" a"flO" UALI1'IDAa MIAT!!. FAT!, a •••ta .... A. I,h.,. Z' .n' AS I~,e'j' pll nllt! In ••'lnltal,: raOCEII81D POOD8, Warme; • iii... ..,. A. " ....,h ZI ud AO Ib,.. ,b WO nil...... ,. .1,1 IUGAa, .lalDp. 81 Ibr.a,b " ,.et! rt' II •• , ,Dd ••••h, .I.m, •• ,to' '.r fl •• , ..... "n- .... ., Ibro.fb r.lI, d, I ... ; 8HOEl, Bo ... IbU. IOWA: P'alr and wIII'mer. ,1,.1." , .I.mp. ,= ADd • ' .... . 1.1I,lIallel,; OA'.O· DAILY IOWAN cle~ LINI 'l$-A ••11. ,., 'ou, ,.n ...... I .. , ••,b D ••. THE II, 18 U I rUIL OIL, "rl04 r•• , ••• fI" Ib ..., •••1 ~ ...,.,j/ h ..II., ,.... N." , .., •••••••u, ..... IIt! Iowa City's Motnlng Newspaper lrensen, $175; !lob •• 111 '"0. nrry Lemme, $tot, -,. ~====-~ UII ..... t'ID AUOCIA...... - COO AlIO~t'U ,; JIm Barnes ' nva IOWA CITY, IOWA FRIDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1944 VOLUME XLV NUMBER 64 nCleld, $50. '$~, m k======~======~==~~======~======~======~======~==~~======~. = YANKS POISE TO HURDLE INTO SAAR COAL BASIN B-29's Hit Iwo Ji.ma, Bonins;

ERS! 77th Division lands on leyte Seventh Army Court Declares Mistrial of- Yanks Destroy \I ooca. all 00- In Mass Sedition Jap .(onvoys reo By the Aasoel&ted Pretll The mass trial of 26 persons ac- ginning. Patton's Tank Corps cused of conspiring to undermine The trial had been underway morale ot the armed forces blew since April 17. O. John Rogge, the Observe Pearl Harbor Drives on Forbaeh; up yesterday. chief Pco$ecutor, had introduced By Sinking 19 Jap Nazis Falling Back Justice Jam~ M. Proctor of the more than 18,000 pages of testi­ United States di:5trict court declar- mony and 1,100 documents in an Reinforcement Vessels ed a mistrial when only one de- effort to prove the defendants con­ PARIS (AP) - United States fendant, Prescott Dennett, a for- spired among themselves and with WASHINGTON (Friday) (AP) Third army tanka yesterday mer army private, expressed a wi!- NazI officials in Germany. -Superlortre...... trlIdnq from MILES thrust to , three and a lingness fOr the trial to continue Rogge told reporters that Bid­ baNe OD S a I paD. bombed half miles from Saarbrucken, with another judge substituting die's decisIon on the future of tbe Japcm ... In.taUatloDS OD lwo in a relentless drive on the war for Chief Justice Edward C. Eicher, case probably would not be an- Jlma 1I1cmd In th. BoDlD b1cmda BAlD HITl'ING YANK troo", of the Third army havinr crosse(! the Saar rtver at Surlautern. have fan- factories of the Saar basin. who died last week. DOunced in the immediate futUre. This left the future of the case- "Only a fanatical prosecutor today. aetI out for lI'ore than 16 miles to POints beyond Merar (Indicated by larre arrow) and established a whose peril was heightened by Th. attack was carried out .;rilltboard to the rich Saar e_1 baltn. Other United States Third army troops are In Surbrucken, In- another American army on the the largest sedition trial in the would start all over again this In­ nation's history-with Attorney judicial, farcial and impossible by B-29', of Briq. Geo. H. S. ...1&1 capita" and General Patch's forces hammer northward alonr the Rhine from Huuenau. The east striking within three mil.. General Francis Biddle. He can trial," Maximilllan J. SL George, HClDMU·. 21,1 bomber com· hleb drive not only menaces straterlc Karlsruhe, but aided by thrusts over the Saar river, thr~atens to of the old Maginot line. either (1) call ott the whole thing, a defense attorney, said in a state­ ueep up the Rhine river corridor toward vital Ludwillhafen and Mains. The Uhited States Seventh mcmd. or (2) order an entirely new be- ment. Th. blq bombers n.w ap­ army en t ere d Enchenberg, proximately 150 mU.. to th. about seven miles south of Ger­ north of th.ir bases on Saipan many's Saar border where in the Marianas 10 bit at th. they were about four and a half Earthquake Strikes Steftinius Speaks for Greeks Superlorts Bag THE RE-ELECTION ot Roberl A. Jap attonqhold. Th. attack wa. . miles south of the Maginot line'S fortress town of . They also Near Jap Mainland Talt, above, Republican United th. second In as many d~ on cleared Montbronn, near Enchen­ States senator from OhIo, is being Japan... 0 u t P 0 a t a by the At a Glance- berg. contested by Cuyahoga county Superfortr.... s, Senator Protests British Units Blast 63 .Jap Planes Observers Doubt Democratic organization and CIO­ The American 77th divlaion Launch New Attacks PAC oltlciais In Cleveland, who succeuhilly landed south of As the winter offensive's first Adve~se Effects have p05ted $11,830, the sum ne­ HOP British 'Dictating' Greek Rebel Party month ended wIth 700 square 'id Ormoc. heart of the Japanese On Nip War Plants eded for a recount by the county Today's miles of Germany in allied hands, In Huge Ra board of elections. William G. resistance center on the weat I!th DubUque coast of Leyte island. Philip­ NQtionalists, Leftists the United States First army By The AMoclated Press Pickrel is the Democrat who op­ Secretary of State launched three new attacks that posed 'raft and lost the election pines. Dec. 7. Pearl Harbor an­ Fighting in Thraee; WASHINGTON (AP) - Slxty­ A violent earthquake, described Seconds Greek Right carried to the Roer river at one three Japanese planes were shot by observers as "catastrophic," for the state by 17 ,999 votes. niversary day, Gen. Douglas Iowan pOint, amid indications the Ger­ To Political Freedom Civil War Expected down or damaged today as Chlna­ struck In the Vicinity of Japan MacArthur reported today...... mans may be preparing to fall based Supertortressea fought their yesterday. third anniversary of In a dramatic race to ahore. ATHENS (AP)-British war- back almost to the Rhine for a new WASHINGTON CAP) - For way Into Manchuria and bombed Pearl Harbor. the 77th won out over an 8-29's hit Iwo Jima, BOnins, ships, planes, tanks and riflemen stand on the Cologne plain. 18-Year ·Old Soldiers the second time in three days, the 77th division lands on Leyte as an aircra1t plant at Makden and There was no direct word from enemy convoy of 13 'hips. in­ United States yesterday spoke out Yanks sink Jap reinforcement blasted at centers of Greek leftist American intruder pilots saw other mllltary objectives. the Japanese, but seismograph cluding seven destroyers. that lor politicul freedom in a Euro­ attempts. resistance around the Acropolis floodlights blazing for the second ThIs was the Superforts' biggest stations around the world recorded To Be Sent Overseas was destroyed. while on Ihe and near the Piraeus yesterday. straight night on roads and fields pean country wbere Britain has bag of enemY planes. a prolonged earthquake of terrIfic opposite side 01 Leyte Japa­ intervened . This time it was Seventh army in Enchenberg. As ancient Athens rocked again near the Edt river, five to eight On the third anniversary of intensity, conceivably centered on Replacements Needed nese paratroops landed in a futile Greece. to the roar of artillery and the mHes from the Rhine, suggestina Pearl Harbor, Tokyo also was hit the Nipponese maInland. As Tempo of Action effort to .abotale Amerij:an air­ The action, by Secretary of SteUinlus speaks for G r e e k clatter of machine guns, a Bt'iUsh that tl'\e enemy realized the Roer by bombs from two :B-29's-out Each observatory sald the trefl)­ !Ields. Sttte Stettinlus put the Unite<;l freedom ot choice of govern­ destroyer and t\yo motor launches de:fenses were about to crack and from Sajpan p r ito 8 r j.1 y on a ors were "extremely violertt." In Speeds Up Overseas Nineteen Nipponese vessels In States on record to let the Greek ment. joined the tray, the royal navy an- was building new ones farther wnther reconnaiAance mission. West Bromwlch, England, seismol­ all, constituting two convoys. people choose their own rulers re­ nouncing their guns set a fire at an back. A 20th alrforce communique said ogist J. J, Shaw saId "the whole WASHINGTON (AP) - Eigh­ were sunk by American planes teen-year-old soldiers are now prdless, in the words of Prime Earthquake strikes near Japa­ Ellis strongpolnt rtear the harbor. Enter Forbach revised rep 0 r t s showed three earth" had vibrated nearly six and naval crait otf Ormoc In de­ being sent to the battle fronts be­ MinIster Churchlll, of whether nese mainland. While Premier George papan-I Lieut. Gen. Geo~ge S. Pa\ton's Superforts were lost to enemy ac­ hours after the shock, feating enemy attempts to put re­ dreou, whose government the Brit- ThIrd army tanks m a tW? and a cau~ of "urgent military