1943 -:::: I I ges I Ration Calendar Warmer A, 0 and C blue Ila'Dpl uplre ~I.r.h 31: ors 11'( tL 01/, .0UpOII expire. April II, OOI'I'EI u.pon 28 •• plr.. April ,11 IOWA: ODIewbat 'warm!'r 111 01\8 "A" •• "~ ••• ~ .. pi,. MIY t i l cuteI'D perilOD toclay IIh IItJOAB ".pOD 11 •• ,.... May III: THE DAILY IOWAN er 8HOES .oupon 17 ..plr.. J.D. U, Iowa City's Morning Newspaper dlmlnl.bl~ wbuIs. Idame reading fIVE CENTS 'lUI ASSOCIATED PRUI IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1943 VOLUME X1llI NUMBER 152 'I rlldio IIY, d(!.. I shoUld Ilthel'e(1
only in e's oWn no goOd r;t lady u.s ., British" Flan~ing Movements Peril l5S Pt'C. IS meet.
d that t it may e might Ie shall ives ranspOl't Axis Trqops, as Mareth Li"ne 9 Way II forces IeI' Ilide greedy, BOUNDARIES LOOM ALREADY AS POST-WAR HEADACHE I rescue ~~v-'---l Soviets Stabilize Lines South nent, 10 Appalachian (oal Operators Urge Immediate nd that he four Of Kharkoy With Nazis Shifting ull thal Submission of Wage Dispute to Labor Board sUpporl ~ Atlan· ve that Advance to Area West of Kursk :nntalize Accept President's Request for Continued Austrian Unit Trains eh peo. B, BICUAIlD McltlURR Y nce nor 110 laird Pr War Editor lecesslty Bituminous ,Production During Settlement At Camp in Indiana the mo Til British hroke the IIlareth line at i llIlchor aIter 're can. NEW YORK (AP) - Soutlicl'I1 Appalarhian soft coal oPol'at'1 3 Brothers of Royal out!lanking it from th real' and th Va Iy JIl ul d axi arm,' \\'8 in th!' p ri! of double enlrapml'nt I t night by till' Eighth d based 01'S re~tel'day uI'ged immediate submisr,ion of the clifl'erenccs be, family of Hapsburgs rinciples tw~ell Appalachian area operators and the Ullited !\filiI' Workel's lIrm~' Ilda ·!tlll 'ut that hndwun~ ar und th lin t th plain " of AlIICI'ica to the WIU' labol' board" for heat'ing alld final deter. Serving as Privates Ileal' Unb" 6l1d tlt(' American 'ho captured :\[0 no y and mjnotion . " piling d on to" it hin :n mile of tb a. Acceptiug PI'~ ' idel1t Roo, cvell's proposals 1'01' cuntillued bitlUJI, CAMP ATTERBURY, Ind. (AP) 'fh thick COl'lification gave wily n r Znrat. 'ix mil north t of town . 1art·tll. and llontgolllrry's 'iup<'l'b d ert \' rs illous ('oal pt'oduction clUJ'iug !lIe scttlement of the CIIl'I'ent dis, -The Austrian battalion, organ the of CiM. t· crnn. werll pOlll'ing thl'lIugh tht j(llp 11'1\ IIrd lall(.> , 22 mil away. )Jutc, the southem opel.'atol'S uuded in !L statemellt that "the issue8 ized as a United States army unit in hi"h hopI'S of catching l\Ja~bol Bl"dn Romrnpi nd chopping ng at tJli,.; coufel'ollee cannot be composed by the pl'OCC'S of co llect· in December at the urging of i\'e blll'gain in g. " hi armored fore 10 bit in a "rl'st buttle of Ll h'uction. Archduke Otto, is getting the ~\ II ~tl'l'l t i~h VI' \)OllliJ, eslab Another ullion spokesman said Ii. h d a brid,c.hcad 1,000 yard. Atte;"pts to Sidestep Vacancie~ in the battalion l'snks President Roo evell, had been = there probably would be an an are being lilled by volunteers who brought Into the d bale and there deep, I)pllllcement today, howevcr. 2nd Supreme Court - trunsier from other army units. had been discussion ot the Politlcol Ytl dr. pit tit dim ult or Reversal of Charges 42 Pereent Jewish th OP raUon, .111 d uaJU The religious make-up of the aspirations of . nat01'l who did were l't')1ort d to be lI,hL Truman Committee battalion at present is 46 percent WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- not vote. In other lale war d velopmenUJ, Catholic, 8 percent Protestant and Th s nate's action has U1C elI ct the Russians reported the repulie Subpoenas Lewil ernment sought to bulwark its 42 percent Jewish, most of the of killine such a proposal for the of Gennan (orces that had driven WASHINGTON (AP) - Refus· charges against George Sylvestcr latter group being refugees from E current session inee the hous aealn t the Moscow - ryan. k ing to take a "maybe" answer Viereck o( New York yesterday the Nazi regime instituted in lheir native country. will not eel the upper chamber's ralLI'oad north or Zhlzdra, and from John L. Lewis, the senate's with a new indictment designed to ETERNAL QUESTION of settling Illtermdional boundaries already Is being ral cd lollowlnr RuSsian dec allied headqUtll'iers In Au tralla Lieut. Col. Conrad believes larations that tlle U. S, S. R. expects to retain tho e territoriI' which It took artl'r Germany's occupa· Truman committee issued a sub- avoid another supreme court 1'e- tbere has been ,a lot of mlsin- bill and there Is no such measure told of powerful r id on Rabaul, tton of Poland in 1939. These Include Latvia, Lithuania. E tonia. Be larable. and part of Paland. The pending in. the hou • in New Britain, in whirh 1i4 to.u poena yesterday to make sure that versal such as freed the alleged 10rmation given thc public con maps above show tlle boundaries that exl ted before 1914, after 811"111nl' of Ute Versaille 'realy and Ihe United Mine Workel's presi- pro-German propagandist three ceming his group. He said some The Increase would have become of bombs wel' hurtled down upon Axis-Russian boundaries that exlsl.ed before axis invasion of Ru sla in 1941. effective Jan. J, 1945, aftcr th conc nlrailon o( 250 en my dent appears Fl'iday to tcstify weeks ago after he had served a of it may spriJJg from letters . il written by newcomers on the day expiration ot Gov. Bourke B. plane5 at aIrdromes there. about strikes, Will' production, in- year In ja' . Hiekenloopel"s term. The Russians said they killed The new indictment is substanti- they arrive. [Jalion and jurisdictional disputes. ally the same as the one on which "Some of the new arrivals," he Ten senators were recorded as 7,000 Nazis in the flehUn, north The committee's unusual exer- Viereck was convicted a year agD, said, "think they are coming to Fake Steel Tests A~knowledged Allies Bo~b 250 Jap absent or not votiJ'lg. of ZMzdro, and told of capturing cise of its legal powers came in but is more specific in allegations some form o( concenl1'ation camp Som enator'll who had b en in mol' I~alitie in thclr surge t~ for Austrians, When they are here the chamber on other roll ClIlls ward molcnsk, The Soviets w re lhe wake of this correspondence: th at h e used members of Congress .. III' . .( . Planes, Airdromes for a few days they find out dil- were reported to have bcen in the nearini Yarlsevo, only 32 mUes l, The committee's eounsel I n behalf of Nazi propaganda. , ( The indictment is in six counts ferently,' By . arnegle- Inols ompany In Heavy Rabaul Raid cloakroom or a short di lance out- northeast of Smolensk asked Lewis to appear Friday. each carrying a maximum penalty The battalion is not attached to side the chamber enlranc6 durin, Th German mar5hol struck In the balloting. Sevel'a l, however, ac- fury at AmeriClln detachments six 2, LeWlS' rep I'10 d I1 I S New Y01' k 01 two years in prison and $1,000 any army division. WASHINGTON (AP) B f negotiations with coal operators fine. Three counts allege failure - e ore time commission and lend-lease ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN tually were not In the statehouse miles southeast of EI GueLar In might interfcre. by Viereck to disclose that he was a senate investigating committee, was not known to the "higher AUSTRALIA, Wednesday (AP)-, aLL day, having b en excused lor c e n t l' a 1 Tunisia. Lieut.-Gen. 3. The committee's counsel, an agent or the German forcign CITIZENS' DEFENSE officers und employes of the managcment," and declared he in- FJrty-iour ton of bomb have businc' reasona. Geor, S. Potion's Americans Hugh Fulton, l'eplied that Lewis office, and three counts charge that Ca1'Degie~Illjnols Steel corporation tended to "clcar it up" as quickly been dropped by allied plane on Senator Faul ob-erved after th (ought witb the am d termina had been given llI11ple nlillice to be he failed to disclose fully his ac- CORPS readily acknowledged yesterday as possible. R.ubauJ, New Britain, the high roll coli: "We migh say this Willi lion and eag rne a. the British l' on hand and "the committee ex- tivilies on behalf of II foreign prin- that tests hud been laked on steel While Perry shook his head in cOI1,lU'lllud announced today, a cloakroom deleo " and Ui wn no sIgn thst they pects you Lo do so and desired cipal. Tomorl'ow, 7:30 p. m.-Civll turned out by its [l'vin (Pa.) plant disagl'eement, Chairman' Truman It was the third heaviest raid Before linal action on the main were yleldin, un iDl'h. conlirmation by ['etum mall," The indictment said Viereck ail' patrol wllL aUend class on to fill WUI' orders, but steadfastly (D-Mo.) told him, - howevel', that ever loosed upon that Japanese bill, the senale voted down a pro- Another Patlon ('01W1U1 slightly 14. Lewis sald he could not be- "wrote, edited, prepared and re- first aid in room 109, dental denied there was any motive ex- he considered it "just p I a i n base at the northern tip of New posal by Ross Mowry (R., Newton) north ronquer d Maknassy and. Heve Chairman Truman (D-Mo.) vised speeclies, public addresses, building. eept patl'iotism-a desire to get on crookcdness and cheating on the Britain, some 500 milcs northeast to make the top alary $10,000 in- drove into the hleh ,round to the or his colleagues on the senate books, pamphlets and other matter, LEARN with the war effort. gov.mment." o( the aUied base of Port Moresby, stead of $12,000. east in tI Ihru t at Meuouna, 2: commJttee investigating the war including speeches to be delivered" J . ' Lestel' Perry, white haired Later B. F. Fairless, president of New Guinea, mlle across lhe lux~ll'iant' flat coastal pJaln which now appears Pl'ogrBm had au.thorized either by members ot Congress and suP- , N~1i :R~~~ ~~Nl~G president of the corporation, testi- the United States Steel corporation Tbe attack was aimed at 250 "the perernntol'y lone or studied plied them material .fur the Con- fled that the "regrettable failure" (Carnegie-Illinois is a subsidiary) planes on uil'd1'Omes in the area to be Rommel', only avenue or .,... UNANNOUNCED BLACKOUT t d hId b "I k d" escope. Iack of courtesy due a willing wit- gl'~ional Record and distribution I to carry out testing procedures on asser e e 1a een as s 10C e of which a substantial proportion I Keokuk Firm The BrUI II Flrs~ IlI'IIl3' in the ness." I under congressional frank. .L....:------~ steel plates fOl' the navy, mal'i- as the committee by the revela- was believed destroyed or dam ______tions, and added "wc are going to aged. north Joined III tbe ,uenl get the facts-let the chips fall The presence oC so many plalles mel b reupturiftl Nel.. S .... where they may." was noted at Lakllnni, Vunakanau tloo, 4' mil" from Skene. I and &popo airdromes by allied Refuses Steam The spectacular Aflican cam He assetted that on the basJs 01 testiniony he had beard, however, reconnai.ssance planes, Tuesday paign almo t obscured the ulti it apparently "stopped at the chief night in the face 01 heavy anti mately mOTC important batUes on , an the Rus'iun iron I. There the Red .CO I 'Ruml Plan search~ Pros of aircraft opposition and d ns metallurgist." For WPB Planl army Willi bearuli down on Smol· The laUer is William F. Mc light barrages, heavy bombers at ensk from thrcc dlrecUonll. ita WASHINGTON (AP) - On the take it right out of the pay enve- say, the argument 01 heavier tax come but pay taxes on only one Garrity, who with others ot his tacked in coordinated acllon. department were among the wit "Fifty-lour tons of bombs rang neare t spearhead reported ~8 eve of wbat voteran congresslllen lope or paycheck, burdens on the mass of people .falls year, opponents argue. WASHINGTON (AP)-Scnalor mil away. nesses. McGarrity said the tests ing from 2,OOO-pounders to frag lay JDay be one 01 hlltory's great There are only two possible ways flat. Government expenditures are at Gillette (Dem., la.) said la t night The Ru ian hnes east and till battles, individual representa- 01 getting 011 such a pay-as·you- 3. 'Representatlve Carlson (R were the l'esponsibUJty of his de men til t ion incendiarics were a new higb level and further in- dropped on thc runways, dispers dilficullies have arisen o~'er the southeast of Kbarkov appeared lives are studying tile al'guments go basis immediately: One is 'Lor Kan.), In his latest bill lncor mu·tment. Othel' company em wal' production board' plans lor to hove been stabilized, and the lor and against tile Ruml skip-a- everyone Lo pay both 1942 lind poroling the Rum! plan, provides creases are sc heduled, The Ruml ployees readily declared that lake al areas, InstulLations, search lights ond gun positions for oDe operation of the KeOkuk grain al- Germans :>aid they were ahiltlng Yeat' tax plan. 1943 taxes this year-and Ruml special protection against "wind- plan would cancel 10 biilion dol tests were made but were vague eohol plant, primarily on Lhe ques- their weight Carlher north and They'll bcgin debating the pay- SupPoI'te1'S rule this out as an im- falls" for big taxpayers: I! a per- as to whose idea this was. if, H. and a half hours," reported the lars of tax liabili ty already im noon communique from General tion of the availability of steam. makini gains west of Kursk. the u·you·gO Idea Thursday. possible burden except for the son with an income over ,20,000 McConnell, assistant to McGarrity, Ttle senator said the HUbinger Russian-held base 120 miles north Both sides Bre alll'et..'d on the ad- wealthy; the other is to "lorglve" had less income in 1943 than 1942, posed-in the face of President said the decision was arrived at Douglas MacArthur's headquar 1 ters." company of Keokuk, a com prod- oi Kharkov, ,viSllbllity of collecting at least part the 1942 tax. collect the tax fol' his 1943 tax would be forl/iven Roosevelt's budget message asking "by mutual agreement" among the ucts manufacturing firm, has BodIes Liller Fiel. 