RATION CALENDAR IIIIOCESSEO FOODS blue stamps 1.8 throu,h XI valJil IndellnlleJy; Partly Cloudy IOAT red slamp' A8 thrQu,h M8 valid IndellnlteJy; SUOAR IIomP 30, 31 (book 4) valld Indefinitely, stamp 40 lor .annln, SUlar IOWA: Cloudy. LlrM rain or ..,u. reb, 28, 1945; SHOE stamp 18 (book 1) expire. April 30, TH:E lirplane stamp 1 (book 3) valid Indellntely; GASOLINE 1.-11 ","upon . . DAILY IOWAN Inow. ppIree June 21: FUEL OlL per. 4 and 5 ooupona uplre ~ . SO; l'IIIE INSPECTION: R.,ulu InSPeCtions not rl;QuiHd atler April 30. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

fIVE CENTS 'I'IIB AlIO~ftD PaBiI . IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, APRIL 18. 1944 TBB AIIOC~TrD PaBII VOLUME XLIV NUMBER 173 SUI Issues At a Glance- ~t~ 1 A~my . Air Hew Fraternity Today's Force Bombs Russians ' Within One Mile " . Regulations low.a..n. Hollandia ' University issues bulletin giv­ Prof. Patton Heads regulations under which frater­ No Allied Raider ·.Stro nities may keep chapter houses Of Seva stopo I hold Committee of Five open. Met Aerial Interference Recommending Plan Said Communique ------~--~~------~ Bailie for Sevastopoi in last A bulletin on regulations stages. A L. LIE D HEADQUARTERS, GOP Keynote.r which thc chapter houses Southwest Pacltic, Tuesday (AP) Enemy Troops under Brl_ln forbids diplomats to One of the heaviest bombing raids or men 's social fraternities will leave country;subjects diplomat­ be permitted to reopen 01' con­ ic mail to censorship, yet centered on Hollandia, Dutch tinue in operation after the close New Guinea, was staged ,Sunday Field Varied In Death Trap . of this semester was is ued yes­ MounlbaUen announces neavy when bomoors and :fighters ot'the terday by Prof. C. Woody losses for Japanese who cu t Fifth army air force left great Thomp on, director of the o££iee Kohima-Dimapur road. BUHonhole Drives Push columns of smoke riSing from .1ap~ Long-Range Airmen of student affairs. anese fuel and supply dumps, Griswold, Vandenberg, Join Aerial Offensive The regulations were reeom­ All details of the raid were not Luce, Hickenlooper Against Romania mended to President Virgil M. available yesterday and Gen. ~uch e r by a special committee British, Indian Troops Douglas 1'ila~Arthu;'s ~ommunlque CHICAGO (AP)-Wlth signs did not mention the number of tons pointing to the choice of a mid- LONDON, 'l'ue day CA P)- O.D lInil' ~l'si ty-fraternity r~la- liOns whICh ha' been meeting Deal Heavy Losses of expiosives which shattered this westerner as the Republican par_ Ru ian troops plUllll'cd to with- since the first week in January. T ° Crequj!ntly-blasted shipping and ty's June convention keynoter, in a mile of Sevastopol's bay Oil Prot O. ~ . Patton is chairman ofl 0 air base. First reports said the ton­ supporters buttonholed members the north ye terday, seized two the committee, made up of Prof. InvaSion Forces nage was more than 200, but head­ of the arrangements committee junction on roads leading into S. G. Winter, W. H. Cobb, univer- quarters expected a mach larger last nillht In separate drives to the city from the southea t, and si~ business ~anage~, Helen Allied Defenders figure when final reports are re­ advance the candidacies of Gov. hurled thousands of German Reich, assistant dIrector 10 the of- ceived. Dwight Griswold of Nebraska and and Romanian troops into a. nar- fice of student affairs, and Pro- Hold Offensive None of the allied raiders met an easterner, Rep. Clare Booth J'owing 55-squal'e-mile death lessor Thompson. Gained Last Week aerial interference, and only llght Luce of Connecticut. trap around tit stricken Cri- The first regulation states that anti-aircralt fire wa~ reported Arriving for their two day meet- mean stronghold, Moscow an- lor the duration of the war or over the base, wblch a few weeks in, beginning today, some oC the KANDY Ceylon (AP)-Japan- ago, lit the beginning of heavy aer- Republicans heard National Chalr- Dounced la t night, untii further notice, chapter hous­ ese fnvasion forces that cut the ial strikes against It, was hotly de­ es of men's social fraternities are man Harrison E. Spangler assert A bulletin aJ 0 aid thnt Ru~- to be opened or continue in opera­ important allied supply road be- fended by the Japanese air force. at a press conference that the ian long-range airmen 11ad tion only if authorized by the tween Kohima and Dimapur in Nine storage dumps, barracks, party's choices in the November . . . . . eastern India last week have been jetties and a small cOllstal vessel electiOn are the oost in a decade. •. . . JOIned the devastating allted director of student affairs, A frat­ were left' aflame in the SUnday emity group making tpls request dealt "vel')' heavy" losses by COUIl- raid. . ; ..' • , While Spangler declined to com- SMOKE AND FLAME shoot skyward as Jap planes burn on I10llandla aIrfield after one of a number j aerial offensive against Romania mit himself on the selection of a of raids made on the enemy ba e by General Kenney's Fifth alrforce bombers. At least 288 Nipponese with a mass attack Sunday night must submit: ter-attacking British and Indian , AlIied airmen destroyed a total "A written approval of the temporary chairman, who also Icraft were destroyed by parachute bombs and straUnJr In sustained attacks over a three day period. on the Danube river port and de- troops. an allied communique an- of six enemy coastal vessttls and serves a5 the convention keynoter, , fense hub of Galati. requesl by an alumni committee. damaged at least three oU Timor, Ind a written statement signed nounced yesterday. in the Dutch East Indies; New he agreed with reports that Rep. One Russian column 01 Gen. by alumni and representatives M t Sf d I I B d B dO f 2W Kohima is 60 miles north of the Guinea and New Ireland. Strating Feodor I, Tolbukhln's lourlh 01 the chapter sayinr they wlU 'Principal allied base at Imphal. It tjghters destroyed three Luuers ;::~P~o~~~ ~i'::~!~ty ~~a~~~S!~~~d ove 0 a eguar ta y-: ase 0 les 0 omen comply with all wliverslty regu­ is connected by a winding 3S-mile nnd damaged two more near Rot! lilions governing fraternities, ~~a::!~~g choice for perman~nt Secrefs of Invasion F B ' .b Found in Missouri ~::~I::I;r~!Oca!!~:sedn:~:e:; highway with Dimapur, a station i~hmd, southwest of Timor, after including the employment of a on the American-operated Bengal- Mitchell medium bombers had Asked If this would not mean a orces om SevastoPQl, which Is built on thc boasemother, Assam railway, main supply line dumped 25 tons of explosives on lot oC Republicans would look "A written agreement signed by westward for the keynoter be re- Britain Stops Neutral 12S-Man State Patrol chalk cUffs south of the bay. for all allied forces in easterq enemy installations at Koepang, r d ff I This Jrroup was only a mile chapter representatives and alum­ India and northern Burma. Timor. ni members that the chapter will Since the middle of last week Air patrols destro,e<;l one of p ~~G: h will h t be I 0 icia s From Leaving; Balkan Targets Searches fOf Killer from the north shore of the bay, make use of the Fraternity Busi­ the allied defenders of Kohima tbree Luggers caught at Vanimo Sider:~gr~Pth~SEl thina:s~" 0 con- Imposes Censorship I Of Unidentified Victims which Is reported jammd with ness service and that it will au­ have been on the offensive, trying and another near Aitape, on the Spangler's hint that a mldwest------axis evacuation ships sunk by erner might be chosen spurred LONDON (AP)-In an unpl'e- CAMDENTON, Mt). (AP)-The thorize the service to arrange for to wipe out road blocks established New Guinea coast, Russian bombers. It was strlk­ the coUection of its house bills by the Japanese at points where Patl'dlling Liberator "1l e a v y talk of Rep. Chal'les HalJeck of cedented move to safeguard the se- ALL lED HEADQUARTERS, nude bodies of two headless wom- and other charges against mem­ tbe highway pasSes through the bombers from Solomol1$ islands Indiana, Sen. Van den be r g of crets of the coming invasion, Brit-. Naples (AP)-Strong forces of en, both fiorribly mutilated, were ill&' alon&, a. road sklrtinc Ihe bers, through the university bUlli­ 5,OOO-foot Naga hills north and bases · the Japa,nese be" . at Michi~an. Gov. Bourke B. rHltk- aln last night forebade neutral Amel'!can Fortresses Ilnd Llbera- found in the Lal(e of the Ozarks eastern end of the bay. ness bUice. northwest of Kohima. Truk, in the Cl1roline islands, Sat- enlooper of Iowa, and others. diplomats to leave this countl y tors bombed Belgrade and ~ofla over the weekend sending Missouri On the eastern side of Sevasto­ "A statement of the financial Allied offensive patrols were re- urday and ~unday rtJgh~ , causinl;( Spangler said he thought the and placed a drastic censorship on yesterday, bitting rail facilities, peace orricers on an intensive pol another Russian column cap­ condition of the chapter and a pro- ported active on the Tidclim road fires and explosions in the ware­ keynoter's opening address would diplomatic communication to and aircraft oomponent factories and search for a demented fiend. tured Cherkez-K e r men, eight d operating budget for the running south from Imphal and in house area on DUblon Islarld in the "outline the general philosophy from this country by all nations an airdrome on the third straight Neither victim of the state's miles outside the city, the bulletin re lar school year and summer the area of Bishenpur, some 18 atoll. of the party" and set the pace for except Russia, the British Com- day of the Italy-based air assault' most gruesome murder mystery of said. Between this Red army force im ths." miles to the southwest of the al- Other Solomons-based bombers what the chairman insisted must monwealth and the United States. on the Balkans ahead of the Rus- recent years had been identified. and Sevastopol lie Inkerman and Men's social fraternitics may lJed base. hammered airdromes and supply be a sober, serious convention The government decreed that sian army's advance, One appeal'ed to about 26 years Malakhov hill, Sevastopol's last occupy temporary living or club (A Berlin broadcast oC a Jap- dumps at Rabaul, New Britain, and without the fanfare of peacetime telegrams of all other countries The American attack was made old and tbe other 45 , . natural defenses. The capture of quarters for the duration, accord­ anese dispatCh said more than other installations in the vicinity meetings. represented here, including Eire, in a series of swift jabs. The younger woman had wounds these hills ended the eight-months ing to tbe bulletin, by securing 10,000 British troops, supported by of Rabaul, with 84 tons Of explo- Asked to specify the party's must be written in plain language Fortresses led 0 f f, pouring from a small gauge shotgun under axis siege of the City in July, 1942, ~rmission from the office of stu­ air units, had launched a fierce sives. . ·Philosophy, Spangler said It was and submitted to censorship. bombs into the rail yards at Bel- her right arm and on her left and also in the Crimean war in dent affairs. counterattack a mile and a half The Sunday attack on Hollandia "to rebuild America. unshackle Diplomatic pouches of such na- grade in the 1irst air attack on breast. A leg had been slashed 1665. In order to assist In main laln- south of Bishenpur. It said the followed the heavy bombing ' of business and private enterprise, tions as Sweden and Bra~i1 like- the Yugoslav capital itself since I from one body and a breast from 10(' an adequate membership in co u n t era t a c k had bee n the previoU/j day at Altape, enemy take the country out 01 a strait wise must be censored henceforth. the Germans dive-bombed the the other, and both were other- each chaptcr, the university will "stemmed," but said a baltle still base between Hollandia and We­ jacket and make the government Couriers or other representatives, then defenseless city at the open- wise mutilated. Sherif! Jack Stot- OuestlOon of ContlOnued reaffirm Its recoJ:niUon of fra! was raging. A similar axis broalJ- wak, and was another contribution quit kicking the people around." naval, military or air attach~s may ing of their conquest of tbe Bal- ler said. He said a knife and a hat- iemlty living croups as an es­ cast reported heavy fighting west to the allied eCtort to destroy the Meanwhile, John Kenneth Brad- not be sent Crom this country. kans three years ago this month. chct evidently were used. Doctors IL d L C sential part of the bouslnr lacll­ of Kohima, an area that has not last remaining Japanese sup.ply ley, Connecticut national commit- Never before has Britain or any Next a major force of Libera- said they apparently had been in en • ease auses