require­ they "form a government of the tion in the daylight strike into Shaw, who said the shocks were in10rcements ashore. right or left .. ish are supporting, deClared that half-mIle. advance probed lOto the Manchuria. It reported that "un­ ments," the army disclosed yes­ Japanese planes, hitting at the the Elas, armed auxiliary of the French city ,Of Forbach, and ~ept recorded at 8:48 a. m. Greenwich terday. In thus enunciating again a pol­ I observed to excellent bombing time (11:45 p. m. CWT), declared Yank amphibIous operation three icy which has already brol,lght a Atlanta Newsman EAM party, was "plunging Greece Saarbruc~en s busy fa c t 0 ~ 1 e s results" were attained in the Under Secretary of War Pat­ miles below Ormoc, sank one into civil war" and denied he was under artillery flre for the eIghth that wind tremors obscured trac­ terson said at a news conference clash with Foreign Secretal·y Eden strikes at varied targets. ing toe dIrection but said it was Uol ted States destroyer and one 01 Britain over its application to attempting t~ impose a dictator- consecu~i~e day. Smoke could be The heavily armed Superforts that the army has departed from small transport after the lanr;Ung Quells lDay Mutiny ship, the Elas themselves issued a see~ bOtlin~ up over Saarbrucken. likely they centered "in the Aleu­ Its policy of not sending men Italy, Stcttinlus used words cau­ shot down 26 enemy fighters for tians, the Kuriles, or Japan." had been effected. tiously and with very evident re­ commuolque charging that Papan- Elght mIles ,~outheast. of Saar~ certain, probably brought down under 19 years overseas for in­ Sixty-two Nipponese p I a n e s dreou had failed to punish traitors brucken:-the LIttle Pittsburgh The Swiss radio, reporting ob­ fanlry or armored force duty. He gard for the kind ot effect they Of Federal Prisoners 13 others and damaged 24, the servations at Zurich and Nurn­ were shot down-55 by Yank air­ and had kept pro-Germans in the and c~Pltal of the. Saar basin-the communique said. gave these reasons: mIght have. Exactly what effect he burg, said if the "quake took place men and 10 by naval anti-aircraft desired them to have is a point he ATLANTA CAP) - A quiet­ government servIce since the liber- 35th mfantry dlvtslon mopped up A "large task lorce" of B-29's The tempo of operations has fire-in the furious aIr battles ation two-thirds of the French City of in popuhlted regIons the conse­ been stepped up greatly. did not clarify. spoken slender man with stooped participated in the raid, the com­ quences are bound to be catastro­ over and near Leyte. Five United shoulders and kindly eyes, backed B :t· h M . G R M S b' lying on the west munique said, adding that It was a The bulk of the army is in ac­ States aircraft were lost but the In the senate, meantime, Sena­ rt IS . aJ. en. . . co t~, bank of tl'\e Saar. phic." tion, and accordingly, the need lor EUender (D., La.) protested by the bold type of his news­ whose ultimatum to the Elas to con tinua tion of the "campaign Prof. L. D. Leet of the Harvard pilots were rescued. paper's front page, yes t e r day quit the Athens area was spurned, against Japanese war production." for replacements has increased. With five other AmerIcan di­ that Britain was "dIctating" by university's seismographic station The supply or replacements force of arms the choice of leaders quelled a three-day mutiny of 25 announced in a communique that The Japanese have important said the quake area had been due visIons hammering at the inland convicts at the Atlanta federal the clearing out of embattled left­ trom the pool of men of 19 and perimeter of the Japanese Leyte in liberated Italy and Greece. He Churchill to Defend steel works and shipbuilding yards tor a major shock for some years. over has decreased because the introduced a resolution to put the prison. ists was progressing steadily, a 1- in their puppet country on the However, he added, the chances defenses, MacArthur said that on record as believi ng the though fighting had broken out percentage of inductees in that through the Ormoc maneuver senate The man was Morgan Blake, Asiatic mainland as well as many of it affecting the Japanese war age group has fallen off. formation 01 military blocs and re­ between the Elas and Greek na­ "We have seized the center of the editorial columnist for the At­ British Foreign Policy other war industries such as the ettort are relatively sl1m - not His discussion of the 18-yea r­ ,ional alliances in Europe is "in­ lanta Journal and Sunday school tionalists in Thrace. aircraft plant at Mukden. A big more than 50 to 1. In general, he Yamashita line from the rear and imical to International peace and LONDON, - (AP) -Under fire manufacturing town, Mukden has olds came shortly after he had re­ I)a ve split the enemy's forces in teacher, who carried out with asserted, a catastrophe results not ported In a weekly war review security." streamer headlines his promise to at home and abroad for British a population approaching 3,000.000. so much from a quake itsell as two." Stettlnius, in stating American Newspaper, Theater intervention in Greek and Italian that United States army casualties publicize the convicts' grievances from fires which follow it. sInce Pearl Harbor now total views on the Greek Ituation, went If they In turn 'would surrender internal affairs, Prime MInister Jap war plants might be dam­ back to Churchill's speech in the Employees SJrike Churchill'S government will de­ 474,890, an increase of 13,840 in themse1 vep and four hostages Mustangs Set Fire aged, he said, If the quake center one week. house of commons last week. He without violence. In St. Louis Area fend its foreign policy today amid Russians Approach To Railway Terminus was close to them. Otherwise, quoted Churchill as having said: The p r i son e r s, Who over­ general expectation that will ar­ damage was not likely. "Whether the Greek people form powered the four guards and' shut ST. LOUIS (AP)-Residents of gue that the ballot box--not blood­ South of Kweiyang Austrian Borderland themselves Into a monarchy or a themselves up in the prison's seg­ metropolitan St. Louis received shed--must settle political differ­ Dorsey Assault Case republic . is for theIr decision. ences -in liberated lands. American Soldiers regation building along with near­ their news and comics by radio CijUNGKING (AP)-The Jap­ LONDON (AP)-Russian troops These an!! entirely matters for ly 100 other prisoners Monday yesterday. . \ It remained unknown whether anese drive In Kweichow prov­ Churchill hlmseif, F'oreign Sec­ Face Murder Charge Dismissed by Court cleared the entire south bank of !hem." night; read Blake's story care­ Already deprived of almost half ince Is within 53 miles of the pro­ "With this statement," Stettln­ retary Anthony Eden, or both, strategic Lake Balaton on the ap- fully, listened to the columnist's of their m 0 v ie entertainment vincial capital, Kweiyang, it was LONDON (AP) - Pvt. George LOS ANGELES (AP)-Superior proaches to nearby Austria yes­ ius Ald, "I am in full agreement." persuasive voice and then sur­ would take over the house of com­ through tbe closing of 49 theaters, mons debate assignment. The slt­ dlscl08ed yesterday, as simultane- E. Smith Jr., of Pittsburgh, Pa., court dismissed yesterday felon 1.