City from the Rock Island sta­ Schwellenbach's Back-ta-Work Proposition Of Humanify' with developina: ernment reorganization. tion. Conference Postponed 1. Atomic energy, fo eacelime The big fuss was over how much The team "needs the support Accepted by CIO, aut leiected by Owners purposes. (See column I, this power the president ought to have of the students wfether it's a As Slap to Argentina Wants Group to Guide page). to kIll off or combine bureaus and case of win or lose,' E .. G. (Dad) BY THE ASSOClAnD PRESS 2. The St. Lawrence river, for commissions. Schroeder said. WASHINGTON (AP) - The The White House anounced it would seize strike-bound oil re­ New Atom Knowledge United States led the- western navigation and power production. Republicans made the m 0 s t Glenn Devine of the Hawkeye finetie. today following collapse of industry-labor-government Toward Peaceful Ends The requests came while con­ coaching staff urged fans to see hemisphere yesterday in deliver­ noise about adding more agencies ing a new diplomatiC slap at the conferences over a union demand for 30 percent wage rate in­ gress haggled over trimming busi­ to the list the president couldn't the team off tomorrow and meet crease. it when it returns. "We'll try military clique which is governing WA SIII NG'l'O ( AP)-PI'efl - ness taxes, paring down govern­ touch. Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach recommended thc tep last ment activities and hiking rail our best to bri ng back the eyes Argentina. ident 'rl'uman ycstel'dll l' called The bill before the house would In tough language, this govern­ njght when he emerged from thc final ses. ion of the conferences rates on federal freight. tell him to layoff all the 10 big out ot the Buckeyes," he prom­ on th e wOI'ld to ou t law I he Congress showed no more en­ ised. ment told its good neighbors to to report that conditions placed by the majority of companies on departments - war, navy, state, the south that the present Argen­ an alternative proposal had been tant'amount to rejection. Thc atomic bomb, and , urged COn­ thusiasm toward the St. Lawrence and aU the test-along with the seaway plan than it did all during tine regime was a bad neighbor, CIO Oil Workers union announced its acceptance. gress to create a com m iflsion securities, trade and interstate and recommended: the Roo s eve I t administration. The White House announcement made shortly afterward, by with unprecedented POWCI' to commerce commissions and the Reds Demand.U. S. Three Reeommendatlons Maybe this winter it will look into general accounting office. Press Secretary Charles G. Ross, said the "necessary orders" fOl' promote the use of atomic power the whole business again. 1. That the Inter-American con­ seizure of oil refineries in 15 states were now being drawn, al­ The house may vote on the bill CHRISTMAS may come early this ference scheduled to open Oct. 20 for the welfare oe hl1mani iy. The president aSked congress to tomorrow or Saturday. year for Lily Mae Smith, ll-year­ Set Up Four-Power though the exact hour of takeover was not specified. He said okay a fast start on teaming up at Rio de Janeiro-with Argen­ At th e same time, he empha­ The senate talked about making old Kent, Ohio, younpter who Is tina participating- be postponed. Pre ident Truman would have a statement on the subject today_ with Canada to improve the river. the government pay the railroads sufferln,. from an Incurable ~art 2. That the other American re­ Schwellenbnch said objections of 10 of the 11 companie in thc sizcd that he ini(' nded to kcep The idea is to generate 2,200,000 as much as anybody else [or haul­ aliment. Lily Mae, above, has bad Rule Over Japan conference to his plan "made it horsepower of electricity and let publics proceed without Argen­ th e bomb sec l'ct wh ile di sc ll s~ in g ing freight. a weakened beart ever since she tina to draft a hemisphere defense utterly impossible to proceed with ocean ships sail the Great lakes. The government has been pay­ LONDON (AP)- A Russian de­ \\~th oth er powers agree m e n t~ to had rheumatic fever lour years al'O treaty- the object ot the Rio con­ Winter Hunger Faces the arbitration." Sinclair, the one The house ways and means ing cut rates ever since it gave and speciaUsts say the chUd will mand that Gen. MacArthur's rule ference-and to sign it at the Bra­ use the "revolutionary" new committee talked a lot about cut­ company, . agreeing to the terms railroads a lot of land back in the no' live to see Santa Claus tbls in Japan be replaced by a four­ zilian capital "at the earliest pos­ knowl edge for " pt'aceful and ting corporation taxes. It didn't 1870's to help them build west­ year. Wblle Lily spends her time power control government was said it would withdraw if the other decide anything. But it looks as if sible moment." War-Wrecked Japan humani tarian el1 d~." ward. flabing, the little girl's mother con­ 3. That the other American re­ firms did not agree. the committee may vote today to presented to the United States In a message to congress, he said Congressmen whetted up a curi­ tinues to search· for a new heart publics carryon consultations "in New Developments end a 95 percent wartime tax on osHy about: specialist, hoping al'alnst hope that during the last hours of the con­ Nippon Communists that unless arrangements can be respect to the Argentine situa­ Other labor deveLopments ot the Oil- a Standard Oil company the worst may not come-or that ference of foreign ministers, the tion." day were: made for international collabora­ official told a senate committee Lily'S life may at least be pro- Want Country Freed Moscow radio declared yesterday. Reaction trom south of the bor­ 1. New strikes, continuing dis­ tion the world may witness a this country has enough to last lonred. (InternatIonal) From Mikado Influence Patton Noncommital The demand, it said, was made der was immediate. A dispatch putes, and expansion of the soft "desperate armament race which "many, many years." from Brazil said the conference Silk-maybe America can pro­ in 11 letter handed to U ni ted Sta tes coal and oil walkouts boosted the