Illes of tbe university and as an been mentioned in allied commun- points on the north and northeast teeman, went ahead with plans to other naUon taken such stringent tors dumped its bomb loads on the the wate.I: less than 36 hours, and Important part of the academic iques. It said a British artillery coast of New Guinea. present the name of Mrs. Luce to measures as this one designed to rail. yards at Sofia, capital of Bul- the younger woman had been a IArgument IOn House Ind social life. Therefore, states unit there had begun a "general the cOmmittee when it gets down insure that no inkling of the de- garla. These yards, like those at mother. the bulletin. no studenl Is to be retreat" toward the northwest-­ New Air Giant Cub to selection of a chairman tomor- tails 'of the coming invasion may Belgrade, are a vital point on the The heads and othcr missing DenaIlled or truted in any dif - . toward Dimapur.) row. reach tbe enemy. Zagreb-Bucharest railroad which parts of the bodies had not been WASHINGTON (AP)-A series (erent manner from any other There was official silence yes­ Cross-Country Time Bradley told a reporter he felt The action was designed to keep is the Germans' 'main artery to the tound last night. of sharp questions, many aimed at duelent merely beoause he Is a terday over the ,reported opera~ "encouraged'~ about Mrs. Luce's innocent-looking In!ormation from southern Russian front from Aus- Col. Stanley GwInn, supel'in- Britain's policies, unexpectedly member of a fraternity, tions of allied air-borne troops be­ WASHINGTON (AP)-A new chances of obtaining a majority of giving the Germans a lip which tria and Yugoslavia. tendent of the state highway pa- embroiled the house yesterday in The univer~ity will publicize the hind the enemy's lines in Burma, giant of the air paths, the Lock­ the 24 votes to be cast. He argued would endanger the saiety of tens Meanwhile, a smaller force of trol, called the killer "a crazy several hours argument over con­ availability Of fraternity living approximately 60 miles north of heed Constellation, crossed this that geoll1'aphical considerations of thousands of British and Amer- Liberators pounced again on the fiend" and .ordered lWs entire 125- tinuation of lend- lease for another groups in all housing announce­ Mandalay. continent yesterday in 6 hours 58 ought not to enter into the seiec- ican soldiers. Zemun air fie{d ' near Belgrade man staff on the case. year. ments, bulletins and catalogues, minutes, an average speed of tion. Both the United States and Rus- which was heavily bombed Sun- No definite clews to the identity The controversy. so heated at giving the same treatment to fra­ nearly 355 miles an hour-a speed sia were consulted beforehand. day. The airdrome was dest:r1bed of the victims was available im~ times it held the crowded galleries ternity living quarters and ac­ Chicago Times Officers well beyond anythin& flown pre­ Haupt's Father Sane The foreign office announcement offiCially as "an. important stop- mediately, . although patroilmen in tense silence, was touched off commodations as is given to dor­ CHICAGO (AP) -Richard J. viously for a similar dista~ce. CHICAGO (AP)-Two psycbi- of the restrictions said: over point lor transport aircraft were checking reports of several by Representative Elmer (R-Mo) mitory lind cooperative living Finnegan yesterday was elected The big triple-ruddered tour­ atrists yesterday testUied before "In the unprecedented circum- flying supplies to the Russo-Ger- women who had come ~ tbis re­ in bis questioning of Chairman quarters and Ilccommodations. president of the Chicago Times. engined ship with a shark's body Federal JudJ'e John P, Barnes stances created by military opera- man front from northern Italy, sort area recenily. Fillgerprints Bloom (D-NY) of the foreign af­ Inc., to succeed the late S. E. contour flew east from Burbank, that Hans Max Haupt is sane and tions impendng in the present year, Yugoslavia and : Greece." fro m the bodies were being fairs committee. Chairmal) of the committee Thomason wno founded the news­ Calif., in the colors of Transcon­ a1:fle to advise his attorney ~egard- any inadvertent disclosure of in- \ checked against those of employes Elnter demanded to know if a Patton described the new regu­ paper in 1929 . and served as its tinental & Western ' ·Alr, Inc., ing charges of treason against him. formation which resulted in help- Ward's Btasts WLB at nearby Ft. Leonard Wood. rumor he heard was true-that U. The U. S. circuit court of ap- ing the enemy or in. unnecessary CHICAGO (AP)-Montgomery lations a~ being the, "first first publisher. which sponsored Its development, S. goods were shipped to Russia time, thaj) I can recall, that the Finnegan, who had been vice­ but is bein, turned over to the peals ordered the case retried loss of British or alJled lives might Ward and company, reiterating through the Japanese blockade president and editor since the army Immediately for use in war after Haupt, father of Herbert have such serious effects, not oniy that the war labor board "has Il­ SS it Uoivers~y and fraternities have Hitler Thursday and the Russians turned over to Haupt executed Nazi saboteur upon the course of these opera- legally ordered" Wards to extend really ever done anything ex­ paper was founded, becomes edi­ transport work. STOCKHOLM (AI') - Adolph the J a pan e s e. Representative was to die for treason: tions but also upon the relations an expired contract. announced eept talk about cooperation, A tor and publisher, James A. Grif­ Compared with the Constella­ s~ntenced Hitler's 55th birthday Thursday Wadsworth (R-NY) and Bloom fin Jr., who had been second vice­ tion's time for the non-stop flight Haupt's attorney, Paul A. F. 'j between this country a~d any tor- last night the company "stands will be observed throughout Ger­ promptly denied it. 1004 many universities have Warnboltz, asked for a mental ex- elgn country whose nationals were ready to recognize the union when IlltIen the position for years president and business manager, is the previous fastest cross-coun­ many by simple ceremonies to Elmer asked also about "rum­ was elected vice-president. try trip of 7 hours 28 minutes, amination of his client, concerned, that the government proof of 'its representation has which families ot fallen soldiers ors" that lend-lease had been mis­ that they were sympathetic to has reluctantly felt bound to adopt been presented." will be invited, Berlin dispatches handled to the benefit of Britain fraternities and would like to this unusual security measure." The CIO United Mail Order, to the Swedish press said yester­ and the disadvantage of the U. S. have them as organized student Students Parade- Warehouse and Retail Employes day. and asked why Bloom's commit­ (roups, but very seldom, if union called a strike at Wards There was no indication wheth­ tee did not hear the five touring ever, has a university really April 12. er Hitler would speak. U. S. senators who returned from dQne anything to bring this - the battlefronts with some of these about. Here we have a real A ustralia Censorship· Dispute Playboy Starts stories. p~oll'am of cooperation-some­ "Didn't you want to tind out the thing positive and definite." Australia (AP) --.,editorials that Snow, Rain Hamper Work on Iowa Dikes truth?" Elmer shouted. Prof. C. Woody Thompson ~YDNEY, -:,....::~'---p-re-j-U-d-ic-ia-l-to-n-o-t-e-c-e-n-s-ors--h-iP-e-li-m-i-n-a-ti-o-ns-.-T-h-e Prison 'Term · Cries of "gestapo" came from a. Tit ted blis "We got the truth, and not from said, l "This is probably the strcet crowd and marching unl- the public safety or tbe defense of e egraph a temp to!1U' h a As Missouri Thr,eatens Record Height the senators but from the real au­ lIlost important step in develop­ second statement by Henderson thorities and there's not an atom Ing a positive fraternity pro­ versity students sang "freedom of the commonwealth. or of value to and an editorial, again with blanks OSSINING, N. Y. (AP)- Play­ OMAHA (AP)-Snow and rain The condition at McPaul was of truth to these rumors," Bloom &ram that has been made on the press lies amoulderin, in the the enemy. • ' to indicate censored portions. boy Wayne Lonergan was placed shot back, thIs campus in 25 years." grave" as the censorship contro- It waS, diselosed yesterday that TheTeupon commonwealth peace In a Sing Sing prison cell yester­ hampered efforts last night of still critical, with residents pre­ versy which suppressed Sydney's the story which the (our newspa- oUlcers confiscated all editions of day, starting a 35-year-to-life workers on southwest Iowa dikes, pared to evacuate if the dikes ,ive four daily newspapers reached pers attempted to publish related the paper, term tor the stranguJation slaying against which flood waters of the HAWKEYE Publications wlll quote the mln­ court yesterday. An Interim In- to "misunderstandinl abroad." Newspapers in other states then of his wife, Patricia, heiress to Missouri river pushed In a rise way. An estimated 4,000 acres was As In other fields or endea. bnum and maximum fraternity junction was granted restraining Arthur Caldwell, information min- decided to challenge what they $7,000,000. that threatened to reach the rec­ under water in that region. vor. wartime condUloJll b a v e tnarles for the semester for board, censorship authorities fro~ Inter- Ister, charged last week thllt R, G. said ·they believed was political The 26-yeal'-01d former Royal ord beight of the 1943 Missouri A call for dike workers at Per­ slowed up publication of the room, chapter dues and lnHlation fering with publication. Henderson, chairman of the Aus- censorship by defylDi the censors. Canadian aircraltman made the river 1100d just a year allo, cival has been issued. The dikes 1915 Bawke)'e and the mem­ lees 10 that the cost of fraterni.ty The students, 'estirlllited to num- tralian Newspaper Proprietors as- Two 'Papers .outside Sydney also 30-mile trip from New York in a Three communities were hardest there constitute protection for ben of the staff exprell their livIna can be readily compared ber about 2,000, paraded the 8ociation, was ifl8ccurate and un- were suspended. closelY-lluarded, bullet-proof lim­ hit--Hamburll, Percival and Mc­ Hamburg, which is about 20 miles With the cost of dormitory and co­ streets alter speeches at the uni- truthful when he replied to Cald­ ousine shortly after being sen­ Paul. Marshal Bill Stacey said below Percival, There was no ap­ rerret that the )'earboolt wUl not be ready for delivery unltl llperatlve living. verslty and then marched to the well's sta*ement su"elti~ that tenced by general sessions Judge water was reported com i n g parent immediate danger for Sid­ The university will perml! the office of the information depart- Australian newspapers and jour­ Conspiracy Trial for 30 James G. Wallace. through a dike northwest of Ham­ ney. after the clOllC or the semesUir ~.ter of pledges from dormitory ment, Police broke up the demon- naUsts were responsible for the al- WASHINGTON (AP)-Trial of Before donning a drab gray burg, and tbat the western' part of Stacey said at Hamburg that a April. ~3, Ind coopel'lltlve groups to chapter stration. leged misunderstandinp, 30 persona charged with conspir­ prison uniform, the one-time natty the town may be hit by water by protective dike on the west aide of StDdenu not atiendlnr the bou ... without penalty, as soon as A erowd ,athered oubide one 01 Henderson attempted to reply to acy to incite disaffection withl.n nlgbt lile figure replied to prison this mornilli'. He estimated be­ town had been removed, and that IUJDJDer Rllion may reeeive tIie dormitories are allain operated the newspaper planb. Caldwell's charpa by quotl~ al- the armed forces moved toward oUlclals' routine questions with tween 5,000 and 6,000 acres al­ there was no protection from water their Hawkeye throurh the II student lIvln, quarters. DuriDi the court heatlDi, which le,ed specific exampl.. of what he selection of a Jury yesterday as the same cool demeanor he exhib­ ready under water in that area, coming from direction, mall by leavlll&' their addml IIWdeat aId will be admlnlll­ resulted In an Injunction belDi called po)ltical cenaot.hlp, The Jederal Diltrlct Court Justice Ed­ Ited through his two-week murder U. S. army 'e.nglneers here said The rain and snow caused many and 35 cents In The Dally "'., bacludtnr tuillon exelllP­ ,ranted to the Sydney Daily Tele- censored version of hit reply wu ward E. Eieher repeatedly denied trial. that last reports Indicated all dikes dikes in the vicinity of Nebraska [owan blllliDess ottlce In East ..... IClholanhl.... loaD fandl graph, justices several times re- pubUahed by all four newspapera, motlona of more than a score of "To what do you attribute your were hold In, at McPeul and at the City to soften. and fear wu ex­ baD. Thll will oover J)OItap, 1111 1IDIvenlb' emplo)'ment. OIl ferred to the absence al any mat- The Dally Telelfavh, on Idvlee ot defense attomeya which would criminal act?" he was asked. Nebraska City bridie On the Iowa II1I1U'aDC8 'wnpplll&' ClOIIts. (See FRATERNITIES, pa,e 5) pressed that much lowland 'flood- "d ter In thEl controverte4 stories or counsel, left blank spacet to de-. laave d~1ayed proceedin~. "I deny guilt," he replied,. side.. lUi would occw" , PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA -- TUESDAY, APRIL 18. 