- terday, and rolled to wIthin 22 rendered the keys to the bu11ding. they were without 'two afternoon ous thrusts towards Kunming led yesterday was charged with mur­ ous assault charges against :Band- miles south of Budapest in an Attorney General Biddle in ua tion has been intensified by the papers, the Post-Dispatch and the deciara tlon by Secretary of State to belief the Japanese were imple- der and Pvt. Leonard S. Wijpac­ leader Tommy Dorsey, his piquant eight-mile encircling move up the Washington announced late yes­ Star-TImes. Edward Stettinius, placing the mentlng their long-standing mas- ha, of Detroit, Mich., with being actress-wite, Pat Dane, and their west bank of the Danube, Moscow Conadia" Troops Take terday that the 25 had been placed The two dailies did not go to United States on reCOrd in :favor of ter plan to crush China. an accessory in the fatal shooting friend, Allen Smiley, bringing to announced last night. in solitary confinements and would press for their three editlons I;le­ complete freedom of pOlitical ac­ Extent of the Japanese gains in of Sir Eric TeIchman, 60, former an end the craziest hodge-podge of Simultaneously Berlin said an­ Nazi Railway Junction be tried promptly and severely cause of a walkout of members of tion for the people of Greece. Kweichow was disclosed by an veteran :British diplomat, on the jurisprudence this city has ever other Soviet army. in a new of­ punished. the paper handlers, flymen, sheet The Yorkshire post reported that Arne lcan communique announcing grounds of his estate at Honing­ seen. fensive spurt beyond fallen Hat- ROME, - A.P,) - Canadian tro-­ straIghteners and 8 t a c k men's "Lord Halifax, :Britain's ambas­ that P-II1 Mustapgs had bombed ham, Norfolk, Sunday, Still unanswered alter eight hec- van northeast of Budapest, Itruck OfII, who captured the Adriatic city Court Grants De Mille union, local 616, AFL. sador in Washington, will have and set afire the town of Tuyun, The soldiers were charged in a tic days of bewildering, conflict- to within 19 miles 01 the Hun­ ot Ravenna two days a,o, advanc- , Radio stations KSD and KXOK, been instructed to leave Mr. Stet­ northern terminus of the Kwei- U. S. military court and will be ing testimony - counsel called garian capital, moving cloll4! to the ell .he miles northwest up the Ra- Temporary Inlunctlon owned by the papers, read the Vnius in no doubt of the unfavor­ chow-Kwangsi railway, 53 miles tried before a military tribunal. some of it perjury-was this ques- east bank of the Danube in an et­ '1enna-Ferrara highway and seiz- Against Suspension entire news Hnd editorial content able reaction)) in Brltain to his south-southeast of Kweiyang, in The announcement came from tion: who carved up screen Actor fort to seal oU the prize city. tel the Important railway junction _____ and described the comics from previous note on Britain's attitude one of a series of attaclts on ad-I headquarters of the U. S. strategiC Jon HaU's nose and cranium dur- SovIet spearheads south of the of Meuano on the Lamone river, LOS ANGELES, (AP)- Cecil proofsheets. toward Italy's Count Carlo Sforza. vancing Japanese columns. air forces in Europe. ' ing a bloody fracas last August capital were within 13 miles of It was announced yesterday. B. De Mille yesterday obtained a on the balcony of Dorsey's apart- Budapest. Berlin said. With Mezzano's capture the Na- court order temporarily restraln- • d N' A A' T ment? Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's . Illa were deprIved of one of their I log the AFL American federation Unite ahons gr.. on Ir ransport-: Otherwise, all is right with the third Ukraine army captured 110 maIn IUPPIy routes between ports of radio artists from suspendIng Dorsey world-and Smiley's too. locaiitles In western Hllnpry, alol1l the AdrIatic and their troops him for refusing to pay a $1 BS- Antonio Icaza, the 'little Panaman- striking to within oil miles of th.e defendIng northern Italy. sessment. Ian actor with patent leather hair Austrian frontier at the south­ An Allied IInnouncement !laid Suspension would bar the radIo International Conference c/o~es and muddled memory, twice-sen- western comer of Lake Balaton enem, rnlatance east of the La- lind movie producer from hIs Mon­ , ------~ tenced for illegal entry-although and to within 70 miles of the IlIOn river was "virtually at an day evenIng all' show whIch, he he said he couldn't remember Croatian capital of Zagreb. end" all the w/lY trom north of told the court, pays him $98,200 a CHICAGO (AP- - At least a cause they were uncertain of their quickly to ask that Norway retaIn Ifreedoms" - the rights of transit these brushes with the law-is in ______ltavenna to south of Faenza. year. score ot nations, Including the authority to do so and others put Ita place and permit Cuba to give and stop. It was explained pri- ja11 on suspicion of perjury. He it off until consultation with their vately that further consideration The court directed union oWe- United States, were prepared yes­ home governments, its seat to India. The conference of Newfoundland's position was told so many stories that even the SHOP~ Jals to show cause Dec. l~ wby an terday to open their skies wide for adopted a moUon accompUahing desired. prosecution t08Sed in the sponge. DAVS He Knew the Answer Injunction should not be granted. commercial air transport under an The fInal meeting bro\IJht a "I'm very happy," mumbled The radio and movie producer, agreement signed yesterday at the surprise move in which IndIa re- the exchange. Fifty-one s I, nat u rea were Tommy, wiping a big smear at placed Cuba on the council of the Another 8urprllp disclosure wal placed on the "final act" which 14 PuT~ NEW YORK, -(AP) -Char,ed who declined to contribute to a closing session of Pat's lipstick oft his mouth, IHJO ~ "eo' With drunkenness, Qustava Jens, fund to combat proposition No. cIvil avIation conference. provisional organlution estab- a reservation to the slanature of sums up the work of the 37-day £1&,. 4', • leaman, was asked by Ma­ 12, the so-called "right to work" Several others offered freedom Iished to function pending ratlli- Lord Swinton, Brilish delegation conference. Thirty-three countries 'He'll Have Time Soon IiItt.te Morris Rothenberl It he'd state constitutional amendment of the all' limited to the right to cation of a treaty which seta up !=hlef, by Which Newfoundland, signed the agreement covering the evtr been drunk before. on the Nov. 7 ballot, alleled that crOBS and make stops without dis­ a permanent world aviation body. the most important stepping stone provisional or interim organlza- SAN FRANCISCO (AP)­ "I've been drunk in every coun­ co-workers on his Monday eve­ Norway announced its intention on the north AtlanUc route, was tlon; 25 slaned the "two free­ Emperor Hlrohito hu been so irt In the world," was the reply. ning aIr show have been told they charllng or plckln& up traffic, to vacate Its place 80 that In41a not Included in the United Kln,- doms" document, and 15 signed busy with war activities the last "Whit would you do If I sus­ may not perform If the fee Is not The number of countries In could have a seat. Cuba roll dom', commitment to the "two the "five freedoms," which would three yean "he hardly has had ~ed aentenC41?" "Problbly head '?lId. . both agreements Is expected to :::;;;:;;;:~~;;;::;;::;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;.;:;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~ exchanae the rlaht of a country to time to doff his uniform to rest," for the nearell laloon." De M\Ile declared his suspensIOn increase steadl13/' since the docu­ the Japanese Domei news agency "You, "Mid Rothenbera. "are would caUle him Irreparable dam-, ments wlll remain open for 8igna­ laid yesterday in a broadcalt the mOlt truthful fellow t ever age after ellhl yeaff' building up lture at W8Ihlngton Indeflnltaly. BOND IN SIXTH,WAR ..LOAN picked up by the Federal Com­ IIItt, lent.nee suspended." an lIudlence for the prolfam, Some c1ele,atea did not 81ID bl!- ISUVA . Ttl D~tVE• I~~!:Interme

,r .- f'ftIDA Y. DECEMBER 8. 19(( ..... THB DAILY lOW Aft • IOWA CITY, Iowa' PAGE TIDUIt Square Dance Team I. ~h' "'" HPME ON LEAVE BaHalion 10A Hold Il:'lOTICts , fleanor Pownall Christmas Formals- Prof. Arnold Small To Appear Saturday to '"f>ltlo.. o. man01 1, uy lO"'.n At Women', Gym wl1l NQ'\' t T~ Head Information Made Concert Master Graduation Dance ~Y' WR~'I'l't On the Parly Line The square dancing demonstra­ Battalion IDA oC the N vy Pte­ . tion team which was chosen at ber I, 194. Rrst Next Semester -Dinner Parties Qf Coast Symphony Flight school will hold Its formal r the last meeting of the Hick Hawk graduation dance tomorrow night Eleanor Pownall. A2 of Iowa 'Word has been received that club will appear for the first time from 8:30 to 11 :30 in the maln • * * Saturday night at an open bouse City. has ben appointed student A Chi' !IUnall* *dinner * wIll be Freeport, Ill.; Yvonne Franski, Ai• ProL Arnold Small. who is on lounge of Iowa Union. • I . beld in the women's gymnasium leader chairman on the Informa­ given tonight by Delta Upsilon of BrookiDls, S. D .• and Barbara leilVe of absence from the univer­ The dance committee includes from 8 until II o'dock. tlon First central committee for the fraternity from 7 until 8:30 in Jones. Ai of Columbus Junction. sUy, has been made concert. master Lieut. and Mrs. G. S. Fencl, Ueul t«Ond semester to replace J ean Hotel Jefferson. Twenty-five cou­ Featured in the red and white of the San Diego clvic symphony. The first learn is composed of and Mrs. E. T. Johnson. Ueul ~flUSOh. A4 of Cedar Falls, who ples will attend. and chaperons color scheme will be a larlle repli­ He succeeds T06cha Seidel. Al Slater, A3 of FL Madison; Har­ (jg.) W. P. Devins, Ueut. (j.g.) ",Ill be graduated at the mid-year wJll be Dr. and Mrs. William Pet­ ca of a sonll book standing open (Professor Small is now associa­ old Swartz, AI of Iowa City; and Mrs. H. J. Ca\'an Jr.