PATS. MEATII ....~ , •• , ,It ...., • .., , ....,. 11...... ,.. 5, 19(5 .o.d ,",.. ,h A.,. II: VI •••• .,11 U J lie: A. '"...... II ,... ,...... 0... II, ••• " FaIr Ib .... b KI •••• 'b...... "n. M. LI ....., .. QI .... • om. va... 8.pl. I ••• .ro , ••t , .....,.. D... II. SUOA., ."'.. , .. •••• • ...... Aa" II ,., rln p ••• d.. 8lam, II ...... ,1 . 1 , ...... D... 'I .or ,THE IOWA: Fair aDIi coDUDaecl warm.. I~r DAILY fl •• IOWAN ,oUDt.. IIHOII, b ...... Irpl ...... I, Z, a .Dd , .,. yo.. t 1••• '1 ..1 •• ,. Iowa Cit y I I M 0 r n i n 9 New. p a p-e r c====:======~~=====z==~-======~======~~~~~~~==~~~~~====~~~~==~c=~==~======~~~~~==~==~~~~~~~~~ .MeENTS Tal AIIOelATID .a181 IOWA CITY, IOWA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1945 TBI AISOCIATU PU.. VOLUME XXI NUMBER 293

.' I s'. ·P,r.epare to ove n on ,o y·o Truman Sends U. S. Speeds .Fate . IConservation Leaders, Amanas NavjSuggesls U. S.. 'DOOl.lnLE' FLYERS HOME AT LAST Occupation Message Of Nip Criminals IO C· I III R I Maintain Permanent N,w Storie. Told : ppose ora VI e eservolr Installations in Pacific Of City Slated Of How Enemy Jo(ongress Tortured, Murdered By JOE MATHER servation commission at the hear- Retention of Strategic :' D.Uy Iowan City Edltoll ing alleged that Insufficient con- Ba ••i in Atlantic For Saturday WASHINGTON (AP)-The 'Unit­ Alter the courtroom in the John- sideration had been given by the army engineers studying the pro­ Also Recomm~nded ~ House Seek. Control ed ,states moved swlfUy Wednes­ 80n county courthouse had cleared ject to the matter of recreation. .W ASHINGTON (AP) - The Liberatlon of War Of Atom Bomb, Return day to punish Japanese war crimi­ yesterday afternoon, it appeared that the Amana society, the state A humorous, or perhaps pathe­ navy recommended yet!terday that Prisoners Continues To Standard Time nals after the state department conservation com,mlssion and many tic, note was added to the formal­ the United States retain a vast told how tHe enemy burned, buried farmers and landowners in the ity of the hearing yesterday atter_ postwar riDg of naval bases span­ At Increased Pace WASHTNOT N (A P)-Con. alive and beheaded American pris­ proPosed reservoir area are all op­ noon when a farmer arose to de­ ning the Pacific, including one •• • D.U, .. ~ YOKOHAMA. T h 1I r day .. D.ily OJ ~ gress nailed up the "open for oners. posed to the direct project report clare that it would be "a sin" to base that was formerly British. .. Doil, .. So on the Coralville reservoir. "ruin" thousands of acres of farm­ It also called tor six permanent (AP)-Thirty.fh·e to 40 square • . Dolly II s.: business sign" yesterday but the Two separate agencies are com­ · .Mo. W•• '1\ The Amana society charged in a land. major bases in the Atlantic, In­ mil of Tokyo's more than 200 · Tu .. n. lot shelve wCI'e ba reo pleting lists of alleged war crimin­ cluding one on Bermuda and an­ square mil will be tak n under .DoII, .. ~ statement read yesterday afternoon 'Go Build Levees' • .DoII, .. S.. Today will be different. als whom Americans and allied tha t they will be seriously Inj ured "Isn't it wicked to put all this other at Argentia, Newfoundl.and. ujlitary control of First cavalry • .D.lly II S.. .. Doil, ..... Prcsidant 'L"'uman has ames· forces are hunting down in Japan if the proposed flood control dam\ good crop land under water?" the Stretching from the Aleutians divi ion troop in tb initial oe­ ...... ~ sage-about a lwo·pounder­ is built. In addition to damage to farmer asked. He urged the army to .the Admiralties, the proposed e u pat ion aturday. it was ... DoII, II ~ and throughou~ liberated Asia,.it ready tl)Kto ' lUA'A'ed up Capitol farm and timber areas from water engineers to "take the money and PaclIic line of bases would lie learned today. •. DoU, ...., was learned...... 100.40, Hill. J,T .von't read it in per· backing up in the proposed reser­ go build levees but don't go flood athwart that ocean to support far As the honored unit pre-­ Mo. W'" ~I\ The 8I'encles are &he DatioDaI VOir, the society claims that equip­ the land our forefathers fought ranging fleets and keep aggression ..... Th. lot 80111 ,CiA would take 8 couple pared for the entry from points PI> .. S.... , war crlmell ooubC!lI, IlI'letb' an ment in their industries will also for." far from United Slates shores. ju t outllide th city, Japan '8 · i v ", PI\ of R ~rs. AmerlcaD orranl.. tto .. , compos­ be endangered. While some of the 500 persons Nine major bases were In­ .. : ,,1\. c con(tre s exp cIs him to growing discussions in the diet, .I."~ ,!,rd" ed of Mate, war and DaY!' de­ The representative of the con- in the courtroom snickered, the e1udecl In this Ilst wblc:h AIIlst­ ...... ,~ II., sarin detail what he expects of raelio and pr on what lay .. Mon .... PI\ panment offlelallt and an alUed farmer cried: "Putting all our land ant Seeretary H. Struve Belllel .Mo.tIt"'r\ it in guiding the nation on to war crimes &lOmmllrlon, In Chlua where so much corn and beef is described as "limited to thOlt baek of her defeat r ached 8. Mo. ill" PI\ a solid peaceti me footing. on which. Amb&ll8ador 'Patrick raised under water just so someone we should Intend to malntalD new high' with an open declara­ .... So,""', tion of Tokyo's newspaper Asahl ...... S.... , Whether they give him all he J. Hurley ls Ullited States repre­ Gasoline Tax Case can go joyriding It's a sin!" and which are a1lleeptlble to de­ .. Mo. tIt"'1\ wants Is something else again. leDatlve, Most hearty advocate:; of the fense. They were: that &be army and navy were in · . . •... S.I"de, bitter dispute durln~ the war...... 9.... ;r Yes t e r day the president In making public another list of proposal were representatives of Kodiak and Adak in the Aleu­ ... Mo. ,bl. P To Be Heard Sept. 13 OJlflIll,. crltlc.sln, &be military merelf recommended that some Japanese atrocltles, in which crim­ cities, industries, drainage dis­ tians; HawaII, Guam, Saipan and . .. .. 81116" aervleea al DO Japanaese paper tb" '1\ $3,500,000,000 be lopped off the inals -frequently , were named oUl.­ tricts and farmers in the lowlands Tinian in the Marianas (consid­ baa lIone In more than a decade. •• S..... " fa.nds of clvUlan war areneles. right, the state depa.rtp\ent said . 'Court Action to Test along the Mississippi river below ered as one base); lwo Jima, in • ...... S.... , Aaahl Nld the arm, and DavY .. Mo. ,~" Pnese w~r cr.lffi~n.a~~ IS, signed for trial Sept. 13 before war and affords one of the flne t .. M.. Ib,. Prj congressmen will argue about: scribed the extent 01 flood dam­ Jacob de Shazer, Salem, Ore.; Lleul Chase Nlell!len, Uyrum, Utah, and whether G en era I MacArthur I ••• ••• • • fleet anchorages In the Paci!\f. 811'14., ca~fled out Just as In Europe, .he .. Judge .Harold D. Evans in district Lieut. Roben Hlte, Earth, Tex. Rescued from Jap prison campa 101- would make his Cormal entry at ... Moo Ill" Prj More economy, less taxes; more age in their localities and the con­ In naminr Okinawa. close to · •.. ... Stll,•• , saId. . . ~. • . . ... coui-Chere. . stant threat of great damage il the lowlnl' the Nip surrender, the airmen are now at Walter Reed hoapltal the same time. . Mo. lbn P,I meat, less controls; more jobs and Til!! atro<;ltt , repo~t was n o.t a. Yesterday Judge Evans handed the )leart ol Japan, the navy ap­ ..•. ,S.,urd" pay [or the jobless. less govern­ levees should break. underrolnll' examination . The fast pace or liberating long­ .Mu thtl Frl pleas.ant story, . Byrnes:, observed, doWn a' ruling-in 'which he over­ parently went counter to thlt­ ment red tape. They said that they were in Ideas of Admiral Raymond A. held Allied prisoners of war con­ ...... Sollrdl, grimly. It was not publIshed unt,JI ruled 'a motion by atiorneys for t.Jnued, with 1,707 more freed •• M•• I~" P,I House members tossed into the favor of any upriver reservoirs S.,raance. Fifth I lee t com­ .. Mo. ,~" F,I t~e war was over lor/ear ~f addl- the plaintiff, L. V. Carlton of Iowa mill a bushel of bills that showed which would tend to reduce the mander. Speaklnr to newsmen Control Board Meets ' Wednesday and 600 more due In lIooal. Japaryes.e reprJ~l~ against City, in 'which they asked for 'more flood stage in the MissiSSippi dur­ Crom the Hamatsu-Nilgata areas they were in a demanding mood. AmerIcan capl!ves, he explained. specific' statement and to strike at Manila recently. he ques­ Service Heads ing acute tiood danger. A drop of S o.u t h w est and northwest ot They demanded: Tbe report .comlsted !If a le~- parts of the answer' of the aUor­ tioned the politIcal wisdom of With O. S. Von Krog I. A congressional investigation only one or two inches in the peak retalnlnr that hard-won Islan.d. To kyo. The ~o t a I liberated les of formal lltate . 4epanment neys' ·for the "defendants in the flood stage, th.ey said, would ma­ through Wednesday was 3,9911. of Pearl Harbor-and they may In addition to the nine Pacific l'reteats on the a'roeltl~ .sent to. case. terially Jessen the pres$ure ag jru;1 Inmates to Be Graded; The United States Eiehth army ,et it. Tokyo-b,: of neutral Swlls- Judre Enns said last nlrht bases, Hensel said at a news con­ Favor Unified w",. their levees. haa released 27 per cent of all %. Control of the a tom I c ference, the navy was recom­ erIud. TIl.... were abuot~. that he 'had left It UP to 'he at- In stating their opposition to the Guards Merit System prIsoner personnel In it., area In lIoalb. That probablY will come lach protests m... dnrmr the torneyS for botb parties to &l'ree project, the Amana society, repre­ mending that many others be Ilonr, too. wat and freq.ently the,. reslllled kept, not as essential to the navy's Planned for Eldora northern Honshu. OD a time for nna1 hearlrIA' on sented by E. J. North 01 Cedar Ra- Moving down Irom the Aieu­ 3. An er-d tt> OPA But many In Improved oondlthln, lor Am­ needs, but prlmar!)y to prevent Command tbe case. He said that they bad DES MOINES (AP)- Members legislators and government o[fi­ erican prillOners, the report ..Id, (See INDUSTRIALISTS, page 6) them from being used by any tiaos, the United states Ninth &«reed on Sept. 13. of the state board of control, which fleet commanded by Vice-Admiral cials think prlce controls will have Examples of the atrocities: other nation. The case tests the constitution­ has jurisdiction over the state's YOKOHAMA (AP)- Amerlcan Frank Jack Fletcher waited to to stick a whlie. Abo u t 750 Americans were ality of tbe act of the 51 st general While not identifying all in that penal Institutions, met lor more 4. An end to the draft. But it crammed into the hold of.a Japan­ category, he named as examples army, navy and,.airforce men want take over the Ominato naval base assembly which raises the state Prewar tee Cream, than two hours yesterday with an of Mutsu bay, on the north coast looks as if the selecti ve service act ese freighter and kept there virtu­ gasoline tax from three to four Wake, Mldwar, Eniwetok, Kwa­ assIstant attorney general. a department of national will stay on the boles until it ex­ ally without air; water or food for jalein and Truk, the latter Japan's of the main Japanese Island of cents a gallon and allows county For about an hour they were defense. Honshu. Negotiations with the pires May 15. The house military near::Jy three weeks, untll the s,hip boards of superl(isors to increase Whipping Cream Back strongest outpost before the war. joined by O. S. von Krog, sus­ This was the impression ob­ committee approved yesterday a was torpedoed. Ameticans who He emphasized that the navy's Nipponese naval commander were tlleir leVies for secondary road pended superintendent of the El­ tained by a majority of a speCial set for Sunday. bill intended to encoUrage enlist­ managed to get olf the ship were maintenance. recommendations were from the dora state training school for boys. ments and cut the need of draft machlnegunned in the water; those For Civilian Use Investigating committee w hi c h Meanwhile, the American Sixth D. C. Nolan and Edward L. navy's viewpoint alone, and that None would say what transpired at a,r my occupation of Kyushu calls. the army alrlorces and others toured every war theater and In­ (See ATROCITIES, page 5) O'Connor, attorneys for the plain­ DES MOINES (AP)- Whlpping the meeting. southernmost Japanese home is­ . 5. The turning 01 clocks ahead ! would make their own recom­ terviewed all toP commanders of .:i.i~ ,btl tiff, chllrge tha t the act is uncon­ cream will be back by Sunday or The conference coincidcd with land, proceeded smoothly with the '" ..... S.... , an hour from wartime to standard e • stitutional because it contains two menda tlons. an announcement by Col. Percy A. • .Mo. Pli crea mwlll be back by Sunday or all services. help of elements of Admiral Ray­ ,hr. t\Jne. The olltiook-obscure. Lainson, acting superintendent at ...... s.t.r~ Rain in Nebraska I separate and distinct subjects. Monday. A committee proposal for a. new mond Spruance's FlCth fleet. . Mo. "tI Pn 6. United Nations headquarters In an amendment to tbelr or­ Eldora, that a gradlng system [or ...... 50''''' in U. S. A. I But Nothing Here I These war casualties are re­ defense organization- in which Units ot the 32nd division, of • Mo. tb .. Prj I&'IDal JIfltJUon tbey allere that 'Tokyo Rose 'Held inmates and a merit system for Gen. Walter C. Krueger's Sixt• ...... Sol".p" 7. Half a bllllotil dollars to .-- tbe contestecl act In Ils final turning to the market following guards would be instituted in an some enthusiasts see Generals .M .. ,~" ri . establishment of regulations of army, took over Kamikaze suicide find the cause and cure for can­ MacArthur and Eisnehower in top .. MOD Ib .. Pri Th.is morning our friends out in form never PUled eUher house effort to improve conditions at the plane aIrfields at Kanoya and an ...... Sot"'" eer and Infantile paralysis. Nebraska are havihg some widely 01 &be lectalature or was slped them by the office of price ad­ F.or Army Questioning school. roles - has been shel ved since . M•• thtl Fri airdrome on KagoshJma bay at the 8. Broader lederal-state help for scattered thunderstorms and light ministration (OPA) yesterday, February...... S.I.r.' br the rovemor because of a YOKOHAMA (AP) - United Von Krog had lillle to say as he southern end of Kyushu...... 5... ' mothers and children. rains. But It isn't I ikely that there handwritten addition made to after the removal of restrictions emerged from the 'meeting,' held Airmen who initially sought an ... Doil, ., ~. 9. Exemption ol soldier bonuses on butterfat content by the war States Eighth army headquarters independent airforce largely aban­ Aside from rebuilding broken ...... S.... ' will be much in that stuff when ~he mle of the act after It bad in the board of control office . He ...... r.I.;.., from income taxes . food administration (WFA). announced yesterday that Iva To­ declared, however, that he re­ doned that proposal in favor of a Japan. the Nipponese also must it gets here, if it does. There just been voted upon III both house supply slillled and unskilled labor .....T ••• pri 10. An end to the war Jabor doesn't seem to be any general Walter D. Kline, Des Moines guri, Los Angeles-born radio an­ mained on the state payroll, Indi­ single defense department. and 8e.Date. nouncer who won fame among to the occupation forcel. and "'~: board. break in the weather anywhere. Attorneys for John M. Grimes, district OPA director, announced ca ting his formal notice of sus­ Eighleen months ago the joint .... the new price regulations the American troops In the Pacific as chiefs of stal! appointed a special under MacArthur's . dlrectives, to .: "l.rPS"·P'I r The senate closed up shop in 17 So we will p.robably have clear state treasurer, are R. G. Yoder, pension had not yet been served £!~If"" dairy industry was waiting for. "Tokyo Rose," is under detention. investigating committee to Inter­ contribute to the comfort and ...... DO· fli minutes. That was long enouab to skiet! agaln with possibly some first assistant attorney general, and on him. ...ld ..... receive a batch of nominations Sellers of whipping cream get a An officer ot the counter-intelli­ Gov. Robert D. Blue announced view army, navy I aod aidorces housing of the increasing Allied high clouds. Temperature about H. J. Ries and H. G. Clark, special power in the islands. from the president, swear in Sen­ small increase in price; sellers of gence corps apprehended the 29- Monday that von Krog had been commanders in every theater on the same. Yesterday's high tem­ a~istant a t tor n e y s g e n era 1. L1eut. Gen. Robert L. Eichelber­ ator William F. Knowland, Call­ perature was 95 and the IQw yes­ Ice cream get none under the OPA· year-old woman and turned. her suspended because he "must have whether America should have a County Attorney Jack C. White is over to general headquarters for ger, United States Eighth army fQrnia Republican, and adjourn terday morning was 63. At mid­ defending the members of the regulations. known of the excessive and un­ single department or national de­ questioning and investigation. commander. estimated th.at the out of respect to his predecesor, nigltt the mercury was at 88 and Johnson .countyeboard of supervis­ Whipping cream, which dairies justifiably s eve r e disciplinary lense. The woman was picked up as occupation of Japan's four home the late Hiram Johnson. going down. Ol'S, co-defendants in the action. serving Des Moines are ready to measures taken at the school." deliver to their customers, will sell an American citizen and no charge At Eldora, meanwhile, it was Island&-Honshu. Hokkaido. Shi­ Fifty-sIll: of the 98 senate koku and Kyulhu-will require lI\embers turned up. . ", . for 21 cents a half pint, an in­ has been lodged against her. Head­ discloseti that a new disciplinary Hobo King to Retire JAP POSTAL WORKERS UN05:1l crease of a cent over the March, quarters said It wasn't known dormitory ordered by Lainson had DES MOINES (AP)- Ben Ben­ bet wee n 300.000 and 400,000 Only 150-odd checked in for the ., troops. His own army will occupy house session. That wasn't enough 1942, price. whether she was under auard. been completed and would be son. 52, king of the hobos for lour Ice cream containing 12 per Miss Toguri was at a hotel, placed in use immediately. years, said here yesterday he Honshu north of Yokohama and for a quorum. It didn't matter I Hokkaido to the north. He said much . There wasn't anything im- cent butterfat Instead of the war­ which was Allied correspondents' Lainson said he planned to have would give up hIs crown at Britt, headquarters and had just given that aU Nipponese troops would portant doing. t time eight per cent will sell for printed as soon as possible a set of Aug. 22, 1946. an interview In which she denied rules for the institution, a copy of be disarmed by Oct. 10. The house knocked oft In 1 hour' the same price as now. Ice cream Following his retirement, Ben­ a and 22 minutes. makers were given their choice she had, called American troops which will be given each inmate son said he would "set awhile in between going back to the' 12 per South Pacific "foriotten men." and employe. California. cent butterfat prewar standard or Hopkins to Head FDR reducing the price on the thin Jap Premier Explains Defeat- Orders Cancelled product. . Memorial CommiHee for Moving Three r.wme WASHINGTON AP) - Harry Truman Recommends Atom Bomb Tokes Top BlU L. Hopkins Will appointed yester­ day 81 chairman of a committee Divisions to Pacific to make recommendations for a Spending Redu~tion T0KYO (AP)-Japan surren- seemed almost impossible to carry diet of conditions in Japan shortly suitable memorial to the late on." before the surrender. WASHINGTON (AP)-The wilr dered because the IItomic bomb "No doubt we committed mis- President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Allied airpower had formed. a department yesterday cancelled WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi­ raIds on Hiroshima and Nagasaki takes and our methods were faulty Announcement of Hopkins' ap­ orders for the movement of three dent Truman, promising to push climaxed mounting military losses in not a few respects," he said. blockade se tight that even com- P9intment to serve a. chairman of veteran army divisions to the Pa­ reduction in war appropriation, and immense exhaustion of the "Nor con it be said our effort:! municatlons with the China conti­ a five-member subcommittee of the executive committee 01 the Cific, including the 911th. inflntry yesterday recommended .. $3,550,- home front, Premier Prince Hi­ were exerted always in the right nent were made extremely hat­ whose members protested aaainst 542,602 cutback in