1944 a • fHI: DAILY IOWAN - Published ever-r morninl ex­ Wasbington in Wartime OFFICIAL DAilY BUllETIN ' cept Monda1 b1 Student Publla­ Opinio.n Itom.t In the UNlYIlRSITY IJAl.IUiIDAJI _ .,Jied1Md in tile tl .. "t'. ow"", Old CapJtoL JtemJ lor tha OJIHEBAL NOTJCII \ions Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa Capital Le~ds Ear deposJled with U.e c',npu.o edJtor of The ~Jy loW... 01 .... avenue, Iowa City, IOWL On and Campus placed In the 1>0" pro~jQed o~ UI~r ••_It In Ibe 'oW_Jat Off To Wire Tapping Dally Iowlln. OENllRAL NO'I'ICl:S IIlIU$ be .t ,TIIe DalJy lDIr .., Board of Trustees: Wilbur L. p. m. the day preeedlnl tint ....bIlca1Jon; noU_ will NO'1' ':iAMNtSf QUESTION: DO YOU PREFER accepted by telephone. and mull\ be TYPED OR LJ:GIBl.Y Schramm, A. Craig Baird, Kirk H. By JACK STINNETT and. SIGNED by II r~blAl 08I'IQIl. Porter, Paul E. Olson, Jack THE PRESENT METHOD OF WASHINGTON-There is one cancer of Fascism than on the Tuesday, April II, Moyers, Jeanne Franklin, Sarah GIVING EXAMINATIONS THE I~. factor in wartime Washington healthy growth of a democracy­ BaUey, Donald OWlle, Charla flEET LAST WEEK OF SCHOOL AND ------\ Swisher. HAVING STUDENTS ATTEND which is very little touched upon but on second glance I'm not so UNIVERSITY CALENDAR CLASS AT THE SAME TIME OR -the suspicion with which every sure. Fred M. Pownall, Publllher THE FORMER METHOD OF SET­ one regards everyone else. It's a In the first place, none of this Tuesday. April 18 "Further Adventures ,ot. a Trav~. Marilyn Carpenter, ~~A6AIN I~G ASIDE A FINAL WEEK delicate matter but a very real one suspicious doublechecking is done 7:30 p. m. Iowa Mountaineers, ing Sculptor," by Mrs. E. F. MaSOQ Advertising ManalJer AND GIVING TWO-HOUR EX­ which has affected our war effort with any idea of clltchlng spies. 223 engineering building; moving Saturday, April 22 Shlrle1 McKIm. EdItor AMINATIONS? for good and bad. For the mosl part, th.1t is lert up to . 12 M. Second semiater Qloaee In Joan Brutus, C3 .f Des Molnes: A few months ago, I wrote in the FBI, secret service and a tew pictures: "Easter in the Holy colleges of commerce, educatl.oo, Entered U leCond claII mail "I believe in the old method_ It this column tbat there was more riow minor congressional commit­ Land," "Wild Elephant Roundup," engineerIng, graduate, law, liberal matter at the postoHice at Iowa seems to a lot of time because wire-tappini in Washington today tees and government agencies. "Four Barriers," "Call or the arts and pharmacy. City, Iowa, under the act of COD­ it shortens the semester by one than ev I' before in spite of the Why then, you may well N~' Wilderness" "Father Hubbard" Sunday, April 23 cress 01 March 2, 1879. week:' fact that there are laws governing Is there any jUstification for all "Adventur~s Among Glaciers.'" 1:45 p. m. University Coov~a- lielen PoUock of &he mathemat­ wire-tapping (which consists both this suspicion in the nation's cap­ 7:30 p. m. White Elepbant bridge tion, Iowa Union. .' Subscription rates-By uWl, t8 party, University club. Monday, April 24 per year; by carrier, 111 eeIdI Ics Department: "There are certain ot listening in on telephone con- ital? The an weI' is to keep the Wednesday, April 19 8 a. m. Summer semester O]ljlU week17, $5 per year. advantages in reviewing a large ver ations and making automatic unscrupulous, the "lust-tor-pow.er­ amount of material at once be­ recordings of them). There was no and-money" boys from taking over 8 p. m. Chamber music, Uni- TuellClay, April 25 The Associated Pr_ Ie exclu­ cause it coordinates the material denial and, well there wasn't be- the war IIflort. Some of lhem ar a versity String Quartet, North hall, 1 p. m. Potluck b.-idee (part- lively entiUed to use for republi­ as a whole. Theretore, under or­ cause it came from an agency of very real threat and no fiJment music studio building. ner), UniverSity club. cation of all news dispatchea cred­ dinary circumstances, I would our government best in a position of the fictlon-wl'lters' imaglna- Thursday, April 20 'rhurtlday, April :n lted to It or not otherwlae cncs­ favor the week with two-hour elC- to know. tlons. 9 p. m. Spring formal, Triangle 8 p. m. Annual meeting--i!lee- lted in thia paper and a1Io &be I Bms and no classes, but it is rather Since thim, I have found that If WPB Chiet Donald Nelson club. tion of officers, Triangle club: local news publlshed herein. hard to do wltfi the accelerated stenographic recOl'ds of telephone hadn't beaten off the wolves ttiilt Friday, April 21 Tueaday, May 2 , •, program." conversations, personal interviews, tried to iet hold of the war pro­ 3-5:30 p. m. Red Cross Tea and 9 a. m. May Breakfast, Univer. TELEPHONES Eleanor Eastvold of the Spanlab and even so-called "off-the-rec- duction board, our war effort KenSington, University c I u b; sity club. Editorial Office ____..... 1111 department: "I think exam week ord" conferences are more the rule might well have been anqther -....:.....---::..-. (For information re,ardlD, dates beTond &hI1 lclMdale, ... with two-hour exams Is beller be­ Societ,. Editor .. 193 than the exception. I have even story. If his Deputy Chief Charles ....rvaUons in Ule otfJ" of the PresldeDt, Old Oa,lteL) . Business Office .. 1111 cause one houl- isn't fair to IIt­ heard of one instance (it may be E. Wilson could halle been run telnpt to test a student's compre~ true or false but it isn't in the out of town by some of the men TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1944 hension of tile semester's work. least far-fetched) in which one who wanted to take over, there G'ENERAL NOTICES Then, too, It's bad to have too government oliici 1 has a secre- might have been a produ~tion bot­ on many tests one right after the other lary accompany him to all social tJeneck at the very peak ot the IOWA UNION I dressed envelopes at the office the as is possible under the present functions, to note down every war effort. News Behind the News method." "howdy-do, how-are-you" and the • • • MUSIC BOOM SOHEDULE of the registrar, University ha.1I 10 Find the BuHon Robert Tyndall, Al of IOwa al')swers there-ta-just in case Monday-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. Such reports will be availabl, hel I use these names only because Watch Out for Teacher Clty: "1 prefer two-hout exams some one tries to trip him up on 1 have no idea what methods they Tuesday-U to 2 and 4 to 8. some time aIler May 15. .: lei with no classes beca.use you have a slip of the tongue or an unin· used to keep jobs sought by the Wednesday-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. HARRY G. BARNE8 'I1 Correspondent, Miss G. more time to study if you don't tentional ihnuendo. unscrupulous, but in view of their Thursday-ll to 2 and 4 to 8. Rerlslrar the In Your Cellar have to go to classes. Two-hour It's a sad state of affairs-one records their sincerity can hardly Friday-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. but . By PAUL MALLON that on first examination seems to 'J, Button, button, who's got the tests a.lso give you a. more thor­ be doubted. If they had steno­ SaturdaY-ll to 3. Spe WASHINGTON-Dear Mr.--: people is certainly a hazardous ough exam, and you can take be more naturally a fester on the graphic or even dictaphone recotds HAWKEYE bUlton, might well be the theme Sunday-ll to 0 and ? to 8. As in other fields of endeavor, wa~ Watch out for your teacher cor- prospect. I do not believe these time to write without rushing of conversations made of inter­ Str' 01 every inspector, whether respondent, Miss G. She is a type claims can be justified except with through." to go to dasses the rest or the views with persons who they had wartime conditions have slowed low Ann GasPllloUl, At of Moberly, NURSING ArPLlCATION up publication of the 1945 Hawk­ lire, health, building or plumb­ beginning to become familiar to strained statistics, counting hea". week?" reason to believe might misquote Women students interested in Mo.: "I like the exams the way Loanna Schnoor, A4 of Perry: them, they were only using a eye and members of the statt ex. ing. The button in these cases me, the kind trying to turn public iIy a large class of backwoods U­ entering the school of nursing witl. press their regret that the year­ sol is the peril or the hazard which attentioh away from the glaring literates and imbeciles everywhere. they are now and am against the "I like the present method better method highly approved by mod­ the class which begins June 12, two-hour examinations because I it the instructors don't all get the ern crime detection. book will not be ready tor deliv­ must be found and proper cor­ deficiencies In our educati6nlillind But. In any case, they must be 1944, should call at the office ot ery until aUer the close or 1he youth sYstems by aby distraction, handled In Ii specllli wily. We believe it is impossible to concert­ same idea tor exams on the same I don't think that either Nelson the registrar immediately to se­ luj~e' rective means applied. trate for two hours at one time. day. They alSo should consider or Wilson ha.d to use 'these mucl1 semester April 23. Knowledge of lire causea, possible or impoSSible. I got only must offer the utmost possible cure an application blank. Com­ Students who will not be at­ erl as far as her sly qul:!stion as quoted schooling to our least educatable Jane Scheerer, A2 of Ft. D0c4e: that final one-hour tests can't criticized systems. Their fights and especially of those condi­ pleted applications should be re­ tending the summer session may E in your newspaper: class. It, theretore, . mu~t be done "I'd rather not have to go to cover the whole semester's work." were too much in the open. But turned to the registrar's office as bal tions which pennit a small fire "Is Mr. Mallon attacking all in separate classes or separate classes the last week. Tben a per­ Ernest Brooks, A2 of Moline, :111.: other government officials have receive their Hawkeye throuah soon as possible. the mail by leaving their address the to become serious, is very es­ American schools and insUtu- schools. son can spend more time studying "Most students don't prepare for used them and the only question BA&BY C. BARNES rea sential to good lire prevention. tions?" What their little minds think for firlals. Consequently, I pref I' classes during the last week any­ is whether they were justified in and 35 cents in The Daily 10mn Rerlstrar business office in East hall. This glei Without such knowled~ in~ I threw the rest of the clipping about such classUication is not longer exams with no classes. It way, so I like the present system fighting fire with fire or were will cover postage, insurance and hel spections become mere rou­ away. I do not bother with that half as important to this nation as finals are given early in the last because a one,hour exam .Is pref­ merely trying to hide their own DEGREE OANDIDATES week, why should it be necessary shipping costs. acr tines, and are a waste of good kind, which can only represent el- the maintenance of scholarship for erable." (See WASHINGTON Page 5) All students who expect to re­ wh effort. ther intelIectual dlshonesty or an those able to learn. This country cei ve a degree or certificate a1 ne A simple report that a cellar inabillty to read plain English. To cannot be sacriflc~ to its mental the April 23 convooation ohould do so would Serve their puproses. deficiencts. make formal application at once da contained rubbish or a store They well know what the issue is: Another step absolutely essen- at the oHice ot the registrar, roem 8/ was selling cotton batting in The restoration of discipline in tial is the restoration cH the right 1, University hull. til the basemenl area, means lit­ both scholarship and conduct in of punishment to the teachers or HARRY O. BARNES I~ tle, but if this rubbish is be­ the schools. Let them talk and principals of D lJ schools. Our youth Rerlstrar el neath the stairs or the cotton write about that. must be required to study and to u)( a batting is open on a table at What has happened in education accept a social line of discil?J1ne COMl\IENCEMENT By ROBBIN (JOONS 11 ~ INVITATIONS HOLLYWOOD - Jus t before the foot of the main stairway, has become quite clear to me. We and conduct established by the 910 ON iOUR RADIO DIAL any experienced lireman can went into mass production about majority. Vandalism, hoodlumism, Candidates for degrees at the things get completely out of hand, easily visualize the inferno he 12 to 15 years ago. Education got and sloth must be put down by April 23 convocation who have I think it's time to pOint out gently placed orders tor invitations may to the movie makers that they're must go Ihrough to reach the to be big bUsiness, and the class- whatever punishlbent is required. room an assembly line. The standard for punishment TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS receive them now by presenting getting sloppy, careless, and al­ fire. 5-Children's Hour We sact'Wced the Ideals of work- should be that it must be etfective. 