• and Convocation. Announcement of the erson. Mrs. Harriet Evans. and at one end of the room. The tune ted with the navy lOund la~rator­ Hewson Swill. G of Iowa City; Lieut. (j.g.) and Mrs. M. F. ~Inge was made yesterday by Mrs. Lida Filkins. of "Jingle Bells" will be written les at San Dle,o ari~ the family is Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Copeland, O'Leary. Idnl Herbst. A3 of Newton. on the Inside with silver notes. resJdlng at 5120 Beaumobt, La North Liberty; Evelyn Jawitz. A2 cI.IaIrman of the lecture series "Jlncle Bells" will be the theme Beside the red book will be a Jolla, CalU. of Brooklyn. N. Y.; Betty Fred­ cODIml t tee. of the Christmas formal of Alpha stuffed Santa Claus. A Christmas • • • erick, A2 of Western Springs, 111.; The Information First series and Joan Swift. pre-school In­ Farm Bureau Opens Delta Pi sorority which will be tree will dominate the other end Bere OD Lea.e o\)eiied this year with a lecture by held in the chapter house tomor- of the room. and stockings will structor. G 0 r don Gam mac k. Sept~ 28. ,Capt. and Mrs. R. W. Schmitt row night from 8 to 11 o'clock hang at the fireplace. The punch and son, Larry, ot Mont.l/omery. Fiddler for the dance is Rufus Membership Drive Among the other speakers heard with Mary Elizabeth Bell. A3 of bowl wlll be the centerpiece of Eiman; George McCrory plays the by students during the first semes­ Ala .• arrived Wednetday to spend Colfax, as chairman. the serving table, which will be banjo and Harry Kolstad the pi­ The annual drive lor member­ ter were W. Earl. Hall. Dorothy a" 15-day leave with Captain Included on the committee in wrapped like a gift box. SChmltt's father. F. H.,Scbmitt. 20 ano. Callers are Hewson Swift ship in the Johnson county Farm Lewill. Frances Farmer Wilder, , charge will be Anne Gilman. A2 Chaperones for the formal will and Prof. Ella Small of the phy­ Guy Gillette and Lieut. Col. An­ N. Van Buren street. They will Bureau was launched today as 80 of Ames; Carita Markel. A2 of be Dr. and Mrs. L. B. Higley. Dr. also visit Mrs. Schmltt:s parents. sical education department. volunteer workers began a can­ drew J. Boe. The regular Thursday Omaha. Neb.; Jean Collier. A2 of and Mrs. Kenneth McDonald and All university students, service­ )eclWtes on varJous aspects of war­ Mr. and Mrs. G. Turner. at Kel­ vass of every farmer and farm Mrs. Alta McClenahan. lerton. men, townspeople and faculty owner in the county. time. and post-war living wlJl be members are invited to attend the Iftumed Jan. 11. with the last Captain Schmitt is a surgeon at "We hope to Increase our mem­ AeUve memben 01 Alpha XI open house. Besides quare danc­ bership to 7M," Emmetl C. Gard­ ,..eaker of the year scheduled for D. A. R. to Present Delta sorority will honor the the Veterans' hospital jn Mont­ ing there will be table tennis. gomery. Both Captain . lInd Mrs. ner, coun ty extension agent, stat­ rei!. 22. No announcement has been pie d g e B with a semi-formal cards, swimming and lortune \ell­ made of speakers booked for next Schmitt are University of Iowa ed. Membership in the farm bu­ Local Compositions Christmas dance at the chapter ing. reau was 644 this year. semester. house tomorrow night from 8 graduates. Members of the Information • • • The 80 canva rs met · with until 11 o·cloc.k. Chaperones lor Gardner in the C. S. A. hall last hit committee this year. In addi­ For Music Broadcast the affair Include Mr. and Mrs. AUendi Be". Licensed to Wed tion to Miss Herbst and Miss ·Mrs. A. C. Harmon; 4 ~ S. Linn A marriage license was I ued night to make final plans for the Jack Curtis. Mr. and Mrs. Ray­ Wednesday by the clerk of district week-long campaign. Pownall. are Joan Holt, A2 of mond Schlicher. Mrs. Marjorie street, has returned' from Sioux HOME FROM FRANCE on a 3~-day leave. Capt. Madison Putnam. The original compositions of three court to Ralph Nelson, 24. and Eu­ HlIhland Park, Ill.. program chair­ Atwater and Mrs. Winifred Good­ City where she attend~ funeral son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Putnam of Oakdale. is spending his time local composers will he prese~ted genia Carlson, 21. both of Minne­ An ordinary gool gives a quart m~n ; Louise Hilfman. A3 of Bet­ s.ervices for her niece. Mrs. Stella visiting friends in and around Iowa City and Oakdale. As fljght leader on the. Daughters 01 Am;eflcan now. apolis. of milk daily. and lives ten year•. tendorf. publicity chairman; Helen of a P-47 squadron of the 9th airforce. the young captain has heen IRevolution tomorrow morrung at ~rlach. Kuttler. A3 of Davenport. hostess stationed In France since July and was based in England for eight 9 ?'cl?ck over WSUI. The program chairman; Anne Waterman. A4 of Tbe Chi 0-.. "Christmas months previous to serving on continental Europe. He reports to Los Will Include numbers by Lowell Holiday" formal dance will be Iowa City. poster chairman; and Angeles Dec. 31 for reassignment. Durham, Wendell Otey and pharles Alm Shaw. A3 of Des Moines. con­ Garland, all of whom have or are given in the chapter house to­ IICt chairman. aliiliated with the university de­ morrow night with backdrop of 118-124 South.Clinton St. Phone 9607 " partment of·music. pine and holly and evergreen pro­ Queen, Four AHendants to Be Presented viding Yuletide atmosphere. This STRUB-WAREHAM- YOUR CHRISTMAS STORE The first two numbers to bIl pre­ party for Chi Omellas and their sented on the program. written by guests will be held from 8 until University Orchestra Lowell Durham will be "Clarinet At Interfraternity Dance Tonight at 10: 15 Duet," played by Allen Sigel. A3 of 12:30. Ottumwa. and Ellen Myers, A3 of A program of Christmas music A gold interfraternity council accented with a rhinestone clip. For ThIs Week's Showing . . . We Have Just Received '0 Present Overture Cedar Rapids. and "Clarinet Quar­ will highlight the affair. and fa­ key surrounded by the Greek let­ Joanne Brown, Al of Center­ tette" played by Allen Sigal, John vors and programs will be pro­ ters of all the social fraternities ville. will be escorted by Joe Tro­ vided. Dancing wlll be included Interesting Deliveries of Beautiful New At Concert Tuesday on campus will provide the back­ Fatland. A3 of Colfax. Ellen Myers, cino. E4 of Oelwein. She has and Charlene Peura. AS of Kettle In the evenlnll's entertaillJllent. dr..op . tor the Interfraternity dance chosen a black gown with a velvet The committee tor the dance in­ THUS ... River. Minn. The overture to the opera "Russ­ which will be h.eld tonight in the bodice and full net skirt. The bod­ cludes Mary Beth Porterlield. A4 Le1\der Ian and Ludmilla" will be pre­ ffilJin lounge of Iowa Union from 9 ice features a high-necked yoke Worlts by Wendell Otey includ­ ing "Psalm 133" and "The Lady of of Holstein, social chairmlll); Glo­ tented by the universHy symphony until 12 . o'clock. Ray W,inegar's of black lace Which creates a drop­ ria Huenger. A3 of Whiting. Ind .• orchestra at the third concert of orchestra will provide music for shouldered effect. A row of white the Lambs" will be ~ung by Mil­ dred Clapp. soprano. who will he favors; Beverly Jones, A4 of Rock director 01 !he season Tuesday evening at 8 the formal party. The !lance pro­ daisies edges the yoke and a ta­ Island. Ill.. programs; Betty Sar­ o'clock in Iowa Union. The or­ grams will be black with 'a gold pered peplum. which is long in accompanied by Norma Cross of will speak the department of music. A third ten. Al of Wichita. Kap .