civilian war Roosevelt Memorial association iashi-Kunl told the diet yesterday. direction. ardous, he said. duly In Japan. agencies spending. In hls ' report on the causes of "We are now tasting the bitter wa. announced by President Tru­ The other two division are the In a letter to congress, he said deCellt, the premier declared 10,- cup of defeat. But in case we show Military supply production had man at a brief news conlerence, Second and Eighth Infantry divls­ this recommendation will be fol­ 000,000 Japanese were "war suf­ our fidelity and faithfuiness in dwindled to an extremely low ahortly after the meeting of the lonl, which like the 95th wefe lowed by aoother calling for ferers," that "hundreds of thou­ fulfilling what we pledged and be­ point; liquid fuel was scarce, and committee, over which the presi­ brought back from Europe and sharp reduction In schedl.ded mili­ sands had been killed or wounded, ha ve ourselves according to rea­ shipping operations had been cur­ dent presided. earmarked lor Pacific service. tary spending of the army and and 2,200,000 homes were burned son by performing what we believe tailed sharply. Mr. Truman saId ftopkins, to­ The war department's a.ctlon navy. by American aerial attacks. to be right, and rectUying what is Higashi-Kunl reiterated his pro­ .ether with Francis Perkins, the Was baled on a recommendation "I also plan another full review He added that the atomic bomb, wrong with a humbleness and mise of free discussion and "cor­ ,ormer IeCret.ary of labor, Henry from Oen . Douglas MacArthur to of war and war-related appropri­ hurled upon a nation whose ~w~r broadness of mind, it is my firm rect public opinion." Then he ~orgenthau Jr., the former sec­ lind to the Pacific only thr" of ations and a report to conlresa of power alreldy was "disastrollSly belief that the integrity of our na­ practically squelched criticism of retary of the treasury, Frank c. the ,ix divisions Icheduled to 10. Jan. 3, 1946, containinc recom­ undermined," was .belleved "likely tion will appeal to the world, pest war governments by 1I,Ini Walker. former postmaster gen­ \ He specified that the three mendations for further adjust­ to ret!ult in obliteration of the Ja­ leading to the restoration of "there Is little use of going back eral and Admiral William D. ahould be the 86th and 97th ai- ments," the president'. letter said. panese people." friendly relations be.tween our to the past, trying to put the blame Leahy, cbief of IbiU to the presi­ ""Idy at lea, and the 13th air­ "In the meantime I shall pro­ The Russian declaration of war, country and the other powers, and on one person or another." dent, will nominate offlCt!I'll for IIome dlvilion who~e memben ara IUANI8I WOMEN ~LOYJJ:S In TokYo', central postotnce are ceed to take administartive action the premier .aid, also forced Japan making it possible to bring about The premier avoided any SUI­ the auoclate and recommend ad­ now on !urJouih prior to rea.. lhewD .... at work l1114er ,ulHln'llIOD of an American oeeupaUon to the full extent ol my authority "into the worst international situa­ permanent peace and common gestion that the Japanese con­ ditions to the executive commit­ Itmbllng early In October at Fa. offtetr, 1faJ. lien Dplan of Waeo. Tex. Such ",haa will lOOn be com- to speed reduction in war and tion" and "the surrender instru­ prosperity for all mankind." sidered they had been wronl in _ The aroup will abo recom­ Brao, N. C. .... au onr J.paIi, Girl. are maIl'- oat poe"'l aavtnn bonda, war-related activities." ment" was sisned only after "it T~e _Premier bluntly told the startin, the war. mend a suitable memorial. . I PAGE TWO THE D A IL Y lOW A N, lOW A CIT Y, lOW A --= THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 6. 1945 Spiritual Aid in Peace-- COVERING UP THE DIRTY WORK AHlee Will Have Hard OFFlcrAL DAILY BULLETIN Church membership in the churches In their everyday living News I.... I.... DlnYS.8tTr OALINDA. a" •• b,,,I,, I~ dI. ".... United States ha'~ reached an a]l- more than evel" these last few ...... 0"' .., 01. C.,I,ol. II..... f •• tbe OIJifIUL JifOTICII ... ,Decision in Replacing ~, '.p .. I••• wit" lb. ~."PD ••dllo ••/ Tb. ".11, I ..... or ., .. time high of 72.492.669 persons- \~ pl ...4 I. Ih. ..OX p.nl•• 4 I.. .b.l. 4opo.11 I. Ill. .m.. .f fti TllQl"e than 52 percent 01 the pop- years. . • Dally J...... OINKAL NOTICII8 IDIII' be a. Til. n .... ' I ..... _, II;> C:IO J. ... III. .., IIr ....ID. Ilrli , ...II.all...... II... wUI NOI.-' ulation-according to the new It Is likely that IIlllllllters alllO Behind Popular Lord Halifax .J .... pl04 10, 1.I.phon•• aD' lIlu. 1 b. T!'PID O. LIIOW,!' W.. lflll ~~~~ ... BIONICD II, a rOlpo.llbl. edition of th Yearbook of Amer­ are learnJng a le980n frolll ed u­ p., .... ican Churches. cators who bave found tbat By JACK STINNETT Vol. XXI No. ZOSl Thursday, September 6, IHi The total membership figure, they cau. DOt stick to the text- The News WASHINGTON - Great Brit­ (For blfonaaliOil re,ardla, d.tea beroD' 'bJa _be•• , ... which represents 265 religious book. • ain's new AUlee government has bodies, is an increase of 3,991- They mUllt carry the textbook hIe"a""" lJl tb, ofItoe 01 Uti Prealden&. Old (J."tol.} a poser: How to appoint an am­ 48~ over 19,43, the Yearbook says. with them into thl! realms of day­ By Mall~n Paul bassador to the United States who D\,. Benson Y. Landis, editor, re­ to-day li~e . They need to tie the I, ports that church membeDshjp textbook's knowledge to some- will pe as popular us Lord Hali­ GENERAL NOT~CES has been increasing steadily for thing which can be solidly'under- WASH]NGTON-Mr* * * . Truman is fox has been. 1 a number of years . . stJi/.od. ' on his own, to wipe the lend-lease There are few here, o~ among The Unlersity libraries, except be dlstJ'i bu ted as announced by This certafuly Is II. heartening 'bur earnest hope is that these slate clean-or rather his own and those many in the country w,ho the medical and dental libraries, the dean at the college. ~ trend-one wblch probably spiritual advancements evidenced Jimmie's (meaning State Secre­ will be closed on Monday, Sept. IIARRY O. Bo\RNI8 " have come In contact with him, Kerl.&rar was broucM on by the war. 3. Labor day, in .increasea church membership tary Byrnes). Congress can, and who would deny that the Earl of R. E. ELLSWORTH Many relatJ\'! of serVicemen -whether the advancements ace will do nothing. ITaliCax is the best known and Director SOHEDULE have found comfort In the spir­ due to the war or to the church The lend-lease law, whjch now most generally liked ot the repre- UNIVERSITY LmRARY BOUIII Itual good churcbes have to itself-will not be lost in the Aur. 9-Sep~. 22, 19'5 turns to have been a give-lease sentatives of foreign governments. IOWA UNION offer. years of peace. Main reading room-Macbride, law, also gave the president free This is omething of a phenome­ Only the lobby, information desk And perhaps as much as the SPIRITUAL G U I DAN C E I and director's offices will be open hall. I war, the inoveased membership WILL BE MORE NECESSARY power to make and close agree­ I non and certainly a phose of the from Aug, 9 to Sept. 10. The PerIodical reading room-LIb., ma'y be due to a gradual realign­ IN M A I N T A I N I N G PEACE ments, without guiding pl"inciples. career of the British earl tK'at Union will reopen for public serv­ rary annex. I ment of the ch urches themselves. THAN IN ENDURING WAR BE­ The original misinterpretation should eat'll him the praise of his ice Monday morning. Sept. 10, [he Government documents depart" ment-Llbrary annex. Today's sermons more and more CAUSE THE NEED FOR ]T of Mt. Truman's announcement people [or u job well done. cafeteria will reopen at 11 :30 P. m. Tuesd"oy, Sept. ] 1. Education - philosophy - 1111, d are leaving the "preaching" stage WILL BE LESS OBVIOUS. As that we should not expect repay­ Seemed lII-F"teti chology lIbrary, East Hall. EAIlL E. IIABPt;R h and becoming "man-to-man" dis­ we return to peace we again will ment, has bee n amended by Monday-Frlcl&y ]n a way, it was :1 job [or which Dlreelor, Iowa Union 0' CUSSiOlls' of how reli/lion and be th i nk ing in terms of dollars BYI'nes and senate lea.der Barkley 8:30 a. m.-12 M. to an extent which represents av­ Edward FI'edet'ick Lindley Wood, SPIRITUAL IDEALS WILL AID and cents and not lives. 1 ,. m.-5 11. Ul. erage congresswnal opinion. as he was christened, seemed iIl­ IN PRACTICAL EVERY-DAY It is often staled that wars G~AJ)ES-TERM n, 1945 Saturday Mr. Byrnes said we expected to SUMMER. SEMESTER L~VING . bring about great advances in the fitted. In the first place, he was 8:30 a. m.- 12 M. . get some undefined things he cal­ Grades for Term U of the 1945 It may be that Lhis, loo is in­ fields of natural science, We For Okinawa Women- preceded by one of the greatest Reserve reading room-Lil:S'rari led "commitments" although not summer semester for students in annex. .. ~ Idiplomats the British have sent directly the resulL of the war. fol" hope that the advances in our dollars. the colleges at llbera I arts and Closed Aug. 9-Sept. 22, 1945 , PEOPLE HAVE NEEDED·TIft spiritual philosophy will be just IJIlposlble to Collect us in recent times, Lord t:.othisll· commerce ond the graduate eol­ Schedules ot hours lor other II-. SJ?IR]TUAL ADVtCE of the as great. The of congtessmen think The latter was charged with tak­ Ieee are available at the oWce of pal'tmental libraries will be poaMd' simHarly it would be impossible to Seek Emancipation ing the gr at red-brick British em­ the registrar upon presentation of on the doors of ea.ch library. ·II C M t' th E . 