5:30-Musical MoMs their receipts at the Mum.ni office together too cavalier in their DO­ A study of fires, made by the FROM OUR BOYS IN SERVICE- in Old Capitol. tions of what we patient if men­ ma.rtship and scholarship to the Parent-teacher associations must 5:45-News, The Dally Jowa" lire prevention bureau of a lir~ ideal of numbers. We got to turn- insist upon this. School boards Pvt. Robert Wilson of the United VEDONNA l\t. KNUTSON tally stunted audiences will take. department, indicated that a States army, and son of Mr. and 16-Dinner Hour Music hafrman ing out three or tour times as must choose high types oj men as 7-United States in the 20th, 1ar g e percentage 01 serious many students, but they were less principals, men capable of disci­ Mrs. Charles Wilson of Iowa City, Senior Invitations committee First, there's the matter of t~e , Centul'Y flash-back, convenient device, fires, both from ille and prop­ thlln hair educateli. plinary leadership in accordance will be interviewed today at 12:45 a 7:30-Sportstime SWAINE SCIIOLARSHJP oiten eflectively used. It had iii erty standpoint. were tho s e How couid it be otherwise? 'Fhe with modern psychiatric 'under­ by An"n Mercer of the WSUI stat! on the regular WSUI program, 7:45-J!:vening Musicale The Swaine scholarship for a beginnings in early silent films. which originated in basements standards naturally had to be standings. 8-For Distinguished Service lowered to take in everyone. We Above all! Cha e the crackpots From Our BOYS in Service. PriVate year 01 graduate study at Harvard when they let an actor reminiB~e and cellars. An important fact 8:15-Wesleyan Chapel Hour will be awarded soon by the grad­ visually by giving over a part gf even got so low In a few pl'ogres- out. Wilson has just returned from brought out by the study wds Yours Sincerely, Hawaii. 8:45-News, The Daily IOWIlI1 uate council. Students interested the screen to his "thoughts." Fran­ sive educational ~chools that today the inaccessibility of lires in Paul Mallon $hould apply to the heads of their cis X. Bushman would be sHUDa the cellars, and the need of ad­ there is no standard either Of departments. Furtiler information on a park bench, smiling, and then schOlarship or .dISCipline except EVENING MUSICALE- ditional entrances affording MrS. Onabelle Ellett of Iowa Network Highlights can be obtained at the graduate up above-like a balloon in a that established by the children oUice. comic strip-would appear .the means of fighting a lire from themselves. ' City will be the guest artist on Evening Musicale tol11ght at 7:45 DEAN CARL E. SEASHORE lovely vision of Beverly Baylle. other than an interior stairway. Grown-up educators, with ap­ EVEln the mentally stunted iot the Basements will remain a ser­ over station WSUI when she wlll (1840); WMAQ (670) parently adult minds, today op­ sing several selections accompa­ NE~tAN OLUB idea: our hero was seeing his dream ious lire menace unless every enly advocate that every child be The regular weekly meeting of A nied by ESther Thoman, pianist. ga I in his mInd's eye. precautionary mea sur e Is passed regardless ot his mental • This year *a state* *need not hire• 6-Jim Blade Newman club will be held April H capacity so he will not personally 6:15-News of the World 18 at 7 o'clock in room 107 of Mac­ Then the thing grew and grew. taken to eliminate hazards, pro­ a press agent to gain the tront FOR DlSTlNQUISHED D be ashamed of his deficiency. Im­ 6:30-Supper Interlude brIde holl. An actor would begin tellmg a tale I vide proper exits, and see that pages. All it need to do is hold SERVICE- W beciles thus fix our standard. 6:45-Kaltenborn Edits the News JOE PHELAN from the past, and the scene wou~d A water supplies are available in one of those "crucial" presidential A dramatization about Lieut. Neatly everywhere we have cut preference primaries. 7-Ginny Simms President dissolve into the tale, reenacted. S case of fire. In such lire pre­ Charles Thomas O'NeUl of Wil­ our great educational ideals to ! ! ! 7:30-.A Date With Judy he was telling. Talkies developed H vention activity every home some extent'to cater to the lowest liamsburg, who has just received 8- Mystery Theater PRE-MEDICAL STU DENTS this further-especially for court­ the Distinguished Flying Cross, G owner and every building own­ abd the worat ()f our populace. Radio's mind reader Dunninger 8:30-Fibber McGee and Molly The medical aptitude test of the room dramas. The screen Yhad p er, in conjunction with the local This &Itt of thing cantlot con­ has turned that 'old Baying, "A Air Medal and three oak leaf clus­ 9-Bob Hope Association of American Medical something the stage couldn't dup­ fire department, can render in­ tinue.The people will not stand tor penny fot your thOughts," into real ters fol:' actions over the Solomon 9:30-Red Skelton colleges will be given Friday, April licate. It had the flash-back. And, islands, wUl be broadcast tonight valuable service and help pre­ it When they see their ehlldren money. 10-Fred Warihg 28, at 2 p. m. In the zoology aud­ boy, how it uses It. ' CI at 8 o'clock in another ot the series vent the loss of countless li\"88 not being properly educated, not ! 1 ! 10:l5-News itorium. .. 10 being ta\Jlbt to think in accord­ of WSUI prolJrarns, For Disting­ 10:30-Ronald Colman All pre-medical students who • • • and millions of dollars worth ThOle .rrOW8 on maps ot the uished ServIce. One of the many virutes 01 ance with relll abil1ty. ll~News have not already taken this test, eadem frOll& have been ShowtJ "Lifeboat" was its sturdy ref~ of property. Bolne corrections are obvious. 11:15-A Little Night Music now one of the normal requil'e­ alDled at Ger.-n7 110 lone DOW to use the device. By acting, dia­ The restorations of standatds is SINFONIETTA- 11:30-Roy Shield and Company ments for admission to medical evell Ule dllJDlteI' NuJ Jlbould IJe RIlvel's lUting "Mother Goose 11 :55-Trellsury for Today schools, should do so at this time. logue, and actIon-the hard wW clearly denlandetl. seeIbc ibe JIiIInt. -it told all that was nec~ssal7 Up I"n Front- In co1leres, this can easily be Suite" wUl be a aprlnltlme 1eatUl'e 12-News Army speclalized training pro­ ! I ! of "Sirtlllnietta" to be gUe$t-con­ of its characters' pasts. But in No industry is more alive to done by abolishing the elective gram students should not take the ducted by Frieder Wlli88man over Bille test since othcl' arrangements have "Passage to Marseille" (a good the need for prnnT6E1Bive ""'st- s)'!tem, aliowinl I!'duc!atonl to fix Clothing is so s~rce in Africa, station WGN tonight at 10:30. movie despite the handicap) ~.".~ r- the COUt1J1e8 rather than the KSO (lUO); ~ENR (890) becn made lor them. .r stu- we reaa, that men are using their have the astonishing business 01 war policies than is raUroaC1- dents. This has been started al­ vests to patch their pams. In a The Iee of $1 for this test should ing, judged by the advertiai.b.g ready In Caillornia university, and BOB HOPE- 6-My Secret Ambition be paid between April 24-28 at the flash-backs within flash-becks. climate like Africa's the vest, We Maybe they co ldn't it any the nation's railways are run- must be followed in the high Bob 1iope and his guest, screen 6:3O-Metropolitan Opera, USA office of the registrar. Receipt for 110 imagine, is worn solely on the stal:' Gehe Tierney, will broadcast other way. But a ,ood thipg cen ning which picture the many schoolJi where 'those of sufficient closet coa t han.er. 7-Watch the World 00 By this fee will be l' quire6aks will hold Its regulal' weekly serv­ Lady," as an olfender. Ella RaiQllo They are facing the chall.aqe retainlnl common education, as scientists. WMAQ when Serenade to America ice 9:45-CoruidentiaU, Yours ice at 7 p. m. WednesdaY, April working to illve her Ilweetbeal't of the future with the .ame Qe. 80tne 'educators say-the future Of • • • will present a prorram based upon I-Musical Chats lO-News 19, in room 110, Schaeffer hall. from a death sentence, IllUilt fiJ.lll termination to reDder • ...,.tcr- demoeracy and inte~nt decis- Two or mo~e species of masto- the Composer's opera; "Katoma." 2-Campus 'News 1():1~.rulton Lewis ,fr. Jl.UTD JEFFERSON out what milliner mpku \he ~ tive service with which-:t iOns by1he votInI masses of the dons beloDi to South ~enca, 2:10-0rgan Melodies 1():39 - Adventures of Mar~ President ' of a famous musio$.l com~ ~ h..., Twain 1- -information 'usually aiv$n~ d' TODAY'! PROGRAMS 2:30-Boys' Town faced the chaUeDCJ8 of the WIID'. ==- . r~ no other elef)hanl haB been j t lO" 3-Fiction Parade lO:45-Music You J,ove SEMESTER GRAD~S theater pro.rlllTl. aut ~ .. ~ There is no teflllOb to .... relating to efficienCy and con- ou. ••• 8-Momfn, Chapel 3:SO-'NewlI, '!'be DaU, 10~aD ll-Iiews Students wishing to obtain of- and a prote0i9nal d4ttecii'l(l; pose or aaewne that the rcdI- .naiHaIIII ,.. dI8 uav.unq ClAd Seed teeds are trees purposely 8:15-Musical Miniatures 3:35-Iowa Union Radio Hour ll:I~Buffalo Presenls ficial reports of grades received both stumpec;i throuah III!VeJ: roads will not be in the imllt IIhipP.'lg pUlic Itt ...~- left." fotHt operators to I'I!sftd t:ft-News, The ·o.Uyl}owan 4-Elementary French l1:~-Jimmy Hilliard during t ne present semester quencei. They have to ~, _ ~ line of progreaa in any m~ taM'6eId. ~ harves\ed lahds: 8:45-~dgram Calendar 4 ~ 30-Tea 'j;ime Mel~es 12-P.ress :N~ws should leave stamped sell-ad- ~lo1 wbuld e}J4 "Tiibt· \h!lre. 144 TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1944 tHE ,DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE THRtE -- .Phoenix Fund I JAPS GET TASTE OF AMERICAN BOMBING ACCURACY Today String Quartet to Give Six Organizations 3rd Chamber Concert Will Open Plan to Meet Tomorrow Evening B E1b ladles-Elks club, 1 P. In. MARRIED CIvic Newcomen-JeUersoll hotel Program to Include I~f \ SUNDAY 1:15 p. m. Lote Beethoven Quartet New Drive Post OffiCII Clerb' auxlUary-D and L grill, 1 p. m. As Part of Series A new drive lor contributions University club - Clubrooms of The University String quartet to the Phoenix fund will take Iowa union, 7:30 p. m. will present a program in north place Monday, Tuesday and Wed­ Trinity Episeopal cburch, Red music hall tomorrow night at 8 nesday, 'according to Mary Jane CrOli8 .... oup - Parish bouse, 10 o'clock as the third chamber con­ Neville, A3 of Emmetsburg, chair­ cert of the season. a. m. until 4 p. m. 1 d h h man of the fund committee. The program p aye y t e The purpose of the Phoenix University 0' Iowa Dames--Mez- group: Prof. Arnold Small oC the r.nd Is to establish scholarships zanine floor at Jefferson hotel, music deJ)artment, violon; David for University of Iowa students 7:45 p. m. Robertson, M lie of the Iowa returnln.. from service aft e r Navy Pre-Flight school, violln ; Uae armistice. Otto Jelinek, instructor in the Anyone who has served for the music department. viola, and Prof. United States or her allies tor six April History Journal Hans Koelbel of the music depart­ months before the end of the war ment, 'cello, will be broadcast and who was in atlendance at by WSUI. the University of Iowa at the Publishes 3Articles Beethoven's "Quartet in B flat time of induction or the semester major," which will highlight to­ prior to induction, may be con­ On Iowa's History morrow night·s concert. is t he lldered for a scholarship. A scho­ In a double ring ce~emony in, was worn by her mother on her t h i r d to be performed by the lastic average indicating normal the Truax field chapel in Madi- wedding day. Her corsage con­ The April quarterly of the Iowa group _withi.n t/le last year an~ is progress toward a degree will be son, Wis., Patricia Helen Kuncl, sisted of tangerine roses. Journal of History and Politics, a contmuatlon of the presentahon necessary and selections will be The matron of honor was published by the state Historical Iof all the rarely-heard late Bee­ made regardless of the race, color daughter of Frank J. Kuncl. 