• decora­ founda· ehestra will be under the direction interfraternity council key. back and shorter in front. tiohs. and Mary· V. Bolick; A3 of .. DANCE FROCKS AND DINNER DRESSES of Prot. Philip Greeley Clapp. selection to be sung by Mrs. Clapp in the 'A 'queen ~nd four 'attei1rJailts Ottumwa. refreshments. bead of the music department. chosen by all fraternity men.on will be "Oh Sweet Spontaneous witl be Earth.. , composed by Charles Gar- Chaperones for the evening are For the All·Important Holiday Occasions! " • Glinka was designated by Liszt campus from candidates repre­ Prof. anti Mrs. B. V. Crawford; senting each sorority will be pre­ ~\:he "prophet-patriarch" of Rus­ 'God of Our History' la~well Durham is now a gradu- Mrs. Allye SimPSOn .. housemother, Cd music. Born in the same year sented at 10: 15 p. m. and Mr. and Mrs. William A. And­ Chaperones for the party include ate student and is serving as as­ U Berlioz (1803), Glinka occupies Society Chooses Hymn erson. • position in Russian music some­ President and Mrs. Virgil M. Han­ sistant in the department of music. -that similar to that of Berlioz in cher. Prof. and Mrs. Kirk Porter, For Publication His studies in composition are under the direction of Prof. Philip A formal Chriltulas dance will nch music. When Glinka visited Prof. and Mrs. O. K. Patton and Greeley Clapp. . be held at the Law Commons to­ s in 1844. the two composers Prof. ana .Mrs. William Petersen. The hymn 'God of Our History" morrow night. Chaperones for ~ and each became an adnUrer Kay O'Connor, C4 of Iowa City, wti-itten by Praf. M: Willard Wendell Otey. who received his Ph.D. (rom the University of Iowa the affalr Include Dean and Mrs. and champion of the other's music. who is being escorted by Fred Lampe, director of the school of bon Mallett. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil The entire opera. "RussIan and Ackerson, A4 of Des Moines. chair­ religion. was one of the 13 hymns in 1939 is now a professor of musle at the California State Teachers Copeland of North Liberty. and LUdmilla," was first performed in man of the party. has chosen a chosen by the American Hymn so­ Mrs. Etbel Miller. 1842. The overture to this opera gown of deep fuchsia crepe with ciety for publication as soon as College at San Francisco. Charles Garland received his b. become a popular favorite in sequins of the same color forming the quest for tunes to the hymns Phi Beta PI medical fraternity !be symphonic concert repertory. a diamond shaped pattern from is met. ' Ph.D. this year from the University of Iowa. will entertain at a house party to­ other numbers to be heard on the V -neckline to the waist. The Prof. E. E. Harper. director of morrow night from 9 to 12 o'clock the program are "Concerto in B bodice is fitted with three-quarter Iowa Union. returned this week in the chapter house. Chaperones Inlnor for violin" (D'An1brosio) length sleeves and the skirt is from a three week trip on univer­ Westminster Group for the aUair include Mr. and lDd "Fantastic Symphony" (Ber­ straight. She will wear earrings sity husiness and reported he had Plans Sunday Vespert MflI.. Albert P. McKee of Nor t.h lioz) . Tickets will be available at and sandals of fuchsia. attended a meeting of the Hymn Liberty and Prof. and Mrs. W. W. main desk in Iowa Union be­ Mary Bob Knapp. A4 of Apple­ tile society in New York. Nov. 20. Around Music Theme Tuttle. liMing tomorrow. ton. Wis., will attend the party Professor Harper. chairman of the with Dick Yoakam, A3 of Pitts­ committee for accepting new "There's a Song in the Air" is PI Beta Phi sorority wlll enter­ burgh. Pa.• She will be attired in hymns. was the guest of honor at the theme of the 4:30 Sunday ves­ tain at a buffet dinner party Sun­ a black gown with a yoke of black a Hymn society banquet during per service of the Westminster day at 7 p. m. in the chapter Senior Nurses Dine lace forming semi-drop shoulders. his visit in New York. He submit­ fellOWShip of the Presbyterian house. Ann Rowe. A4 of Ottum­ styled with slight cap sleeves. The ted 33 of the 100 original hymns church. The program will include wa. social chairman. Is in charge remainder of the bodice is of black sent him and 13 were chosen for the singing of Christmas carols. of arrangements. ~t Hotel Jefferson velvet with an inverted basque final editing and printing. Marilyn Fontaine is chairman waist and the full skirt is of black The 13 songs will be printed in of the student program. Partici­ ,Sixty-one members of the sen­ Phi Cbl fraternity will enter­ georgette over pink taffeta. Mary booklet form and the hymn soci­ pating will be Marcia Beth Ems. tain at an Informal party tomor­ jor nursing class from the Unl­ Bob will complete her outfit with ety will make them available to Cathy Covert. Douglas Bradshaw. row night from 9 until o'clock I yersity hospital were present at 12 long black gloves and black satin be used In church hymnals. Mary Wahrer and Helen Zimmer­ at 211 Newton road. Chaperones ~ dinner Tuesday evening in the slippers. The hymn committee was re­ man. Carolyn Covert will play for the dance will be Mr. and fIlM room of Hotel Jefferson. Ta- Attending the dance with Gary appointed to begin searching for the flute. Mrs. Walter Webb and Prof. and decorations featured three 1ft Chinn, Ll of Des Moines, will be composers who may adapt old Two solos will be sung by Cath­ Mrs. Erwin Gross. doUs. one dressed as a student LaV01ll1 Gordon. Al of Barnum. music to the new hymns or com­ erine Kessler and Harold Shoe­ IIIIrse. one as a graduate nurse. She will wear a black crepe for­ pose new tunes. The committee maker. A Chrlstmu dinner will be giv­ and one as Florence Nightingale. mal skirt with a sheer white will be assisted by distinguished After vesper service there will en Monday night for actives and "fter the dinner a program was blouse. long fuli sleeves with a musicians Dr. Hugh Porter. Dr. be supper and a social hour. Lois pledges of Delta Delta Delta at 6 presented by members of the frilled cuff edged in lace and a Thompson Stone of Boston and Hatfield is in charge of the supper p. m. In the chapter house. d&8l. including Mary Lou WillI­ narrow panel edged with match­ Dr. Reginald McCall. committee. and will he assisted by .., of Flossmoor. 111.. who gave ing lace down the front. Her ac­ John Street. Elizabeth Penning­ Ib_ toast; Carol Heckman of cesories will include black sandals roth and Harry Auchter. Knoxville. Tenn.. who presented and a black velveteen headband Ibe class history. a nd Eleanor Second Semester J,ockwood of Cedar Rapids. who Cordless Iron Religious Director ..ng "White Christmas" and Begins Jan. 3 "Nllht and Day." From Cedar Falls Also presented on the program Jan. 3. 1945. at 8 a. m. the se­ Visits Faculty 'Here WII a brief skit. "Knight After cond semester of the 1944-45 aca­ \ Cprlstma8." directed I)y Jan Rod­ demic year at the University of Dr. Vernon P. Bodein, director .~ of Buffalo; a reading. "Ma­ Iowa wil lopen and continue until of religious activities at I d w a NIt 'Gets Her Mon." written and I April 21. according to official an­ State Teachers coilege at Cedar f!&ented by Marge Hirleman of nouncement. Falls. visited in Iowa City Tues­ ~rllngton. with the musical The term includes 94 days. the day through Thursday. While in IIIckllround provided by Frances regular second semester period of Iowa City he conferred with the blltel ot Corydon; a reading. the past two years. Commence­ faculty of the school of religion ·'aeflections." by Helen Van Zlle ment is scheduled for April 22. and with the Y. M. C. A.-Y. W. of Bloominllton. Ill.. and a poem. the day after the semester closes. C. A. staffs. "Bleaslnlls on Thee. Stu den t Nlfr .... written by Shirley Street­ TIle .. da,I, "\Vlatry Blat" I• .it er of. New Windsor. Ill. The class 1OlI1. written by Miss Hlrleman. Revised Bee Line Bus Schedules hli wont, 10 tak • ..,.1 Hi. obilly OOIIcluded the evening. wat. Itri'" diloo.fort to _I­ .' O!llcers of the cla88 are Mary Effective Friday, Dec. 1 5 .dve b. ~ •• 1114 .u•• che. 10 Formals are lov!ier than ever before . . , softly JfIIII Whitney. prosldent; Helen uul,bd,. ~In ZlIel secretary; Mary Leyda. e Northbound- draped fiqure defining lines aglitter with sparkling "-aurer. and Frances Buchtel, 9:30 1\. M.-Ml Vernon. Atiamosa. Wyoming, Maquoketa Be nad, for hi•• keep a hudT lOdal chairman. In charlie of the 9:30 A. M.-Montlcello. Dubuque. MadlllOn. Wis. tube o( Ro,., .t GaUet .,.",.., sequins and bright stones ... lush full' skirted tijnner Tuesday was Dorl. Owen (Via OreJho.nd Irem Anamo••. ) U, PoatU. Ia JOUr ,""ket. A8II G( North Enllllsh. The committee 3:00 P. M.-Anamosa, Maquoketa. Savanna "Iae_r '" out-of-doon "')clnll with MI.. Owen was (Via Cran.l. C.dar .apld•. ) .ta, sweeping models with touches of color that lend '0 ••oetll III Imailll., 1IeaIi .. II. ~8ed of the cIa .. otflcen. 7:15 P. M.-Mt. Vernon. Anamosa. Maquoketa., Savaana .,.,., U, •••It ...... , : " It, . charm and allure. In anyone of them treasured e Soutbbound- For bodt _ ...d wo •••• Bo,... Mary" to Give 8:3' A. M.-Wa.hlnclon. Sicoumey. Oskaloosa, KnoxvUle. a: G ....t U, Po_lei. .... 