1 collect debts, along the funding b'assy on Massachusetts avenue the student identification card. R. E. ELLSWOIl'llB WI ongress ee emergency. llnes in which we tried to lower By ROBBIN COONS. , Henry Bachmsn, CinclnnnLi, Ohio, from under Its wraps and warm­ Professional college grades will DJrector J drastkally and then collect a mi­ ,(Jblcago Sun: Congress assem­ OKINAWA (APJ- It • could be economics. and industry officer al ing a relationship which the shy \ mentary dip OR A DISASTROUS nor portion of the debts of World that here on Okinawa, la sL gl'e"l Ishikawa village and watched a Sir Ronald Lindsay had allowed • bles today (Wednesday to con­ SLIDE DOWN. War 1. battleground o[ the war, ~he ol'!en- ' to cool considerubly. Home After Heroic Exploits- tiJ;lUe a session which has sud­ President Truman is pursuing The nations cannot pay, they tal woman has zegun'hel' battle for fascinating oriental speatacle. den.ly become almost as import­ a sound and vigorous course. not ay. n would be daugerous tAJ emancipation. It is too eady to ~ay Look Like Ants Lord Lothian succeded well, - tbe signs al'e too few-bu~ it Down a winding path, out of the ant as that of the "hundred days" only on these matters, but on the br·pose auy financial obligations but within a* year * he * died. In that aCter March 4, 1933. The resem­ Ion g'-range features of the "full OD them, so why 1I0t forget the could be. lush ten'aced green hills in the Nisei Face Problem : troublesome year 91 1941, when so The com mon women of Okin- distance, came a seemingly end­ • blances are many, but there are employment" bill, on continua- whole b.uslness? much depended on ot.r relations awa, for th:1t matter, have shown less procession of native women, B.y RALPU menTON ful a8 he said, "By the time 1 am two great and disturbing differ­ tion of the draft in order to re- (This means, of course, our tax­ with England, Churchill sent 1.IS no sign of desiring greatel' free- each bearing a bundle of brown AF Newslealures discharged, things may be dlfter- ences. lease overseas veterans, and on payers must pay the deficiencies,) Lord Halifax, In some circles, peo­ dam. For the most parI of their thatch on hel' head. They trudged VAN NUYS, Cali!.- One gl'oup of ent. I hope-I really hope-tha~ Then conlP"ess knew that It' the strfamllning of goverl1ment. No sentiment for any affirma­ lives have been those oj beasts of along single-file, not rapidly, not ple who thou/lht they knew Gl's fighting back to health at Bir- will be so." The Truman-Vinso n tax pro- tLve action lo make Messrs. Tru­ groaned. was a time of crisis. and acled man and Byrnes take any course burden and childb~arers, They slowly, but at an even pace. mingham general hospital will face Loungi'1g with liyama in the sua Lord Halifax had the reputation a tough problem all their own room at the end of one of th,: accordingly. Now it does not. gram is undisclosed, but may be about the debts exists in either hOlve been proficient at both. For Ilours the pa.rade. lUce ~ of being " Britain's No. 2 ap­ It is no unusual sigh'. around the march of an"" wouJld down out when they return to ci vilian lile. wards in the 2,OOO-bed bospital \\.~ 1l.\I\uGa.cncs its work with expected to disapPOint the reac- house. Some debating pressure peaser." civilian villages under mililary of the hUJs. It was Uke some­ They are Nisei, American citi- were three Hawaiian-born Japa- seemIng reluctance. tionaries. WILL CONGRESS RJ!:- urging Mr. Byrnes to get the ut­ He is a tall, bean-pole of n man, SPOND WILLINGLY TO THIS most in commitments is present government to see native womell. thing out of a mQvle.-lIke "'lhe zens of Japanese ancestry. nese-American casualties. They Then President Roosevelt en­ with a shynes~ that borders on These Nisei, veterans of the were Pfc. Takashi Kusunoki, 23, LEADERSHlP? and will be exerted, old-looking frail and tiny in shirts Good Eartb." joyed a leadership which over­ severity. He certainly gave no famed 442nd inf;mtry regiment, at WaipaOIl, Oahu, who had been and mompei ttrousers), balancing Twice a day these women walk came all obstacles to a swift and * * * Nowhere can I find anyone who heavy timbers on their heads, first impression of being the man whiCh spearheaded the American wounded in the chest; Pvt. Haaao Just now the prospect is not wants to ask-what of Russia? several miles to recover thatch comprehensive action. T 0 day treading surely through mud or to fan the flames of friendship drive last spring in Italy, face Yoshida, 22. of Honopepe, Ita­ cheering. There is talk of leng- Who can say she is in no position {rom war-wrecked native huts President Truman faces the first dust in their bare feet. The fields and confidence between the soon­ the future honestly. They don't wBuai, hil In the knee; and Pvl tbening the duration of unem- to pay her debt? She has no in­ and bring it buck for Ishikawa to-be Allies. test of his own leadel'ship in do­ are ,full of them. harvesting 0)' brood about it nor do they ignore Tokio Okura, 24 of Kanuuela, Ha- ployment payments instead of ternal war debt like ours, at least houses, their own future homes. A Warm FrlendJln.ess it. waii, wounded in the leg, mestic legislation. He enjoys a planting. The women keep house, few military police escort them, none of more than nominal conse­ Which just goes to show. Lord "Many the people who dis- Pfc. Joe Arakaki. 27 a farllle~ far greatcr perso nal popularity increasing the weekly amoun~ . quences. I understood she started cook and mind the baby, too. Be­ or merely for protection. The women Halifax went into Il series of hud­ criminate against us. quietly or at Montebello, Calif., before the' That is nothing but a proposal to out paying us for everything she sides, that, they've nothing much are willing workers and like some­ in congress than h is predecessor to fill thei), time. dles with the publicists ond other violently. cannot be blamed," says war, was lhe only one of the possessed after the "honeymoon," stretch out poverty. got, but lapsed lately. Dollar bal­ thing to do. members of his slaff who knew T/ 5 Heynai Iiyama. "Their sons group to recall any discrimina. It comes Irom regions seek- ances? Regard for Women BUT THAT DOES NOT INSURE The men, of course, worked loa, Men Need Supervision the United States. He emerged have been killea by Japs." tion by other Gl's, "He was a new inll'" to perpetuate low wate Pay In Gold Sales PASSAGE OF BILLS. and apparently accepted their wo­ The men work will i n g I y with a warm friendliness that has Early Volunteer Joe at Ft. Riley, Kan,," Arakaki scales, when both recional and Russia can mine gold for per- enough also, but they bog down In 1933 the country was try­ men in the dual role of servant extended far beyond the bound­ 1Iyoma, who was in the first said. "At lirst he was going Ul national prosperit.y demand a 'haps $11 an ounce cost to her and unless there is supervision and di­ group to volunteer for the army smack me down. But before we ing to get out of a depression. and wife without qualms. But aries of the District of Columbia. pusblng upward of those scalell. sell it to us for $35 an ounce rection. Generally, they have to be Without a trace of pe.rsonal iso­ from the Manzanar. Cali!., reloca- left Ft. Riley. we were drinldn. Today it is trying to avoid going since the Americans came, with The whole system of uneP'!- (thereby getting about 70 per cent shown what to do and how to do lationism, he has been more than tion center, is recovering from a beer together-and he was buy In" into one. On the economic side, all their projects such as roads ployment insurance is what Sena- price reduction on goods from us) and airfields requiring as much it, in every detail. generous of his time and energy leg injury. A Beverly Hills land- most ot the beEr." it is easier tg stay out than to tor Barlt!ey has called it, a and by this .means is in a pOSition labor as could be supplied. the Where this trend, it such it is, in making speecbes. Although he scape gardener before the war, Optimistic Outlook: get out, but on the political side "hodge-podge of inconSistencies'" to repay. Without hurt. Okinawa men are regarding their toward a pOSition greater dignity is conservative by nature, birth Hyams plans to study landscape Arakaki. wounded in the arm, this is reversed. d t 11' t" t Ie I It Also look at her captured re­ women with new interest. for women on Okinawo will lead ,lOd practice. no British labor design at the University of Cali- doesn't think "there will be much MEN DO NOT EASILY LOOK . ue ~ can IC 109 s a. aws. · Isources and markets in Europe Tbe women work better, are I is of course pure speculation, party member could have beED fornia under the GI bUl alter his trouble, once lhe ~I's get out ot lS eVident now th~t congress and Asia. which have permanently discharge. uniform. They will help their. AHEAD. They will spend all steadier at their jobs. need Jess I Wh(Uler it could possibly carry more persistent in his contacts made a fatal concessIOn to what enhanced her financial and eco­ He anticipates opposition :!fter hom folk understand the NiseL" their energy climbing out ot a guiding and directioD, than the over, under American inOuence, with labor lead rs was called state rights, in allow- nomic pOSition. In spite of injured to tradition-bound Jopan is also a he become a civilian, bul doesn·t Capt. Elliot Grafman, Jewish hole 10 feet deep, taUler than men. ing the states to .!let up separate industry does she not have genu- They therefore receive mort) moot question. But Okinawan wo­ Extremely dignified by nature, know where or when it will de- chaplain a\. the hospital, who has throw in a few shovelfuls of dirl * * * insurance systems. This caused ine ability to pay? . praise from their new bosses, and men-some at least-are getting he has played good sport by at­ velop. taken the Nisei under his wing, When it is forming, compensation to be PUT ON A . Tbe condition is different as th Okinawa men, hearing this, are to see American picture maga- tending everything trom barbe­ "I am not hUnting (or it." he said he thought Arakaki was PAUPER LEVEL IN MANY regards the British empire. the beginning to look with wonder­ zines. cues to night clubs. He has been said. "But from who\. I hear and right. "Mo t of the men in this read, there have been several in- hospital," he , said. "are southern * * * STATES, Netherlands, France a.nd otbers somewhat as if the old family Could be that their Japanese initiated into Indian tribes and Had it not been for th is. almost stances, in Cali!ornia and Arizona, Californian . Their attitude ought In all of them it created a Including China-but not to­ gout, long talten for granted, sud­ cousins, under similar influence. received honorary college degrees. fa,tal def\!ct in human nature, the of violence against Nisei. It would to be an accurate reflection of tally. '1;he British, Dutch and denly had learned to sing soprano. some day will emerge enough to He has attended numerous base­ group of s tat e officeholder.