418 dressed in street-length navy blue society contains three articles thoven quartets. or residence of the student. N. Gilbert street. became the crepe dress with white accessor­ about fue history 01 Iowa. Upon its fir s t presentation At present the fund has about bride of Pvt. Hubert L. Kreeger ies. She wore a corsage of pink PLANES of the U. S. Anny Tenth Air Foree give this Jap freighter at M.ergul. Burma, a thorougn "The Perkins Brothers in the March 4, 1826, the final movement 56.000 in bonds. Soholarship of Kansas City, Mo.. Sunday at roses. blanketing wtth direct hits and hull.ahatterlng near mlsaea. Mergul Is a port on the Andaman sea. Campaign of 1860" contributed of the composition was disliked rrants. which will be made by 3:30 p. m. Chaplain Roland C. Mrs. Kreeger was graduated Th18ls an ofticlal United states Army.Air J'Ol'Cel photograph. (International) by Prot. Luella M. 'Wright of the intensely. The finals of the quar­ Ihe stUdent aid committee, may Reny read the marriage service. from St. Mary's high school and English department, is the story tet as it n~w stands, written l~ter Dol exceed $2,000. Given in marriage by her fath­ Iowa City commercial college. at­ of Henry A. Perkins and George and SUbstituted for the formlda­ Awards will be made on th e er, the bride was attended by her tended the ' University of Iowa. D. Perkins, who established the ble fugue, was the last completed basis of need and worthiness, ap­ 'HYMNAL AT ' A U. ·. S. AIR BASE sister, Mrs. Edwin Knoedel, 824 She has been employed as stenog­ , Ups and Downs Cedar Falls Gazette and how they work of the composer. proximately six months after the E. Jefferson street, as matron of rapher in the architect office at hondled the election of Abrabam The quartet is also remarkable cessation of hostilities. honor. Fvt. William J. Krause of the university. As Seen by Operator in that it contains six movements A station for collection of con­ Lincoln. Madison served as best man. Private Kreeger was graduated Of Elevator "The Czechs in Cedar Rapids," instead of the usual four. tributions will be set up in the The bride WOlle a street-length from Blue Springs high school in The second selection in the treasurer's office on the days that by Martha E. Griffith, deals with gold crepe princess-styled dress Blue Springs, Mo., and completed their settlement south and east of conce r ~, "Rispetli e Strambotto tuillon for the summer will be with three-quarter length .sleeves his basic engineering course in It's a business with more ups Cedar Rapids about 1850. It de­ (Love Songs and Serenades)" by paid. and plain neckline trimmed with the A. S. T. P. at the University of and downs than any other. but you scribes the Czechs' economic ac­ Malipiero. is an uninterrupted black velvet band. She chose Iowa. He is now with the army find it among the best for view­ tivities, cultural organizations, work of 20 divisions of contrast­ black and gold accessories and air force technical school at ing people. choral society and dramatic pro- ed style, the general character of Mrsl 'William Snyder wore an amethyst lavalier, which Truax field. Th is is the testimony of a "step­ ductions. . which is in the nature of rounde­ down-please" feminine elevator Miss Griffith, teacher of social lays or a contempora ry version of Visits Mrs ~ L. Coffey, operator who k now s. Having science in Wilson high school in tbe songs of the troubadours of Patriotic and Point~Free worked for almost a year reciting Cedar Rapids. attended the Uni­ continental Europe. floors, lawyers' names, dentists versity of Iowa. She has been Prof. Howard Snyder who don't hurt and insurance that teaching in a Czech district since Movies of Adventure always pays, this girl with a uni­ 1920. To Conclude Program Mrs. William Snyder of Dav­ form denoting "what-floor?" serv­ "Albert Bigelow Paine's Visit enport is the guest of Mrs. L. O. ice says her job does bCCO:-.1: irk­ to Keokuk in 1910." by Prot. Fred Of Iowa Mountaineers CofCey. 125 River street, and her some. W. Lorch of Iowa State college in Ames, sketches the controver­ Adventure mot ion pictures, soli. Prof. Howard Snyder, 109 " At Lirst I loved it,"' shc ~ ays. sies that arose between Paine and varying from the wild Iwme coun­ N. Dodge street. "It was fun jllS t IOOJ-i.lg forward to coming to work even though [riends of Mark Twain's brother. try of Africa t.o the Alaskan gla­ • • • Orlan Clemens. Professor Lorch cier fields. will make up the Guest In Hughes Home my arm did get stif[, but now- " is the author of "Mark Twain in last regular indoor program of - Mr. and Mrs. D. Webb Hughes, She odmi ttcd that she felt as it cveryone was looking at her, and Iowa," which appeared in a pre­ the Iowa Mountaineers ror the 331 S. Lucas street, ha ve as thei r ~ he always fclt conspicuous. She vious issue of the journal. 1944-45 school yeur tonight at. gIl\!s\s i.heir daughter, Mrs. Larry 7:30 in room 223, engineering Calhoon. and granddaughter. explained her present distaste for the job by evidences of people building. Carol Ann, of Des Moines. Mrs. Three shorts will open I he' pro­ becoming less courteous. and the Hughes will accompany Mrs. Cal­ lack of young male admlttants has Peace Offl·cer Course gram including .. Ea~ter in the hoon to Des Moines tomorrow for Holy Land," "Four Barriers." a a visit. detracted from occupation interest. II W·II 0 J I 10 tale of Switzerland. nnd "Wild­ Aged ladies and family argu- I pen uy · .. . menU; are the most persistent items Elephunl Round·Up." Recovering from Illness in her routine, while crying babies Concluding the program will O. E. Sweetlng, route 6. has are next on the distasteful list of Post-war law enforcement will be t.wo semi-featurl's, "Cull of the returned home from the Mercy persons who "call frequently." be the main feature of t.he Uni- Wild erncss," an nnimal film, and hospital. "They don't cry, they scream." versity of Iowa's eighth annual "Fathel' Hub bar d Adventures · .. . she lamented. And with a crying peace officers' short course to be among Glaciers," illustrating the Returns Home baby ent.ering, a curious dog de~ held July 10 to 14, according to majesty or Alaska. Martin Pederson. 1504 E. Col­ Siring entnillce and an undecided Prof. R. M. Perkins of the college [Prospective members are in­ STRAPPED 18 their parachutes and wearl.ng their flying jaCkets: ready lege street, has returned to Iowa lady venturing to whisper a third ot law, director. '" vited to enjoy the remainder of City ailer visiting in St. Louis to "scramble" for thelr planes at a. moment'a notice, Lleut. Frank S. Preliminary plans for the affair the year's indoor and ou tdoor pro­ Barrett of Dallu, Tex .• left, and Lieut. Frank M. Cookson of Loa floor inquiry. she armounced, over the weekend. "going up." have been drawn by an advisory , gram by obtaining membership • • • Angeles. Cal .• join In a. hymn during a. church .ervlee at a United committee which included repre- effective through MllY I 0, 1945. Weekend Visitor States Anny Air Force ba.!le somewhere In England. (Int".,,"';fln,,/) sentatives of tbe state attorney I . Second Class Seaman Robert Students From Chicago general's office, Iowa State Sher- I I 4 H C T I Stone of Great Lakes. TIl .• was the Asked to Volunteer iffs' association, Iowa State PO- I I - age ourney 'WtI!kend guest of his aunt and licemen's association, Association To Be Held Tonight t uncle, Prof. and Mrs. F. E. Mrs. Don Brown, Mrs. George Callahan For Care of Children of Chiefs of Police, County Attor- I • Holmes, 203 River street. neys' associations, department of Members of the 4-H clubs and ...... To. Be Co-Hostesses for Elks Ladies Today Students from Chicago and vi­ public safety and the Iowa High- I their parents arc invited to attend Reooverlng at Home FIGHT FOOD WASTE and save points by using left-over vegetables cinity who will be spending the way Patrol. the 4-H basketball tournament to Mrs. Carl Harned, 1836 G street, in soup for the children's lunch. Steaming soup supplies vitamins Mrs. Don Brown and Mrs. A. H. Woods, Mrs. Ira Houston, summer at homelare urged to con­ According to Professor Perkins. Ibe held in the University high bas returned home from Mercy and minerals while the crackers are full of energy units so necessary George Callahan will be co-host­ Mrs. R. G. Bowan, Mrs. E. P. Kuhl, tact the volunteer bureau of the a substantial attendance Is assured school g?,~nasiu.m at 7:30 tonight. hospital. to keep up resistance to these cool spring days. A glass of milk and Council of Social Agencies. 53 W. although the figure probably won't No adnusslOn Will be charged. Mrs. A. E. Longstreth, Mrs. Edwin • * .. a cup of custard completes the menu and provides protein. esses at the Elks ladles luncheon Jackson blvd., Chicago. in regard reach the average of 350 of past Captains o[ the team~ are Ken­ Returns to Base bridge this afternoon at 1 o'clock Bartow, Mrs. E. F. Gerkin, Mrs. to wartime care of children of sessions because of short-handed neth Smalley, Austin Colony. Don- Dana A. White, A. M. M. Se­ In the last* two * years * of wartimet to bread crumb * *mixture. * Mix well in tbe Elks club. Harold Clearman, M81'y Von Stein, employed mothers. starts. aid Burns and Kenneth Lacina. cond Class, of Miami, Fla., re­ living, American housewives have and till onion shells. Libby Ereth and Veronica Ereth. According to Helen B. Sulzberg­ turned to his base Saturday after learned that waste is sabotage and Arrange itt a greased baking UNlVERS[TY OF IOWA DAMES DOUBLE FOUR er, chairman of the recruiting spending a leave with his par­ they have acquired the babit of dish, add cream. Cover and bake A dessert-bridge will be h«:ld A dessert-bridge will be held in committee, vacations will release 101 Tires Issued ents, Mr. and Mrs. Dana H. White, tucking dabs ot leftover vegetables at 400 degrees F. for 10 minutes. for the University ot Iowa Dames the home of Mrs. Truman Shra­ thousands of children who s e A total of 101 Grade 1 tll'CS route 4. and meats in the refrigerator. Remove cover. baste onions with tonigbt at 7:45 on the mezzanine der, 321 S. Dodge street, Thursday mothers are now in defense work. were issued during March by the 1' · . .. Sometimes these leftovers can be the cream in the dish and continue floor of Hotel Je!tcrson. New offi­ at 8 p. m. for members of the To meet this need a joint project Johnson county rationing board. ~~'of~!I AUend Blrthda.y Celebratiou dressed up to taste better on sec- baking, uncovered. for 10 min­ cers in charge of the meeting are Double Four club. for training of recreation aides is Attending the birthday party of ond appearance than their first. utes or until cream has thIckened Mary Walker. president; Helen being sponsored by t.he Council Mrs. K. P. Tofting of Pleasant One of the most effective meth- and onions are lightly browned. Scoles, vicc-president; Georgean LENA T. RING CIRCLE of Social Agencies, Chicago rec­ Valley Friday were Mrs. Otis ods of cleaning up left-over veg- Another "ration wise" dish for Harmon. t rea sur e r; C!\rolyn Mrs, Roy L. Mackey, 222 E. Dav­ reation commission and the child Conklin, 902 Hudson avenue; Mrs. etables is in soup. Here is a re- you to introduce to your family is Brandt. secretary. and Carolyn enport street, will be hostess al care committee of the office of W. Jensen and Mrs. Stanley cipe to help you out the next time a tasty Bean Loaf. Either dried Rahn, corresponding secretary. the Lena T. Ring circle meeting civilian deCense. Cross. both of route 6; Mrs. Leo you have leftovers, and this one beans. split peas or lentils may be Thursday at 7:30 p. m. MrS. Glenn A short intensive course will White and daughter. Dayna Lee. doesn't require meat stock. substituted for beans and the re­ ENGLISH LUTHERAN WOMENS Murdock. Mrs. Bess Adams, Mrs. be gi ven for college students who ~harm the and Mr. and Mrs. Dana H. White. LEFT-OVER VEGETABLE SOUP suits are delicious. ASSOCIATION ana Abbott and Mrs. Lloyd Rog­ are willing to contribute the I r all of route 4. and Dana A. White, 3 cups vegetables left over BEAN LOAF The women of the First English ers will serve as assistant host­ lime to this project. On comple­ A. M. M. Second Class of Miami, 1 medium sized onion. chopped 3 cups boiled beans Lutberan church will meet tomor­ esses. A social hour will be held tion of this course they wlll serve Fla. 3 cups tomatoes ' 1 smaIJ onion, chopped fine row afternoon at 2 o'clock in the after the business meeting. in existing centers and those now Stag Line • • • 3 beef bouillon cubes 3 tbls. melted bacon or other church parlors. Mrs. V. J. Albrecht • being opened as part of an ex­ Honored at Diuner 3 cups water fat is chai rman of the Hostess com­ LOYAL HELPERS CLASS Mrs. Catherine Hope, 423 Grant panding program. The Rev. and Mrs. Elm e r Salt cup bread crumbs (soft) or mittee, which consists of Mrs. Irv­ Charm the stag line with fre- street, will be hostess to the Loyal Dierks. 