10., loveliness is yours. May we suggest early shopping. " Christmas Program 8:38 A. M.-Mt. Pleasant. Fl MadlllOn baH til. a_pled nllarlor ohapo , 2:02 P. M.-Waahlna1On. Ml Pleasant, Ft. MadlllOn. QuIne, peel, .,..,kW IIpt. Plok up a t1IIte $tudlnte of St. Mary's Catholic 2:02 P. M.-Falrfleld, Eldon, Centerville, Kansas CU, .. W_ Wa, at .., .ruj lton. l will present a Christmas (Via •.•. 'ral. 'r... W.lbla,lon. 4Ir ••' .0.... &1 •••1 Women's Sizes Junior Sizes ram SundeSO' nlllht. Dec. 17, In 7:15 P. M-Blvenlde. Washlqlon. WinfIeld, Mt. PI-.tt ~ueembly Ull. A one-act play. KITTY C"IUIU, ftlm alar. demon­ -A Candle for Chtl.t" by Daniel .trat.. . the ftrst of the hoUle­ Phone 25U for AddUional Information -' Prices Range $17.95, $25, $39.95 and Higher '" Lcn-d. S.J., will be liven by the wlv8l' poIt.war d~eam convent­ ..... boYI. John BU8hmen, Jlmlll .uc.. to make It. bow-the new UNION BUS DEPOT ..... Grtilory Brilhl and Norbert Bunka cordlesa electric Iron. The _ael are featured In the play. iron obtalnl It. heat trom tha eandlell.ht ceremony. carol automaUc·controlled wety 'balle ROGER & GALLET nil and a tableau of tM na­ and retain. I t I for conalderable ... """ AVI., .... ~alC ." It~. ~U "1Cene are alao on the pro- Uma In a lponp-llke plat, inside 1m. \M..!!!!!. _ _ (1I!,tIQ.tio/Jl!l JJ lr {( r. IOWA F.IUDAY, ;DECEMBER.a, -1-944 Iowa Sea hawks Drill on Basket Shooting; Prepare 10 Meet Minn~sota Tomorrow Night ; , BlliiY preparing rOI' 1 morrow's in basketbllil nt Lowl'cnce collese. meeting with the Gophers of Min- Saturduy night against Mlnne. nesota in Minnel\polls, Iowa'lI sota Nordly hopes to be able to Conference Mentors, Seahawk cEI'gers continued to drill \Ise Bob Baggott and Selden Smith Yesterday on baskei shooting, one more extensively. Baggott, who Propose Ndtion-Wide or iheir weakest \'Dints in Tues- tl,'ulh Carolina rosier lust se~SOIl,' Skyers. is tI rangy center who is espe. Presides C H 1 CAd 0 (AP) - BasQball 1>.1 tho ugh the pre-flighters clal}y strong on the der~nsive. • coac:hes of the Westem <;onferencll emerged with a 40-32 victory over Smith, a guard, lettered ­ in action, as the starling five urday's game with ihe Gophers {e;;siooal clubs from $ignlng co!­ played nearly the entire game. should give a . fnir indication .of CHICAGO (AP)-Major John Only replacement to break Into now the Scahawks can do !j8;rlost 11.. Griffith, 64, commissioner of leg ia t~ players until after they had completed their studies. toe lineup was Wayne Weaver, Iowa State next Wednesday in athletics lor the Western con­ 18-year-old forward who lettered Iowa City. ference, died in his office last Foll\lwingis the 1945 Big Ten night 01 what is believed to have baseball ~chedule: .been a heart attack &hQrtly aUer April 6 and 7 bei ng reelected to his office for Wisconsin at Iowa. Leads another five years at a meeting of April 13 and 14 conference- athletic officers. Illinois at Micl;ligan Iowa at IIUonls Oakland Open Field . P.resided APril 20 and 21 Major Griffith had presided at . Iowa. at ~inn'lsot.a. OAKLAND, Calil. (AP)-Byrqn the Western conference sessions Illinois at Indiana Nelson hung liP a sub-par 66 yes. yesterday afternoon and was on May 4 and 5 terday to lead the lield in the first his way to attend a meeting ot Minnesota at Michigan round of the 72-hole Oakland galt faculty representatives at the Wisconsin at Northwestern open. University club with L. W. St. Ohio at Illinois John, athletic director of Ohio Indiana at Purdue Tournament favorite and win' State and K. L. (Tug) Wilson, May U and 12 Two ulldefeated teams will be ner of the only Northwestern university athletic Purdue at Wisconsin ba\t1ing it out tonight in an eflort last Monday, the Toledo, OWo, director. Wilson and St. John Illinois at Northwestern to keep their season's record clean sharpshooter practically spt:el\d were wailing for Griffith in the May 18 and 19 when St. Mary's Ramblers travel eng led the field as he CQupled 33's lobby oC the Sherman hotel. Ohio at Northwestern to Illinois to meet St. Joseph's of for the lowest score of the day. Par for the Sequoyah course, When Grifrith failed tl> app~ar, IndianiJ. at Michigan Rock Island in a game scheduled Minnesota at Wisconsin to start at 8 o'clock. short and sUghtly on the hilly side, St. John and Wilson went to his is 35-85-70. office in the hotel where they Purdue at nlinois Four Wins found him on the floor. They May 25 and 26 The Ramblers have piled up Nelson, leading money winner PICTURED ABOVE Is the City high Little Hawks who will open tlll\ir ender, Dick Kallous, Dick Drake Don Sehr, Jim Vall Deusen, and four impressive wins this year of the year, rammed home a 20. called a fire department inhalator cbnference season tonight against McKinley of Cedar Rapids. Fr',ent Phil paily. ThiJ:d tow: Coach Wally Schwank, Bob Krall, Dean Hartz­ Northwestern at Indiana Purdue at Minnesot

With A Dally Iowan Want Ad Jre Not Chlek Time Yet But It'. TIme To , Buy..;.. Sell-- Rent _VINO the treacherous footlnr at thlt Ndt.deatr6yed railroad n over the Mosell e rlve~ . t~e.e Fr !lOll Y,0uhI.tliri wllo are now vldera tOt their tamille• . re.cU4 (09~ from the! wreked cara of Business oiPce-Baselrient, East Hill train wfilch plunged to th rlv~r whe" the bridge WU blasted by Germ ...... ThIll I. on the. Third_Arm", lJ1!.llLJ a.clen'tlon,I), PAGE &II THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA FRIDA Y. DECEMBER 8. 1844 Walter A. Kerr FIRST WACS ARRIVE IN PHILIPPINES 14 SUI Students FRENCH EX~CUTE COllABORATOR Junior Hostess Danee' Elected Chancellor Speak on Behalf .J 0 Be Held at usa Commander of Lodge Of Seal Drive Tomorrow Night

Walter A. Kerr was elected fourteen students are filling Bcrnadine Makorsky will be chancellor commander of Corinth speaking engagements with var­ chai rman oC the Junior hOliea lodge No. 24, Knights of Pythias ious civic, social, patriotic, and dance tomorrow niiht Crom 7:30,\0 at a meeting last night at the K. fraternal organizations on behall 10 :30 with the public address sys. P. hall. He succeeds John Phipps. of the Christmas seal program to tem providing the music. ~lstln. Other new officers elected are fight tuberculosis. Robert Ray, G Miss Makorosky on the central CUfton Moyer, vice - chancellor of Davenport, is chairman of the hostess committee wllJ be Charlene commander; Clarence Conklin, speakers' bureau, and Edythe Ros­ Huber, Eleanor Pari~ek, JOjIQ prelate; Dr. J . W. Figg, master of cnthal, Ai of Scarsdale, New Boehm, Nancy Campbell, Anna the exchequer; Otto A. J. Miller, York, N. Y., is secretary of the Clark, Yvonne Franzke, Florence master of finance; A. A. Miller, bureau. Langenfeld, Virginia Moran, Jean masler of work; Jesse L. Richard­ Included among the speakers Newland, Helen Oltman, Gladfl son, keeper of record and seal; Ira Parizek, Helen Joy Rankin, ~. arc: Doris Lundeen, A2 of Mar­ Lewis, inner guard; John Phipps, jory Shuttleworth, Marjory Sw ion; Mary Forslund, A2 of Sioux outer guard; Kenneth Heath, mas­ son, Corrine Synhorst, Do Falls, S. D.; John Nydegger, Ai ter at arms, and Embert Carson, Tjebben and Grace Vigen. of West Union; Raymond Miner, trustee. Leo CortimlglJa will be at' U of Donnellson; Owen Peterson, piano in the lounge throughout A3 of Parker, S. D.; Jean Collier, evening. A2 of Freeport, Ill.; Velma Mar­ Mrs. Harriet Walsq will con\lJ! Sodality Admits tin, A4 of Laurens; Marian Crews, danci ng lessons for all servicem!