'of income taxes out or pay e~ve- 1943 (und coming yelll's) out of (instead of 1942) and hc'd pay on till increase in revenues from taxes inspection starf. steam but is -contending it should The most violent battie was in 'lopes, by withholding 20 pereent of thc current year's income. the bigger income. If a taxpayer's or compulsory saving by 16 cil Truman commented that MeGa 1' Flood Crest of Ohio operate tht! plan\. the Zhizdra sector, 32 milea ,'Nalles and salaries above exemp- In reply to opposition al.lega- 1942 and 1943 incomes exceeded lions in the coming fiscal year. l'ity might be held "crimi nally The WPB, Gillette said, is stick- northea t of the German bastion Ilolll, starting July 1. , lions that (l) the Ruml plan would his 1941 income by more than $50,- FOI'giveness of 1942 taxes would liable" fOl' passing defective plates River 475 Mil .. Long ing to orIginal plans for the con- of Bryansk and 130 miles lOuth· Here al'e tile main points ralsed cost the treasuJ'y 10 billion dol- 000, the wartime "abnormal" por- distribute benefits in inverse ratio through his department. sumers cooperative association of east of Smolensk, and there the In the debate so far: la1'5; (2) would require heavier tion of the forgiveness year would to need, the hou~e ways and means At the opening of yesterday's CINCINNATI (AP)-The Ohio North Kansas City, Mo., to opera~ Russians declared the battlefield 'Dr Ute Ruml plar.- tax burdens on the mass of peo- be taxed by 25 percent of any comp1ittee's majority report said, committee hearing, it was dis river's second flood of the year, the plant. was littered with 6,000 Oerman Under prescntlaw, the amount a pIe; (3) would let war millionaires amount up to $500,000, and 50 per 10 cancellation would bestow the closed that. the committee, in a mino!' though It was, produced a The senator received and made dead, lelled in three days of em· JerIon pays In Income taxes this escape taxal1ol1, and (i) would cent above that figure. I/realest benefit on those best able secl'et hearing Monday, had re condition yesterday which veteran pubUc copies of telegrams ex· bittered fighting in which Nul l'ear depends on what he made .benefit big taxpayers as against 4. The RumUtes say their plan to make economic sacrllices. ceived testimony that faking ot river men said they hadn't seen in changed between John W. Boyer, counter-attacks failed to bud,e lut yeoI'. II a pel'son' income those with small incomes, Rum! would cancel the 1942 tax ]lability It the 1942 tax liability is wiped tests had been a 10ng·Ume prac a liletime-a practical crest 476 chief of the WPB alcohol section, the Russian lines. drop. 8harply (when he goes into plan supporters say this: on a fair basis for all brackets of out, the committee majority report tice. miles Jong. and Roy L. Krueger, vlce-presi· The RUlllians were galn1oJ, too, the army, for instance) 01' stops 1. The Ruml plan would increasel taxpayers in the same manner that asserts, at least 60 taxpayers with A flood crest normally may ex- dent of the Hubinger company. in the Kuban south ot RoItov tIIUrebr (unemployment, retirc- eUI'(ent treasury revenue rather, the progressively . hil/ber rate riUllion-dollar incomes each will Meat Sale. Allowed tend 20 to 50 miles, but a perfect Boyer wired Krueger that he where the tel'l'llin wa hardeninl lllent, dlBabUlty, or death), the tax than decrease it, because it would schedule ot the income tax as receive a benefit of at least $854,- WASHINGTON CAP) - The balance of intake and out1low ot had received a copy of the Hub- after the worst spring in memor1. Is left hanllnl ovel' JlIm or brtne in paYqJentB this year on the' sesses it. _t j 000. At one stroke, it holds, the oUice of price administration re water yesterday JDOrDlnI maiD- Inger company oUici.aJ's telegram Only artillery exchanl/es were re· ~ family. basls of 1943 income rather than - Ruml plan would add to their affirmed yesterday that meats tained (he river slace statiOnary to the defense plant corporation ported in the Chuguev area 22 . So, the Rumlltee ny, the thin, 1942 income. Ala.... tile Rami piaa- wealth more than they could gain may be sold freely until meat from darn 32, near Vanceburg, Ky., "refusing steam supplies to our miles southeast of Kharkov. Nul to do II to collect taxes out of in- 2, If the treasury's revenue is Under the Ruml pian, the tax- in six years it they saved every rationing beelns next Monday to Louisville, 225 m.Uea down- proposed alcohol plant unless you drives eut of BeIgorod were de- l'OiIIe when ji', belni earJ1ed-aDd increased in this way, RumUtcs payer would get two years of in- penny of their income alter taxes. morninc. st.l'e!lIJL be allowed operator's lease." c1ared halted in their tracks. PAGE 'FWO THB DAtLY IOWAN , IOWA Ci TY , IOWA • WRDNESDAY. MARCH 24, 1943 THE DAILY IOWAN OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETrN Published every morning except Monday by News Behind the News Manager and disappointed at the ren('1 ion U]('il' resolu Representati ve PauL SWer (Mich.) Dr. Allred P. lIa.ake crawled when they decided to go Wednesday, March %4 Sa.tmday, Maroh 2~ James F. Zabel, Editor tion received. in the senaLe. They say so them- Me mber UOllse Military Aff airs Nationally Known Industrial Econ- to war against the United States 4 p. m. Vocational conference on Iowa high school and jun ior Jeanne Starr Park, Managing Editor Ive , in prh'ate. . , Committee omtyt, LectureI' and Author and the British empire. law: Address by Mary Fagan, college forensic league fina ls. The plan for 11astening a enate deelara That is the readiest interpre senate chamber, Old Capitol. 9 a. rtI. Pan-hellenic workshop, 7:3 0 p. m. "The World Today~ Entered as second class mail matter at the post tion on the subject have therefore eooled some l\ffi, SIIAF ER OPENS: I believe must be taken irom where they tation of the propaganda blast axis room 221A, Schaeffer hllll. r a d i 0 stations lecture series: "Religion and oUice at Iowa City, Iowa, under the act ot con what, not in the 'ense that those of this the United States can raise, equip, are, and both factory and farm 7:30 p. m. Iowa Mountalneen transport and supply eleven million are all'eady short of workers. loosed yeslerday World Reconstruction," by Prol. gress of March 2, 1879. partictllar el1001 of thonght intend to aban M. Willard Lampe, room 223 A club; illustrated lecture by Pa ul men in our armed forces to aclueve Ii could be done if we could have when they an Stettner; room 223, englneerin. don tbeir ideas, but certainly to tbe extcnt nounced that a Schaeffer ball victory. Although we have been at more production, per worker, per 8 p. m. University band concert, building. Subscription rates-By mail, $5 per year; by ihat a cool, calm, Unl1111'1'ird drbnle now .eems war for more than a year, we have hour; but, is Mr. Shafer ready to Tokyo con{erence carrier, 15 cents weekly, $5 per year. in prospect. had rea c h e d Iowa UniOn 9 p. m. University party, Iowa not yet made anything like a defin- risk hW political life, to save Thursda.y, March 25 Union Member ot The Associated Press itive test of the ability of America America, by opposing union limi complete I\gree • • • ment on "'crea Iowa high school and juniol' col 8 p. m. Univcrsity play: "The The AsSOCiated Press is exclusively entitled to This is specially lI'ue since the British to supply men to the armed forces tation of output? lege forensic league finals Eve of Si. Mark," University use for republication of all news dispatches and maintain necessary services of R£P, SHAFER REPLIES: Men tion of a new foreign minister, Sil' AntJwny Eden, ex world order 6:30 p. m. Annual stag supper, theatre. credited to it or not otherwise credited in tWa SU~PlY. We have .~o~ scratched the Ior the armed services must be pressed lti.s views on the subject in I'xeCll based on justice Triangle club Sunday, March 28 surface or Ame~l~a s capacity .to carefully selected. No public oliic paper and also the local news published herein. t;1 and guaranteeing 7:30 p. m. Lecture: "The Action 2:30 p. m. Town Mountaineers c session 1uith the h01(se foreign affairs produc~ the mumtions and suppbes ial's political life means anything aI/d. senaie [ol'eign relations committees. eternal world peace." of Light on Cellulose and Its Deriv club: 3-hOur hike. Meel at en ii TELEPHONES necessary to. support an expanded compared to the physical life or There may be some hidden sig atives," by Ralph E, Montonna, neering building. No one asked Eden stl'aight out i[ It(! armed scrVlce. Our g?~ernme.nt welfare of one soldier or many Editorial OUire ...... 4111 2 nilicance that escapes this obser of the University of Minnesota, liked lite Ball 1·esoI1tfion. That question cann~t perfon:n m.ost eff~clently Its soldiers. Political expediency could 6 p. m. Buliet supper, Universll1 Society Editor ...... 4193 ver but it seems most likely that sponsored by the Iowa section, was primarily i?~ the minds of mo ,~ t of the lunchon .of ~lg~tmg this war .so defeat us. Evil aggressors forced club; second nnnuallSinging school, the chief purpose of the meeting American Chemical society, and directed by Mrs. L. G. Lawyer; Business Office ...... 4191 natol'S fo hint long a~ .l~ diSSipates its e~ergles us against our will to iight They dirf'cting illquil'ies [1'om was to combat a feeling of isoll\ the graduate college; room 314, Prof. Earl E. Harper, accompanist. bolh sides of till' fence. an? ~blhhe~ .. and. the energles and compel us to have armed services chemistrY - bot any - pharmacy WEDl TEflDAY , MAR II 24, 1943 tion that may be gaining among {onday, March 29 ablhtl~s ~f ltS cItizens m mnumer- and civilian production adequate the people of Japan. building. • • • al:lle Side Issues. We cannot pr~duce to win the war. Labor unions along * • • 7:30 p. m. Iowa Mountaineers 8 p. m. University play: "The AI 0, 111i. i one of the few s('cr t Re~sions o.f a .l~rgcr and adequately eqUipped with al1 other Americans would club; movies and lecture by L. Eve of St. Mark," Univcrslly Actua.lly the mcetlng served theatre. ConcreteChristian Thoughf- any charnetcr he)d in WAAhington in recent military for~e with. Incomp.etent lose all in defeat. The necessity to emphasize the fllLed by }\fal11'i('e Feldman, visionaries who guide them, wouLd Let's loolt at facts: Officials esti- resident ambassador:', who have GENERAL NO TIC ES territor'ial aggr·uudizement. woule1 11l1ve to be Austl'ian jou1'nnli t and author, a nation of help. mate fcom 15 to 21 civilian workers been unable to visit their home stricken out and, pr(' nmabl? al o. the inter· M SIC SCIIEDULE of student. aCfairs not laler than Europe (U. S. of Enl'opr), excluding Russia But we still have the problem of are needed for every member of lands since Pearl Harbor. Wednesday, March 24-10 a. m. Sat., March 27. The examinations llational police [01' e. The peopJe of Japan must be be and Great Britain would fOl'm ihe basis of findi ng six million human beings, lhe armed forces. Normally forty to 12 M. and 3 to 5 p. m. will be given from 9 to 12 a. m, oul of whom we can make men for five million are gainfully employed ginning to realize ihat they are Thursday, March 25-10 a. m. April 2 in Macbride auditorium po -t-wnr development. • • • the ll-million man army. They (See AMERICA, page 5) (See INTERPRE1'ING, page 5) ith thiq ill mind, he would divide the While Eden saicl noITt1'11!I '~J1ccificall1J to 12 M. and 7:30 to 0:30 p. m. and those wisblng lo take them must have the application forms 1'E'mainder of ihe continent inlo seven reo 011 Ihe latfe.l' point, it i.~ th e adntinis11'(l Friday, March 26-10 a. m. to 12 M. and 3 to 5 p. m, signed and approved in order to lion's 1OOI'kinO for intcl'J1f1tion(l.liuil ional groupR: thc four peninsulas-Balkan, basis Saturday, March 27-10 a. m. to be eligible, 8eC1~rity, 1Ohole tone Scandhlavian, lberian nnn Italian; the filth alld tho of Rdrn's 12 M., 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 p. m. PROF. C. WOODY TIIOMPSON would ineiu(]E' FI'anee', Brlgium, Holland, ('01tnsell1'lIU delall was at variance witlr Sunday, March 28-4 to 6 p. m. Ornce of llldent Affairs • wii.zE'rland; the sixth, the Catholic tates of it and the entire 1'e.