230 N. Clinton street. en­ Pepper ~ cup fine dry crumbs ing Borts, Mrs. L. L. Smith, Mrs. Helpers class Thursday at 2 p. m . • • 9ra<1Ce .. . Drop a desh of dry tertained at a dinner Sunday Paprika I egg Fred Jones, Mrs. Paul Ross, Mrs. IRobert W. Hansen I ~sisting her will be Mrs. E. Monk perfume in the hem of your nig,,! in honor ()f the Rev. and Put aU the ingredients with the l 'h tsp. salt J. W. Jones, Mrs. Floyd Jackson, exception of the left-over vege- 1 cup ifl'adiated evaporated milk Mrs. John Yeslinek, Mrs. F. Mack and Mrs. E. Radlotfe. Roll call will I To Talk to Eagles I prom dress. That's II quick flip Mrs. Grant Anderson· of Cedar be answered with remarks on the tables in the kettle and let them Soak the beans overnight in cold Miller Mrs. John Stevens Mrs. way to make your fa"orite per­ R8pids. care of house plants, and there will • Robert W. Hansen of Milwau-• .. come to a boil. Then add the veg- water. Boil unlil lender and dtaln Vernon Roose, Mrs. George L. ., . . kee, Wis., national presid~nt of fume go fllrther. Select your be an exchange of flower seeds . Detroit Visitors ctables and simmer for 20 min- while bot. This llquid may be used Ruppert Jr. and Sophia Heru. the Fraternal Order of Eagles and f.vorit. scent from tho "k croet.d Mrs. Charlotte Ketelsen, 21 utes. Serve with crackel·s. Serves for soup. Mash beans. Add other PAST NOBLE GRANDS CLUB editor-in-chief of the Eagle Maga­ by Roger &0 G.It.t .nd fill tho . ir Woolf avenue, has as her guests 6. ingredients and stir to blend well. 500 CLUB OF CARNATION REBEKAH zine. will speak at a meeting of with frogf. tsp. salt Mix flour to a smooth paste with Mrs. Lloyd Howell, 505 River the all day Red Cross sewing ses­ SecrefGrial Cou,.. 101 BURLINGTON 'RAILWAYS or tanned. • ',4 tsP. black pepper a Uttle of the milk. Add the re- street, wUI be hostess tomorrow af­ sion to be held Thursday from 9 IUS DEPOT Seeds and plants are being fur­ 6 tbls. lninced boiled ham mainder of the milk and cook over ternoon at 2:30 at the April meet­ COLOSI STUDlln oM GIlDUlm a. m. unUl 4:30 p. m. in the Amer­ A tborou.b, iateasive, leer_rial bished to the club members by 2/3 cup thin cream boiling water until very thick, ing of the Women's association of ican Legion rooms of the Com­ coun. - st.nio. Februuy, Jul,., Union Bus Depot Searl! Roebuck Co. Prizes are of­ Peel and trim onions. Parboil in stirring constantly. Remove from the Congregational church. Topic munity building. A cooperative OC1obet. lle,i.ttatioa QOW opeD. Jease Roberti, Agent fered for the best garden and the salted water for 30 minutes. Drain heat and beat in egg yolks one at for the afternoon's discussion will lunch will be served at noon. 213 E. College at. best . display of vegetables and and allow to cool for easy han- a time. Add salt and tomato pulp. be, "A Christian Pattern for Post­ a...... ,. ud ..eala. lCbool canned food. at the local achieve­ dllng. Remove centers carefully, Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. War Planning," and will be led tbrOulhout the* ,.eu. Catalo,. Phone 2552 lDent show in August. leaving a shell about ~ inch thick. Pour into custard cups. Set in a by Mrs. E. A. Gilmore and Mrs, Administratrix Named A ICNOOl ...._ar COWOf_0#""" AMI ~ Trim crusts off bread, dice and shallow pan, surround with hot Leslie Yetter. Mrs. Paul Packer is Clara Scott was appointed ad­ soak in milk. Mash with a forkr water and bake in a moderate oven chairman and Mrs. Ross Living­ ml nistratrlx I n district court yes­ IMI .BGO COLU.I add parsley, marjoram, seasonings (375 degrees F.) until set and ston Is co-cbalrman of the commit­ terday ot the estate of Thomas ...014 .... 11M ...... 0...., S.CA and ham. Chop the ple,es ot onion delicately browned, about 30 mln­ tee in charge of the meeting. Other Ellenberg, who died April 1l...... ,.....~ ,__. ,.... M. ITaIl'.' '.Ir.MA _ .. removeg fr9m tb\! r;enterll ang i\Q\1 ute~ , YI~~ 6' servinlP" l;omm1H~ memberb 1n~UQe p(rs. The QQnd Willi ~t at $1,000, ------' ...... -,·NtE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA :;;.', n From 'he Mr 1944 Sidelines. .1 Di~ By Jack Sords A by be this TRI DAILY IOWAN Yoke [,e01 , B088'/ \II~O Well the grand old game gets mot underwa~ today and while we B' PeRMANE, don't intend to climb out on that "Jew SE-IS'A1Io.-l I~ By JACK HAND proverbial limb as lal' as predict­ !.to of ""~e "flJ£F ing who will beat Who, we ~r- NO NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball plllis the she t. off the 19-14 SP RT . tainly wish that that limb was tol model this !t1'temoou v.'ith 125,000 custom I'); lCp ctod to join the long enough and strong enough so S Ill anagers and club owners in hoping fol' tire bcst I'rom the weath(,r that we could get out there on it soli! man and the draft-riddled lineups. and hang l'ight over the fence of liP! R If the. un sl}illes nnd th warm bl'eezcs blow, IJltendance fore­ some major league orchard, hid,. 10 CIL'>t.· will be l'evi ed upwards, but 27,000 I'OJ' the tl'aditionlll riPl'Il- ,AUlIROWN NOW NAVAL OFFICER den by the follage just ellDugb So Joh 1')' in Cincinnati is tops so far. . that the cop on the beat couldn't bOil see us. !lfl Improvement on lh 1943 £igur,' is almost. (Jl'l'tuin as I'aill Sports Then we'd yell ar,d cheer, Ilot wa, hed out foul' of the tal·ter. then lind sll'etched the entire Mal loud enougb to attract attenl.I.OlL brO' opening program fOlll' day. (iJolUlting 8 pecinl PI' view in Wash­ bui Jut loud eno~h to get that ington t.hat will not be h Id this NCIi . Oil, Ill'lt yeor's nine gllmes feeUoe In the plt of our S~"'­ jURt topp d til 100,000 Dlark. Trail aclJs tbat th~ baseb311 seasOll A the third wal'time ('ompaign gets stal·ted, only two pitcl\el'S • • • was really here acaln. who worked the '43 op ners definitely have been nominated fOI' There is somethini abollt sit­ • By WHITNEY MARTIN ting in a major league ball park, t.omonow. AI Javerty of the Boston Brny('ll and J.Ul)1 IIal'l'i., of NEW YORK (AP) - This is drinking in all of the sights and the Athletics, both of whom were b aten Ii yelU' ago, 1I1'e Cl'lltaill Ithe year. sounds that attend such a place, to go. Bill Dietrich, who 10 t to the 'Bl'owns, itol a 'hicago White feeling the warmth of the sun on Sox po sibility. 1 This is the yellr when a major the back of our necks and talkinll .E1ll.Inett 0' eiJl of the BO!ltoll n cl Sox /l:l'abs the pl'izel'ookie 1league pennant might be won or to the perfect stranger to our right lost by a draft board at CQrn as if he was our best friend. ossignment of throwing against Ihe Yankees in Roston and Stalks, Ark. PI'!'IlclH'I' IlI'W- As far as frienQliness is con­ 011 Rot', Pittsblll'j:(h This is the y~ar when a kid In foe&! CoMes ~M A cerned I don't th ink tha t there is 4-F who shoold be playing in the , 'I De.;.&. W· eOlI)el" is Ilamed t~ 110 k up with o(II611'(IZICA~ r:IIM.U.'f "lIP anything like the bleachers on a class C will be panned because to t! SAw Ac1i ON 66/11140 1""'~ Sunday afternoon. There you are I JUy Inner Max IJIl~li~I' of llIw (:IlI'dil1aJ~ I1t he can't put on a I-A perform­ hel i apt to find anything but most of , At. 1,0\11:> III th only. ollthpaw F'o,,.n.16f1~ AND ,.I ance. lcr FRoN1' OF 111~ ,wcRQ­ all you're sure to find Americana led Of dMI. The only othel' fiJ'Kt yea I' And this is the year, his belit­ working at its best. The men that T man to get a starting assignment Pfb.l1i- - 6"'" ~IS tlers say, when Joe McCarthy will the is Bill VOiselle, who lost 21 and HeA~ NAS Se1" 0.-1 A you find there are the true base-' SU b demonstrate whether he really is ball tans, the men that remember but J . won only JO for Jersey City but "1'ItACI( C:A~ ,I something of a manager, or just Spe every game for the last 10 seasons, I II has been named by Manager Mel a manager, or something. 'the men that know exactly wl:lat waf 's Ott to face the Braves' Javery Or maybe It should be: ThIs Strl I in New York betore 20,000. is going to happen next, and the peeu a IOn was to have heen the year. Now, men that revel in the wonder of Joe McCarthy's choice is Hank VJt-fl4 ~I'IE> w,,J,JeRs "fll~ee S1'lZIIIbA1' D,,",~ ,,>II> with Spud Chandler and Ernie knowing that. Borowy, who has been with the 30 VlJNN6~S 1.1 !5'0 DA'jS', l'J.\e 661'S ARB Go'NG­ Bonham back, If his Yankees do PAUL BROWN, left. Ohio's famed football coach, Is now ~ Hell tenant 'AJ,d there attends the custom l:~ NEW YORK (AP)-The Ken- the club all spring although Ernie oN PE;r~MANI! 's MooJiJo(S' I wIn his crItics will say he has (j,g,) in the United Stales navy and will be replaced as head coach (If betting on each pitch and n tucky derby is less than three Bonham, last year's opener, and Spud Chandler are present but , ______"'-_--,.-. yet to face the test, as with of Ohio state university's eleven by Carroll Wid does. rlltht, wbo will being sure that you are right, Ie two like that In a year and hearln\:, all of the minor fu weeks away but the experts still need More work. serve In that capacity for the duration, according to Ohio stale's are as far away from agreeing on like thlll anyone should be able athletic board. H 15 beUeved that BroWII may lie a']polnted football strategies that are discussed and erl Ossie Bluege led off, as expect­ '44 Season Opens In- to wIn. beIn&, sure tp.at yow' man Is the E the probable winner as they were ed, by nominating a knuckle-ball coacb at Great Lakes naval tral!!ln.&: stA-tlon, tbollLb no oftlcfa.l For a long time there has been announcement has yet been made, ~martest (If them aU. bal when the candidates went into chucker in Johnny Niggeling, an undercurrent of resentment in Yes, we'd certainly like to be the winter quarters last year. granddaddy of the first day pitch­ some quarters against McCarthy. there and we can th ink of a lot of rea One prediction already seems ta ers at 38, When he takes the hill I The Maiors TQaoy There always is resentment over other people that would like to gJe: have been exploded, The boys against the A's, 25,000 are expect­ too much success, but in McCar­ be there also. Every American is hel pointed out that the 1Ulies finally ed to give Clark Griffith's stadium NEW YORK (AP)-Today's opening day schedule in the major thy's case the feeling was that Cards, Leaders in National Race a potential baseball fan and there acr I might have something to say about runnerup drawing honors to Cin­ leagues with probable pitchers, their 1943 records, starting times his success was achieved because is hardly an American that, hav- · wh Col. Malt Winn's run for the toses cinnati. Dnd expected attendance: he always had an edge on the ing once been exposed to it, doesn't ne at Churchill Downs on May 6. The Johnny Vandermeer, wh 0 (Time is central wal' time.) other teams, and there's no par­ take to it like that proverbial duck females did a pretty good job of burled the rem 01 the '43 start­ NATIONAL LEAGUE ticular honor in a giant beating a Face Pillsburgh af Sf. Louis anel the water. d making the colts look foolish in ers with a }-o shutout of the Boston at New York-Javery (17-16) vs. Voiselle (1-2) 1 :30 p. m. dwarf. But the boys that are playing n Cards, is a navy man now so • in the rea l1y big lea~ues today are ):lst season's two-yeaT-old stakes. 