\1 A2 of Ft. Dodge; Edna Herbst, A3 in the gymnasium of the USO Of Newton; Jean Stamy, A3 of building from 5:15 '0 6:15 tom(l'. Sf. Patrick's Students Marion; Frances Siamis, A2 of row afternoon. Cedar Rapids; Donald Ecroyd, G Members of Pi Beta Phi sororib' Twenty-six St. Patrick's Catho­ of Kansas City, Kan.; Peggy will be the special guests .t the tt!a lic high school students were Banks, A4 of New York, N. Y., dance from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sun· I and Mary Kirby, A3 of Sioux day with the public address S)'sleal received into the Sodality of the TWO FILIPINO school-lirls, Cansaliaclon and Erlberta Amarillo, quickly make friends with a member Blessed Virgin Mary yesterday Falls, S. D. providing the music. An adventUrt of the first WAC conUnlent to arrive on Leyte Island. The WAC, T/ 4 Martha White, of Tallahassee, movie will be shown In the 1000000e at 2:15 p. m. in St. Patrick's Fla.., .models a native hat. church. at 3 p.m. and Leo Cortlmislia WIll Students who were received Boy Scout Officials be at the piano for the regular jim into the sodality: Joan Hess, Prepare for Sunday and song s€1>slon. Marlene Michel, Carmllla Schnoe­ Mrs. E. M. MacEwen villi ' be R. ,E. Neff Describes UHigh Plans University Hospital chairman of the senior hosteaes belen, Barbara Nolan, Mary Lee Court of Honor tomorrow, and Mrs. Ben SIlIJlIneII. Mathes, Mary Jane Kelly, Mar­ I garet Jones, Jean McNamara, Statewide System . . Needs Nurses Aides A second board of review for will will serve as chairman Suo· Janet Greer and Marjorie Mae Boy Scouts was held Wednesday A "RENCH COLLABORATIONIST Is pictured here as hlB execution takes day afternoon. The need (or 65 members on the evening in preparation for the place in Rennes, France. The Collaborator Is falling as the rope Snack bar hostesses this weel. Crock. Of Ambulance Service Variety Show which held him to the stake 1IIes free, sevel'ed by bulleta, and splint' Lois Sorensen, Molly Cano, Do­ nursing staff at University hospi- court of honor Sunday afternoon end are members of the West era fill the air. The photo was snapped at the illlltant bullets from a Lucas club with Mrs. Pearl C. lores Cano, James Kelsey, Ken­ tal has stressed the urgent need at 3 in the council chamber of the The state-wide system of trans­ One defense stamp will admit for more volunteer n",rses aides, city hall. At this time scouts will French firing squad hit the victim who collaborated with the Nuill. Mentzer in charge. The committee neth Rummelhart, James Dooley, porting indigent patients to and University high school students to This Is an official U. S. Signal Corps photo. (lntf!rnational) includes Mrs. Frank Carlson, Mrs. Earl Ruppenkamp, John Leonard, and efforts are now being made receive badges and awards in a from the University hospital-the a variety show asembly in the high toward as large ah enrollment as court of honor. ------Edwin H. Sider, Mrs. Ge6rgeSmltll, Merle Herdllska, Merle Schnoe~' only system of its kind in the school auditorium today. Mr. and Mrs. Everett WilUarna, Mr. belen, Vincent Dalton, Donald possible in the new class for nurs- Bob Rasley, son of C. R. Rasley, Completes Trip country-was described by Robert Fealuring tap dancing, imita­ es aides which will begin in Jan- 406 Magowan, will be named an and Mrs. George O. Stevens aild Winters, Roy Duffy, Jake Roskup, E. Neff, administrator of Univer­ Junior Group of DAR Mrs. H. B. Newcomb, 314 Sum­ Mr. and Mrs. George A. Stevens. James Peters and Perry Miller. tions and accordion numbers by uary. Eagle scout, the highest award in sity hospital, to Rotarians at their students, the show will be staged The vital need lor volunteer scouting. mil street, has returned from a Cookies lor the USO cookie l'fs weekly luncheon yesterday. by the Victory Council to stimu­ nurses aides was emphasized by The public is invited to attend To Present Program trip to Michigan. are being provided by the EIim "One or more of our 20 ambu­ late defense stamp and bond buy­ Basil O'Conner of the national the ceremony. Ladies this weekend. lances are in every county in the ing for the Sixth War Loan drive. Red Cross, who announced that' ------. ----- Freshmen fo Discuss I state on the average of three times Charles Morris will serve as local chapters throughout the At Meeting Saturday BOMB LANDS IN BE a week," NeIf stated. Each month, master of ceremonies for the pro­ country are seeking 29,691 aides an average of 20,000 patients are Electoral College gram. Katl Harsharger will play to meet immediate needs. In Iowa, Iowa City C. of C. The junior group of the Pilgrim ' transported to and from the hos­ on his accordion "Coming in on a chapter of the Daughters of the pital . . an additional 201 daytime and 47 Freshmen students wUl again Wing and a Prayer" and "March­ evening aides are needed. American Revolution will present participate in a radio ·dlscussion Before' the system 01 carrying ing Along Together." Then an imi­ Any nu.rses aide over 18 years Nominates Directors a program at a meeting of the Pil- I program tonight at 8 o'clock over patients in cars was adopted in tation of President Roosevelt and of age, who has completeQ. her grim chapter tomorrow afternoon WSUI. Under the direction of Har­ 1932, patients wcre transported by a tap dance ·will be given by 80 hours training and 150 hours Twelve members of the Iowa in thc home or Mrs. James Lons, old Nelson of the speech depart­ train; this proved to be inconven­ Norma Thornton. of hospi tal experience, is eligible City Chamber of Commerce were 521 N. Dubuque street. A board ment, tonight's program deaJs with ient for the patients and expensive The new University high school to work on a salaried basis in nominated for the board of di­ meeting will be held at 2 o'clock "The Electoral College Method ot to the hospital. swing banc\ viill be introduced at veterans' hospitals, such as Schick rectors at a meeting of the nom­ preceding the meeting, which will j Choosing the President and VJce­ "We save $75,000 a month under the assemb ly . Band members in­ hospital in Clinton. inating committee Tuesday after­ begin at 2:30. President." Students in communi­ the present system compared with clude: Bob Baird, J im Easton, Tom Anyone interested in joining the noon in Hotel Jefferson. Assistant hostesses include Mrs. cation skills, freshman course hi what transP9rtation by common Fetzer, Don Follett, Bill Hittler, new class is asked to contact Mrs. Nominees include E. J. Liech­ H. E. Moore, Mrs. Paul Shaw, Mrs. speaking and writing under Prof. carriers would cost," Neff de­ John McCarty, John Miller, Larry R. F. Wiiliams (5256) or the Red ty, A. A. Welt, Vern Bales, J. W. V. A. Pangborn, Mrs. C. E. Loghry, E. C. Mable, head of the dramatic clared. This saving is used to pro­ Murray and Jim Spear. Cross office (6933). Kirwin, Will J. Hayek, E. C. Mrs. Sherman Watson, Phyllis art department, prepared the pro­ vide more and better treatment for During the month of November, Miltner, Howard Young, I. C. Jean Myers, Mary Louise Kelley, gram. . the patients. The cost of transpor­ a total of 413!/:i hours was con­ Nickois, Earl Snyder, Henry Lin­ Alice Kelley, Mrs. Clark Caldwell, Those .taking part in the round tation comes out of lump appro­ tributed by 16 nurses aides at the der, Ray B,Ywater and L. W. Yet­ Mrs. 1. L. Orris and Mrs. C. A. priations made to the hospital by Prof. E. E. Harper table discussion are Elaine Lenny, local hospitals. At Mercy hospi­ ter. Loghry. the legislature. Al Cleveland, Ohio, chairman; To Speak at Hillel tal, 91 hours were contributed by Of this group, six' will be elect­ ot "We were able to double the Conrad Wurtz, Al of Downers Mary Michael, Mary Sheedy and ed to serve for three years. Bal­ Old Gold Theta. Rho Girls number of patients treated at the Foundation Service Grove, Ill.; Richard Antes, Al Mrs. Robert Wiley. lots will be mailed to members in An election of officers will be ot hospital because of the savings West Union; Geneva Foster, Al of good standing Monday. AJI bal­ held at a meeting of the Old Gold from using our own ambulances Prof. E. E. Harper, director of At University hospital, 322~ AtaliS$a; Estelle Fuchs, Al of lots must be returned to the Theta Rho Girls Monday at 7:30 after eight years of the new sys­ the school of fine arts, will be the hours of volunteer work was com­ Chamber of Commerce office by Brooklyn, N. Y.; Lois Black, Al of principal speaker at the service Of pIe ted by Mrs. Chester Clark, Mrs. p. m. at the Odd F'ellow hall. Ruth tem," commented the doctor. 5 p. m. Dec. 18. Preston; LeLora Zahorlc, Al of the Hillel Foundation being held Elm e r Dewey. Berta Griffith, Lammert of Waterloo, chairman Indigent patients are brought of the board of control, will be Cedar Rapids, and p'rof. John E. to the hospital according to a pre­ tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in Feme Krupp, Carolyn Long, Mrs. Briggs of the politicl\l science de­ the HJllel lounge. "The Day Alter (Everett Lindquist, Mrs. Norman present at the meeting. A social arranged s c h e d u 1 e; emergency Tennis Tournament program in charge of Mrs. L. R. partment. cases are brought by local ambu­ Tomorrow" is the subject of Pro- Meier, Mrs. Robert Neff, Mrs. fessor Harper's address. John Russ, Mary Sharpe, Mrs. Winners Named Morford and Mrs. Roy Mackey will lances which are reimbursed by be helll after the busi ness session. the hospital. State law provides Rabbi Gilbert Klaperman, spon- J. R. Walsh, Mrs. Robert WHey Prof. E. T. Peterson SOl' of the Hillel Foundation, will and Mrs. Emil Witschi. Final winners in the tennis that patients who are committed Army Officers Wives Club to the hospital by district COUl-t deliver an address at the Sunday tournament begun the first of the Explains Proposals The Army Officers' Wives club judges must be transported to and ~o~n~~!u~~!