might well end in disaster." had been postponed, It was aiso TO KYO, Thursday (AP) - duce it. A house subcommittee is Secretary of State James F. Byrnes Japan planned today to ask world­ national total of workers on the Congress Aots About New Desk Job learned there that President Ge­ production sidelines to more than going to see abut it. A start on Tuesday as the foreign ministers wide aide through the barter sys­ The war department and COII­ Walks SOO Miles tulio VargaI' had abruptly post­ 450,000. production has been made at Min- of the five leading Allied powers, poned a scheduled visit Oct. 12 tem to dispel the black threat of Continues to Believ.e eral Wells, Xex. 2. General Motors corporation gress moved swiftly to act on the Makes 10 Day!ljke deadlocked o'll er Rroced.ure, ended with Gen. Edelmiro Farrell, pr6&­ 'winter hunger in the wat-wreck­ JUSillent's recommendations for He Loyally Executed In com{Tlittees: ed nation, and Japanese Commu­ rejected as "unreasonable" the CIO To unsuccessfully their first attempt ident ot the Arientlne regime. United Automobile workers de­ House agriculture approved a Expect Agreement nists said their party wants to "rid the atomic energy commission. Eisenhower's Orders bill to require the agriculture de- mand for a 30 percent wa~e rate to write a European peace. There was little doubt that the the country of Mikadolsm." Chairman May (D., Ky.) of the partment to include labor costs in (AP) - Alvln F. The disclosure came in the midst increase. house military committee and Sen- BAD TOELZ, Germany (AP)- figuring out parJty prices. Parity other American republics would Nipponese newsmen, taking full Bergman, Pittsburgh's persevering of these developments: quickly agree to the postponement advantage of General MacArthur'S 3. William Green, AFL presi­ ator Johnson (D., Col. ) of the sen- Gen .•George S. Pation Jr., a fight- prices are supposed to give farm­ dent, said the nation needed ma­ pedestrian, plodded Into Chicago 1. Russian Foreign Commissar V. of the Rio conference and to the order freeing the Japanese press, ale military committee introduced I ing man relegated to a desk job I ers as much buy i n~ power as tbey other U. S. proposals. Three Latin chinery to settIe strikes before . . with a 'paper army" after charies had in some past, favorable per- yesterday, two days late, because, M. Molotov, French Foreign Mlnl­ turned light on conditions in the they start. American ambassadors in Wash­ country's prisons where leaders of legislation to carry out Mr. Tru- that he was slow about denazily- iod, such as 1909 to 1914. he said, "rains and head winds" ster Georges Bidault and Byrnes 4. The spreading coal strike ac­ man's r~ue s t. ing Bavaria, said yesterday he Senate foreign relations ques- ington had sugested delaying the Communist and liberal poUtical slowed his progress. separately expressed conl idence conference Tuesday. thought were tortured. , counted for more than 100,000 The bill was sent to then: by still believed I)e had carried out tioned Spruille Braden, former mine workers away from their pits. The 58 year old Bergman, who that the ultimate agreement would Acting Secretary of State Dean American forces today extended Secretar~ of W~ r P att~l".; on With a his chief's orders with "vigor and ambassador to Argentina. It post- 5. A port-wide strike of 60,000 plea for Im~edlate action. loyalty." poned action on his appointment has been walking tor a hobby be reached on peace treaties for Acheson asserted that the United, their occupation of the conquered since he was 16, made the 500 mile States beJleved Argentina not only workers, including 46,000 long­ ~h~ preSident s~ ld he . proposed Relieved by General Eisenhower as an undersecretary of state. Europe. country wit h first landings on shoremen, crippled shipping in to . In~hate diS CUSSions w ~ t h G r~at of command of his beloved, famed In th house Rep. A. L. Miller hike in 10 days and arrived at the had failed to fulfill its hemisphere Hokkaido, the northernmost home 2. Byrnes and Molotov brought commitments, but had completely New York harbor. Bflta~ and Canada looking to ~ n- third army which he led to vic- (R., Neb.) stymied a bill to award Loop Congress hotel unwinded. He into the open a disagreement over Island. A regimental combat team ternational a gr ~em ent s outlawing tories from France to Czecl}oslo- a gold medal to Gen. George C. repudiated them. h 7 . f d' k AI; oil company representatives wound up the trip with a lope to whether the big three had agreed of t e 7th 10 antry Ivlsion too entered a conference with Secre- the use of a~omlc bombs. . vakia, Patton was pleasant and Marshall army chief of staff. at Potsdam that ail five principal over at Hakodate. The remainder . Other natl?os, p re~um a b ~y m- smiling, as he mJ!t correspondents the Loop, carrying only a stick and powers could participate in dis­ of the division Is scheduled to tary ?f Labor Schwellenbach .m cludlOg S oviet Russia, . Will be yesterday, accepting the change Police Lift Cordon Washmgton, the Shell company lS­ with his high topped walking cussions of European peace trea­ enter Otaru and Sapporo tomor-, sued a statement saying it was r e- brought mto th ~ diSCU SSIOns ~ater . with soldierly discipline. Around Universities At the same tIme the preSident Welcomed Job 'Globester' in U. S. shoes worn through. tles. That was the issue which row. jecting the union demand for a 38- stressed th at-temporarily at least He said he "welcomed" com- Ahead of Schedule; Bergman, on a two weeks vaca­ deadlocked the conference. In Argentine Rife Trade Sllk, Rayon cent hourly Increase. -the secret of the bomb wo~ld not mand 01 the 15th army to which tion, walked to Chicago to see the 3. Byrnes announced the depu­ The Domei news agency report- Government Proposa,l be dlsclo~ed. to others outSide .the Eisenhower transferred him­ Due in Capitol Today world's series. He admitted he ties of the council would continue BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Police ed Japan would soon ask the allies The government settlement pro- Great Bntam - Canada - Umted though the 15th