> be foolish to assume tha\. I alone what the Nisei will find in civll- legislation needed to catTY us French and Chinese (now ex­ The women naturally are enjoy­ tell bushido... minded, war-loving ball games and now can even wash chiefly interested in hanging ont~ will be spored." ian life. And 1 can assure you from war to peace WOULD pan d e d through Mancburla) ing it. down a hotdog with soda pop with their jobs. friend husband where to get off. Hopes for Change there isn't a hero in this hospital HAVE BEEN ENACTED LONG control the world output of I sat one day with navy Lieut. and thus be an influence Jar peace. apparent relish. ILyama, a very young looking who do not think as much of AGO. Some of the damage is ir­ Will cOJlKl'ess act ~ow for the every material we are short of. ------Nothing Frjvolous American people, or for state . True, they are financially on the 2<\. spoke calmly but earnestly. these Ni. ei 'as he does of the rest reparable- the refusal, for in­ Yet th re is nothing frivolous His expression turned almost wist- of his buddies." sloance, to prepare a public works Jobholders who fear that In­ brink (the world bas put up some about Lord Halifax. The war has program to bridge the reconver­ creased federal aid wln lead $18,000.000.000 to he 1 p the m brought tragedy into his own to a national system? tbrough the Bretton Woods bank Tool Industry Continues at Wartime Peak Jhome (one at his sons was killed) .. sion gap, Will it act to avert a depres­ and exchange fund) but after the and no one who has listened to The next eight or ten months * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ sion, or to protect the idea that war. they will hold world cartels Manufacturers Expect 'Sock in the Jaw' Soon him in press conierences, at will be cfitical ones, with mil­ and ri.onopolies in such strategic INTERPRETING' poverty is a good thing except which he now is thot'oughly al lions of war workers and veter­ materials as rubber and tin, CLEVELAND (AP)-America's are several unknown quantities ease, could doubt the si ncerity or j when the wrong people are ans O\lt o{ work. Could not a small yearly per­ machine tool building industry, mixed up in the whole problem. poor? it steer 10,000,000 ser­ depth at h is feelings. wm centage of that monopolistic pro­ There is some possibility that Quick II.Ctlon Is lIeeded to In­ vicemen back into a decent living which during 1942-43 a manu- No Peacetime AplJUcation u 1Fie WAR NEW$ crease \JIIemployment la'iur­ duction be aPl?lied to reverse give­ facturing clip 10 times kreater "For inst:mce, some of the war- Lord Halifax will be relained in and contentment? lease to help us build permanent ance benefits and to perrect the than its peacetime peak, today has I time machinery has no peacetime his post, but it a career diplomat BY JAMES D. WHITE ready when they started makln~ The answe to that does not stock piles, or ever-normal sup­ or an out-and-out laborite is sent Assocl.. 'ed Pre !I taft Writer excu s. macblnery for selling surplus unfilled orders which guarantee application. The government, too. depend wholly upon congress, plies of manganese (which Russia seven months 01 production. at will retain some as 'stand-by' fa­ to succeed him, the newcomer General MacArthUr got a politi­ From 1942 untU last sprl., lie property. nor upon President Truman. IT has in abundance), tungsten, lin­ current rates. aiJities for the nrmed services. will have a hard row to hoe be­ cal advisor Tuesday whose assign­ was coun e1lor of the Amerleaa The attitude or congress may DEPENDS CHIEFLY UPON THE seed oil, quinine and even Paciric So said the National Machine SChools and colleges are suppos d fore he raises the crop of friends ment is interesting news,. just as embassy a~ Chuolklag-leara· determine whether this unem­ AMERlCAN PEOPLE THEM~ oil to keep our patrol battleships Tool Builders association as it an- to get first crack at buying the Lord Halifax has made. Tokyo oUicials begin turning on Ing still more abou& Japan, et­ ployment period wlll be ' a mo- SELVE,S. going around Japan in the inter­ nounced the 225 firms of the in- government machinery, but no their well-known charm aDd Jap­ pecially her bomblnr taeilca. est of world peace, without having dustry, employing about 76,000 one knows how much they will ... The walrus is said to have a anese militarists start beatin/l their Lt Gen. Robert L. Eicha:1berflr, to ship fuel to them acro~s that workers in the "cu.t metal',' t?ol absorb. - hide one-inch thick. Belng such breasts and talking about 'repent­ comander of the Eighth a riJl,y vast ocean? plants, are currently shlppll1g "Other maChinery, with peace- a hom ly cdlt r he certainly ance'. fwhich is occupying Tokyo, ~ 10 Gel Rid of a Menac&- Drop Indies Bases knows th Japanese from uYla)I each month completed machines time use, has been punished by the needs it. ' The advisor is a quiet career The Chicago council of the Na­ legllslature, for tJoIat matter-are Government authorities do not vatued ot $32,000,000. three-shift operation during war- diplomat, George Atcheson, Jr., back-from their actions outsl~ tional Negro congress has II prac­ permitted to pass judgement on seem to want the West Indies and The new tools, the association time and is no good for postwar their own country, where cherry only a small fraction of our for­ who wears a twinkle in hi~ ey and the "qualification" of their mem- Bermuda which are valuable de­ said, are going to metal-working precision work. We know that blo . 'oms und the tea ceremOllY do tical suggestion for ridding Wash­ eign trade." knows the Japanese weU- from b~ s. They go through a process, fenses and air bases, on the ground plants in aU sections of the coun- some of the standard equipment not .. em very important w hen ington of Sen. Theodore G. Bilbo, The greatest number of cancel­ whal they do liS well as what Uley no more than a formality in most that we would Mve to support the try, speeding them toward recon- is adnptable to peacetime produc­ stock d up agoinst Japanese cru­ lations of War contracts for m:r­ say. the hate-inspiring, race-baiter cases of judging newl -elected I poor n.alives. Well we n.eed farm versioQ from War to peacetime tion, but theL'e will be u cost in elty · gr ed and cuning. I Ul chine tools came last April, the Most of his 25 years in the Far Uead of IntelUcence '. ' " y I labor the southern cItrus and markets. adapting it. The chances are that from Mississippi. ,members QuahflcalJons so that ' cottonbelts which might enable spokesman said, when manufac­ East he has spent in Chino, and a Eichelberger was head at the op­ The council points out that they can ~e seated. the natives to support themselves, The tool buUding industry, an much of the adaptable machinery turers antiCipated the end of the goop part at that was devot d to erlltion and lnlelligence sectlolll whereas it may be doubtfUl whe­ Thus, It would seem legally a,nd the bases might weJl be worth association spokesman said, is will be junked in favor of new Jupanese war far ahead or the rest reporting and prot 5ti rig the a '­ at the Ameriean expeditionary looking for a "sock on the jaw" tools. But the indusU'y is looking ther a member of congress can logical that the senate could a loss for secudty. This phase of of the country. lions at Japanese militarists in oc­ force In Sib ria in 1918-20, an out­ w hen government-owned ma- Cor a 'sock on the ' jaw' when the cupi d arens. t~chnically be impeached, he expel Bilbo. C e r t a i n I y the repayment may be debatable, "It requires, as a rule, about, fit which found it necessary to per chines in hundreds of war plants government CinalJy dumps the ex- could be expelled. Both the house grounds are sufficient. Most sena- however. nine months from the time a spe­ Was on Panay about as much attention to accom­ "are dumped on the market." cess on the market." and the senate-and every state tors have admitted as much. There call be no debate about cial tool Is ordered until thut tool Atcheson slarted as a Chinese pllnyilli J 8 P 8 n e s o¢cupatlon the lac' that ourl Allied friends "This government-owned ma- The spokesman said current can start production in the cus­ language stud nt in P [pIng in the lorc s os it did to the "bolshevikJ" bave been short In "commit­ chinery has hit the market only in shipments ' are higher thon the tomer's plant," the spokesman early twenties. II was one of th it was ent to contain. It wllS oal7 meats" of every killd to us, ]10- dribbles so far, but there is a lot ]939 average, and just under the said. "The industry, b Bevlng the last American diploma[s to leave with great dltciculty that the ".,.. THE DAILY IOWAN Wlcal as well as econoJllie; III of it," the spokesman said. "How- ]940 mark when heavy machine war would be over before too Nankin, in 1937- in lim to b(> on anes wcre persuaded to Ie.av. Si­ Published every mornln, except Monday by Student PaUeaUolll fact bave ma~ none outsidll the ever, we don't know just how tool cargoes were sent to England long, slarted tapering '!IOff (rom the gunboat Panuy when she wa beria, years oller the Amerle.... Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. Un U e. Nau.na orcallhatlon heavy the impact will be for there and France. April until Japan quit, and at the sunk in the Yantz !'lver by Japan­ did. wllJeh II on .'rlclly a mutual Forelrn Orders finish there were practically no ese aircraft. ilc elberger allo hrved .. Board or trustees: Wilbur Schramm,' Kirk H. Porter, A. Craig basis. owes you money might well wish "We have many orders now orders for war plant machinery on Prior to tba', all an embaesy China, where even 'Il... Ja.... Baird, Paul R. Oison, Donald Ottilie, Mary Jane Neville, Mary Beth The British, for i1Jstance, n re to make a "commitment" (0 estab- from France, Belgium nnd Chino," hand. In fact, most of the machine secretary In PelplD~, he b II d ef' InreMlon w...... PUrner, Kara]yn Keller, Jack Moyerl. socializing the Bank of England !ish good will- If w~ asked for it. the spokeslt.an asserted, " but the tool plunts had compJeted theit watched the tide 01 JapanlM .... Still later he beca_ an btWII­ while seeking a new dollar loan My Inside Information. 8U'- IAmerican ol'ders probably will be machinel')' contracts, and hod ac­ nesicln .weep dow n throu,h fence expert on tile Far E.... · Fred M. Pownall, PubHlber directly from us, in addition to the retlta Mr. Truman made Ills too- filled first. The Amerlcn n machine cepted sub-contracts making war Manchuria and acl'Olll the peat and thai mean~ beln, a speelaJW. 