~e on "The Message Couple Granted Divorce semester are: Dorothy Henry, Al For Code Revision from the hospital at public ex­ of Des Moines; Bet tie Lew has pLanned a Christmas party for pense. Chanukah commemorates the Maggie Cox was awarded'll de­ Schmidt, A3 of Frecport, III.; Tuesday evening in the parish Prof. E. T. Peterson, acting dean "Seven of the 20 cars in our re-dedication of the Temple in 175 cree of divorce in district court Marilyn Schrimper, A4 of Cedar house of the Trihity Episcopal of the college of education, ex­ fleet have traveled more than B.C. after Palestine was liberated yesterday from her h usb and, Rapids and Julianne Freund, A2 church. Thc event will begin with plained the proposed revision of 400,000 miles," he told the Rotar­ from foreign domination by Judah Arleigh Cox, on charges of deser­ of Cedar Rapids. a dinner at 6:30 p. m. and is open to army officers' wives reoiding in the Iowa school code commission ians. The cars are kept in the best the Maccabee. During this eight­ tiOn . Because of bad weather the to members of Lions club at their day holiday, prayers and services The couple 'was married in Iowa tournament will not be completed. the city. WUCKAGE AND DEATH caused by a Nazj-Y·2 bomb In BeJtillli of mechanical condition at all The committee in charge of the noon meeting yesterday. times and are serviced completely are offered in commemoration. City, Feb I, 1910, and separated in Is pictured above. The bodies or victims are afloat In water (1'01/ August 1936. arrair includes Mr·s. F ran c e s burst water mains. A padre stands by to admlnlsler last rltN ., "Public schools are our most every night at a garage. Christiansen, Mrs. Thomas Don­ important public service," accord­ 'Because we transport so many Play to Be Given rescue workers try to save lIle lIvu of 8'ome or those wounded by Inelly , and Mrs. Ol'rie A. Couch Jr. the terror weapon.; (lnlunalionlll SOlJnd,botDj ing to Professor Peterson. Two patients we are able to arrange Mrs. Charles Anciaux Reservations may be made by call- years ago an attempt was made to trips to and from Iowa City in Communion Vessels At Junior High Tonight Elected Head of Royal "The Five Little Peppers" ing Mrs. Christiansen (5164) not completely revise the school code, straight lines so that mileage and To Be Blessed Sunday later than tomorrow noon. he said, but the bill was subject­ expenses are reduced," he added. Neighbors of America (Rosemary G. Musil), a three­ act-play, will be presented in ed to more than one hundred Expenses have been even :fur­ . At Episcopal Church Women's Relief Corps the junior high school tonigh t am~ndments, and wasn't passed. ther reduced during the war by Mrs. Charles Anciaux was elect­ A new set of Communion The Women's Relief Corps will Today a series of 20 isolated and complying with the 35 miles an ed oracle of the Royal Neighbors vessels will be blessed by the at 8 o'clock. hold a potluck luncheon in the independent bills which deal with hour speed law and other wartime of America ab a business mceting Rev. Fred W. Putnam at the Under the direction of Mar­ Community building Tuesday at the most pressing problems of the regulatrons," Neff explained. Wednesday night in the K. of P. 10:45 a. m. service at the Trin­ ian Petrie with Helen Bochen­ noon. Members are asked to brlng school code will be cODiidered by hall. ity Episcopal church Sunday. tbien as prompter, the play wlll table service, sandwiches, and a the state legislature, he said. The Communioh vesselS, a feature a cast of 15 junior high covered dish. During the business Divorce Granted Other oWcers named were Mrs. school stUdents. These bills are concerned in part Pearle E. Sweet was granted a Edward Oldis, vice-oracle; Mrs. chalice and paten, were recent­ meeting to follow the luncheon, an with state administration, election decree of divorce from Caleb Hugh B. Wright, chancellor; Mrs. ly presen ted to Trinity church election of officers will be held. ot a county board of education, Sweet in district court Wednesday. George A. Stevens, recorder; Mrs. by Trinity Altar guild. The transportation for pupils in rural She charged him with cruel' and Frank Patterson, receiver; Mrs. gift was made possible in part areas and teachers' qualifications. inhuman treatment. Joseph Bleeker, marshal; Mrs. by contrlbu tions made to the Altar guild during the past She was awarded custody 01 Henry Fuhrmeister, inside senti­ r hi" W e ~ k' & 0 L D MIL L· S pee i a I ••• their daughter, Verlee Sweet, 15. nel; Mrs. E,Lllalia Reid, outside year in Illemory of Arthur J . Students to Present The couple was married in Iowa sentinel; Mrs. Margaret McCabe, Cox, former vestryman. City, July 3, 1921. manager; Mrs. o. E. Carroll, past .I------~------' C~ildren/l Recital I oracle; Mrs. Ed Mora, custodian, The world's second largest des­ and Mrs. Fannie Messner, install- Seventeen music students will be ert is Australian's "Dead Heart." ing officer. presented in I children's recital to­ To the People morrow at 10:30 a. m. in North YOUR electric iron isn't a8 youn, all it of ~hls Community mUlic hall. used to be. If it is to continue lIerv­ The proaram includes Joan Mar­ "Sad mUll personal belongings are strewn a II over these bitter ing faithfully until new ones are alain tin, plano; Joan Tompkill3, plano, sands." Thus wrote Ernie Pyle Vlrllnia Coder, piano; Randan White is right! from a beachhead in Normandy, available, you'll have to take extra pre­ Bolt, flute; Kitty Korns, piano; Joe More than 2,· cautions in 11:15 use and care. And that' • Winter, piano; Alan Moore, piano; • An Arrow White Shirt is 000 bundles of these belongings, true of your other appliances 8S wen. Annetle Trachsel, flute; Lynn Cul­ right with your plaid spom carefully collect.­ len, piano; Agnes Kerr, plano; jacket ••• your chaJk •• uipe ed and packed by Phyllis Fordyce, clarinet; Bethany the armed forces. M In In! suit ••• or anything else TOU are sent monthly Get inlo the holiday spit'it Miller, piano; Bill Lierle, piino; want to match it up wIth! from a Kansas • • • and serve Old Mill's Cay lioliday rn Caring for Appliance.: James Andrews, flute; Clarence City depot to novel ice cream dessert with Updegraff, piano; Charles Keislar, And besides being venatile, , homes through· Be eareful not to drOll .r baor ,our lroll clarinet and Barbara Coder, plano. Arrow Whites Ire out America. the gay Christmas Tree Cen­ lee Cream * _r an, other appllanee. That's the cur· rugged. 'lb. fabrics ter. Rich, creamy, vanilla rent price of vic. With .'or. leavlnl lronlnl boar' til anlwer Awarded BroIIIe Star are pr""t,. for tory over ene­ ice cream surrounds a tree * mie" who forced this war upon center Of refreshing mint phone or doorbell, illwconnee& the Irolt. First Lieut. David C. DunCln, longer war. San­ you. Sometimes it is a comb, a 7'''ee Center. Ion of Mrs. Edith M. Duncan. 125 forized label melos sherbert. Buy a package to­ * Do not lubmerle an eleetrleal appUane. pocketbook or pictures of loved In water. Golfrlew, hal been awarded the shrinkage less than ones. These "souvenirs" are en· dayl The family will love 170 "/nl Bronze ltar for heroic achieve­ veloped with heartache. and this festive desert . Pk,. 340 QUlrl .even 1%. tl.24 up. drenched with tears. p,,~. * Alw.,. Irup plul-nol the eord-when ment In action in Italy. How lon, thie tragic depOt dlacOllJlectlq an aPlllanee. I Lieutenant Duncan I. ,ervin, stays in businesl is up to you. ope .. 10 0\. M. to t P. M. , You have the power to cut tile * 011 rtrulartr where neetIN'" aooorlll· with Lieut. Gen. Mark W. Clark', lime of war. Few prisoners have Inl to manuracturer', InatMlotionl. Fifth alTll1 In the 387th InfantrY been t. ken by eltller side in tile reliment of the 811th· "CUIter" Pacific war. It Ls kill or be kUled. division. Every second prolongs the elaughter. Every extra $100 War Bond In the Sixth War Loan To let a Jlatural wavy effect helps to shorten the ft,hting. Can 10WA·ILLIIOIS liS you do Ie.. than to lend your for a lAA' bob braid, alllhUy money for .peedy vfctory? AID ELEDTRII. 10. dampen treaHI and then bl'Ulh THE EDITOR. aut dter an l)our aqd a balf.