is a military skel­ didn't have a ticket yet, but prom­ work in London on some aspects began withdrawing last night from for permission to trade silk and posal cails for a temporary 15 per­ States group. H I C K MAN FIELD, Hawaii ised, "I'll be there." of the European peace which were positions around Buenos A Ire s 'll K S t eton, a headquarters staff and a rayon for the foodstuffs of other cent increase and arbitration of WI (AP)-The "Glob ester" winged its Bergman said he first became not involved in the procedural dis­ universities, w her e hundreds of nations, acting at the request of the additional 15 percent in the "I d . t eeph ecre' th t th . t·ew specIal troops, an d t houg h h'IS . e.slre o.emp aSlze a ese new job would be supervising the way across the wld.e Pacific yes­ interested in walking when he pute. students and professors had barri­ sectional chiefs of the offices of union's demand for a 30 percent dISCUSSIOns Will not be concerned T f th h' to fA' terday with excellent indications read newspaper accounts of the While the milita'ry phase of the caded themselves in apr 0 t est regional superintendents-general. hike. Shell said the union had with disclosures relating to the WrJ lOgO. e . IS ry 0 men- it would beat the announced time pedestrian's feats of Edward P . war and the disarmament of against reimposition of a national Domei reporter T a y Tateishi been informed the company's offer lIWIuIacturing processes leading to can campaigns 10 Germ~ny. Japan continued, a Moscow radio • . Patlon long has been Interested of 151 scheduled hours on the Wesson, an old time walking state of seige by Argentina's mili­ told of visiting the Fuchu prison 13 of a 15 percent boost 'remains the productIon of the atomlo bomb . n·ta h' t d t d' f army transport command's first champion. Later, he said, he met broadcast said, there was reason tary regime. miles west of Tokyo and inter- open." il.!elf," he said. In ~ I ry IS or,? an s u les 0 world girdling fHght. Wesson "and we used to go for for concentrating control in the Some 30,000 students in the na­ viewing Kyushi Tokuda, S h i r 0 Many communities are in a tight "They will constitute an effort tactics. . There will be a three-hour stop sociable walks together." Allied commander-in-chief, Gen. tion's six major universities join­ to work out arrangements cover- Often m trouble t~rough o,ut­ Matamura and Yoshio Shi,a, Jap- gasoline situation as a result of at San Francisco and then Into the Asked how long a "sociable MacArthur. Now the allies are ed the protest. Those barricaded anese Communist!;, who said they refinery closings. The strike shut ing the termS under which inter- spokenness, Patton weighed every air again at 7:30 a. m. (CST). walk" was, he said: "about 25 fllced with problems of a political, here had remained firm despite Qational collaboration and ex- word yesterday. He said he wo~ld were eager for the allies to order off the flow of crude oil through The tentative schedule cailed for miles." economic and financial character suspension of water and light ser­ their release. pipelines from Houston to Corpus change of scientif ic information turn over ~ommand of the third the flight to end at Washington, "I wouldn't get dressed up for which call for jOint control, it add­ might safely proceed." anTI! to his successor, Lt. Gen. vices to the building, at noon yes­ Japs Bebaetl Christi, Tex., at dawn yesterday. D. C., at 9 p. m., or In 148 hours. less than 25 miles," he sa~d. The president said that in inter- LUCian K. Truscott Jr., at a 1are­ ed. terday. General MacArthur reminded Toledo's gasollne rationing pro­ national relations as in domestic well ceremony Sunday. ------~------the Japanese government a g a ingram collapsed and the mayor of lfiairs "the release of atomic en- He permitted newsmen only one that Allied occupation forces were appealed to President Tru­ ergy ~onstitutes a new force too direct quotation-to the effect the supreme authority In Korea. man and Schwellenbach for a revolutionary to COnsider in the that, ba.v.ing had •.only 29 days at Cheering, Singing Crowd Enjoys Pep Rally His reminder came in a sharp no- quick settlement of the oil dis­ 1 lramework of old ideas." home smce he llrst came over­ tice that the government's promo- pute because of short gasoline I "We can -no longer rely on the seas three years ago, "I naturally tlon of certain Nipponese otficials supplies in the motor capital. 'ow progress of time to develop a am interested in pushing to rapid *** ••• *** being held over temporarily in Some 80,000 automobile indus­ .ogram of control among nations. completion my new assignment." PRESIDENT HANCHER ADDRESSES FANS AT RALLY southern Korea "are ineffective." try workers in Detroit are not "Civ!l!zation demands that we Issues Statement Hawks Given Rousing MacArthur's headquarters an- working because of labor trou­ ~ll reach at the earliest possible Several hours later, however, nounced that Gen. Tomoyuki Ya- bles. The UAW wilt vote Oct. 24 .te a satisfactory arrangement for he issued a written statement, in Support by Students mashita, who 0 n c e swaiiered on whether to call a strike among tie e«Introl of this discovery in which he ciefended his steward­ under the nickname of "the tiger General Motors' 325,000 employes Order that it may become a power- ship over the eastern hall 01 the Young and old aUke sang and of Malay" and who surrendered and Oct. 25 on one among Chrys­ lit and forceful influence towards American oC4Pied zone. the last. Japanese forces fighting In ler corporation's thousands of lie maintenance of world peace "I have received no official no­ stomped and cheered until the Ionic pillars of Macbride audi­ the Phlllppines, would be tried in workers. The UAW also is peti­ iulead of an instrument of de- tification at my transfer to a new torium rang with the high spirits Manila "for brutal atrocities and tioning for a strike vote at the llruction." command," the statement said, other high crimes" against the Ai- Forl;i Motor company. 