~oZ/Ition. 1IJlIil'lt pri. and 7 to 9 p, m. Poland, Czec]lO~lovakia, Hungary, All. tria; 111«(1'i/lI tl'ol/Td t'cgllil'(' an iT1{cl')wtional Monday, March 29-10 a. m. to ARCHERY CLUB flir Reventh (1{,,·many. I'onfcrencr 1/01(1 10 spillr IllesI' IIlld ofhcl' 32 M. and 2:30 to 4:30 p. HI. Archery club will meet Thursday problems. in the women's gymnasium at 4 • • • ON YO UR CLIMBING MOVIES o'clock to elect officers for the English 1voltld be tcse(l as a secol1d • • • Paul stettner of Chicago, for coming y ar. All members are 7(J'Il(1l1ag~ to 1111'ify (],e 'Ila tion , and all 'I'be Eden t811<, t[H'I'cfol'r, a. rcpl'C euted, merly of Austria and one of t.he urged to attend. (ll'Ollomic 11'Ol~la sectIlC'd to offer (hr. fi I'SL sip;llt of a common TODA Y'S JIIGHLIGHTS 9:45-Keeping F'it for Victory 3:35-The Frcshman Takes the o)rothers of the famous Slettncr J\uLDRED MlCllAELSON politir.al and affairs be " tm'llsa,cteit in tllis common t01lgu . The ground upon whicll opposing factionR in th(' . 10-Here's An Idea Pla1iol'm climbing team, which has many Pre ident 11~diuidllaW1l of the m01l1l languages of senate might m('('t. By .. tl·ippiIlO' the reRol\1- AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF 30:15-Yesterday's Musical Fa- 4-Melody Time notable ;J cents to its credit, wiU vorites E1I.rope wouTd, howellct', b tllai"fained tion of ii s contl'ovcl'Silll rl'atnrcs, it might br . UNIVERSITY WOMEN 4:15-Life and Work in Soviet present a program of kodachrome ADMI SION TO 10:30-The Bookshelf Russia movies to the Iowa Mountaineers PROFE ION L COLLEGJ:S Ivilbin a,l' Rfpara l(' Rtllt('.~. rewrittCJl to expl'('ss ideals whieb are common Mrs. J. Garth Johnson of Iowa io both side. As Eden expres. cd [l\em, they City will speak on "The Theater ll-Nurses to the Fore 4:30-Tea Time MclodieR March 27 at 7:30 p. m. in room All students who plan to apply J j 11 :30-Waltz Time 5-Children's Hour 223 engineering building. stett for adl'ni~sion to the next enter· • • • seemed to be aec{'plable to hoth. . 10 W?rld War ~ and II" o~ the Federated uncler a con titution embodying . b h I Amencan Assoclailon of Uruvel'- ] 3:45-Farm Flashes 5:30-Musical Moods ner will show films dealing with ing cla$S in lhe colleg of dent the gllQrantl'e of human rights, (,pntra]jzed .A teaRt1 t 1liS seems to, e a ou~ t l~ only sity Women program at 3 o'clock 12-Rl1ythm Rambles 5:45-News, The Daily IowaJ1 ~ climbing in the Devils lake region istry, law, and medicine should 12 :30-News, The Daily Iowan 110licc and military powers as weU as a com tlllng t"~t em1 be don(' :vl[h the s.ILuatlOl1 at. this afternoon. Mrs. Johnston is 6-Dinner Hour Music of Wi~., the Mississippi Palisades call at the office of the rellistm present In consonance With thc pl'lmary pur.. : chairman of the drama study 12:45-Religious News Reporter 7-Unil.ed States in the 20th neal' Savannah, m., in the Teton immediately tor application forms. mon economy and monetary system, the 1-Musical Chat:s Century, Prof. H. J. Thornton range of Wyo., and in the Longs' Completed applications should be United tat:;; of Enl'op(' would be under the po e of winning tlie war. .A. knock-down, . group of the organization. drag-out fig lit certainly WOll ld S(,l'"O no goocl 2-Victory Bulletin Board 7:30-Spol'tstime peak region of Colo. returned to lhat office as soon as control of a United Nation's council. 2:10-Recent and ContemP9rary 7:45- Music in America S. J. EBERT possible. From t.1 Ii:-; embryonic beginning might WEll' purpose. CONCERT, UNIVERSITY Music, Prof. Philip G. Clapp 8-Concert, UniverSity Band, Pre ident HARRY G. BA RNES ea. 'ly be r1('velope!l the most democratic Allother sign oC spttling dust on this sub- BAND- 3-American Association of Uni Prof. Charles B, Righter, conduc ReII' trat ject. wa the little-noticed announc('IIlent from The University band, under the nl1tiOll of th(' world, for the propo a1 lS versity Women tor A-l2, V -12 EXAMS the Whit!' llOll, e that a committee, head('<1 by direction of Prof. Charles B. fwit in design and pliable in application 3:30-News, The Dail y Iowan 9:30-The Living Jefferson ,Anyone interested in taking the TUITION ED lPTIONS tate Secretary IInll is to mect with the prcsi- Righter, wlll broadcast at 8 -Qne.ot thc best to come 011t of war-weary ql1alifying test for the army or Holders of partial tuition ex· a dent weekly on post-Will' .food, relief, and re- o'clock tonight in the main lounge navy college training programs, emptions and Laverne Noyes world blindJy Reeking a post·war panacea. of Iowa Union. The Network Highlights habilitation probl(>ms (most of which Mr. A-12 01' V-12, should obtain the scholarships who pi n to attend Wallace eem Lo have b('('n connting as ex TO P RESENT RUSSIAN 10:30-Author's Playhouse application blank trom the ollice (See BULLETIN, page 7) THE LIVING JEFFERSON- SONGS- ll-War News clusively in his bailiwick). Proi. F. C. Ensign, acting dean The best chorus of all moves 1l:05-Paul Martin and his Mu Need for Women in War- On the committee are practical men, wbo of the col lege of education, will !rom Carnegie Hall when the fa sic Peoplc arc too apt to think of WAVES, know the problem8. None i ImOWll as a politi speal~ on "Jefferson and Educa moUs Don Cossack choir of 30 1l:30-Ray Macc's Jytusic Hollywood Sights and Sounds WAACs, 8PA RS amI the )'('st mercly as good cal thcorist wbo might handle foocl, relief and tion, in the third program in the men makes one of its infrequent 1l:55- News series celebrating Thomas Jeffer IQoldng young women in uniform, not con rchabilita lion from the poLit ical rather tllan appearances on the Cresta Blanca a 1'ralistic l'reding, l'plievrng 8mI rrilabilitat-. son's bicentennial. Following Pro carnival tonight at 8: 15 via tile Blue Th e Tale of a Hollywood Producer nc ting them with problems of army size fessor Ensign's talk a dramatiza Mutual network. K 0 (1460); WENR (890) and farm labor. But if enough YOUllg wbmen ill'" standpoint. B~ ' lhis observation, I mean With Sledge-Hammer Finesse to contra t them with MI'. \Vallace'f; achi ors, tion of lhis subject by James Hen volunt('('r for, \lch sl'l'yices, the problcm of nessey, G of Iowa City, will be NBC-Red 6-Terry and lhe Pirates By ROBBIN COONS tbose who want a big army to get the war Ipd by Milo P('.rldll'. produced by the students in the WllO (1040); Wl\IAQ (67 0) 6:30-The Lone Ranger over swiftly, and t11e relaLed problem of • • • radio class under the direction of 6:45-Captain Midnight HOLLYWO D-IIere' the tale of a Pl'ortU(!.r with sledge Prof. H. Clay Harshbarger. 6-Fred Waring in P leasure 7-News, Earl Godwin farm manpower, will be mnch morc easiJy In the gr0112J are Wclles, Red .Cross hammer finesse. IIis studio want('d It certain Hrtor to play oppo ite Time 7:15-Lum and Abner olved, 'fhe ul1certainlie. about men over 38 Chairman NOI'man Davis, D,·. Isaiah Belt~' Grable in ", 'wrrt Bosir 0 'Grady" but .tlf producer want. could cea e, and they could go back to fac Bowman, of John JIopkins nnivM'sif:JJ, TODAY'S PROGRAM 6: 15-News, John Vandercook 7:30-Manhattan Story 6:30-CBribbean Nights 8-John Freedom ed another. lIe told tile . uHlio: I'll taUt to ),on1' man and scU t ory or fll rm work Myron 'l'a!Jlo!', the pt'csident's 1'6p1'esen~ 8-Morning Chapel 6:45-News, Kaltenborn 8:30-Anniversary Broadcast of b.im on the part. ' An enorrnOlll, amount of clerical work h as tative to the Vatican, Dr. Leo Pas- and 8:15-Musical Miniatures 7-Mr. and Mrs. North MetropOlitan Life Insurance Co. Th~y met at Innrh-thr prod\1('el' Elnd thr II('lol' hI' di dn 't to be done. Oil·I. can do mo t of that an d 1'olsky, special assistant to Hull. 8:3 0-N:ews, The Daily Iowan 7:30- Tommy Dorsey and Or- 9--Raymond Gram Swing want. much in eommnnirntions. Mecllanically 8:45-Keep 'Em li:ating chestra 9:15-Graeie Fields' Victory "I'v{' seen a cOl1ple oC yonr pil'tlll' ,," the p.'oou('('r b gan lJi.~ dancin • • • wh ich minded women cau do grounc1 work around 8:55- Sel'vice Report~ 8-Eddie Cantor Show 'lclling job, "and didn't like them. dicln't lil. W e mn. t adm it that our air raid drills lola C lacked the reali m of tM' J apanc. e p rfor~ the Town where's that Brazilian hat you par nlly, was Director Irvl", mances, in Tokyo and YolwlHll.na: 8:30-Milton Berle P rogram usually wear-ihe one with all Piche!. To lend a touch of realism, notices have 9- Great Moments in Music the stufr on it?" Carmen: "Well, Between them and a cast lil ck' pineapple is hard io get now.".,. Ing in "big name" but rich· ift North African Strategy- said, t he J aps al'e flying eaplured Briti h 9:30-Corliss AI'cher Program A pol 10-News, Doug Grant The OW l wants the movies' acting talent, they have turned and A merican plane Oyel' the cities. Con 38th an Ya Ilk units, forci ng Rom mel ' .Afrika 1 ~:20-News Analysis, W. L. Nazis painted blackest black, 10 out the clearest, most drarriaU No. 34 sid('ring the meager nmnber of American Korps into a twenty-mile corridor, have Shirer aelor Kurt Kreuger died several caJly absorbing sttllement of what be held p llsherl th(' enemy in to a tigh t sp ot. Only bombers left behin d by ujted ~ tales raiders, 10:30- Treasury Star P arade li mes for a scene with Humphrey this wor Is oboul. hall. T three possibl otltlets now a1' open for th(' it mu. t llave been an anemic d monotr ation. 10:45-Abe Lyman 's Band Bogarlla "Somewhere in Sahara." Hitlel' and gang woUld h.ve lhOSo .... II Nazi commanding oHic I' . But on thc other hand, maybe one Amer ican ll-News A [tel' savel'al rehear&ols, Kreuger nightmares over this plcture\ lhe orll we nt down with his arrogance they mtlst be haVing over the 1. 'L'o die f ighting for the ~Iareth positions, bomber i en ough to bring back lhe memories l..1 :15-Tommy Tucker's Band 1I101't. of th e Jimmy Doolittlc raid. fl:30- Neil Bondshu's Band changing to whining, de~pera lc country who e heroism is det'11~ FolIo, inflicting maximum ca ualt ie u po n hi s pleading and fear. Zollan Korda, -Norway. It says, In tne wat' Never theless; a de£initn poin t l'emains 12'-Press News bUslnCt!: neme i the- Eig11t h army. still the' director, complimented him! story of on~ 1r\'\8ll vllla ••, .. - we can ' t compete wi th the N ipPQnese fo1' tilth a 2, To flee swiftly up thc narrow coastal MBS "You dlea beautifu lly, When you freemen may be detl!ille4 ~ Orlan reality in air raid drills'; This is pl'dbably be cam dol' an d j Ol n bandR wi th Col.-Gtm. Jl1r WON (720) cloSQd your eyes, l(ou hadn't a C.II n not be co)1qu ~ red , . 11M \I arralllil gen,. vQli .Amim's Germans in the north. cause tbe army and nav y fliers In the Plicit.ie frieM lh the wOI'l d...... proves Its tHeme w i t H • u ' ~) 3.. To - strike at the American divisions in wn en they fini. h -wlth a Zero or a. J,IitsubisID, 5:30-0v erseas NeWs .Roundbp • • • mountlflil d rn m~ t1 c tor~ Witll The I don't Jelw e ven It reason able facsimile wltich 8:11S- Cresta Blanca C a~n i vill For all thllt, the stronl eat antl- such wealth of lm:l dent, th.t III U.S. a the Maknassy-El Ouetar r egion. , film Lh~lDd lO- BlIBketball Nazi yet a "The Mo n ,I climax 1 Ilk r. 15,000 I Rommel see1l1S In have p ieked th~ tllird. we could u e. - . - '" I TH E DAlLY I O WAN , I O WA C I TY , IO WA PAGE-THREB = WEDNESDAY~M~CH ~, 1943 Program Announced Honorary Fraternities Prof. F. C. Ensign i Band 10 Give To Hold Dinner·Dance For Iowa High School For New Members To Give Broadcast ! "Frolieus Sclcntia," a candlelight "Jefferson and Education" will Spring (oncert Forensic Contest Here dlnncr-dance, will be held Frid Y be dis ed at 9:30 night by trom 8 to 12 p. m. in the _i1n'r Plvf. P . C. En, ign, acting director Shadow of th Iowa Uni n. Th of the coli e of education, in the 37th Annual League party will honor initiat . or the third of des of WSUI broad In Iowa Union I Will Be on Campus rive honorary engine ring Crater- cast thi VI' k, honoring the bi nilies, Tau Bela Pi. Chi Ep.!llon, centennial of Thomas Je(fenon. Thursday to Saturday Pi Tau Sigma, Eta K ppa 'u and A dramatization written by Program for Tonight FLORENCE lIDAMARY Phi Lambda Epsilon, and i being JamC$ P. Henn y, G of Iowa Includes Handel Suite, SLEMMONS The program for the 37th annual sponsored by tbe<:e organizations. City, wiD be produced by radio WALKER final contcsts of thc [ow a High E. Bruce 1cicT. E4 of Kansas udenl5 under lh direction of Friedemann Rhapsody ENGAGED ENGAGED School Forensic league, to be held City, Mo., will act a master oC Prof. H: Clay Harshbara '1', alter ceremonies for Ih~ prv~a~ to be Professor En Ign' speech. on Ihe Iowa campus Thursday Prof. Chtlrlcs lJ. llight.cr will presented during mtennl ' 'IO!I. In- Empha ned on the broadcast Un-ough Saturday, was announced lead thc University Concel·t bund el uded on the program will be will be Ihe origin of the famous ycsterday as follow.s: Rulh J' Anthony, A4 of Waterbury, pr ident'· \'lews educati<)fl, and In the annulIl sprlng concert to" THUIlSDAY Conn., who wiU do a oft toc hallet his plan to abll5h a 5Y tern of II ill!) t at 8 o'clock in the maln dance; a comic monologue . by public hooling in Virginia, ex 3 p. m.