20,000. We never shared that feeling, ST. LOUIS (AP)-Outfielder flJ Dura... a Out the CIncinnati job goes to either Brooklyn at Philadelphia-Gl'egg (0-3) vs. Barrett (JO-13) 2:00 although admitting such an edge SOX Tackle Trtbe 'the ones that are going to come 111 But Brownell Combs' westel'n Bucky Walters or Elmer RIddle. p. m. 9,000. • usually was there. We always felt Danny Litwhiler of the Cardinals CHICAGO (AP)-The Chicago back to America as they knew it e3 glamour gal, DuraznB, already has Tbe Cubs are banking on two Chicago at Cincinnali-Wyse (9-7) or Hl1nyzewski (8-7) vs. It took a good manager to keep may not be in the Uneup when the White Sox will be host to the in peace time. America at base­ a youneslers, either Hank Wyse been declared out because her • Walters (15-15) 01' Riddle (21-11) 2:30 p. m. 27,000. harmony in a club of stars, and to National league champions open Cleveland Indians in the opening ball parks, and Sunday afternoon iiI training schedule was impeded or Ed HanyzewskI, AMERICAN LEAGUE get the most out of a pitching the season with the Pittsburgh Pi- double-headers, where the kids cl game of the season today, with in~ and trainer Ben Jones, who con­ Al Smith succeeds Jim Bagby New York at Boston-Bol'Owy (14-9) vs. O'Neill (1-4) 2:00 p. m. staff. rates today. He has been ordered on the block match for Joe Di­ ditions Warren Wright's horses, as the Indians open in Chicago, 10,000. There was some skepticism dications that chilly unseasonable Maggio bubble gum cards, and ag has not indicated that Twilight where Jimmy Dykes is expected Philadelphia at Washington-Harris (7-21) vs. Niggeling (10-10) before the 1943 season as to to take his pre-induction physical weather would keep the attend­ win Joe Cronin autographed bats ma Tear and Miss Keeneland wiH be to come up with Orval Grove or 2:00 p. m. 25,000. whether McCarthy could pro- examination at Jefferson barracks. ance down to 6,000. by selling the Saturday Evening around for the big party. Dietrich before 6,000. St. Louis at Detroit-Kromer (0-0) 01' Sundra (15-11) VS. Trout duce a winner. with Joe DIMal- Even if Litwhller completes. the Al Smith. a lefty, is Manage\' Post. And where they go to boys Among the coits such as Jez­ Detroit will have Paul Trout (20-J2) 2:00 p. m. 22,000. Kio and Tommy Henrich and service tests in time :fOl' the game, Lou Boudreau's pitching choice. day at the park and sit in the right rahel, Occupy (the leading money on the hill against the St. Louis Cleveland Ilt Chicago-Smith (17-7) VS. Grove (15-9) 3:00 p. m. Phil Rlnuto and Red Rolfe and his case points up baseball's gen­ Orval Grove has been nominated field stands and yell their heads winning juvenile of 1943), Don Browns who wl1l go with either 6,000. Red RuffinI &,one, but when he for the Sox. The youthful right off. Jose H. and Seeing Eye, the lat­ Jack Kramer, former Brownie did win, the victory was minl- eral player uncertainty because hander managed to beat Cleveland And when YOU get it all down ter two from Mexico, have either back from Toledo for another try, mlted. as why shOUldn't he have of the draft. ohly once last season. Uke this and look at It it looks or Steve Sundra. The Tigers count won? He 8tlll had Charley Kel- But whatever happens DS time lOti of silly and you can't h'elp . been withdrawn or are not ex­ goes on, both the Cardinals and pect d to face the barrier. And on 22,000 to watch Trout, the only but think that a lot of other 20-game wiDner who will be ler and Joe Gordon and Bill the Pirates have been fortunate sO Tigers Face Browns gUYS have said it better so many horses like Black Badge, Boy Leahy Seen as Possibility for Sea hawk Spot; Dickey, didn't he, as well as far to retain enough regular play­ DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit Knight and Grant Rice have failed pitching today. Chandler and Bonbam? Umes before. But you have to Iltookbn is sUil experiment­ ers to start the campaign with Tigers and St. Louis Browns, who say It because it's part of what to run like Derby caliber, Well, this year he has Chandler lin e ups approaching normal Ill&' with Us inrield IIU the eve Notre Dame Coach Asks Navy Commission topped the American league's sec­ YOU believe In, part of what you Gin. Platter Favored and Bonham, period. l'le has some strength. ond division in 1943, will meet Col. C, V. Whitney's Pukka Gin of t.be o})eoer In Pblladel,hia think of as America and part or I> t II 1'1' I F I I I fbi ~uys who we,e with the ~lIm be- The Cal'dinals, in fact, appear today in the season opener at what you can't help thinking and George D. Widener's Platter but has picked veteran Whit ~l\.u nJOJ·S 0 l' (' cct t Hit run { .Jea 1Y, otre Dame 'oot al fore, such as Hank Zuber and Wyatt to do the tbrowlnc coach, would 1i ('lld the eoac:h inl-\' slaff here Ilt the Iowa Pre-Flight George Stirn weiss, but on the relatlcely stronger than the J943 Briggs stadium before an estimated about each time opening day' were voted the top juvenile colts 22.000 spectators. Paul rolls around. of 1943 but it's no cinch, especially aeainst the Phils' Dick Barret.. ~c hool Ilext rldl, thut have [wcn pu~sed Ill'ound mid", 'st spori1l Whole it is a new team. titleholders who won the pennant The latest BrooklYn in ...~ !Ie­ by 18 games. (Dizzy) Trout, a 20~game winnel' Let's pray boys, that we have in the case of the latter, that they eil'c1'R 1'01' the PHst few w eks, took on a mOI'e factual nature If he can do it this year, even If Litwi).er cannot play, Mana­ tell8e bad Lula 011110 011 second last year, was Detroit's cboice to many more opening days when will start. Pukka ran Corking sec­ yestcr(/uy. R('v. ,Johll J. Kavanaugh, oil'!! DHme vice-pI' . id nt his critics must admit he's got ger Billy Southworth aid he face Jack Kramer, navy discbarge, everybody can go to his grand­ ond in the recent experimental alld Gil illl'l.isb. .. Utird wWi BtU lIart benched and Dlx.Ie and eha.iI·man of' th' fat!ulty bom·a 0[' athll'tie eontl'ol, j veal d plenty on the ball. With the ex- would use Pepper Martin in left who finished last season at Toledo. mother's funeral and all happen handicap under Derby weight of SaturdllY that of Wal~r returnlnl' to .ore ra­ tile Ii'ish couch and alhletic (ti l'(>ctol' had applied ception Chandler and Bonham tield rather than Augje Bergamo to meet at the park about 3 o'clock. 126 pounds at Jamaica but there fo1' a 1lavy eommi~sion. he's virtually s tar tin g from since Pittsburgh is s tar tin g have been reports, denied by miliar p'01U14 III the IIIlUleld. scratch. p Braves, Giants Battle Ovel' tIeI wrekend rJeahy was ill the UI lieu 0 navy bo/U'd uf If h . . . . reac!)er Roe, a leCt - hander. l Trainer Andy Schuttinger, that NEW YORK (AP)-Bob Cole- St. Louis Browns last season, and [>roeuJ'l'll1ent hut WIL'I una\'oilabl for 'omment. e ~oes WlD, the cnbc~ WI~ Southpaw Max Lanier, who had the colt has a bad ankle. , . . . . layoff him for awhile. HIS Job IS 15 . t· d d ft· man will make his debut as a big by Luman Harris of the A's. . Iowans Need Two COllJl11ander Hal'vey Harman , athlehe du,pctor of the Pr'e-Fbght 1 to try to wI'n pennants and If he VIC ones an seven e ea s JD league manager and no fewer than In addition to Wallace, other Widener never has had a starter . Tl A . ,1943, gets the mound assignment in the Derby and his trainer, Bert se 1100, I IlaC I 110 COnJJlll'llt to mak c yest er d oy regal'(j rng )e .'Sf)Cl- can do it he deserves credit no for tbe CardinalS. five playel1s on the two teams also ' notables on hand for the opening Mullholland, has said the son oC Wins Over MinResota at d PI'ellS Ntal'Y. Local of'ficial~ apparent,ly had no infol'11lntion matter what edge he millht have. The Pirates, who finished fourth, will make their fir ·t malo" league day cel'emonies will include Sep8- Pilate definitely will not make the abont the deYelopmentR in Ohi- What was he expected ta do? have vete.ran players for every appearanCes today when the B08- tal' Alben Barkley, m<1jol'lty lead­ trip to the Downs unless he is just full three times but each time two cago. Bench the DiMaggios and the Ket- place, including sucb standouts as ton B~ayes and New York Giants er, War Manpower Commissioner open the National League season at Paul V. McNutt, onetime college right. Lucky Draw also is an eli­ For Conference Threat men were out and the side was re­ rrhe story cOrl'elatcd rumors lers and the Gordons and the Dlck- Bob Elliott at third, Vince Di­ gible from the Widener barn. eys to gtve the other team a Maggio in center and Al Lopez the Polo grounds. baseball player who subbed for tired on an easy roller. Iowa could Coleman was advanced from President Roosevelt on openln. Bel l.elch Lo~ 81M Two victories over Minnesota from a reliable local source thaJ) h ? C ance. lbehlnd the bat. Their main trou1;Jle cdach to manager of the Braves day last year, and President Wil­ Of the lon, shots, Bel Reigh is will be necessary if the University collect only four hi ts. "on of' the greatest name in is l8fk of experienced reserves a1te~ Casey Stengel resigned this lIam Hal'l'idge of the American the one most talk,ed about in these of Iowa baseball team is to remain "We will try to get in a lot of football will take over the Pre- but that's a problem also facing parts. Only $5,000 claim early in as a conference Ii tie contender outdoor work this week, if the spring. A arowd at about 20,000 is league. Flight coaching duties." Whether the Cardinals, although to some­ expected see Mayor FIorello H. his career but a juvenile winner and the Hawkeyes will play for weather will let us, perhaps some what lesser degree. to of five races, including two stakes, these here Friday and Saturday. informal practice games with the the source had meant Leahy could LaGuardia throw out the first ball Phtllies, Dodgers Meet Mrs. Tilyou Christopher's bay Last home games of tbe abbre­ Navy Seahawks. All of the play­ not be discovered as of last night. at 1:30 p. JTI. (CWT) . PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Thli colt has been coming along fine in viated 'four~garne home season, the ers are short on actual game work. Should Leahy land at the lOcal Reds Play Cuill Phillies and the Brooklyn Dodg- traininll, workinll a half-mile contests also off.r the Iowans a Pitchers like Dick rYes, Wilmer base he would be put iJlto the odd CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincin­ Senators, A's Tiff ers. open the baseball season. at througb the mud in 47 3/ 5 at Bel­ chance- to avenge the two defeats Hokanson, and Bob Gipple who position of leading men on to vic­ nati's Reds inaugllrate their third WASHINGTON (AP) _ The I S~lbe park today With .all trrm- wartime season of baseball today . mmgs of a pre-war openmg game. mont yesterday. at MinneapOlis last spring which have not appeared in a game need tory against his own school, wJ»ch Washmgto.n Senators, ,rated one of Mayor Bernard Samuel will cut them out of the race. the practice under game condi­ eked out a 14-13 ttiumph over B 0 S TON (Al")-Big league at 2:30 (CWT) before an expected the Amerrcan league s ?est throw out the fi rst ball and two Iowa now has won two of three tions," Coach Davis said. the Seahawks last year. baseball gets its 19.4 inaugwal in crowd of 27,Ooo-the equal at last pe~- nant bets, take on ~he p~lladelllhla bands will join with platoons ot Weisner Enters lel.vs games, the 7-1 1098 to Wisconsin For the second time, Iowans Candidates for the v a cat e d Boston today with the world­ year's opening day turnout. Jimmy IlES MOl NjE S (AP)-=-Billh Ath.letics, the clr~ult s poore~t SPARs and members of the coast at Madison last Frid~ spoilina the will face a rival pitcher who de­ coachiJlg posts were led by Ed champion New York Yankees fac­ Wilson's will be the jumper Kenneth Weisner of Mar­ opportunity to pUe up a n4:e lead feated the 1943 nine. At Wiscon­ McKeever, Leahy's assistant both · ing the 80ston Red Sox before an opposition. ~h~~:r ~r succ~s, m the season s guard volunteer port security f{)r~ Quette university was l!ntered yes­ of victories. sin it was Bob Eisenach and Min­ at Notre Dame and pneviausly at expected throne of 10,000 at Fen- R appeared yes t e r day tile PV'c ere. today, in a program befOl'e the game. J Henry A. Wal- Unless yesterday's cool breezes terday in the Drake relays by "Our six errors usually occurred nesota will present Gene Kelly, Bostall college. way park. weather would be kind and that e~PFesld.ent. lace, PlDch-plt~hing for Presldent grow even cooler, an estimated Coach Mel Shimek. Weisner is the just at the wrong time. Wisconsin who permitted seven hits in last Schedule revisions an the part It will he a far different Yankee Bucky Walters would pick up Ro?sevelt who IS on a southern va- 9000 will be in the stands. top collelle high jumper io indoor didn't hit the ball especially bard, yeu's 7-3 Gopher win. of both schools later in the spring which paraded to the American where Mayor \ James Garfield. competition and placed second to even it they did get ten hits off were reported to favor a continu- team, however, from the club Stewart leaves things after pik!h­ cation, WIll toss out the ball at 2 "'':-::~~~~~~~~~~=i~~ Dave Albritton, Dayton, Ohio, in ation of the Irish-Navy rivalry. league championship last season ing the bradltlonal first ball. Herb Preul, but the Badgers SOX WIN ClTY SERIES chor:es wHi be taken the recent Chicallo relays. His placed the ball just beyond the CHICA-GO (AP)-The Chicago Should he receive a commission, and then overwhelmed the St. ~'~'e ~C~'fJg ~U_~' ~ Til '" Indoor high mark is 6 feet 5 3/ 4 over then by Johnny Niggeling, ~.!,t..!! ~ __ -- infield and inside the outfield," Cubs defeated the White Sox, 7 to Leahy would have to interrupt one Louis Cardinals in the world ser­ the ~bsent "Flash" Gordon. Nick S~nator pi.tcher acquired :from the TODAY and WEDNESDA¥ inches. said Coach "Waddy" Davis. 6, in their final spring series game of the game's most successful big les. :t;:tten remains a holdover at first He said that Iowa had the bases yesterday, 'With the White Sox time coachiJlg careers. In five Calls to the service have so de­ base and Long Johnny Lindell, winning the series, three games years -three at Notre Dame and pleted the champions' ranks that W~CI opened in right field a year I tp two. two at Boston-his teams bave only throe wbo opened thll seuon ago, h