'Wldely Known' " but I expect to receive such noti- 01 the students at the "Kick-Off" lies. The president said that :scientific ficalion shortly." football rally last night. More Coal Trouble OPinion was virtually unanimous "My only comment is to reiter­ The audience filled every seat New soft coal mine clOSings car­ IIlat the essential , theoretical ate the statements which I made in the auditorium and late comers Recommends U. S. ried above 100,000 the number of knowledge upon whIch the discov- to the press at this headquarters were standing all around the sides workers in that industry off the !y was based "Is all'eady widely Sept. 25." -girls, young boys in plaid shirts, As Permanent Seat job because of a strike of super­ returned vets, some with their Of World LaDgue visory employes. The strikers seek lIlown" and that "foreign research ;::======. wives like Bill Boswell who was collective bariaining recognition !In come abreast 01 our present ... ~ theoretical knowledge In time." IFair Weather Again busy teaching his wife the words LONDON (AP)-The United of their union, a branch of the He said discussions could not F t f C'ty to "On Iowa." States should be the pennanent United Mine Workers. ~wajt with safety the functioning orecal or I . One of the oldest rooters was seat of the new international se­ The strike is confined to four Of the United Nations organlzatlon. • -~ policeman J . F. Phipps, who has curity organization, the United states, Pennsylvania, West Vir­ , At the outset 01 the message, the For the past two days the fore­ been doorman for pep rallys for Nat ion s preparatory executive ginia, Ohio and Kentucky, and the President said that it had been al- cast has been fair and warmer tor 2~ years. He has seen so many com mit tee recomlJlended last solid fueis administration has put moet two months since the first Iowa City. And both day. that pre­ crowds, he said, he was lonesome night. an embargo on shipments via rail atomic bomb was used against diction came true. So once Blain at first. But 11$ the meeting got Only Great Britain, France and or water from producers in the Japan. He said it did not win the we Issue the same forecast and underway he began joining In on the Netherlands bppoaed havini aHected areas, ,..ar, but shortened it and saved the have the utmost confidence that It some of the cheers and burst i~to the headquarters in America. Rus­ A new strike closed the Con­ Iivea "ot untold thousands 01 also wl1l be fulfllled. Unless some­ a wide smile when the High­ sia voted for the United States solidated-Vultee Aircraft plant in 'merlcs" and Allied soldiers." thing extraordinarily drastic hap­ landers in full re,alla tootled and and against Europe. Fort Worth, TelC. About 700 mem­ . He recomemnded that the na- \)ellS, this Will be a beautiful fall beat their colorful way through The recommendation first will bers of the AFL Machinists union .lion's "enormous lnvestmenl" in day. the auditorium, be offered to the preparatory established a picket line and ces­ atomic bomb plants in the states Yesterday morning we narrowly Students participated noisily In commission itself, which is ex­ sation of operations kept 8,000 01 Wuhlnilon and Tennessee be miAed a killini frost The mer­ learnin, new yells and loni8. pected to meet soon. If the com­ workera oft the job. The union lllaintained and that a "sh'ona or- cury dropped to 33. Later In the President Hancher opened the DICK YOAKUM, WSUJ lpor&leute.. , Prealdeat Vir_II Haneber, and Muter of Ceremonies Bob Ra, open­ mission approves, the recommen­ struck for a contract calling :for a 'Illizatlon of scientists fam!liar day It roll to 88. It may be even ed the "Kick-off Party" a' Macbride a1Ull&orlum last m.ht In preparaUon for Satura,'. footbaD ,ame dation then will be put before the 30 percent wqe rate Increase and ,with atomic energy be continued," wa~mer today, (See RALLY, Pile 5) with tlte Ohio at&t. Bueke,,,, i'IIe 'ee' JJelOlll .. Gleu p'evtae, ~ 9, (Dad) 8chro~er, &84 Brt~ W1IIoa. entire u.embq tor tinal ll.cUon. other benefits! \ I 'AGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN. lOW A CITY,·, IOWA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1945 Editorials: Locat Boy Makes Good- OffiCIAL DAILY BULLETIN Re... I. I•• trNlVaal1Tl' CALIIHDAa a ....Il •••, .. I...... Senior Hoars~Baoa or Banet News ~ ".,'. OUI.. , ow Vopllel. De... r.r lINt OENIIlAL NOTICIII IN . '" ~ 'ep•• IIe. wlill 'b..... p ....lIlfr .f Til. "all, low••• r .., .. filo IS Success ,~ \~ ,..... I. 'b. .... ,roYl4.. '.r lbolr dePOllt .. ,.. .trI." .r '" liil ' ,Doll, I ...... OliN_AI. NOTICES ...., ,,_ aI r •• Dan, I ...... , Liberalization of oj inll hOllrs for nior tion to the new" bOUN tt ruling. And ther • ' :11 p ... 'II ••• , pr •••• l •• rtral p."Ue.U.. ; ..II .....III NOT .. wom n. announc d Tu . day by Ihe niversity is apt. to be criticisDl after the rule take ef­ By WJLJ..MM B. KING prove so valuable to the Allied .._'" II, leI...... -rrru OItUO...... wa:nw. Behind ... IIO"ID It, • ,up... r .. ,. ",.. .. • omen' •ation. is another answer tD the fect. AP Newsteaiures cause lwo decades later. question: "How gr t is the University' But that oppo ition did not come from uni. KUMROVEC, Yugoslavia Leadlt l.&hor Vol. XXD No. 9 ThursdaY, October 4, 1t45 respon ibility in seein Ihat Indent one way Back in Yugoslavia he became versity officials, or froUlJ the office of t udent The peasants of this little Croalllln a labor leader of the metal work­ or another acquire an education '" The News UNIVERSITY CALENDAR affairs, as lIle migbt uppos. It came from village are proud of two things. ers, in aonstant trouble with the Answ rs to tha qu tion range from the persons around the ta parenb, ch'ic lead­ One is that during aU the war reactionary police and finally 6:15 p. m. Picnic supper, T~l­ university trictly euforcing regular cl Friday, Oct. 5 ers IUld others honestly inter ted in the stu­ By Paul MaDoa not a single man of the village recl!iving a five-year prison earm. 7:45 p. m. Baconlan lecture by angle club. room attendance aud regula.,ting ocial activ­ dent I welfare. joined the Ustachi, tIle army of In these days the name "Tito" Prof. J. H. BodJne, senate cham­ Wednesday, Oct. 10 iti on the one hand to comIllete liberty They doubted the ad,!i.sability of granting the QUisllnl premier Ante Pavlic; Iirst was heard. He began to use bell, Old Capitol. 