-PI·eliminary meeting of lounge of Iowo Union. George Anderson, A3. of ~ Iwill, tendini from the elementaf1 couches, house chumber, Old The complete pl"ogrum Io)' to Tenn., and the "UnI\crSity Lcc- grad thlOUgh the university. Capito1. lure" from Kampus Kapers, pre- Plan for the Jefferron celebra rullh\,s pertormance is as .fol 4 p. m.-Debate, round I, senate sented by Rober~ Cuevo.' E1 . ot lion were originated by Prot. LoW. lows: chamber, Old Capitol. Paral\lay, and, Richard Lindqui t, P Izcr, chairman ot th commlt~ Ma li n ' A4 of Des Mome.. and Prot. Norman .Foerster, direc 7 p. m.-Debatc, round II, scnate The Iirst work to be presented tor of lhe chool of letters. Assist will be "AlIegl'o Maestoso" from chamber. Iowa Women's Club in them are Prof 0'1' Harahbv, 8:30 p. m.-Preliminuy oratory, ' u and Chari • H. FOISter ot the "Water Music," by Handel, lind MR. AND MRS. HAl'tLEY WALKER of Sidney announce tbe engage MRS. MARY B. SLEMMONS, route 5, announces the engagement of Will Meet Tomorrow her daughter, Lida Mary Slcmmons, to Robert A. Sigg, son of Mr. ]10use chamber. En,l~h department. ment oC their daughtcr, Florence, to Robert Ohme, son of Mr. and Mrs. arranged by Donald F. Malin, an and Mrs. George W. Sigg of Toledo, Ohio. A graduate o[ University E. H. Ohme of Cuclling. The wedding will take place April 9 in the F RJDAl' "Your Plans for a Victory GDI- Iowan composer and arranger of high scbool, Miss Slemmons is a senior in the University of Iowa. 8:30 a. m.-Drawines, prelimi- den" will the respon, e to roll Me thodist church in Iowa City. Attending the couple will be Eleanor b~ Will Entertain Club Mr. Sigg was graduated from the University of Toledo and is now nary extemporaneous s pee c h. call when the Iowa Worn n" dub Mrs. Jeph SI vata, 620 N. choral musle. "Watel' Music," a Walker, sister of the bride-elect, and Howard Kemper of Washington. stationed at the naval air navigation school at Hollywood, Fla. No Berles of 25 pieces, WriS written for D. C. Miss Walker 'yas graduated tram Sidney high school and is a board room. mee tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 Linn slre t, wUl entertaln mem- definite date has been set for the wedding. IJ a. m.-Annual meeting of the in Relchs pine room. be of the SUkh and Chatter cLu~ jUnior at the University o[ Iowa, where she is aIIiliated with Alpha usc in connectlon with an aquatic Iowa High School Forensic league, The committee in char e or the I FI'iday at 2 p. m. M. Un, host fete. Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Ohme is a graduate of Cushing high school ------and the University of Iowa. He is stationed in Officer Candidates' board l·oom.. aUair includes Mr . Frank Sehn -Iwill be Ml'I. Paul Lam~r,. The "Sln vonic Rh apsody No.1," by 10 n. m.-Prelimlnary extem- berger. Ml'8. Hilma F ny, MI' . C. afternoon will be spent in sewing Frledemann, occupies an impor school at Ft. Benning, Ga. Among Prof. M. W. Lampe pOI'uneous speech, house chamber. R. McCann and Mrs. A. Ami. h. ror Red Cro . ta nt place in the standard band literature, not for its musical pro cha10mber. n. m .-Finals, oratory, senate If iiii~i;iii~~~~~~ii;i~;~;;;;;~ fundity, but because the idiom is Iowa City People To Present Lecture 12:45 p. m.-Drawings for final well adapted to the wind band extempOl'8neOU8 speech, board SUI Union, Sf~dent Publications Wh D it comea to and Is populal' with oudiences. Mrs. James Coleman will leave Prol. M. Willard Lampe, direc room. "Vl:stas" was composed by James today lor her home in Sioux City tor of the chool of religion since 2:15 p. m.-Finals, extempo R. Gillette, former band director after a visit in the home of MI'. and 1927, will discuss "Religion and raneous speech, house chamber. aod organist at Carleton coilege. 4 p. m.-Debate, round III, Boards 1o B~ (hosen 'uesday Ml·S. John D. Zeller, 403 Beldon World Reconstruction" at the Smart Suits He has published a number of senate chamber. short original works and tran avenue. World Today lecture to be held at 7 p. m.-Debate, round IV, You'll find them on Strub'. Fashion Floor scriptions for bunds, most of Annual election oC three stu-Th ighest' will be elected for a • • • 7:30 this evening in room 221A, senate chamber. which seem to be experiments in dents to the board of trustees of MI'. and Mrs. Olyde Stuntz of Schaeller hall. 8:30 p. m.-Debate, round V, ter m of one year. Greene were weekend guests In senate chamber. descriptive coloring. Student Publlcations, Inc., and six Besides his duties at the univer Each undergraduate candidate the home Mrs. Stuntz's mother, SATURDAY "A Chant from the Great of sity, Protes or Lampe also serves Plains" is closely ideniilied with representativ~s to Union board for membershjp on the board of Mrs. Guy V. Newcomer, 418 S. 8 a. m.-Debote, round VI, Suits of fine aU·wool the middlcwest, as it was com will be held Tuesday in Iowa trustees will be nominated on a Capitol street. as general dir eto1' of the depart senate chamber • fabrics and in a variety posed by Carl Busch, a resident of peti lion signed by 25 \nembel's of ment of university work, boal'd or 8 a. m.-Radio speaking, Studio Union. • • • that will pJeau you. Kansas CIty. His composltiolls Any person who. iuUilleq Union his own class. Jean Shr(Jpe, 518 S. Capitol Christian. education of the Presby A, engineering buJlding. have earned world-wide recogni- Eliglblll ty st.reet, l'eturn~d Sund;ly from a terian church in the United States. 8:15 a. m.-Poetry l'eading, tion. ' board requil'emen~s ' in previous No student is eligible liS a candi short visit at her home in Mechan room 224, University high school. Professor RI,hter years and who desires to run for date unless he has earned uni icsville. 10 a. m.-Debate, round VII, Profe,'!sor Righter has made the election this y.ar· may have his versity credit amounting to 26 • • • Maj. Charles H. Obye senate chamber. 8l'rangel-i1ent for "Marche Chorale mtme placed on the ballot of his semester hours and is in good Dr. L. L. Leighton of Ft. Dodge 10 n. m.-Prose reading, room Priced and Fugue," composed by Guil college by leaving a 'written state standing in the unIversity. Each was a recent guqst in the home of Will Add ress Meeting 224, University high school. mant. Guilmant was one of the ment of such desire with his name petition for nomination must be his brother-In-law and 5i tel', Dr. 12 noon - Luncheon, announce best-known of the FI'ench organist and college at the Iowa Union desk accompanied by a certificate from and Mrs. H. R. Jenkinson, 220 Of[jcers at the Iowa City Wo ments of results, river room, Iowa composers, and as there are few before 1 o'clOCk tomorrow a{ter- the registrar showing compliance River street. man's club socinl sciences depart Union. $25 with the requirements. 2 p. m.-BroadcaBt 01 radio original WOrks for bands, this noon. • • • ment wJU be elected and a di' and 1ranscriptioll represents an at- Petitiolls Students now members of the Recent Ruests in th home of Dr. cUl)sion will be given by Maj. speakers, stalion WSUJ. 1empt to probe new sources of Petitions [01' nominatitlns to the board of trustccs o( Student Publi and Mt·s. Fred T. Bauer. 1122 2 p. m.-Interpretative I' ading, nmt.cl'tal for band;j. board of publications must be filed cations, Inc., are Dan McLaughlin. Sheridan avenue, were Mr. and Charles 11. Obye at. a luncheon room 221A Schaeffer hall. An "Espana Rhapsody" by Chab not latel' than 4 p. m. Friday with E3 of Des Moines; Elizabeth Charl Mrs. J. W. Kober and Mrs. Maude meeting of tlie organization Fri nouncement of reading results and riel' and arranged , by Sofranek Lois Randall. secretary of Ule ton, A4 of Manchester; Blaine Karber, all of La Porie City, and day. The group will meet to elect recital lor audience by winners. $35 was inspired by a visit of the board of trustees in room N-1 , Asher, C3 of Spencer; Glenn Hor Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Schneider oCficcrs nt 12 p. m. in Hotel Jef Because of reduced tournament ton, C4 of Waterloo. and Jack attendance, officials said, clllBS A t'rench composer in Spain, and East hall. of Independence. ferson, nnd luncheon will be All Sbe. while the themes, are original, they The elections will be held be Moyers, Ml of Guthl'ie Ccntcr. • • • and clos B schools wiJl compete in are based upon Spanish dance tween the hours of 8 u. m. and 5 Mrs. George Callahan, 405 S. served at 12:30 p. m. the same brocket. Winners tor AU Colors forms . p. m. in the lobby or Iowa Union, r----:-"..---...."..--..,~-__:, Summit slreet, is visiting hm' hus Milior Obye, a member of the each class, howcver, will be an Wagner's "Elsa's Pt'ocession to under t.he joint supervision of band, Lieutenant Callahan, who is uniVCl'iji!y military d partm nt, nounced. thc Cathedral," from "Lohengrin," Union Board and the board of stationed with the marines in will discuss "How The Service and arranged by Cailliet will be publications. Today Santa Ana, Calir. Supply Cun Lose the War." Horace Mann P.T.A. lhe lil'st number played follow The election committee J5 com Suits to work in. . . . to 22 Organizations '. . Mrs. A. M. Ewers w11l preside at 01 . ing intermission. Wagner wrote posed Charles SwisheJ', Ll of Mrs. Frederick Simpsoll, 603 E. o See Activity Skit only one important work for band, Wat.erloo; Dorothy Ward, G of Plan to Meet College stl'eet, and Mrs. Benton the election. Mrs. A. D. Henslelgh play in ... to live in all is in charge of luncheon arrange By Girl Scout Troop but his treatmcnt o[ the wind in Iowa City; Doris Janacek, C4 of Underwood, 221 S. Gilbert stt\et, thru the hours of your strument in his orchestralions Cedar Rapids; Cl\1rk Houghton, A3 returned recently fl'om Kansas ments. Ladles Aid of the ClU'lstlan Church busy day. pOinted the way to better things of Red Oak and Reeves Hall, A3 -Church parlors, 10:30 a. m. City, Mo., where they visited their Girl Scout troop No.4 under the for the band. of Mason City. husbands, Capt. F. E. Simpson and direction of Mrs. Donald Mcllree Presbyterian Woman's association Ens. Benton Underwood. her husband, a lieutenant in will present the program at a Comic Opera Three men and three women -Church parlors, 12;45 p. m. lir~t • • • the army finance department, who meeting oC the parent.-teachers liS- "Bellt('ice and Benedict," a wUl be elected from thc college Old Capitol Auxiliary No. 29 La Recently visiting MI'. and Mrs. has been transferred from Dur- sodation of Horuce Mann school comic opera in two acts composed ot liberal arts to supplement the dJ es Auxlllary of Patriarchs H. F. Beranek, 808 Hudso n avenue, ham, N. C., to Chicago. BoUt MI'. tomorrow night at 7:30 In the To accompany your spring by Berliz and 'ananged by Henn 10 other members of Union Mllitant-Odd fellows hall, 6:30 ing, is seldom heard today, but board selected by their respec p. m. were Mr. an d M rs. B une11 A m- and Mrs. Beny arc former stu- school ""ymna"I'um " . suit wear one of lh new the overture l'emuins a favorite. tive colleges. Only liberal arts Order of Del\lolay- Masonic tem- long o[ C(.>dar Rapids. dcnts of the University of Iowa. The troop will give a skit show· "tc Mist" scarf.. Light. lacy and colurful. 100': £:-~ NS The sulte "Jeux D' Enlants," com st.ud ents may vote for these six pie, 7:30 p. m. • • • • • • lng some of their IIctivlties and til W. wool! All n w pa t I V ' on ex· posed by Bizet and at'ranged by liberal ar ts represen tati ves. S. C. S.-Unlt A-Fellowship Mrs. J. C. Taylor of Kansas City, Jane Beye, a studcnt at the Uni- work of the scouts. Following the IInade. 1.98 Iowa City's Departmen. Store Noyes Winterbottom, is made up of Live Qualifications for candidates for ball of the Methodist churCh, Mo., is a guest in the home of hel' versity of Colorado in Boulder, skit, Mrs. E. R. Means, a m mber attend parts Including: "Trumpets and Union Board ate ollt.st.andlng par 6:3 0 p. m. son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Col., is spending her spring vaca- of the scout council, wm give a ticipation in student aclivHies, 7) Drums," "The Doll," "The Top," W. S. C. S.-Unit B-Home of Mrs. Edward Besser, 741 Mel- lion wHh her mother. Mrs. Howard short talk on "Scout LeadershiP." ---~---- "Little' Husband, Little' Wife" and high qualities of leadership, com Mrs. B. M. Ricketts, 1602 Wil- l'ose aveJ1u~. Beye, 422 E. Brown street. She ReIreshmcnts will be &erved by liThe Ball." pletion of the required number son street, 2:30 p. m. . •• • • will leave Iowa City Sunday. Mrs. R. M. Tarrant, Mrs. J. Evnru The concluding works on the of hours of service on a Union W. S. C. S.-Unlt C-Home of A recent guest in the home of • • • and Mrs. W. J. Phelps. program arc "Cimarron" com boa r d sub-committee, and ap Mrs. Wilma Loghry, 114\.!, S. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Berry, 413 A guest in the home of Mr. and posed by Hurris, which attempts proval by Ule present board. Dubuque street, 2:30 p. m. S. J?hnson street, was their daugh- Mrs. Irvin Cud, 801 Bowery street, Franciscan faUlers planted the Keep right to porlray the rugged pioneering Students Notified W. S. C. S.-Unlt D-Home of ter-m-Iaw, Mrs. Paul K. Berry. is Pvt. Marvin Pull ot Camp Polk, lirst olive groves on U. S. soil ncar on buying Liboral arts students who were days of the southwest, and "Sal Mrs. Roy Ewers 1530 Muscatine Mrs. Berry was em'oute from Kan- :L:;:a:. is~ainiiDii iegioiil i70iiyieiDli·siiagioi·.;I:::. tarello," by Gounod, a lively Ro members of sub-committees this avenue, 1 p. ~. sas City, Mo., to Chicago, to join ;I••••••••••• War Stamps mall dance taking it~ name from year will be notified oC their eligi W. S. C. .-UnH E-Home oI bllity. Lett.ers will bc sent t.o the the verb sAY, MARCH 24. l~ I SPORT Sel SIDELIGHTS Hawk Swimmers fsr .NCAA Meet To~ • • • OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS • By Jack Sords By CruickshanK Spears Named Major League Clubs Squad Includ~ Wa DON SLYE 'II ( , ~Slarf fnfrasquad Tills WAS Sports 00 GaG.. I approv: Leads With i 1 F lti,a • Paul Q.ean Begins Three Frosh Reporting on odds and ends rrail ship, th trom here and there- ' ryl" Drill With Browns; Armbruster Selects terday Pirates Shift Infield veil's ( The Big Ten basketball season At Ma. anU In Golf Meel MARTIN" Nine Mermen; Relay. $25,000 WIlrI'NEY wa a complete success. Late last COLLEGE PARK. Md. (AP) _ LAFAYETU, Ind. (AP)-The Regarded Best Bet The loll, to cooperate with government PINEHURST, N. C. (AP)- Cleveland Indians' conches paid • same 0 * French's Can Dr, Clarence W. Speal's, director oCCicials requesting a limita tion in Forty - eight - Year old Bobbie o( . athletics and head Cootball particular altenHon yesterday to Nine men have been named by manner civilian transportation, the confer Cruickshank o[ Richmond, Va" a '* Cause Navy Trouble coach at the University of Toledo, the p'itches oC elongated Mike Nay- Coach David Armbruster to rep now b ence directors asked for a revision veteran of World War I, led the ,~ With Other Athletes Toledo, 0., has been appointed mick because, as manager Lou resent the University at towa In committ , head football coach at the Univh- Boudreau expl'esscd It, "We're eight of the cleven events at fhe the b!l1lketball schedule. field at the end of lhe £irst rouno branch ot NEW YORK (AP) _ Lieut. (jg) sity 01 Maryland, Preside.nt R. C. going to give Mike all the work we National Collegiate A. A. swim, in the 41 st a nnual north and south Only: . The schedule was cut from fif Larry French has the permission of Byrd announced yesterday, can. We think he has lhe makings ming meet at Columbus, Ohio, teen games to twelve for each in open gol! championship yesterday Spears, former head footban of a real pitcher." Friday and Saturday. stitution and so revised that thero with a card of 36-35- 71, one un Branch Rickey, Leo Durochel' and coac h a t D ar t mouth , W est Virgin- Boudreau aSSigned the siX-foot The sC/uad, now enroute to Co - league president Ford Frick to ia, Minnesota, Oregon and Wis- eight-inch veteran rookie to start lumbus, includes three freshmen, was a saving of 110,000 man-miles der par, Bobbie is a grandfather. The score board oC the north and pitch for the Brooklyn Dodgers consin, alsQ will be in charge oC the Tribe's initial contest Sunday the tirst yearlings to enter inter in travel. Ta save this mileage whenever he can get away from his student health at the university, against the semi-pro Lafayett~ collegiate swimming competition south open read like a gol! tour Byrd said. Besides coaching £oot- Red Sox. here in 25 years. and to even up, as much as pos JAC.!( . ~ h~"' eD nament of the twenties, with five service' duties at the ~'ooklyn ball, he will act temporarily in an Yesterday's drill was the Indians' Freshmen on the squad are gible, among the ten . schools the S-(F:'ol-iE;> !PRo ,Prominent old time golfers on Ihe navy yard, but as this was writ- advisory capacity in the inter- first outdoor session of the spring David Brockway, a high schoor number of miles traveled, some OAKLAND ['AS1' 'leAR, WI~ N IN& 10 top of a plle ot 14 pros and 16 oma len he had yet to get the okay of collegiate athletic program and training season. all-American diver last season; institution that ordinarily played lhe navy authorities. will direct physical educntion for Robert Matter·s, back s t r 0 k e GAMe;S" r;l-(f.\e ~Sl" cards, Three others started but * * * each other each year, did not have h men under the war program. BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) _ champion of Wisconsin h i g h ~IG~l'weeKS FO~A cards. Thl'ee' orthers started but T at seems like asking everyone Byrd added that Spears would hoo1 d I' St b an opportunity to meet this year. SeCincinnati Reds LoulS sprmter, In spite of the late change in nght to park by a fire plug, for Apl'il 1. He succeeds Clal'k Th H k '1 b pe~~Al'S Joe Kirkwood of Philadelphia 'f th joined the sideliners' club yester- e . aw eyes w) 1 e especially too schedule and the drastic re 1 e cop says no it's no usc argu- Shaughnessy, who I'esigned eal'ly st ong th 300 di d was in second place with a card . b th th th I . day-Crabbie after stopping a hard r m e -yar med ey an an'angemenl that had to be made, mg, 1'0 er, coer op mons this year to become head conchU pt 400 d f t J of 72, . t d 't t <> grounder with his ri"'lt ankle. -yar ree s. y e ri!lays, in which the season brought about several Johhny Farrell of Baltusrol, an JUs,It on ~oun.t t . d 1 t the University of :Pittsbul'gh. The injury is not serious5' trainers I owa was th Ir d and fourth, re- s an meres 1l1g ,eve opmen Byrd said Maryland expects to said, but hot towels a~d lime spectively, in the Big Ten title all-time conference records. open champion in the twenties, ~~y way y~u look at It, although go through with its full football probably will be in order Jor !l day meet. JIIlnols Leads wa.'! next with 73. Then came Joe It s not WIthout precedent. The schedule next fall, although one or two, The trip is financed by a dona- Of course the great Illinois team TlIl'nesa of Rockvil1e Center who ?Iephant-memory boys l'.ecaIJ that game, with Florida, was cancelled • • • tion from the Dolphin fraternity, with Andy PhiJlip led the way chased Bobby Jones to the' wire III 1918 at least three pltchers - when Florida dropped oIl inter- CAIRO, Ill. (AP)-Most ad- part of the prof! from their water for the open title at Columbus Leon Cadore, Clarence Mitchell collegiate athletics. h I 1 with three records~most points ' i tl . ' and Jeff Pferrer of the Dodgers _ vanced 01 oIl major league teams s ow ast, fal . The Iowans ha~ JAC'K Oh10, n 1e mld-lwenties and the t d all f lh NC (one game) one team-lllinois 92 fifth man was the Connecticut fa1'- took time off from their service CJ.. I FI t R d d jn spring training, the St. Louis compe. e moe AA meets (Illinois vs. Chicago); most points SA LVSSON mer, Gene Sarazen oC Brookfield duties to chuck a few games for Uun ee egar e Cardinals split into two squads held slllce the 1irst one in 1924. (one gAme) indJvldual-Phillip Ve1'6RA.J Pll"CHeJi!, ~AcK IA the Brooklyns, under coaches Milte Gonzales and The squad: w I\0 won ate11 h big championships 50 d 00 (Illinois) 40, and most field goals -(lollS 81G- SHOW W''''''Iol-rM~ open to Pl'O~ wh n in his prime. However, it is without prece- As Horsft I Df I Buzzy Wares yesterday and played an 1 -Yllr~ free style- (one game) Phillip (illinois) 16. C[.61/6["ANP .NI>IANS APf'eR. Cruickshank and a few of his deni In this war, and the attitude ~ 0 e ea a 1 to 1 tie in a fast 6-inning prac- Capt. Clyde Keml1ltz of Chlcago, A new twelve-game season total S'EN5N 'Ira.Ar:l.S ,~ -rl-le= veteran pals were slugging to keep or the navy will be watched with tice game. Ill., Donal~ Holmwood of Buffalo, of 755 points, a 132-point game, PACl~tC CQAs1' l-e:AGue,.. up the standard of play in the 41- interest, ohlefly because a nod In Kent"cky Class,"c Martin Marion's triple and a N. Y., Irvmg Sraub of st. LoUis, a laO-point game, several games year-Old event. Bobbie.. had five of the bead migbt lead to all U single by Sam Narron counted a Mo., and Sid Craiger of Des with the two-team scor~ over a birdie, Three or lhese came on kinds 01 eventualities, wltb ath- run for Gonzales in the second Moines. hundred and others in the nineties the first nine. letes In a. variety of sports tumb- NEW YORK (AP)-G. Donald inning. Wares' team tied tne score 150-yard back stroke - Bob stamps the season as one of offen The leading amateur was J ames ling over each other to get per- Cameron, a California Scotsman, in the sixth on Buster Adams' Beckel' oC Clinton, John Gottsch sive basketball, T. Hunter, or North Adams, Mass., I mission to do a. little private is not dOing much worrying these single and Ray• Sanders'*. triple. oftel's Shenando of Waukeah,sha, and Wis. Robert . Mat- The largest crowd to ever wit Outfield Makes Munson Tak~s Fall who scored a 76. Private Ronnie campai gn i ng on t I leir day off, d ays over the kind of opposition ness a Western conference game Williams of Camp Butner, Dur- and a pro football team which his Count Fleet will have when CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. (AP) 200-yard breast stroke - Nick (19,000) was in attendance at the ham, N. C., who is from Deh'oit, could get Its players concentrated lhe bugle calls the pick of the ~Paul Dean, one-time pitching Karaffa of Trenton, N. J. , I . To Advance In Meet Illinois-Northwestern tilt. Four led thq small delegation of sol- at some nea.rby barracks would three-year-olds to the post for star of the Cardinals, put on a new Low and high board diving ..J teen thousand in below-zero diers who were able to get fur- be sitting pretty for its once-a- the 69th running of the Kentucky St. Louis uniform yesterday and David Brockway of Marsha1lt6wn. weather turned out for the Wis Stengel Worry With 155 Pounders loughs to play. Entl'ies in the week games. Derby at ChurchilL Downs on reported for spring training with consin-Indiana game. Seven wresUers in the 155 lb. events were limited to players 38- There is one HUle drawhack May 1. the Browns in a comeback attempt Belated congratulations to the class advanced into the quarter- years oC age or over, unless they which might deter the pro athletes "Why shOUld I wOrJ'y?" said the aiter winning 19 games fOl' Rous Yankees Keep Busy WALLINGFORD, Conn. (AP) Mason City Mohawks, 1943 state finals of the all-university mat were in the al'med services, Only though. Lieutenant French woudn'i trainer of John D. Hertz's fleet ton last year. cage champs. They went through Problems appear to be piling up tournament yesterday afternoon in five soldiers were able to play and get a cent for his extra-curricular sun of Reigh Count as he watched Dean said he was in good physi Despile Bad Weather an undefeated season and had no on problems at an alarming rate the fieldhouse wrestling room. a number of old-time goUers in activity. What money the Dodg- the 1942 jl.\venile champion breeze cal condition from handllng a trouble in winning the tournament for the Boston Braves' Casel Sten John Hunler of Phi Kappa Psi war production plants could not ers would pay him would go into around the track at Belmont park cross-cut saw at Russellvllle, Ark. in Des Moines. From all l'eport!; gel but he, inlluenced, no doubt, registered the quickest fall of tlte make it. the Navy Relief society fund. yesterday morni.ng. "I've got the .. * * ASBURY PARK, N. J. (AP) - the tourney was one 01 the best by his as yet light contact with day by pinning Ernie Bundgaard "I don't care about the money" hor'e the experts say is the one EVANSVILLE ,Ind. (AP)-The The minute you walk into the Nevi in a long lime-sports stlll hold a exclusive Choate school's cloisters, of Delta Tau Delta in 1:5 1. Eastman Re'lterates he told Frick in outlining hi s to bE;at, so let lhe other boys do Detroit Tigers engaged in a bu ~y York Yanke ~ training base here strong place in a wartime wOl'ld. has decided to attempt to solve Paul Munson of SchaeHer haq lhope, "All I want to do is 1'each the worrylng. Barring an accident three hour workout. yesterday to on the blowy Jersey shore, you Iowa-Seahawk Game them one by one in true academic more difficulty in hi5 second round the 200 mark in the victories." He I'll have my horse ready to r un." ' tune up for today's opening inh'a- sense that something is missing. There have been rumors that an fashion. match with Val Schoenthal of Al- Rule About Tr I .has three games to go, and, being A mention, however, of the 2 squad game. AHer the drill, mana- It isn't. the abo ence of Joe Gord- Iowa-Seahawk football game wlll Problem NQ. 1 appears to be big pha Tau Omega, but kept irUhe ave 34 years old, fears this is his last lo 1 odds the bookies are quot- gel' Steve O'Neill designated Halon or BJIl Dickey or Charley Xel. be scheduled next fall. We say Ernie Lombardi, the first-string running by pinning his rival"' in T chance to make the grade. ing on the Count brought forth an Newhouser, Horold Manders, Roy ler, b cause everyone tells you lt~ more power to it. • There would be cutcher and NaUonal league bat 3:29 for the right to m et Boyd aKentucky Derby Fricl- is all for the idea. In fact, explosion from the good-natured Henshaw and Virgil Trucks to iust a question of time until they no traveling expenses, and we ar~ ting champion, who has decided to Berryhill of Dean house in the frolll the baseball standpoint lhere trainer, work three innings each today. put in their appearance. And il willing to bet that it would out take a defense job for the dw'ation. quarterfinals. docl;n't seem to be much argument "Two to one?" he said. "Why it The veteran Tommy Bridges went isn't Marse JocMcCarthy's cheet1 draw the rest of the hom games Lombardi is unmarl'ied but has Taking to the mat today are WASHINGTON (AP)-Railroad against it. wasn't so m any yeal's ago you to the sidelines temporarily with smile of greeting because some 01 on the Hawks' schedule. several dependents. Finding some wrestlers in the 118, 126, 165 and and bus carl'iers agreed yesterday To begin with, quite a few tlubs, could get 8 to 1 that a horse a blister on his finger and O'Neill the boys Insist M'al'se Joe can turd Dad Schroeder seems to favor body these days to replace the Lom heavyweight divisions. 