10hn A. Stlcl}noth, Editor Wally Strinrham, Adv. MJr. financial aid of the Bretton Woods ali-embracing obs~rvatlon for tool industry is going after post­ muteriel of vurious kinds, wall Ibto Nor'" ()hlba. In JaP4n~ allrllllo". agreements and promising to side world consumption because his war business in South America, . "Some of the primury movers Alter the Panay Incident he re­ Anothel' Ameri~an under Entered as second clap mall SublCription rate_By maD ,5 I 11.­ with Bussla on the continent. earUer ee_Uon of rlve-lea.e too, whel'e Germany ruled the toward reconvel'sion, such as the tUt1led to Pelpitli liS fir t ecrelary Arlhur who knows the Japan.. per year; bJ CIlrrler, 15 centa matter at the DOstoUlce at Iowa The Russians have resisted our had been .. shflCk to the natlonll market before the war, with Eng­ automobile indusll'y, were per­ of embassy where he hud lh job better tor the keen edie of thllr CJty, Iowa, l,lnaer the. act of con­ week~• • , PY' YUl', I poUcies throughout Europe, and which expected to ,et rehablll· land secon d, mitted mOnths ago to order and at makln. repeated prot st to the sword thon for the supeJ'liclII gress o( March 2, 1878. what trade or interests we will receive reconversion tool8. At that The ~tad Pr~ . llr Gcll&­ tated a' Uncle Sam', expense. "Several non-competing manu- Japaneee over the bombing of Am­ R nl) ness of lh Ir home II' e la get or be able to maintain there A leading gove~nment official, fa(!turing firms in the United lime, war orders were listed as erican missions and other viola­ Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell, c~­ 'TELEPHONES slve\)' entitled to u_ for rep"bli­ caUon of all di.patches is dubious. just back from EUrope, Is telling States have banded to gethe~ to "rated" by the WPB, and all oth­ tions at American right in China. mander of the 10th army wtuch II l!!d1torlal OfficI ...... 4192 Dew. credited to It or not otherwise Field Limitless his colleagues the astonishing ex'- set up Offices in South Americu, ers liS "unrated." The p,uto indus­ , Suave Bel. Firm occupying so uthern K 0 r I •. . Ha Society omce ...... _ ...... 41113 credited In this paper and also The field of "commitments" tent to which th.ey were shocked . orfe~ing a wide range of American try rcceived some pl'lorlty, al­ The. JapUIl$& Ilot lo know him probably knows the JIlPaneae ~­ l3uilness attice ...... _ .. 4191 the local new. published herem. which could be made to us by our Actual closing, at the books machine tool products. We are though listed os 'unroted: and the as a suave but firm negotiotor, one tory better- trom first ba~ .s­ Allies Is limitless In both politics throu1!h Mr. Byrnes may be a less ready to puso. aUf products to the early receIpt of tools by that in­ who understood' their own attitude perl n e in Chi n a trom 18111 THU~SDA Y. SEPTEMBER 6, 1945 . and economics. and involve mat­ oneslded propoaltion than slate limit down there, where In pre­ dustry accounts for lts 8P~Y to pn uncomfortable extent and through his greal r treat in B_ ters upon which a friend who wlping-I hope. war times our sales represented swing to peacetime production." who had his arguments set and In 1942- lhan ally other AmeriCJ!l.

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I THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER S, 1945 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PA~E THREE .~====~~~======Women Make Cooking'n Sewing Childs Play- W· . J b Nine-Year-Old Dr. Dunnington Outlines Five Point Plan * Wants to Keep For Peaceable Control If Atomic Bomb Final Plans Miss America . '!~ * 0 Hit by Auto . - By LUCIA PER.IUOO * * * * * Dr. L. L. Dunnington, minister physicists throughout the world SOUTH CHICAGO, IIl.-Miss of the Fi~t Methodist church, in will understand atomic energy For Rushlna America for our money Is no long­ Struck by a hit-and-run car discuSsing "The Atomic Ale" at sufficiently wen to make atomic stemmed lovely, with a lIghter­ while riding his ~cycie on a the weekly luncheon of LiQns club can adapt atomic energy Soro(lty women are relurnlng lo than-air brain and a body beauti­ bridge between Dodge street and bo~s~e the campus to complete formal ful encased In a one-piece swim yesterday, stated five principles to furnishing power for a peace­ suit fitting snugger than a bull­ KimbalJ road Tuesday, Cyril Tau­ or conclusions which must direct ful economy, we can have an era rull1lng plans for the largest num­ ber, 9, suHered a skuJl concussion dogger's blue jeans. ou!! activlties if civilization Is not material prosperity such as the ber of rushees to parlicipu leo and lay unconscious for 10 or 15 Of We found our candidate clad in to be destroyed: world has never seen," Dr. Dun- " ~oJld/ly morning at 9 o'clock minutes on the bridge before he 1. We've pt to haYe a war- nington asserted. more than 400 girls will begin a overalls, grease and great gobs of was found. 1- world. Compabor,. TtralniDc full week of rushing activities cli­ the good earth. When he regained conscious­ maxed by sorority pledging Fri­ There was Just one flpre she Z. We've pt to have a worfcl Emphalszing that he had no ' ness Tuesday evening, the boy was rovernment. In the not.-too-cUs- opinion to state on the questions day and the traditionaL Pledge was Interested In-even~ the able to explain that he did not taut fatare. of compulsory mllitary training Prbm Saturday nlght. score for her serviceman brother have Ume to dodge as a car ap­ 3. We've rol to ham_ the and large armies and navies, Dr. Today all the sorority houses whose number came up In pearing to be full of people hit powers 01 atomic enern· Dunnington said ". am only say- will be filled with acllves en­ France where he was flchUn(. him, but puUed his legs up before In completing plans for their And If she didn't typify the best 4. AU Id_ whJeIl we ma,. ing that we must reexamine our ..,ed losing consciousness to escape have aboal COIIlPIIIaor.,. ideas on these subjects, giving full parties, tees and dinners. Last min­ In American women as she swung mIIIt.arT having them run over. The speed­ tralnlll&', lar,e armies or navies, collliiderations to this terrible new ute arrangements will be madc a pick with the labor gang in the ing car ran through a stop sign have (ot to be thoqht. throach force. and everyone will be anticipating a South Works of Carnegie-Illinois at the east end of the bridge and arain in the lIcbt. er &his new "After all," he continued, "just week. steel plant, then you hever saw a f\lll disappeared down Governor street dillcover)'. what good are a thousand dread- woman measure up to the times. A meeting of all sorority presL­ alter the acddent. S. Moral and lpiritual re- noughts against one atomic bomb dents and rushing chairmen will be Labor Ganll' Martin Vevera of Kimball road search mast cateh alt with and or 10 million of the best trained held tomorrow afternoon at 2 The pick and shovel gang are found the boy unconscious on the lupersede .e1entlfie l'fteaJ'c:h U men against an enemy who III o'clock in the senate chamber of boomingly proud of Katherine bridge at 11 :30 a. m. He took the the world ill to be laved. tossing atomic bombs at them? Old Capitol for last minute in­ Kalwasinski and of her four re­ child out of trafIic danger and When the first atomic bomb "We must put moral and spirit- structions and announcements. maining brothers in service. Car­ caJled Mrs. Tauber, who rushed was dropped on Hiroshima Aug. ua1 training at the tore of our , lash president and rushing negie is vocally appreciative.. too, her son to a doctor. 6, tens of thousands of people training program," Dr. Dunning­ chalrman Is required to attend the not only of the fact that she was It is ·thought that when the ac­ were killed in a second and tens ton asserted. "This means that meeting to obtain a )jst of regis­ their tirst woman on the labor cident occurred Cyril was return­ of thousands have died since then. we will have to revamp our edu­ tered rushees and a schedule of gang, but that today she has pro­ ing to a store after he had run an Japan's most modern city was re- cationel and religious institutions," )'reahman Week activities to be­ gressed to the position of their errand Cor his mother. Mrs. Tau­ duced to nothinl. he added. ,In Sept. 17. oldest woman welder. ber and Cyril had been canning S... MUIMII Uves Moral Bac:kwuh tomatoes, and the boy had- gone At that she's only 41, an age "That bomb probably saved The moral backwa3h caused by to the store, returned bome and she describes as "a darned sight more than a mUlion lives," Dr. this war has been terrlClc, he as­ WOIlTB then disappeared. DUnnington said. He remarked serted. "The trouble Is that we Director j too young to sit and sew." I Government Hopes Restless Slttln" Sewlnll' how Winston Churchill had est!