8 p. m. Gradllate college lecture for the student, on tb other. a uni\'ersity tndent the right to make uch W ASKJNGTON-A* * * naval car­ and the other is tbat one of its the name Tito, a common nick~ 8181da" Oct . ., by Prof. Raymond Adams, senate Neither or th extrem i tlll! corre t an- important decision for herself. They pointed rier tighter pilot who fought in the sons has made good in a big way- name in his native pa!'t of 8 p. m. Vesper service; address chambel', Old ,Capitol. Tito, or Josipbroz, president of Croatia. Friday, 1Z wer, aud , .eyeral institution haye discov­ particularly to the fact that if ·tudent ·tay PacUic (rom the beginning-and by Dr. William B. Lampe, Iowa Oct. a li ttle bMore-returned home ap~ Democratic Federated YugoslaVia. A polititaUy independent news~ Memorial Uhion. 7:45 p. m. Baconian lecture by ered, regretfuUy, that they are not. But be­ out long hours at nigbt and con equently get palled at the intensity of the peo­ The peasant cotiage where Tito ptper of 1928, reporting Tito's Monday, Oet. 8 PIlOt. G. H. Coleman, senate cham­ tween the extrem i a compromise which little sleep, they can not possibly ab 'orb as would help immeasurably ill the d ve]opment ple and Issues he found after long was born in 1892, typical of the trial for Communistic activity, U.W.t. health program, senate ber, Old Capitol. much of the next day's lecture as jf they had absence. What this country needs, several dozen in lhe village, described Broz as having a steely chamber, Old Capitol. saturUY, Oct. 13 of a uni v !"Sity tudent' character. had ejght hours leep. Tuesday, Oct. , 12 :15 p. m. A. A. U. W. lunch­ If thc . W. A.' purpo e in liberalizing he says, is some fun. His comrades, is a sma 11 stucco bUilding, cold stare and fearlessly hold­ They argued conectly, that if a tudent is he reported, had the same idea. painted a light blue, with a red Ing his own in sharp exchanges U.W.A. health program, senale eon meeting; guest speaker, Dean closing hou " fol' I niol' WOllen i' to at her hon e or dormitory by 10 :30 p. m., he Not many smiles can be found slate roof. Although it has taken with the president of the court. chamber, Old Capitol. Earl McGrath, on "Higher Edu­ try to arrh'e at a con tructive eompromise, as i more apt to tudy because the temptation around here, and more expletives on some of the aspects of a shrine An artist's sketch of Bro2) 12 M. Luncheon, University cation in an Atomic Age;" univer­ presumably it i Ute actioll i a good thing. to do other things is not as tron". than anecdotes are available in of~ it is stilI what it has always been- which accompanied the article club. sity club rooms, Iowa Union. • • • ficial sanctums. ¥et the preci,se the home of a peallllrrt farmer. showed a serious, bespectacled ~ Ilales be,OIId ...... lIeda1e, _ rlf; any cos, nIt unill rsiiy i d -cmpha­ • • • condition behind most of the The present occupant is a >,oung intellectual, on fire with ...... reprc1JDC ~atlo.. III the ornce 01 &be Pr_dellt, Old CaplteL) ruing comptll'ion Ull(l is laying the Ires 0,. BlII file new nile OCCOllll1lisllCS lite e/ld of glumness and high nerves notice­ nephew of the marshal-a son of the agitator's intensity. Today the illcIividltol s r ponsibilily to KElt· mailllainill{} Mglt. scholastic tondards with· able in the news actually faUs his elder brother-who came in Tilo is quiet and readily shows a considerably short ot justifying or SELF. Olt t tlflPOSWly sllch a Y/'cal ,ugrcss of COlll­ trom his fields to show me the sense of humor. GEMERAL NOTICES inducing morbidity. room where Tlto was born. The Tito is not a big man. he is • • • pulsion. Tf a selIior WOltI,(JlI fall dOWII i It Iter HIGHLANDEJtS PRINCIPLES OF ADVERTISING ThiB i a particularly beait hy 1r nQ, for Little Excltemenl nephew himself was typical of , Mth~I ' under. ~ediu~ ~eighL A t1lfUde'r slit ttJill be "Itt ow fJ"obatioll all-t'~ ,.e· To tel! it to yoU straight, wl!.h a the \'illagers simple bareCoofed bulgIng walsUtne tndlcates a P,actice Sched\11e The class in principles of ad­ Iowa eniot· women studenls will now be gi\'en quired to obscrve the same olol!illg h01t1'S as primary instance, there has been and b~owned: ' vigorous appetite. His marshal's Oct 1 to Nov. 17 includIng Tues­ vertising, offered jointly by com­ an opportunity to make a praeti al applica­ 1l1ldlJI'gradttate . less excitement over the London Tlw Ret un.iform is always neatly pressed. day, Thursday and Friday from 4 merce and journalism, wiU mllet tion or thE' malure dic;erelion It ih hoped the ••• conference in congress or the state . urns . I This quality of neatness, his as~ to 6 p. m. lhis semester on Tuesday eve­ have gained in three y a1 al thj uuiversity. department t han you co u I'd '1!he Villagers tOI.d. us .wIth ~I-ea sociates say, never lapsed in the WILLIAM L. ADAMSON nings at 7 to 9, instead of the Sat­ They will r cciv th im·aluable experience And it he desires to 1'OlllfHIl eligible 1'01' Ille expect. State Secretary Byrnes sattsf~ctlon ?t a VISit ~J to. paid ~ most difficult days of the partisan Pipe Major urday hour announced. the vrllage In June, hIS fIrst trip ughI' >g o[ adju ting, for themselvcs, a workable p eial privilege of the dew rule, she will had' almost free rein from Mr. Director of ""hlanders DEAN ,CHISTIR A. PHILLIPS to his Old. home sin.ce 1937. Many TJ . wi10tie formal education sc.hedule for ludy and for I'e ·1'eatioo. Tliey ba\'e to curci c good judyurellt. Truman to make lits own dects­ J~ PROF. WILBUR SCHRAMM ions, passed little inside iniorma~ of the villag~rs did not clearly was only rudimentary speaks SCRBDeLE will be allow d to de'id how much time th 'l' NatUrally, wh~1t tile' W rule b COUll' ef. remember him. 0 n e gnal'led . ' UNIV ...... Y LIBRARY can spare for" play" without jeoporadizing fective r.tonday there will' be a "" of tion to Washington. And what he t 'd "W d'd 't h fluent RuSsian and German, reads .,....,.~ CROSS COUNTRY, did pass rather suggested the peasan sal:. e 1 near ngUsh and French, and is well HOURS TRACK MEN their scholasti, tandu I' . women taring oli unl'il tM late hoU\~ of til conference table tallt was really much about him aCter Ite left read in all (our languages. .cbmiDl Sept. 24, 1945 Val'si ty cross country and. fa~ night or the earlY 1l001'8 oIlh morning. Bllt M,.jn • • • worse than public~y conceded. Yet an? we wondered what he was Goes Underground reading room, Macbride track practice will be held daH, And lite t'C/'Y (let of maki ny SltC/t deci· we do not believe the office of sludl'ut affair gOSSip tnat this being the begin~ domg. When we found out we On his release (rom prison in hall. at 4 p. m. on the outdoor track. sions i goiliU 10 bc tile urOlwdwork for