10 cooperate wilh government ef- although not necessarily the Dodg- wouldn't slart in the derby, let removed him from the lineup slat- it on. And ii isn't the heat thai the idea H the Seahawks will us~ would be considered black magic WRJi:STLING ltESULTS forts to limit attendance at this ers, may be short handed this year :l lone win. And hel'e it is stiU six ed to face the Chicago White Sox was missmg from the 'ianks' hotel n team composed entirely of cadets, rathcl' than D solution. 155 lb. Dlvl~lon year's running of the Kentucky w ith u roster several ployers short weeks away, I wouldll't bet a lhis Week end in 'Opening exhibi- last night because of the oil short- and the pre-flight school may do Now that Stengel has lost his ecol'ld roulld derby to residents of the Louls- of the 25 allowed. In such an event dime on him at those odds." And Hon competition. age. just that. Since the Iowa team one E\l1d only slugger, ho also has Tom Welch (Slagle) threw Bud ville area. they could carry a once-a-week he hastened to explain it wasn't • • • But when you start checking UPi will have to depend mostly on 17 had his outfield wrecked within 24 WOL'th (Delta Upsilon) In 2:35. Because of heavy transportation man on their rosteTs without cut- because of his Scotch llnceslry. LAKEWOOD, N. J. (AP)-The you discover that what you see and 18 year olds it would not be hours. Monday it became known John Hunter (Phl Kappa Psi) demands for the movement of ting out anyone else. And it would New York Giants hunted a shcl- very little of in thi. bascball ~a mP fail' to put them up against men that Maxie West had been induct threw Ernie Bundgaul'd (Delta troops and oUlcr war-connecled be once Ol week just half the seas- DP I Sf rt PI tered spot on the vast Rockefeller is ba, eball. There's a chunk of who have had college and profes ed into the army and yesterday Tau Delta) in 1 :51. travel, the office of defense tJ'ans- Oil, at that, as a combination sol- e au a s ay estate yesterday and worked oui calisthenic. , a bUllch of basketball sional experience. Nanny Fernandez forwarded along Paul Munson (Schaeffer) threw portation is seeking to make the dier 01' sailor-ball player COUldn't for two hours, It was the sixth oui and even a bit of bOxing as tbt Before long we will be able to with his signed contract the pre Vat Schoenthal (Alpha Tau turf classic a purely "street car" make the road trips. In NCAA Tourney of doors drill for the Giants in American league champions iD write about baseball but with snow diction that h awaited an early Omega) in 3:29. affaiI'. But if a man in such a cl1tegory their nine days here, through their daily chores. But; on the ground we do not feel up induction call. Boyd ' BelTyhill (Dean house) In addition to pl'ohibiting the could win three or fo ur games for • • with the opening exhibition game to it. Stengel planned to start West, decisioned Larry Cole (Delta Up- operation of special trains, ODT the club he would be a valuable NEW YORI$' (AP)-The [our MUNCIE, II~d. (AP)-Fral'kic only two weeks away, the weather Fernandez and Tommy Holmes in sllon) took several steps yesterQay which adoition., Gu.ys who nevel' won that remaining teams in the National Gustine, shifted to short top in an and onc thing and another has aU his regular outfield. Holmes wl1l Carroll Mullln (Psi Omega) de- it desoribed as "drastic," to' elimi- mnny pltchmg every fourth day Invitation Basketball Tournament attempt to fill a gap the Pittsburgh but shut ut the Bronx Bombei1 Red Sox Give Blood be available and so will Chet Ross cisioned Keith Stinson (Sigma nate h'avel to Louisville for the 11 1l'0~lgh O L\t lhe se~son have been get a chanc~ to take a busman's Pirates have h~d there since Al'ky from doing any work even clO&eIJ MEDFORD, Mass. (AP) another experienced flY-Chaser: Phi Epsilon) derby May 1. corned. 01' should It be dragged? holiday the next two days whilo IVaugha)) leC!, handled five chances resembling the diamond game. You Manager Joe Cronin and 31 mem but they make only two and Sten Bill Thomp on (Sigma Alpha Eastman, tn a statement Feb. 7, Naturally nch an individual the National Collegiate A. A. takes cleanly in the Buccaneers' first can see at a glanee it's an unusual ~ers of his Boston Red Sox spring gel needs at least three. Epsilon) threw Peter Seip (Phi said it would be bctter, from a would have to be a pitcher, al- over Madison Square Garden to pracllce game yestel'dllY and fig- spring training camp. training squad yesterday re "Yes, wo have plenty of prob Kappa Psi) in 2:20. _ transportation standpoint, if the though by rubberizing the Imag- pick its eastern regional winner, ure~ in two double plays, one un- Now, Marse JOO says that's oka1i mained away in a body from the lems," Stengel admitted sadly, "but Charles Hamm (Spen~er) de- derby were not run this year, The Inatlon you might see a once-a- The first round games tonight aSSisted. that things orc progressing saUa· Tufts baseball cage. They gave up we'll try to take care of them one cisioned John Quinn (Dean house) CHurchill Downs management then week eatcher as a valuable asset. will throw Dartmouth eastern Gustine, with Pete Coscarat as factorily and that his guys will be their practice session to donate a by one. And we'll never complain MATCHES TOD.-iY agreed to make no requests for There would be J~O percentage, league winner the last ~ix years, h is working mate at second base, ready when things start to go.~- pint of blood apiece at the Red about any of them that puts our 165 lb. Division special transportation facilifies, of course, In havmg a once-a.- and De Paul, mid-western power- w~s?n tfle ~amp team led by coach cept for one brier spell, Marse Joi!j Cross blood center in Boston. boys inio the armed services." Second Rounel and to bonor no further requests week second baseman or center house, together in the iil'st game Virgil DaVIS, which deteated a men have spent all their time in Dale Spaan (Alpha Ta~ .Oroega) for l'esel'vlld or box seats from fielder. Some ?[ the clubs have and New York univerSity and squad headed by coach Jake Flow- the local high schoof gym. vs. Don Campbell (Phi KaPI?a Fsl) persons outside the Louisville that kind of hitters, at that. Georgetown in the nightcap. The ers 5 to 2 in the six inning contest. Cager Takes up Baseball Howard Hensleigh (Dean sec- are<\. Eastman subsequently said far 3S ball player's in the Dal'tmouth-De Paul game is rated A ~ .),\_~-- PAUL, Minn. (AP)-Howle tion) vs. J . Van Berg (PM10mega) he hqd no objection to the running service go, onl:t: two ort?rec at the a toss-up by visiting coaches here Dickey SIr;ns ST. Schultz, 6 Coot 6'. inch basketball Don Van Gorder (Spencer) vs. of ~he detby on this bpsis, m?st mlght be In a posItion to sub- for the two tournam~nts, wl\ile ASBURY PARK, N. J. (AP)- Paulson (Beta Theta Pi) .. II' a statement yesterday, East-, mit U1e B,ame propOSition ~s Lleu- N. Y. U. is given a Slight. edge over Bill ~ickey, veteran catcher oC star of Hamline universfty, a~ Lewis Cowan (Nu Sigma '!Ian reiterated that if racing en- tenant French. The rest either are the Hoyas from Georgetown, the New Yor'k Yankees, yesterday nounccd yesterday that he wm ~ Nu) join lhe St. Paul American assoc:; "«,,elll,.,. vs. Ted Gibson (Phi Kappa Psi) thu!lia~~ trom outside the Louis- too for away. from the baseball The winners of tonight's games accepted terms and said hI) would RQbert Koch (Phi Delt.a Theta) ville l1rea trl1vel there by rail or scene,' or are liable to be at mo- ",:,iIl tangle on Thul'sday fOl' the slar! at once Crom his home oL iotion club Cor spring lrainlng at a Richmond, Ind. VS. William Mueller (Sigma Chi) bus La aLtend the derby, "despiLe ment s noh,ce, A fellow woul? have ng~t to clash with the western Little Rock, Ark. 126 Ib, Divlsloll W1e conditions voluntarily accepted to be s{al1oned hard by IllS ball regional winner in the !inals, ~7 Quarterfinals by the ChUrchill Downs manage- park. and ~e~l he was. there more or March 30. -- Bob Alderman (Sigma Chi) vs. ment, they may interfere with the less mdeIiDltely for It to. work out. .--- 4 • Bill Baird (Nu Sigma Nu) proper accommodation of members We t1nderstan~ the ~hlls have a Clarence Hqs(ord (Psi Omega) at the military forces 01' of others good young .Pllcher.ln a def~nse gllllll~mll • NOW! "ENDS vs. Dave UnderwoOd" (Delta Up- whose travel is necessar}>." plant at Phi.la~e1phla who might ,l' ~~ T~'RSDAY " silon) work out a Similar plan. a • ~v Hugh Guthrie (Gables) vs. 0' S Anyway, we'd li ke to see Lieu- -.; ~ .. ~~ 'e. L~J!f": IfAPP'y::: Jim Hunt (Pickard) . Uln" ays Coaching tenonL Frcmch get official permis- ./'Ie.. "'\ O\t1lr ~f Hea.vYwelghi Division sion to pitch Sunday home games ~40?" OIJ 0. '\'\ \ ••• Quarterfinals School WI'II Cont,'nue just to sec what happens. What :.?<.«.O-<;>. ' Joe Poulter (Sigma Alpba Ep- would you call his Sunday ab- --tl MIL iO~ silon) vs. Andrew Novosad (Beta sences from the navy yard, any- fTr"'L£ Theta Pi) I DES MOINES (AP) _ Lyle D " 118 lb. Division Quinn, secretary of the Iowa high ,;w;a;y:? ~F;r:e:n:c :h~l;e~av:e:?;:;==~ MARY BEiH S~mlflnall' schooL ath1etic association/ said r HU GHfS Jerry Flemlllg (Slag1~) vs. How- y e 1; t efr day the organization's I. 1 ~ "/_' • ~~~t.tf~ ard McNeny (Manse) annual coaching school would be --- ~ --..! The onty "0" eve. Cub~ on Guii dours6 ) held as usual next summer unless STARTS TODAY pubilihed TW 113 by .he SItI"d., LL8 , FRENCH LICK, InCl'. (APJ~ there are unexpected deve]op 11•• o,n. Po.. .. Chicago's Cubs continUed their ments. ARMY OFFICERS workouts-two of them-on the The board of cO I\tl'ol of the 14th fairway of a gol! course yes- IIJAA anI;! the representative terday and greeted th'i'e~ riew~ council decided, Quinn said, that &~ comers, pitchers Dick Barrett and (he customary coaching school and UNIFORMS ACCESSORIES George Washburn and infie£dcl' Stu officials clinic be held during the Mar~in. last week in August. Our complete stock of Army uniforms Olio of the reaSons for continu- Adcfed Hit belts, insignia, shit'ts, ties, p~nts, &hoes, cap . Boston Bruins Win '" ~ng lhe school in wartime, Quinn "LlU" Mell of rteelfom" covers, overseas caps, gan'lson caps, will M.... C\loC1l nlty cover all ot your needs. BOSTON (AP) - TM B:ostc) ~id, is thllt. Ml(t year many sup . ,. ~ND •• Bruins gained ~ . tW.Q...,dfries ', el'i nrendol\~ wlfo have been . out "CALLINO' DR. GrLLISPIE" "Laftd (If Cluhltili',.t&" nottrlng lead ov~.t -tne .Morit,rea1 ,Qt,the coacHifig field for a long QUinta' I~ Te,Phnteotor CanlldJe\1 ~ in theft- Nl.itipifllt 1{~i\t(.:, time witt b~ cll"lled upon to take -Wltli- LIONEL BARRYMORE ".... ~t;tterii" ey p!aYQff h!!I'e" Iiy , ~u'tUhi,_0; q!(et_CP cl1ing duties and will be DONNA REBD gethel' al\ exciting 5-3 trillmpb great! iii neec1 a refresher C'rwon ot -----'- last night before a t 2,900 crowd course in major sports, such as the NOW THRU FRU>AY t NEWS at the Boston Garden. J HAA offers. Tt WEDNESDAY, MARCH ~4, i943 'I HE DAlLY IOWAN. IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE FIV!