Nine Cases Reviewed In Iowa City Court Sunday, Yesterday Nine cases were reviewed in police courl Sunday and yester­ day. Fined $1 each for parking over­ time in a 15-minute zone were Mrs. George F. Kay, 6 Bella Vista place; Mrs. E. G. Gross, 622 Brooklyn Park drive; Fred Lo­ vitnisky, route 4, and C. R. Schlu­ selman, also of Iowa City. Two persons, Uno Hideo, 204 McLean street, and Haroid Smith Jr., 2224 Grand avenue, were ar­ rested on charges of speeding. HideD's fine was $10 and Smith's was $15 with an additional $5 for driving without a license. Ralph Robinson, West Branch, was fined $10 on a charge of in­ loxication, and Donald E. Nelson, 915 Fifth avenue, paid a $3 fine are playing lor falling to heed a red intersec­ today are tion light. to come CARL ANDERSOJI knew it H, Earl Benson of base- ~li.aC.N - I afternoon New D. A. v. Chaplain the kids Joe Di­ H. Earl Benson is the new chap­ rds, and lain of the third district executive "' ~nh,>rI bat.> committee of the Disabled Ameri­ Evenin~ can War Veterans. Benson was go to boys elected and installed at the Ilroup in the right meeling In the Hotel J ellerson their heads Sunday afternoon. Other officers elected were: Henry M. Prehm of Danville, com­ mander; William Tomlinson of Keokuk, senior vice commander; Evan E. Rowe of Oskaloosa, junior so many vice commander; Josiah Lyle of have to Davenpdrt, adjutant; and E. N. ,,************ P-:,.... ~~ of what Moyel's of Sperry, sergeant at 100 pounds of '4 -18 waste paper yoli arms. or wUI O1ake 60 The local group acted as hosis 75-0101. shell CLARENCE GR"'}, l'rt* 10 the veterans. The stale conven­ 0 0 n t il in e r s. My' A\.l I.lERE 15 TJ.lE SLAB­ COME, eRAD~ORD - TJ.lE tion will be held in Des Moines start e3,,:lng! NOW 1\= VOU WOULD DOOR IS CONCEA.LED June 25, 26 and 27, ...... we have BE SOKI~D- ~ERE BELOW ! days when his grand­ aJl happen t 3 o'clock. Daily Iowan Want Ads ROOMS FOR RENT CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR RENT - Rooms for girls. Doubles and singies for summer RATE CARD school. 804 Iowa Aven ue, Dial 7711. CASH RATE 10l'2~ ' FOR RENT - Single rooms lOe &leI' line per ., rent. Close in. Dial 4932. 3 coDIecutlve dan- 7c per line per _ WANTED 5 CODIecUtive d~ Ie per liDe ~ dar WANTED - Student to help in 1 month- faculty home. Practically entire 4e per llile per da;, support, room, board, tuition and -1'igUre IS word. to lIDe­ allowance. To cook lunch and KiDimum Ad-l lin. dinner for two pel'sons, beginning Au gust or September. Tryout can CLAsSIFIED DISPLAY be arranged eal'liel'. Telephone • !lOe col. Inch 5877 between 4 and 6. Or ~.OO per IIIODtII WANTED - Laundr y shirts IIc. All Want Ms Cash In Advance Flat finisll 5c pound. Dial 3762. Plnble at D&I.I,. Iowan Bull­ t.onptnJth. !lUI office da1l1 UQUl • p.m. WANTED-Plumbing and heating. Caacellationa IDIIIt lie MDId .. Larew Co. Dial 9681. before IS p.m. INSTRUCTION JIeQJaaIlble for one fDtorNet InaeriIoD ODJ7. b~CING LESSONS - ballroom, ballet tap, Dial '12'8_ MJmi BOOM AND BOARD Youde Wuriu. DIAL 4191 Brown'. Commerce Co11eat IIOLD SllLL,JUNIOR,AND iloW'll Ctty', Accredited ru.. l'l'\INT QUi ,iI1AT BL.-.cK. 'EYE! ---I CJt,.NT HA~ 'IOU Busineu School GOING ,oWDUND,AS THE EARL Est~blished 1921 , . Of' SAANKHAM, 'DISPLAYING * * * DIy Sobool NiCht Moo] 1111: HALLMARK OF A * * * "Open the Year IRDUDd" SCHIN A"- MAlLIN. DIIT.ICH, abe of the shapely underpin­ HOOOLUM" :'D RAT IT MAN * * * Dial '682 nings, now II In North Africa ro. e n~erta1n the IOldlers. Thll is what , YOUlL fv..VE iO CbN51~R.. * * * Ute G. L'a are _~ aDd bearing. (Internationlll) YOUR.. RO'(AL RANK. AND I • • If FURNlTURE MOVING (,iI\lE UP w RESTL.ING! ' . * * * ~ FEMALE HELP WANTED MAHER BROS. TRANSFER Treasurer Lists Taxes WANTED-Girl for ,en era 1 M mtlcleat J'urDltve I4DvIJII Received for March housework. Part time job next AMI. About Our school Jear. Call Mrs. T. Larew, WARDROBE SERVICE Current year ta lCes received for 215 Wolf Ave. March, according to the Johnson DIAL - 9696 - DIAL county tt'easurer, Lumir Jansa, LOST AND FOUND have been issued to the county LOST - Shaeffer pen without PROFESSIONAL DmECTORY auditor. Taxes received for the current cap. Black. On Clinton or Mar- fp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Itet. Reward. Call Iowan office. year were $532 ,216.15; delinquent taxes were $2,048.60 ; sPecial as­ I l'OR RENT-2 room apt. with pri­ ALBRECHT & KNOX sessments, . $1,679.13, and miscel­ YOU. Too, vate bath. Table top stove, elec- AttorneYI-at-LAw laneous collections, $142,693.43 tric refrigerator and automatic Phone '99' Listed as disbursements were CAN SINK U-80ATS heat. Front room' unfurnished. 110 S, Dubuque Iowa Clt7. face of warrants paid, $34 ,655.24, -.,-It 6uy ''----- Close In. Adults. Inquire 20 W. and miscellaneous pa y m en t s, Sa"~ ~,,,i_ Burllnaton. ,134,866.72. u.w,.w.r PAGE SIX THE D A I L Y lOW A N. lOW A CIT Y. lOW A TUESDA Y. APflIL 18. I~( 84 th C'onvocation Will Be Held • Iowa Union Sunday at 1:45 ZERO HOUR OF AN ENEMY NIGHT AIR RAID ON NAPLES PLANE LIKE THIS WRECKED TIRPITZ tion for vote at the next election New City Hall, will be made. Will Award Crawford summarized the major Police Station objectives of the committee as es­ tablished in January. They include 320 Degrees Asked for I. C. encouragement of airport activity and cooperation with the new air­ A suggestion to build a new City port commission; action in con­ Des Moines Bishop nection with the construction 01 Scheduled to Present hall and police station was made units for university library and at a meeting of the post-war plan­ hospital facilities; construction 01 Commencement Talk ning committee last night by O. A. a city swimming pool with funds White, chief of police. Present­ already v~ted by the local citizell$, Despite the fact that this year's ing the advantages ot a new house and creation of employment op. Convocation has shrunk from tho! for municipal officials comparable portunities and wholesome sur. usual affair in the field house to the one which houses postoffice roundings for Johnson county men with 1,100 candidates for degrees administrators OPPOSite City hall, and women returning from armed and certificates and some 7,500 Chief White urged conSideration forces and war work. spectators. to a ceremony in the of the suggesetion by the commit­ Three-fourths of a million main lounge of Iowa Union with tee. dollars, $40 per capita, Is now 320 candidates and not more than The six months' birthday of the available for projects alr,,&4I, 2,000 spectators, the actual Com­ Iowa City post-war planning com­ underway. Plans for the swim. mencement itsel[ has been held mittee was observed with a resu­ ming pool have been Idlin&", but intact for the members of the me discussion of the major ob­ contInuance in the obtainln&" 01 I class of 1944. jectives of the group, a decision materials and labor in addlUoD , pl'O Bishop J. Ralph Magee of the to wind up the recreation petitions 10 construcllon plans is beln, pili' Des Moinl!6 area of the Methodist now Circulating and several sug­ made. This project does not en· \~ church will present th~ Convoca­ gestions from the members at tau any additional taxes because clor tion address at the service Sun­ large. the sum appropriated by the day which is to begin at 1:45. Chairman L. C. Crawford dis­ voters has been approved. low l President Virgil M. Hancher will cussed the recreation petition, Post-war plans include the Im­ the confer the degrees and certificates which has been c i r cui a tin g provement of City 'park with a on upon members of the smallest through city organizations, which road leading west to Rocky Shore the spring class in more than 20 years provides Ha commission form of drive and landscaping to make to in the university's 84th com­ program under city jurisdiction to the land an asset to the commun­ h I mencement. have charge of aJI recreational ac­ ity. ter The program, which once in­ l ONE OF THE FIRST PHOTOS of Great Britain's new Fairey Barra­ tivity of the city." Another suggestion concerned '11 cluded some 15 events over a cuda, a combination of dive and torpedo bomber, now In service wIth At the February meeting- a the purchase of land leading to the lour-day period, has been reduced the Ileet air arm, is pictured here. Planes like this participated In the proposal for a referendum on City high school which was for­ but to an alumni banquet luncheon latest attack on the German battleshIp Tlrpltz which left the enemy the creatJon of such a tax-sup­ merly used by the railroad. The Spe at Currier hall Saturday noon ship baltered In its hideout at Allenfjord. Nonvay. ported prol'ram was made. The tracks were removed, and the road waf which is open to all graduates committee was headed by Mrs. continues from MorningSide drive to Hotz avenue. Improvements in Strl and the Minnesota-Iowa baseball Judge Grants Divorce Georl'e Martin. Mrs. E. W. Paul­ game at 2:30 that afternoon. Downed 4 in Day us. C. Woody Thompson and this street condition would elim­ Some alumni, particularly mem­ flARES. curtlng down out· of the -blac'k sky, illuminate the harbor of Naples as German bombers pre­ To Mrs, Jean Sidwell Newton Weller, execuUve com­ inate difficulties encountered at I~ bers of classes with numerals end­ pare tor a nIght strike. Silhouetted In the foreground Is a gun turret of a United States cruiser. quiet mittee members, submitted the Ralston creek during rainy sea­ sons. ing in 4 and 9, will return for and grImly sUent, as Its crew awaits the order to open fire. Tracers from other Allied ships In the har· Mrs. Jelln Sidwell was granted proposal. le1 class reunions, but because of bor add to the welrdnesl of the scene-the lull belore the storm of bombs and gunfire. (lnttrnational) a di vorce in district court yester­ It was decided the petition, con­ tw tra\iel conditions no special pro­ day by Judge Harold D. Evans taining from 500 to 1,000 names, -'**********11''' ~~""l'W'!""''1 from Richard Sidwell on grounds will all be handed in at the end of er motion ot Ihese reunions has COlltalners for been attempted. Features planned GO HIGH HAT WITH TEA SHOPPE of cruel and inhuman treatment. this week and submitted to the blood plasma E Miss Frontier. Days are made of are the 50th rally of the class of They were married in Des Moines, city council for its meetIng April bal June 11, 1939. paper. Your 1894 and the 25th of the 1919 24. The petition will be given con­ the The Dutcher, Ries and Dutcher sideration at two additional meet­ waste paper rea class. is needed! Tickels or admission to Con­ law firm represented Mrs. Sid­ ings, and further recommendation gle: well. concerning submission of the peti- hel vocation, limited by the capacity of the Union lounge, nrc obtain­ acrwb, I able by graduating seniors until ne~ noon, April 21.

~j l til Mrs. Ruth Madsen h e3 a Jurisdiction Case III e~ Goes Before Judge 1 The contention of R. A. stewart, superintendent of tbe Indcpend- !lee ~tate hospital, that the dis­ trict COUl·t of Johnson county docs not have jurisdictlon to try the cas·e of Mrs. Ruth Madsen was heard in district court yesterday by Judge Harold D. Evans. Mrs. J\.1l1d~en's attorney, Edward L. O'Connor, is asking a writ of hab­ ('US corpus releaSing his client from the Independence institution. Reprc~enting Stewart are the FLYING a P-47 Thunderbolt tight­ ..- Iowa attorney general, John Ran­ , BAItBARA ANN BENTON, above, of er, Lieut. Qulnce L. Brown, Jr., of k1n, and his assistant, Robert L. Brislow, Okla., shot down four Larson. They contend that the case Cheyenne. Wyo., has' been elected "Miss Frontier Days" and will German planes in one day to boost ~hotrld come before the district hls bag to 10 since bls lour of court of Buchanan county and rule as queen over the annual Frontier Days celebration, July duty In England. Brown spent 19 have