=PA=G=E~SIX~======T=H=E====D=A==I=L=Y====I =O~W=A==N=. =I ,O==,W===:A= C==IT== Y; ,===I O~W==A~===~==::======r=~T~H~U~R~SD~A~Y. OCTOBER 4. 1945 New Charm School Siie Chosen for Sf. Thomas More Chap~1 .! (rash Falal Medical Society Hears Speech- University Club CommiHee Chosen * * * * * * ·Alcoholics Group To Have Luncheon By UWA Council To Iowa Grad The UniVersity club wiil have a "Alcoholics ,Anonymous owes its and friends for the first time since luncheon Tuesday, Oct. 9. at 12 I became an alcoholiC. noon in lhe clubrooms. Dr. Henri Newly appojnted members of a Lt. Edward J. Mahoney, 24, vet­ success not to scolding, threats or finger-shaking. but to an honest " Barzun of the romance langualt committee tor the Univen;ity eran of 1,400 flying hours over­ The strugle involved pays off department will speak on ''Tht Women'.. association - sponsored seas as a piJot of a troop trans­ desire on the parl of its members in true happiness and peace of to help the other fellow, the habit· New Political France and Amer- "Charm School" were announced port and an Iowa major I man, mind." jca!' ual drinker, overcome the disease When an alcohollc is approach- Dt the regular U.W.A. council was kilJed in a plane crash at Marcella Hutz is chairman of tht \ meeting held yesterd~ afternoon. of alcoholism," an attorney from ed by a member of A. A., accord­ com m i ttee in ch8l-ge 0 f arrange. Nancy Gilson. A3 of Kirkwood, Des Moines who is a member of Ing to the speaker, he says to him­ Marietta, Ga., according to word A. A. told the Johnson County ments. Other members of the COm. Mo., acting as ceneral chalrman, .------. • • seU: "Here is a man who has gone mittee are Mrs. C. C. Aurner, Mrs. will be assIsted by Joyce Duschl, received in Iowa City. Lieutenant Medical society at a meeting in the through the same struggle which I Mahoney is the 14th university Hotel Jefferson last night. Adelaide Burge, Mrs. O. E. Ny­ A4 of Mapleton, hoste chairman; am going through now." bakken, Mrs. S. B. Barker and Mrs. Anne Gilman, A3 ot Ames, contact major letter man to be killed in The society had as its guesls 15 the service according to the re­ "Good fellowship is the keynote C. E. (,ousins. chairman, and Nancy Schmidt, A4 m e m b e r s of Alcoholics Anony­ of the method employed by Alc().­ Reservations should be made by y of Davenport, postwar chairman. cords of the Hawkeye athletic de­ mous. Two of the representatives, partment. holics Anonymous," the speaker Oct. 7 by calling the Iowa l)nion The following women will work the Des Moines attorney and a stated. "The drunk from the flop­ desk. jointly on the contact and hostess Lieutenant Mahoney, who was judge from Dubuque, addressed house and the drunk trom the committees: Margery McDonald, stationed at Pope Field, Ft. Bragg, Ll Edward J. Mahoney, a grad­ the ga thering. penthouse enjoy t hat fellowship Town Judiciary Heads A2 of Lakewood, Ohio; PhyUis N. C. had returned recently from uate of the State Unlven;lty of "Before we can help a man," the together." In Bentley, Newton; Mis s Gilman; duty with the Eighth airforce. Iowa., and bolder of major 1's In attorney said, "I\e must honestly The judge from Dubuque em-l Have Meeting Tonight Shirley Har~, A3 ot SheClield, Ill.; He was pnotin~ a C-47, towing a wimming and track, was killed want to overcome the hold which phasized the facl lhat Alcoholics , ' . . Virginia Rosenberg, A2 of Burlinl­ glider when the crash occured out­ when a C-47 he was piloting alcohol has over him. He must be Anonymous has nothing against All town house ludlcHlr:,: chair. , Up ton; Charlene Peura, A4 01 Kettle side of Fairfax Field, Ga. cra hed near Marietta, Ga. He willing to admit to himself lhat he those who make and sell alcoholic ~en, hOllseholdel':3 and semor res­ River, Minn., and Miss Duschl. Lieutenant Mahoney had been had served with the Eighth air­ is an alcoholic and needs help. Fi­ beverages or against those who Ident~ ore r~quested to ~ttend , Barbara Ellison. A2 of Webster awarded the rur Medal with two ., meetmg tonight at 7:30 In room force for two years and had flown nally, he must be willing to ask for are able to dnnk like gentlemen. 221 ASh If' h 11 S' . Groves, Mo., will help on the post­ clusters, the Bronze Star and a 1,400 hours feming troops to the help and to accept it when it is "Alcoholics Anonymous was not . -, c ae . el ~ . emor PrIV_ war committee. Presidential unit citation. He ser­ continent from England. given to him." organized with any though of re- lieges fol' u.OIverslty women and Gladys Bliss, New York author­ ved oven;eas for more than two The speaker pointed out lhl! fact I r r .. 