- haven't trained our children in Sitting and sewing is what she mated that, because the atom home, school or church, in the , I was doing three years ago during bomb caused the Japs to quit, Ii ways of the kind of world in whIch for 14 Million People the early days of the war. But Seven Iowa Youths million American lives, 250,000 we would like to live. even then it wasn't Idle fancy British lives and four million Jap- "Brotherhood is an Idealistic In Faclory Jobs Soon work. Not Katherine. War broke Win National Honors anese lives were saved. concept," Dr. Dunnington said. out and she got herself a job in a "Although the effects of this "But now with the atomic bomb at atomic bomb was to end the war, loose in the world, It Is also the WASHINGTON (AP) - The medical supply h a use sewing Six Iowa City youths and one bandages. But right then she was girl won places In the National we have no guarantee that the most hard headed realism." time I am JOvernment was s h 0 0 tin g at HAPPV-Kath.rlne Imll •• on iob. next atomic bomb which explodes be dlHtr­ In employment goal of 14 million bUrsting to follow her dad and her Dairy Cattle contest at Waterloo earned! Why, I never even got will have such beneficial effects," people in factory jobs in the next brothers who were deserting the to last weekend. Catholics Will Observe hope-thai ftnlsh grammar school, but left It Dr. Dunnington sald. few months. steel mill for the ranks of fighting Joan, Charles and Eugene Jen­ First Friday Tomorrow to become a drill pren operator nings entered live head of cattle Declaring that the forces which The war manpower commission men. As she puts it: for Continental Can company. Now ba. proposed the figure as a "first I looked around me and in the contest, filling the county can now be used to make war are look at me. I've 1I'0t a 1I'00d trade. group quota for cattle in the two­ so powerful that we cannot afford Special mB3Ses on observance of goal" to be attained even while thou,ht-'Let the older ones sit another war, Dr. Dunnington said, f1rsi Friday will be held tomor­ millions are losing jobs in war and sew. rm stron,. I can do a year-old guernsey heifer class. LOYAL SISTER-Note .tars on Kalherlne'. helmet-for brothers In M,!lce. party clothes and senUmental Eugene, 14, won a first prize with " We have had our last chance. It row morning at 5:45, 7 and 8 plants. roan's work U they can ,0 out must be a warfess world from here o'clock at St. Thomas More chapel Fourteen million were at work in and work for me.' . IOn,s, looked as emancipated as his heiler, while Joan, 15, won any mechanical-minded Eve you on oUl." at the Catholic Studedt center. factories In the record peace-time "So I told my third brother on he came over to watch and call what I've learned! - what I've second with hers. ever saw. Thomas Nicholas won second World Governmenl Tonight a holy hour w,U be ob- year 1941, When defense work was the day that he was leavil)g for out, 'LOOK where Mat i 1 d a earned! Why, I never even got to served at the St\ldent center from piled on high civilian manufactur­ the army ' that I thbught I , would landed!" Sbe Introduced us to her sister, prize in the 4-H saddJe colt class. In arguing for a world: govern- 7:30 to 8 o'clock. Conic Ions will finish grammar school, but left it in,. This also was the factory pay­ take his place at the mm. Mind Used to Hard Work a furnace charger, to a handful of The judging team representing menl mucb stronger than the Unl-· be hellrd this afternoon and UUa roll on Aug. 14, when Japan quit. you, he didn't make fun of me but But like the United States mail, to become a drill press operator other smiling women workers and Johnson cou.nty, composed of ted Nations charter dralted at evening. Many have lost jobs since. encouraged me,. so I walked right Katherine went through. She was for Continental Can 'company. then spoke for all of them, saying: Eldon Moss, Eugene and Charles San . Frahclsco, Dr. Dunnington . WMC-In a report prepared out and got the job." born with the tough fiber of a Now look at me. I've got a good "Now this war is over I'd hon­ Jennings and John Carson, aU of said . that the atomic bomb Is a ------slnee Japan's surrender and used . More than that, she stuck it. fighter. When she had been a lit­ trade. I'm a skilled worker. I buy estly like to stay in the' mill-but Iowa City, tied other counties for secret which can't be .kept. Five Marriage License only inside the government-esti­ Sweat often blinded her eyes. Her tle girl in Russia she "had a hard a bond every other week." if any man retu.rns, I'll not want first place in the judging of Ayre­ years from now It wHi not be a A marriage IIcen e was Issued. mated that perhaps 4 million per­ back muscles had demons dancing life," and when her father brought Weldin, Motors to keep his old job. If that day shire class heiters, and placed fH­ secret. ' to Buryl Kanellls and Shirley Sa fl· sons would lose jobs in the next on them every night. Her arches his big 1a mily to this coun try it The day we caught up with shouJd come you can send me back teenth in a field of 30 teams In He predicted that Russian sci- ders, both of Cedar Rapid , by tho six months. ached, her arms would go limp as did not get much easier. Pa first Katherine she was welding mo­ to the cook stove-I'm used to judging seven other classes of entists. wlll soon solve the secret clerk ol the district court yesler­ WMC said the task of making rubber bands, but she stuck Eight became a coal miner in Virginia, tors, a regular home front heroine heat nowl" live-stock. and that it will not be long belore day. and finding work for millions of hours a day, six days. a week for then migrated to Minnesota for in denim blue coveralls and steel ~------~------~----- newly laid-off workers and return­ 99'h cents an hour or $7.96 per work in a saw mill and finally helmet on which she had painted in, veterans will "tax the energies day. The money was good, the brought his brood to Chicago the names of her brothers In serv­ The Rising Sun Has Set on .Tokyo-a City of Devastation ' • . ' . _' "~",:!' ';~'V".' ..., .... "... ~ .." .. ..,-." ... -. .» ...... '''"'!.... : P~,"',.u-'V.,...... ~.' ; •..•~" 'l' -:'or' _.;. "•• of management labor and gov­ cause great, but looking back, she where he could find good pay be­ ice--Sergeant Stanley and Cor­ emment for many months." guffaws in that honest, rolling side the fiery blast furnaces of poral Ted in Germany, Corporal It added: laugh of her: that great industrial inferno, the Mike, hospitalized in South Caro­ "Men and women in ever greater "They just about had to carry steel mill. numbers must be taken into non­ lina following wounding Ln 'Ger­ me out the first day. I guess If manufacturing fields"-such as Ask her she likes her inva­ many, and Seaman First Class Jo­ mining, building, trade and farm­ only ITlY pride got me through. My sion of a man's world and work seph. Sergeant Frank was killed ing-"which has been restricted by safety shoes weighed four pounds and her eyes light up like an in France. war or which need to expand their and were straight from Franken­ open hearth. She had Just IInlshed her ap­ ptactime activities." stein. "Like it?" she exclaims, a grin prenticeship and now was a Employment In the manufactur­ "The wind cut across the tracks stretching her small, round face fuJltled,ed welder, a beamin" ing industries reached a record of where we were working' cleaning and enthusiasm superchaging that gregarious little flnre who for 17,200,000 in November, 1943, and out switches and then the kidding short, strong, stocky frame of her. all her love of Jeannette Mac­ sloped off steadily to aboul14,OOO,- of my brother cut a little, too, as "Golly, why wouldn't I? Look Donald-Nelson Eddy movies, 000 by V-J day. To get back to that level quickly, Ida Ratchford Files said WMC's report, "might be ac­ Fall Bride-Elect ceptable as a first goaL" Divorce Petition Allied POW's' A petition for divorce was filed Feted at Shower Victory Celebration in district ,court yesterday by Ida Feting Dorothy Gay, September -WASHINGTON (AP) - The Ratchford against Richard Ratch­ Seriously III treasury receiVed a $50 ch ~ck from bride-elect, Mrs. George Spencer ford. 8 man in KnoxvJlle, Tenn., with and Mrs. Dan TeztlaIf, 222 Mel­ The couple were married March I this note: rose avenue, entertained last night KANDY, Ceylon (AP)-Allied 2, 1944, in Colorado Springs, CoL, 0 at a miscellaneous shower. Eight­ prisoners held at Singapore, the "I choose celebrate victory in and have one child. Mrs. Ratchford this way in Ueu of throwing a big charges non-support and cruel and een guests shared the courtesy. great naval base now reverting party and getting drunk." inhuman treatment and asks main­ Miss Gay, daughter of Mrs. once more to British control, are He explained it was a "free­ Helen Gay, 506 S. Dodge street, tenance for the child . . Jack C. sullering greatly from malaria, will donation" for use ''In meeting White is her attorney. will become the bride of Staff the ' expense of operation of the SergI. Richard Robert Adamson, beri-bed, tuberculosis, and dysen­ ,overnment, or payment on the To retain food value, peel po­ son of Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Adam­ tery, said reports reaching the national debt." tatoes just before cooking. son of Yakima, Wash., Sunday at southeast Asia command head­ 4 p. m. in the Christian churCh. quarters. • • • British men-o-war rode at an­ A DEJECTED YAMASHITA WAITING Tonight Mrs. Tetzlaff, assisted chor in Singapore's harbor, but by Mrs. Spencer, will honor J o there waS no word that oc­ Ann Clayton, also a bride-elect of cupation troops had landed to this month, Sharing the misc~l1an­ take over the base won by the -eous shower will bl) Mrs. Robert British more than 3'h years ago. Gross, MrS. M. E. Wright, Kath­ (A New Delhi broadcast said ryn M'w'phy, Phyllis Blackman Adm. Lord Louis Mountbatten, and Mrs. Helen Groom. southeast Asia commander, had di­ Miss Clayton, daughtet of Mrs. rected. the Japanese army and navy Wesley J. Clayton of Ft, Riley, commanders at Singapore to meet Kan., wil become the bride of Rob­ Rear. Adm. C. S. Hoiland aboard ert. L. Zaayer, son of Mr. and Mrs. HMS Sussex yesterday. A. A. Zaayer, of Des Moines, Sat­ ("The object of my order is to w'day at 4 p. m. in the Congt'e­ arrange for the landing of my gatlonal church. troops without .incident and for their orderly reception at Singa­ pore," the broadcast quo ted Jap-Americans Leave Mountbatten's order as saying. (A Melbourne dispatch quoted an Australian war correspondent State at Slow Rale aboard a warship oft Rabaul a:s saying the Australians wo\lld ac- DES MOINES (AP) - Some cept the surrender of 139,000 Ja­ Japanese-Americans (Nisei) will panese in New Britain, Bougain­ leave Iowa soon in both family ville, New Ireland, and New and slngle groups, but only at a Guinea at 9 a. m. today. very slow rate, A. Downing, di- Southeast A s i a headquarters rector of war relocation author- said latest figures showed 115,354 ity disclosed yesterday. Allied prisoners were held by the He said there are about 538 J apanese in southeast Asia, and Nisei in Iowa now and the num- that 2,792 of these had been eva­ ber leaving the state will be far cuated so far. smaller than the number entering The total of prisoners and inter- or remaining here. nees, described as only an ap- Until July I, only 17 had left proximation so tar, includes 796 Iowa to return to the west coast. Americans, 29,266 British, 31 ,621 Since then they have been leaving Dutch, and 24,413 Indians. THI IAMI NIP COMMANDII, Gen, T~moyuld Yamuhlta, who IIClIt at a rate of about six a month. J Lt. Gen. Jonathan W. Walnwricht l)ack for a promotion in rank In Des Moines, a total of 700 f lie "'fore he would acc&pt the American'l lurrender of U. S. forces on japanese-Americans has bee n Lovetinsky Will ...... • c~· Corrertdor In 1942, ,trike. a dlaconlOlat. pCIH u he awalta the ar­ housed by the Friends hostel. Only The will of Frances Lovetinsky,l rJJlY wJijc~ II rival of the man he Icomed whtn the rlalnr IUD wu bright in the 17 persons now are staying there. who died Aug. 23, was admitted to ITHE THIRD LARGE8T CITY IN THE WOBLD-TOKl'G-1a a "lUll area b, Vlllled 8iate. 8aperforta. Benl aDd twisted IIIaIHS ., or ••. J~ Iky, 'nIe heroic Wllnwrt,ht, who WU jUit releaaed from a Jap The lease on the building ex- probate in district court by Judge "lhambles" today, and lhe J.pa find no ,ympath, from their aon­ steel are praeUeaUr aU Utat remain of TolQ'o'. main railroad ...... pa.neaelJl&l' Priton camp and participated In the formal NlpP9nele IlUrrender In plred Friday, but R. T. Wilbur, Harold D. Evans yesterday. WllI- querora. Amertean servicemen, now in t.he capital cU, of the Nt.. ' Ielt below, wbUe olle of Ule city'. IDOIIt lIDpOriaDt war aileY. lia back­ at ha¢ ' ~Q Tokyo bay, Willi delayed on hIs flight back to the PhUlpplnes where, director, said the hostel could con- Jam Lovetlnsky, husband of the homeland, rcallze the devastation was the only answer to the question ,anS 1ntIu&rr, _ vtnaall, obUwa&ed b, Ule mAcht.y B-l"L The 1'e­ tram 1... ~ In a "table·I.