Speaks Today sia would complete the ring ot their own canning and presening., insist on removal of. the Un consin Geoloaic and Natural ms-lllO physics building, The prize Necessity of Women hostility. Is it not true that America' C8- ments restricting those effortS. tory survey. 1'1.1;'0 travel mods of 525 is open to all IIIOphomores ~ ~enate Voles The burden of the evidence up pacity to produce is as yet a prac- will conclude the proiram. who are abou·t to comple the t to now is that Japan is gOing to tically unknown, at least an un ". J . EBER work of the. freshman and sopno- In Law Profession OFFICIAL BUUETIN Pr id~nt I more years &.n mathemaucs. Candi- avoid war with Russia as long as tried quantity? America does not (Continued from pale 2) dates should prepare lot' an ex she can. Only lost week it was yet know her capacity. We have I amina n in aJaebra, pla~ trigo ~ To Scrap F.R . Eo R. C. Be Discussed geometry of two Will disclosed that she was permitting not extended ourselves. We have the 14-week summer semester and All students in U1e .t.nlisled Re nometry, analytic lend-lease shipments from the devoted more time and energy to who wllih to re-apply for stJc:h sel'\'e Corps who plan to apply for dimeruions, and the elements of United States to cross the Pacific quibbling over what we can or aid for that session, should call differential and int gral calculus. "e (ell 'II nn University WOf\\en will hear Mary admission to Ole next fr~man Wa'J ~ K. Fagan, practicing attorney-at in Russian ships to be Janded in cannot do than we have to roll Immedi tely for their renewal ap cl in the college of medicine The prize may be di\'ided if out law, give a lalk 0 women's oppor Ru ssian Siberian ports. These ves- ing up our sleeves Dnd doing it! plications at Room 3, Old Capitol. should obtain application forms tanding papers oC equal lue are sels must thread channels between DR. DAAKE REPLlI': : America To be eligible lOr consideration, obmitted or may be "'ilhheld it WASHTNGTON (AP)- With the tunit.ies in lhe law proCession at immediately from the office of the \ Japanese island cbains; they could does have great unrealized produc applicant must have held one ot registrar. no paper shows sufficient merh. LLOYD • 1<. 'OWLEI approval of the Democratic leader- 4 o'clock this afternoon in the sen easily be intercepted; but Japan live capaCity. But, within the lim lhese grants during the present ApplieatiGOS "hould be returned apparently prefers to permit all ited time at our we just ship, the senate voled 74 to 3 yes- ate chamber of Old Capitol. This di~posal, . hool year. No renewal applica to thi5 oUice a oon as po ibl this war material to reach Siberia, SlLV terday to scrap Presiden t Roose- is the l~st in the series of leclures ·t . ht t tl b ha\'e to make the utmost possible tion can be accepted alter April and hould indicate that the ppli wereh J .mlg evt;!n ua y e use of capacities already developed. 10, 1943. The Y. W. C. A. sil\'er tea w11l velVs order putting a ceiling of sponsored by U. W. A. and the ca.nt is in the enlisted res \'e turned agam~t h~r, rather th.an That means, contrary to the fatal • WOODY TRO. lPnON cr.rp. be held Thursday from 3 till 5:30 $25,000 (a[ler taxes) on all salaries. vocational information board this I~eate a major IS. ue now With policy of France, working more in the harpe of Mr!:, Virgil r. The house has approved the semester. 05COW. hours and doing .Illore work per lOW MOUNTAINEER Hancher, 102 Church street. All same objective but in a different A graduate of the university I hour, without penalties Ior over- Iowa •• lountaineers will hold Y. W. C. A members, women in here, she excelled in intercolleg time 01' the drag of absenteel m or their regular meeting Thursday, I TB tATI LOW» . PRIZ all housing group of the uni\'er manner, so the two vcr~ions will iate debating and was elected to I AMERICA- strikes! March 25 at 7:30 p. m. in room The examination tor th Lo den ity, women t cully membe • now be threshed out in a joint Delta Sigma Rho, honorary de- (Continued [rom page 2) We could j[ We would, as Mr. 223 en ''leerlng bUilding. Dr. L. prize in mathematics will be Ih' n faculty mefllMl'S' wi\'es and Iowa committee representing the two bating society, whUe attending the ____Mar__ y_ &_._ F_a_,a_f_l ___ Shafer suggests. II fewer men are R. Wilso; of Coe college will give In room 224 phy 'ics buiJdml, Sat City church' group worn n are In branches. college of liberal arts, and was an for all national needs. But, let's be leH to work, and there is more II Lalk on "Plant.s, Lakes, and urday, April 10, from 2 to 5 p. m, vited. Onl y Senators Bone (D., Wash.), outstanding student in the college inglon has a legal staff, and the conservative, with only ten \...:>rk- I work to be done, eaCh. man must Fish," Iiummarizing the resu~, of Candidates should leave their LO Kl:N1'ON need for trained lawyers at this of law. She received her B.A. de ers per soldier, we would need one d::.;o=m=o=r=e=w=o=rk=.=B=U=t,=\v=II=l=c=o=n=g=re::~=s=tl=v=e:::,=u=mm=::=ers='=w=o::::r=k=wi=t=h=th=e=w::;::::is::-=n::::a=m==ln=::th=e===rn===th=m=::[l=ti==O=lli='=,====;:==PresI==d=D=' ===== Downey (D ., Calif.) nnd Lnnger grce in 1928 and was graduated time seems to be one which can hundred million workers lor the - not be filled rapidly enough." (R., Ind.) opposed repealing the from the college of law in 1930. proposed army. POPEYE sa lary limit. She was admitted to the Iowa ASsume civilians sLill have Lo --:::=~-:"'==--:-==-""'I:"~~~~ r:=~r-::::"""'I:7""::-::-::-r'""'IIJ The repenler is aUached to an Bar a few days alter graduation eat, Jive, and get only one-third oC administration measure raising the and practiced law with her father INTERPRETING- what they did, we still need fifteen statutory limit on the pUbilc debt in Casey fOr three years. From (Continued fl'om page 2) million workers for that. Our work from $1211,000,000,000 to $210,000,- 1.933 to 1935 she served as county and fight requirements would be 000,000. The whole bill, with the attorney of Guthrie county, and increasingly alone in their islands army, 10 million; workers, 115 mil rider, was passed on a voice vote is now president of Guthrie county !ton; government employees, 3 mil nnd rcurned to the house. bar association. Her first case as wedged between the great Asiatic lion-or 128 million. But our 1)OPU Chairman George (D., Ga.) of county attol'lley was a murdel' continent, which contains so few lation or 14 years and aIde,· is 101 1 the finance committee, leading the case. of their lriends, and the Paci ric million-so we would have no one llght to nullify the salary limita- In 194 2 Miss Fagan was nomin ocean, in which the might of the to keep house,-,r rai~e babies, and tion, said it "serves no purpose ex- ated tor secretary of state on the still be short 27 million \Varkel'S. United states is increasing daily. cept the fancilul purpose of eq'unl- Democratic ticket in Iowa and ran There Is another answer, but Ity of earnings." ahead of her ticket in a non Some of them must realize thal pHhaps we'd rather lose the wa,· George also contended the presi- Democratic year. During the cam all the territory they have con than jeopardize our labor and soc dent exceeded the power congress paign, she spoke under the di rec quered along Asia's fringe and in ial "gains." intended he should have when it tion 01 the Speakers' bureau, Iarge the islands of the Pacific fOl'mq fRo • IrAFER HAU,E GES: passed the price and wage stabili- ly in support of other members or.ly an outer protecti ve bhe li t lIa t Arnerica's full farming and manu zation act. He cited a statement by of the ticket. may collapse one day. facturing e(fidency has lleVel' Yl:'t one legislative tax expert ~ing According to Miss Fagan, "From ISOlation been developed. Millions of pt'r the limitation meant a loss of a recent visit to Washington and Th is position of isolation is one sons have depended upOn the !'Orn BtONDIE CHIC YOUNG $100,000,000 annually in revenue. with the various heads of legal explnoolion of the unexpected eI' grocery, the cannel'ies, par:kers ~~--~--~~~ -, departments there, th£,l'e is a very powers of ~L1rvival shown by Ja and packagers fa" food insteod of ... wide field of opportunities. Prac pan's neutrality pact with Soviet planting their own gardens and CONSUMERS' tically every department in Wash- Russia. To go tG war with Rus- doing, to a greuter or less degree, CORNER Daily Iowan Want Ads Spring thaws and Mar c h showers may spell leaky roofs as well as May flowers. Putting * * * PROFESSION* AL* *DIRECTORY C~R* RENTAL* * water in its place is a real job, CLASSIFIED ---- particularly when your ceiling ADVERTISING After March 21 Dr. W. L. BY- RENT A CAR. B. F. Carler. Dial begins to drip in unexpected plac WATER's oUice wil) be Room 4691. es. Patching a roof can be a costly RATE CARD 220, Savings & Loan Bldg. .,-- HJ::LP WANTED and complicated project. Often the cheapest way to repair a faulty ,>I", CASH RATE LOANS PART-TIME waitresseR and sand .,.. r. w ,,"",,1 roor is to replace it entirely. lor 2 days- wich board girls. E.;pcl'ially or course the time to replace lOc per line per day $ Money to Loan $ , weel<-ends. Apply Ford Hopkins. BRICK BDADFORD CLARENCE GRAl your roof is before it leaks so as 3 consecutive day&- Hock-Eye Loan Co. Ul avoid the damage and discom 7c per line per day Phone 4535 WANTED immediately. Man as I lort that even one small leak can 6 consecutive days- janitor. Permanent job. Apply bring. But for those not gifted with 6e per line per day APARTMENTS at Larew plumbing. I sevl:nth sight, the lirst drops 1 month- !plashing [rom the ceiling of your 4e per line per day FURNISHED three room apart- LAUNDRY WORKERS llpply in bedroom will have to serve as a -Figure 5 words to llne rnent with bath. Electric refl'ig- person. New l'rOCe!:s Laundry warning signal. Your root is badly Minimum Ad-2 lines ernior. Adults. 20 W. Burlington. 313 S. Dubuque. and neerls complete replac- FURNISHED foul' room apart- WANTED CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ment. Automatic hot water and 50c col. inch heat. Electric refrigerator. Private WANTED - Second-hand plumb Or $5.00 per month bath and entrance. Bus line. Dial' ing fixtul'e.q. AI~o lIsed healing I 4510. plants. Larew Co. I All Want Ads Cash in Advance • I Payable at Daily Iowan Busi ROOMS FOR RENT WANTED - LAUNDRY ness oIIiee daily until 5 p.m. FOR RENT-DOuble rOom. Twl.n LAUNDRIES-Dial 4538. Cancellations must be called in beds. Dial 7200. LAUNDRY-Shirtl! 9-c.- Fl- a-t- fj-n-is-h, , before 5 p.m. Responsible tor one incorrect FOR RENT! Room fOl' two bOYl!. 5c pound. DIAL 3702, Long- HENRY CARL ANDERSON insertion only. University heated. Plenty of hot streth. ,.---=--,---- ~~~ water. 32 E. BLOOmington, ----IN- S-T-R-U- C- T- I-O-N--- S~J ROOM lor profe&sional or gradu- DANCING LESSONS-ballroom- Leaky roofs-- resist patching for DIAL A191 ate girl. Illeone up on it to find and 1'1.' Doily hauling. Dial 3388. ,air the trouble. Walking on a LOST-Diamond ear-drops. Lib- , Courteous roof causes old warpeq or cupped eral reward. Dial 3448. pinsetterg mingles to crack and loosens their Dails. Every cracked shingle, every LOST-Pink shell l'lm glasses MAHER BROS. TRANSFER Clean kJosened nail is a potential leak. Tuesday. Reward. Dial 3173. For EUicient Furniture Moving alleys . ... -.:--- .- ==-_--' t...,.-_..,-___- _...;. Invi 'bl Leak Ask About Our Ollie E'l'TA KETT PAUL ROBINSON The outlaw of all leaks is the LOST-Navy blue zipper purse WARDROBE SERVICE Bently's Ilvisible leak. Unseen water let containing PM, cash and identi DIAL - 9696 - DIAL 11 by this route may run down fication card. Reward. Dial 42un- cer!; have not yet becn announced, reawakening of the consciousness composed prlnelpally of members cellulose and its derivatives. Of tty in advance o! Broadway Pl'Q- to call conferences on Christian of man's divinity in his own heart. of Gletin Miller's organization, late years, he has been interested S k D I A duction. It was originally written cducation. ChUl'ch vacation Bible ------whIch disQsndcd when Miller Yank Soldiers Cited in the development of Minnesota's toc ea ers, gents especially for members of the Na- schools were especially stressed Jack Horner's Plum joined the armed forces. Featured For Teaching Officers industrial future by the chemical tional The;lter conference, an or-I during the convention. with Spivak are a quartet, the utilization of locally available raw To Meet IOn Trlople A ganization which serves amateur Miss Parkcr, speaking at 7:30 in Covered Lot of Ground Slardustertl, plus the vocals of LONDON CAP) - For "out~ I materials. and semi-professional theaters. the evening, discLlssed "Correlating Garry Slevens and the arrange- In 1922, he went to Yale as an Meeting with extraordinary suc- the Home, Church, . and Public LONDON (AP) - The "Little ments of SOllny Burke, Dave Mann standing meritorious services as instructor of chemical engineering Offloces Here Today cess wherever it has been pro- School" with particular reference Jack Horner" who sat in a corner and Nelson Riddle. instructors" at an officers' candi- and received the Ph.D. degree from duced, because of its timeliness, to the newly-ol'g.mized Victory was no mere fictional character date school somewhere in Eng- that institution in 1924. He was "The E\!e .of St. Mark" is a play corps. The latter, she asserted, was of nursery-rhyme fame but a very T land, lhree noncommissioned of!i~ real man who knew which pie I cers of the United States army appointed assistant pl'Qfessor ot Livestock dealers and agents o! American youth at war. rapidly growing all over the scate. SUI Students In chemical engineering at the Uni- will meet in the county AAA o!