11 . d new regulations to the owns peo.. Ity on grooming, III to speak at the years. a la lon, e sal . pie housing university. students stationed at Tampa, Fla. His that A. A. is not a religious group, two general meetings for the Lieutenant Mahoney was a star Following the address, Dr. WiJ- will be presented and discussed. "Charm School" to be held at 4 swimmer and track athlete at fiance. PatriCia Monohan is a sen- although they urge alcoholics to bur Miller opened a discussion and p. m., Monday and Tuesday, Oct. Wyandotte high school, Kansas iOl' at lhe State Uni;ersity of I ren~w their belief in God and to question period concerning the al­ Ffrst Friday 8-9, in the senate chamber of Old reahze lhat there is need for guid- coholics' organization and the part City, Kan. where he was graduat­ Iowa. ance that can be found only in Capitol. Per OIlS Interested ip played by the medical profession Masses Announced ed in 1938. At the University of Other university major letter Him. scheduling 15-m1nute personal in­ Iowa he won major letters in in aiding alcoholics. terviews with Miss Bliss from 10 to swimming and in track. He re­ men who havp lost their lives in He stressed the pomt that "once Dr. M. L. Floyd 01 Iowa City. As Oct. 5 is the First Friday in the month, Catholic masses will 11:30 a. m. and 1 to 3 p. m. Mon· ceived a B.A. degree from the World Viar H ",'e Aviation Cadet an alcoholic, always an alcoholic". president of the Johnson County day or from 9 a. m. to 12 noon and university in 1942. Lieutenant Robert Jones, Lt. Robert Yelton, The condition can be overcome, Medical society, presided over the be held at the St. Thomas More 1 to 3 p. m. Tuesday, may silD up Catholic student center at 5:45, 7 The building site for the new adjacent to the present center and Mahoney had planned to re-entir Ensign Nile Kinnick, Lt. Ray Wal· · but never cured, he said. meeting. at the UW A desk at the foot of the college o[ law alter his dis­ lers, Lt. Bush Lamb, Ll. Victor .. I have been dry for over two and 8 a. m. Confessions will bt the circular staircase In the base­ St. Thomas More Chapel has been is located high on the west bluffs heard Thursday from 3:30 p. m, purchased, the Catholic student charge from the service. Vargon, Lt. Irvin Wolf, Lt. Harold years now," the attorney said ot ment of Old Capitol starting today. of the Iowa river. Announcement A Captain Mey was the first to 5 p. m. and 7 p. m. to 8:30 p. m. center announced yesterday. The Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Lind, Lt. Rudolph Bolte, Lt. Syd- himself. "It has given me the abiL­ Registration for service 83 co­ property Is in the 400 block on of the university's postwar buiJd- George Kleteca, and his brother, ney Slory, Sgt. Burdell Gilleard, ity to hold my chin in the air and director sent out by the West In- ThUl'sda~ nights th e Monthly aides, oWce workers and in In­ Riverisde drive, just north of the ing program puts the new chapel Lt. Eugene Mahoney, a veteran of Ptc. John McCammon, Maj. L. has returned to me my self·re· dia Company to govern its North Hoiy Houl' will be from 7:30 to formation First activities wllJ take the European war theater, now Robert Blaylock. spect and the respect of my family River trading post (New York). 8. place at the UWA desk, Wednes­ Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house. in the midst ot the new housing -::::::::====--==== day, Oct. 10, from 9 a. m. to noon Last spring a committee was unit. The chapel will be within and 1 to 4 p. m. appointed by the Rev. Leonard J. five and one halt blocks of all Dorothy Ward of Iowa City, Brugman, director of lhe Catho- present and planned university graduate of S.U.1. and a former lic student center, to select a suit. housing units. member of UWA council, attended able building site for the chapel. Purchase ot lhe property is the the council meeting and told This committee, made up of local first step in a long-range expan­ briefly ot some of her recent ex­ aJumni, worked with the architect, sion program of the Catholic stu­ periences w h I I e spending 23 Barry Byrne, in selecting a prac- dent center which calls for the months with the Red Cross in tical location for the Catholic stu- erection of an adequate unit to India. dent chapel. augment the present facilities of Upon receiving the report of the cenler. The chapel, to cost 111(/" C(f" • the committee appointed by Fa- $100,000, will be built first and A jim" . • Mrs. W. Townsley ther Brugman, the Most Rev. will be followed as soon as pos­ Ralph L. Hayes, bishop of the sible by a recreation unit and bus­ Davenport diocese, authorized Fa- iness offices. The steadily increas­ To Entertain Today ther Brugman to take the neces· ing number of Catholic students sary steps for the purchase ot the a t the university has necessitated Mrs W. W. Townsley, route II, property. the undertaking of the bullding will entertain members of the The site finally purchased is program. Friendship Circle of Kings Daugh­ ters in her home at 12 :80 today. During the business meeting the University Professor Judge Gaffney Mak magazine "Sliver Cross," will be Wins Honorary Prize es reviewed. For Reseqrch S!udy, Equity Assignments Good amarltan Encampment, , . Auxiliary No. 5 A study by Prof. M. Gladys Scott the women's physical edu-. equit:,: assignments for the A potluck supper will be served ot Firs~ cation department, entitled followmg ciVil cases were made members of the Good Samaritan "Sur~ vey Of Vocational and Professional yesterday by Judge James P. Gaff­ Encampment, Auxiliary No.5, at a meeting in the I. O. O. F. hall PlilnS and Inlerests of High School ney. Girls and College Women," recent. Wednesday, Oct. 10, 9 a. m. - tomorrow evenlne at 6:30. Iy won a research award by PL . Henley vs. Henley. Will J. Hayek A business meetinl and social Lamba Theta, honorary edU(;a- and Swisher and Swisher are the hour will tollow. Members are t· lIt ·t • attorneys. asked to bring a ten-cent prize Ion. a ra erm y. Thurs dOt ay, c" 11 , 9 a. m. - to be awarded to winners ot the Two annual awards of $400 Ratchford vs. Ratchford. Swisher games. each are made through the EUa and Swisher and Jack White ere Victoria Dobbs fellowship fund. the attorneys. Learue of Women Voter•• The~e awards are for research Thursday, Oct. 11, 2 p. m. - The League ot Women Voters will stUdies on any aspect of the pro- Sawdy vs. Kost. Swisher and hold a noon luncheon Monday In fessional problems ot women. Swisher and Jack White are the the Fellowship room of the Con­ This year's awards were an- attorneys. I've got my eye on a business I can purchase clear and free, gregational church for the first nounced recently, but due to a tie Monday, Oct. 15, 9 a. m. - I thi~k of a rolling country, and the farm I'll own some day, general meeting of the year. between three studies for the two Schrock vs. Schrock. Wi Iso n Illl swap my wrench for a milking bench, my lathe for a load of hay! 2. I'm saving my pay for the lucky day when I start to work for me! Prof. Stephen H. Bush, head of awards, three of $300 each were Clearman, and Brandt and H. W: the department of romap~e lan­ granted. Vestermark are the attorneys. guages, will speak on the "Euro· Tuesday, Oct. 16, 9 a. 111. - pean Situation." Moravec vs. Moravec. Messer, ReserVations must be made be­ Filling Stations Top Hamilton, and Cahlll and D. C. fore 7 p. m. tomorrow. They should Iowa Retail Sales; Nolan are the attorneys. be made with Mrs Lester Dyke. Shoe Stores Second Tri Delta Pledges University Vespers Filling stations were boosted to first place in Iowa retail Sales for Remain One of Iowa's • Aug"st as a result of the li!Ung of Elect Class Officers Oldest Traditions gas rationing with a 44 percent in- crease over July. Thla Aukust per- Wilhelmina Smith, A3 ot BUrl­ Vespers have been a tradition at centage Is the largest gain of any ington, was elected president of the University of Iowa since the business ]jne since Aprll. the new pledge class of Delta school's beginning. These inspira­ Other gains reported by the ,Delta Delta social sorority. tional lectures deal with the lreat University of Iowa bureau of busi- Other oUicers include Catherine issues of the day from the-view­ ness research InclUlle: shoe stores Smith, Al of Red Oak, vlce-pres­ points of high spiritual considera­ from ninth in July to second 1~ Ident; Barbara Anderson, Al of barrier tions. August, 4 to 2 percent; lumbor- Princeton, Ill., secretary-treasurer, reel lelep In previous years, outstanding building materials from 13th to and Patricia Gaffney, A3 of Mar­ bier Attl, leaders in all walks of lite have fifth, -4 to 10, and motor y,ehlcle engo, social chairman. Premier: spoken. They included Chancellor dejllers, UtI) to ~th. Phi chapter of Delta Delta Delta Stalin afl Bruening, the stateman; Lloyd C. 1n third place with" a drop :from also anrio\¥lce$ the recent pledging eien Com Douglas, the novelist; Stanley 32 percent to 12-.-- lIte women's of Patriaia Holland, Al of Inwood. Some day I want to retire, I'm saving my cash for then, Th~ ~o ready-to-wear stores as compared We're planning a year of travel, .now the flags of war are furled, High, the commentator, and AJ­ I Itt1ed In to first place in July. Furniture With Bonds around I won't be found in a home for broke old T"''''n! fred Noyes, the poet. • Each Bond we keep is another leap in our trip around the world! , the Mosci dropped trom third to ninth and Canterbury Club 3 Among the speakers emphasiz­ IIIlnislers family cJothlng stores trom second OHicers Meet Friday Brllain, , ing inter-faith cooperation have to eighth. . ' been Msgr. Fulton Sheen, Rabbi Eating and drinkln, p I ace s lltade "nc Louis L. Mann and the Archbishop The executive committee of the five.poW! showed one of the greatest de­ Canterbury club will meet in the of Canterbury. clines with a drop from 7 to -15 in ,ula 10 se1 Gordon Christenen, L3 of Iowa Iowa Union soda. fountain Friday IiIIderlini. one month, while men's clothing at 4:15 p. m. This meetin, will City, wiIJ represent the Student stores dropped from 18 to -1. PMIIS gfJlI' iean pia] consist of the newly eiected offi- . (/"t! his come true.( council at the university vespers • • S~ s. Sunday night, Oct. 7, at 8 o'clock cers and chairmen: P. Byrne: Donald Kreymer, A3 of Iowa in Iowa Union. The lUest speaker eonrlrenc will be Dr. William B. Lampe, City, president; Connie Righter. Whatever your plans for the future you'd better buy Disclose Engagement Al of Iowa City, vice-president; IItrberl ] m.oderator of the general IlII8em­ 5. Bonds by the score, eJcnmin ply of the Presbyterian church of Anne Cannedy, Al of Lewiston, Pa., secretary; Mary Stanarl, A2 of Your dollars won't shirk, they'll pitch in and work ... Evatt ~ the United States of Ammca. Of Shirlie Gordon Of Britai.:J As In former yean, university Des Moines, treasurer; Lynne Each three bucks will bring you back four! students will present choral and Mr. and Mrs. Joel Gordon of Kendall, A2 of Iowa City, Student Iuaia 111. musical selections. Lowell, Mass., announce the en- Christian council representative; So buy 'em and buy 'em and buy 'em, and keep every Bond till =tPK: gagement and approaching mar- Jonne Seip, A3 of Plymouth, Ind., llpenty riage of their daughter, Shirlie E. poster chairman; Marilyn John­ it's due, llinedlo~ Iowa City Brothers Gordon, to Tech. Sit. Allan M. son, At of Rock Island, m., pub· The more Bonds you buy will be more you've put by Receive Discharges • Bishofl of Chanute Field, 111., )jclty cha.lrman; Miriam Prosser, .\xlI. son of Mr. and Mrs. Blere Biahofl, G ~f MmneapoU., Mlnn., food For the day when your plans can come true! The 81. 1 Frederick Aaron, BOn of Mr. and also of Lowell. No date has been chalrtnan; Mary Hullkamp, A2 of 8rmes' ~ Mrs. M. L. Aaron of Iowa City, set for the wedding. Miss Gordon I Keokuk, edJtor of Canterbury br Brit\s; ~ has received a medJcal discharge is a graduate of Lowell high school Tales; Elizabeth Davis, A4 of ~ICTORY BONDS-TO HAVE AND TO HOLD ! I!It 8eVL at Camp Patrick Henry, VL, and and is a junior in the colle80 of Farmington, New MexiCO, l1i~tor. llllnea ne Ibe BrilL wilJ be home soon. He will resume liberal arts at the University of lan, and Mr. and Mrs. TravIs J . \ his stUdies at the University 'of Iowa. Sergeant Biahoff was also Phillips, faculty advisors. 1eIterc!.a5 Iowa. graduated from Lowell hi' h Another son ot Mr. and Mrs school, and was overseas with the Marriage UcenM. Rai Aaron, Staff Sgt. Martin Aaron, arm,y air corps for eight months. The clerk. of the county court "AS~ landed in New Jersey Tu8lday He completed 35 missions over Je:9terday Iasued marriaae licenses I. Corm..] from gellium. Sgt. Aaron bas France and Germany and has re­ to Lois Miers of Knoxville and TH'E DAILY IOWAN ~nt also received a diacbarle under ceived the air medal with five John E. Peters Jr. of Iowa Oity, ;::rIca. the point system and will be home Oak Leaf clusters and the presi- and to Frances Palen and Laurence m the near future. deotial citation. Welbes, both of Cedar Rapids. •