- Tickets lor the production are Not Regimentation held the biggest plum, wlll have an oppol'lunity to versity of Minnesota in 1924. In fices ill the post office building at now on sale at the University thea- She explained its Junction as an According to an item in the Hospital .1 qualify fOl' commissions through 1936 he was promoted to full pro- 1 o'clock this afternoon. Ray Smal- ter ticket office, room 8-A, SchaeI- attempt to enable school children London Star, the story of Jack atiending classes in thc same fessor, which position he still holds. ley, chairman of the Jivestoclt and fer hall. of all ages to help win the war, Horner dates back to the time of Donald Howie, Al of Monticello, school. Thomas Cromwell's dissolution of The instmctors are Scrgl. Norris He graduated trom Syracuse un i- meat distribution committee, an- emphasizing that the implications ward C53 M. Nevils, 30, of 80 Lee street, versity in 1916 with the B.S. degrce llounced yesterday. Past Matrons' Elect of the movement, which should not the monasteries during the 16lh Jean Stamp, C4 of Lynbrook, Charlestown, S. C.: Corporals in chemistry. Following a period ot The food distl'ibution order from M W C be looked upon as any atfempt at If plannlnl1 a trip, consult with century. N. Y., \~al ' d C31 Michael Kolesar, 26, of 1122 Wash- our a!lent as to best day. of research and development work the OPA requires that each person rs.. H. ress regimentation, wel'e also designed At this time, the abbots of ~ao~1 Brown, A3 of DUluth'l ington street, Farrell, Pa., and with the Merren-Soule company engaged in the handling of live- President at Meeting to help win the peace. Glastonbury, who owned the MlI1n., IsolatIOn Floyd A. Nelson, 34, of South the week to travelancS the belt on spray drying, Professor Mon- stock as a dealer 01' an agent is re- "There were so many things-- manor of Mells, tried to forestall Rob~rt H.ughes, P4 of Emmets- Sibley stroet Lichfield, Minn. IChedule. toule. Your cooper tonna spent the war ;real'S in re- quired tQ have a permit. Smalley Mrs. W. H. 'Cress was elected Red Cross, scrap metal, etc.-in Clromwell by surrendering title burg, Isolation __~ ______ation will materially aid In the search and plant production work explained that all such dealers and president of the Past Matrons' as- which pupils were asked to partici deeds of all the abbey's manors Susan Irving, N2 of Osceola, jso~ into Henry VIII's own hand. lation task of tran'PQrtlnll the armed on poison gases. Artel' the war, h~ agents must fill out applications sociation 01 the Order of Eastern pate," the speal{er continued, "that forces, wpr workers and otherl was superintendent of the oxazine fOr permits before April 1. Star at a meeting Monday evening. it was clear not all could be ac To ensure their safety, they hid Malcolm Coy, P2 of Cedar Ra- Goose Feathers r depaHment of the United States In defining the terms ' of dealer She succeeds Mrs. E. W. Hostet- complished," adding that the pres the deeds in a pie and entrusted pids, ward C22 Warm U.S. Airmen I trllVellng 01\ C sentlal bualne... COlor and Chemical company, and and agent, Smalley said lhat the let'. ent Victory corps would provide it to Jack Horner, at that time Cecile Peyser, Al of New York, r la~el' assistant director oj organic term "dealer" applies to all those Other new oHicers are MrS. Inez coordination. steward to the abbot, for safe de- ,Childreq'3 hospital •WILSON, N. C. (AP) - Goose• lIi1t.e~flJ l'e~eareh for the Semet-Solvay who buy and sell livestock and who R. Kelley, vice-president, and Mrs. * • • livery. During the journey, Newell Jacobson, A3 of Creston, feathers [rom old fashioned south company. . do not keep such livestock more Charles Beckman, secretary-treas- The pupll will be able to choose Jack Horner is reputed to have isolation ern beds are keeping some U. S. DIESELINBBS Professor Montonna has been a than 30 days, while the term Qf urer. the lleld in which be tWnks he "put in his thumb and pulled out Charles Frazier, Al of Keokuk, airmen warm. member of the American Chemical "agent" applies to anyone who sells To honor Mrs. George Maresh, could do best," Miss Pa.rker &5- a plum," the title deed of the isolation Mrs. W. F. Welfare of Wilson CHICAGO·OMAHA·KANSAS CIH·DlNVU soCiety for 25 years. He Is a mem- livestock for others. who will leave soon for st. Louis serted. "We want to make every manor of MeUs, which he kept for Clifton Royal, A2 of Des Moinos, has donated beds which were 8ILLI/jOS - SALT LAKt CITY - CAlI-OIINIA bel' of the Amerjcan Institute of to make her home, the group en- clllld fecI that this Is his country himself. ward C51 given her on her wedding duy 26 UNION BUS DEPOT Chemical Enginecrs, A~ha Chi r tertalned at a party aIter the busi- and that be has some contrlbu- years ogo. The feathers will be Sigma, Phi Lambda UpSilon and I ness meeting. Members presented tions to make." I I Report Four Iowans Asks Speed Check Beta Sigma Phi Elec;ts lIsed in flying suits. They must be R. J. l\1cComa , gen. Sigma Xi. Missin. gin N. Africa. • the honored guest with a gift. • • • less than two and a half inches "All over the statc thc problem WASHINGTON (AP)-Alarmed Mrs. Emmett Beard waR elected long, dry picked, from ducks and Dial: 2552 ." WASHiNGTON (AP)-The war Pope Pius III of juvenile delinquency is becom- at reports that motorists al'e again president of Bela Sigma Phi, busi geese, , department listcd lhe following ing increasingly difIicult," she stepping on the gas, Rubber Direc ness sorority, .al a meeting MQn The Weifal'es have a son in the PI as er Base Iowans as missing In action in the WASHINGTON (AP)-Pope Pius stated. Especially in the bigger tor William M, Jeffers yesterday day evenl'hg. Other newly elected army air corps. . . north African area: XII is su(!ering 'from a mild attack city is this being felt. It is the task appealed to the governors of every otricers are Helen KeUer, "ice I Pvt. Delbert J. Beirne of Deni- of influenza, according to a Vati- o[ home, school and cl\urch to state to help check what he calJed president; Thelma Brown. record The average price of a meal in son; Capt. Francis D. Burdick of can report received yesterday by combat the evil, which is due to "a public tendency to disregard ing secrctary; Regina Seelman. a British government rcstaurant AI Sf • Naza I re . Shenandoah; Pvt. Silas E. Colwell the information bureau of the puzzling adjustments in enVlron- the national speed limitation of corresponding secretary, and Helen is 20 ccnts, including lea or cof of Clarinda, and Pfc. Ralph F. National Catholic Welfare confer- ment ralher than to nalw'al pre- 35 miles per hour." Hughes, tl·easurer. fee. Kleffman ot Portsmouth. ence. dispositiQns in boys and girls. A LONDON CAP) The RAF threw nearly 300 four-motored bombers against the l;Iattered U boat base at St. Nazalre Monday UHARLE.S A. BECKMAN UEORGE r, DVORSKY night and lost only ope, the air J ministry announced today, while L'-~. I Candidate for Calldida.te Cor City Trea urer returning pilots descrIbed how Park Comml88ion~r A young man who ha llved In large fires took hold of the docks His oubtandlnr service on the of the French port. (/PIII" fHIj. Iowa City all of his life-cap 1/UtfiJ~ Park BoaI'd bas seeured Cor blm able, honest, efficient. Obsel'vers regarded the single re-eleetlon without opposition. bomber loss in such a large-scale operation as particularly notable, and recalled that the Jan. 16 night .... You can spot it every time raid on Berlin was the last attack in force whiCh cost bllt one. In a quick follow-up, speedy HE fashion magazine, "Harper's Bazaar", publishes two mosquitos of the bomber com Tpages showing a row of young models ••• each in an mand attacked the St. J~seph loco l\lAX W. BOONE motive works, near Nantes with original dre.ss creation. Each,is drinking an original cre DR. ANDREW H . WOODS out loss this afternoon. ation in refreshment .•. ice-cold Coca-Cola. Thumb the Candld~ te for Alderma II Candidate for Alc1erman - First Ward Whirlwind fighter-bombers at pages of magazines and you see Coke in picture after Second Ward tacked railway targets In Brittany picture. Note how shops and stores feature "Coke-Bars" An energetic young buslness~ last night while the larger planes An uutstand\Jll cUben whose man who has the eapael~y to were ovel' St. Nazalre. The dual for their customers' refreshment. ability Is unquesUoned, get things done fur his cUy and nigh t attack followed quickly yes. hls ward. - - - terday's devastating daylight as Coca.Cola had to be good to get where it is. The finished sault on the Nazi U-boat base at art of 57 years' experience is in its making. The result Wilhelmshaven by A mer i can is a d~ffeTent kind of refreshment-all the difference HENRY F. WILLEN BROCK heavy bombers. All the Whirl between something truly tefreshinG and just something winds l'etumed fl'Om Brittany. ~1AYOR The St. Nazail'~ foray mal'ked to drink.. resumption of the RAF heavy prndent. careful, cfflclent ma.yor bomber offensive against axis con The only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself-the JACK WWTE seeking a. weU-deserved rc-el etlon. tinental bases after a nine-nilht trade-marked ptoduct of The Coca-Cola CompalW. CIUJdldate lor Pollcl! Judn LEO E. KOHL lull, presumably because ot unfav There's no comparison. A younr, able attorney, a. man Candhlate for Alderman orable weather. It was the first ThIrd Ward who comes from ~ pioneer Iowa. It Is natural to think oi state ana national governments big RAF night assault since tons as mOlit Important. That Idea arises because Ihey super * * City family, wbo Is experienced Ills elcotlon \\ as so mueh as of explosives were dl'opped on It'. ni/otural (or popular names to acquire (rlendly abbrevia In tbe office he seeks. vise the actlvltles of mote people. But the government or Essen March 12, starting great tbe city Is the one whIch Is closest to the people and tbe sured, no candidate appeared tions. That's why you hear Coca·CoIa called Coke. Both IIgalnst hlln. fires in the Krupp wOI·ks. . one which has the mest I'nflucncc on tbelr dally lives. mean the lame thing •.• "coming from a .lnille IO\lfCe, and The welfare of our people and our bomes I determined well known to the community". by the persons who are our city orrlolals. Town and city Sir Edward Beatty Dies governments sUJlPly Ilollce and [ire proleeLion,-the feel Ing of sceurity. They egulate ~be public healLh and the MONTREAL (AP) - Silo Ed-I moral well-being ot the community. The atmospherc of ward Beatty, president of the the 10e,,1 SOCiety In which our chUtlren grow up is cleo Canadian Pacific Railway com termlned by the etliolency and the attilude of our local pany from 1918 to 1942, died late JOHN J. ZEITHlUlEL otrlclal.. That society so ruled determines and flxcs last night. even the tone and qualUy of our churches. lIERMAN J. KADERA Candidate for It Is our task ~o ret the best bearls and brll,lns of our Heads Townsmen Ald~rman- at-Larre city interested In our city rovernment. When represen Candidate for Aldermall Conscientious and truly repre· tative men of fIne oharaoter offor themselves tor ortlce, Filth Ward vote for them, Then stand back of Ulem! We offer silch sentatlve of tbe people of this A bllSlnc sman who has the In· city. a group of repre8ellta~lve nlen of fine char.ctel1 a the Democra.tlc candidates for clly otrlce. ter sts of the men, women and chlldren of hI ward at heart. ~ ______D_e_m_oc_r_at_l_c_C_I _tY Central CommUtec I
: :---' Come to the Polls on Monday next,'" March 29, 1943 ~"-"' --.- --"'~"-,'.~ VOTE I=OR YOUR DEMOCRATIC 'CANDIDATES
FRANK UNRATU SAftt WHITING, JR. WILLIAM J, WHl'fE Candidate for Alderman The best ;s alwa'Ys the better b,,,, I Four&h Ward Cl6l\d Idale for CllndldRte for Auetlor CHARLES R, EICHER" At of Alderntan.at-Larre Ue Is a pioneer bUIlDea man of His services have been 10 ..da· WuhlD&1on, Iowa: wu elected lor1LID UNDER AUTHOllTY Of THE COCA.COLA COIHAMY ,V Iowa City who has .. knpwled,e Experienced In cUy rOViernmen~ facion to ~be veople ot thl. cll1 »rcalient of the Townsmen orpm of Ute cIty's needs b.sed on a and OM who knows and senSCH th_t he has no uPPollIUon In tb~ QUon at a meelinr of &own proc CEDAR RAPIDS COCA·COLA BOTTLING COMPANY IUluwlecile 1&1 ,row~b. the needs uJ tbc euHre city, ejection. &on and &own Bee&lonal preslden&l 0' ,.ea1erda,.. Eicher IUC~ Harold 409 E. Woah1nqion Str ..t Iowa City, Iowa Sehnert, U fill ~ •