·turned" clremony, he accepted the now far-from­ tinue on a month-to-month basis" deceased, was named executor of whether the "Sons of Heaven" )llould rUle the world or DoL At the maw of the faetorl-. ho... and maehlner.,. In &bill IMUOIl ef .. eat In BU~ Jlallfhty Yamuhlta'. capitulation of Jlp fore .. on LUlOn. Omclal probably clOSing around the first without bond. Will J. Hayek is top, II Ihown Ule Olnn dlltrlct of the once (reat cU,., a aouterpu1 .JapaJlelle capital are abown .. Ule photo al the rlcht below. ler Am.riWl, , Jl: II MJlY IIllIl S&P! r~p_ (laCfllMti01ltl.lW1d;boto) of the yeal', the attorney. of New York', FHiIl avenue. It baa now"been turned " .10 a wrecked

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PiGEFOUR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBDt S, 1945 7 .. • Lurltmari ~1~C!harged; ~ Chicalfo Wtns .. Bdseball Members i Iowa 1o PI y . Detroit, (hms Will R610ln Bean 11' (a,plain Quits Of '14'011 of Fame' \ Yankee Hope'- • For Redskin Tussle. Over 611 I1Is • Elected EveryYecw. 12Con ,ferenee CHICAQO (AP)-Sid Luckman, Noire Dame COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. (AP)- New members of the baseball hall • • veteranBear's T-formation,king-pin of thehas Chicago been In 'TMln BIIII of fame will be elected every year honorably dischar~ed fr6m the (aGe Gme s Instead of every t.hree years, it was In Doubl'eSpht maritime service and will report to inPr oMixup announced yesterday by the com­ the Bears' Collegeville, Ind., mittee. NEW YORK (AP)-The Detroit training camp today. CHI C AGO (AP) - Effective The chahg was made because Acting president Ralph Brizzo­ SOUTH BEND, Inti (AP)­ By WALLY STRINGHAM Tigers broke out their fence-bust­ pitching by Ray Prim and Claude Frank Slr.ymanski, veferan center of disappointment arising from the Pops Hllrrlson's Old Gold cagers ing bats just enough yesterday to lara of the Bears· said Luckman PaSseau baclted up by a 20-hlt at­ failure of the basebOl11 writers' as­ would start his , seventh season and captain of the 1946 Notre wlll play a 50-50 schedule this chill the Yankees' challenge to tack enabled the to Dame football team, yesterday re­ sociation to name Olnyone to the season In Cluest of the Western their American league lead by with the club against the Washing­ tighten their hold on the national hall Jast January. The writers' ton Redskins in 'an exhibition signed his captaincy and noU1ied conference championship for the spHtt\ng a doubleheader with the league lead Wednesday with a Hugh Devore that he would choice Is confined to the ranks of second straight year. . gaJlle at Soldier Field next Tues­ victory over the New York players active in the period sub­ New Yorkers before the season's not participate in football this (all. Six away and six ot home games day. Giants, 5-2 and 10-2 before 25,769 sequent. to 1900, biggest week - day c row d in The DetrOit, Mich ., athlete, Who give the Iowans a well-balanced Yankee stadium. fans. was one of the standout centers card wit.h the best feature beinl They pulled the opener out ot Prim, a 39-year-old lefthander, in college football last seas6n, de­ that the Hawks must perform only the hat 10-7 with a five-run ninth­ allowed only five hits in the 5-2 clared thatl"he was resigning from twice on a Saturday and the fol­ inning flare-up featuring an awe­ Feller SIg,s opener, in recording his flth tri­ the squad because he did not wish lowing Monday and on ly one of to embarrass Notre Dame Over hi.> Car1inalsBeal some assortment of long-distance umph. All of the hits were singles, these combinations Is on the road. dynamiting for the entertainment ex c e p t Ernie Lombardi's 19th contracts with professional foot­ ball teams. 1I11noi9 will start the Big Ten of 51,511 customers. But in the homer with one man on in the grind In Iowa City Dec. 22, for the nightcap their bats were full of Tribe SpHfs . fifth frame. Last January Szymanski signell a contract with the Chicago Bears, Braves, 4-2 earliest opening in Iowa history. holes and they bowed 5-1 before Adrian Zabala, the first of four Five of the same opponents as • the stylish south pawing of Joe Giants tossers, was charged with effective after his graduation BOSTON (AP)-After their Bob the loss and knocked out by a two­ from college, Later this contract ST. LOUIS (AP)- Harry "The 1945 will be met and the sixth Is Page who served up a fancy three­ Cat" Brecheen notched his lIth Chicago, returning to Big Ten hiUer in his first route-going per­ Feller suffered his first post-war run double off the bat of Reggie was declared null and void by the setback by a 2-1 margin, the Otero, a fellow Cuban who was National profeSSional league on victory last night for the Sf. Loui:> basketbal laIler a lapse ot anI!' formance this year. split a double­ grounds that Szyman:ski was not a Cardinals as the world champions season and replacing Michigan on All of this five-hOur fuss left playing first base for the Cubs. header with the Boston Red Sox The Bruins Chased Jack Brewer "free agent" but was subject to defeated the Boston. Braves, 4 to 2. the Iowa card, according to tht the red-hot Yanks thoroughly' Brecheen who allowed six hits- official schedule released by K, yesterday by capturing the night­ in the fifth inning of the nightcap the league's annual draft. Chilled, 51r. games oft the pace cap, 5-2. when they scored four runs on Roy In July the West'ern conference three of them to former Cardinal L. Wilson, Big Ten commissioner. after dropping two of three starts Feller held the Sockers to seven issued a ruling which declared in­ Joe Medwick- was in trouble only More than 14,000 per son s Hughes ~ double singles by Peanuts so far played in their current hits but they scored both of their eligible any football player who in the first Inning when Dick Cul- watched the first Iowa team In seven-game series. Lowrey and Mickey Livingston "enters into an agreement or signs runs in the second' inning on triples and two Giants errors. Five boots leI' and Medwlck singled and history to win the Big Ten title, . In the ninth a pair of tremen­ by Johnny Lazor and Skeeter a contract" with any profeSSional by New York in the second fray scored on Charlie Workman's dou- defeating the fighting IlIini last dous homers by Eddie Mayor anq Newsome and Tommy McBride's league teams. ble. March 3, under the tutorship of helped Chicago roll up 10 runs on Hank Greenberg-the former with double. The Indians also tallIed in S~ymanski said that although he The Cal'ds got one run back in Lawrence (Pops) Harrison. Thil two on. A two-bagger by Roy Cul­ that frame on Don Ross' single and 10 hits off four pitchers, including acted in good faith and did not be­ the first 0[( Elmer Singleton on a year's chance of a second title a homer by Andy P a f k 0 in the l~nbine that slapped up against Frerikie Hayes' two-bagger against lieve he was jeopardiizng hi3 col­ walk to Lou Klein, a single by rests on the shoulders of the same eighth. j the 367-foot marker in right and Otis Clark, who was belted for M JOINeO -(Kg -rtGeRS Jege standing, he felt that to con­ Johnny Hopp, and a double play quintet that blazed its way to na­ Pas sea u scaiterea the nine tinue playing in the face of the a 450-foot powered by Rudy nine 9ther scattered hits: I~ 1930 A}'!o HAS f'l.A'ieD which allowed Klein to score .. In tional glory on the hard cour~ Giants hits over the route in earn­ Big Ten ruling might embarrass York enabled the Detrolts to mak.e Allie Reynolds Jimited the sock­ vll"~ ,JO o"'H6~ I3IEr the fourth they picked up theil' throughout the middle west. ers to six hies in the aft.erpiece, j ng his 15th victory and fiist over Notre Dame. up a two-run deliclt and go out New York. l-eAGve ct-1.l5 other three tallies on singles by Dick Jves, Herb Wilkin SOh alllt in front for tile first game vic­ which the Indians clinched in the 1'Ie said that he intends to rl!­ BUster Adams and Whitey Kul'ow- Clayton Wilkinson will form the' eighth iimh'lgJ after &i~ing' st'arter The double win increased the main in school for the preseht to tory. Cubs margin over St. Louis to five ski, a triple by Ray Sanders and a bulwarks for this year's five with Raric:fy Heflin ort thEi' mound in the complete work toward a degree. squeeze bunt by Marion that Sin- Ned Postels, Murray Wier, Dick (First Game) games but the Cardinals were fiftb. Whitney Martin- gleton threw into right field. Coulberson and several expectedl Delrolt AB R H · E Cleveland 020 000 012-5 playing a night game with Boston. (First Game) M'fchlran on Deren!Je The victory kept the Cards in outstanding new freshmen ready I Boston OOQ 001 00\- 2 /.AP)- the pennant race, four and one- t A II k. Webb, ss ...... 4 ANN ARBOR, Mlch \ 0 "arve out new aw eye laUr. McHale ...... 1 o New Yo'rR AB R H E Coach H. O. (Fritz) Crisler yes- half leneths behind the Chicago els in the cage sport. Hoover, ss ...... 0 o Vets Aid Ball Clubs terday stl'essed defensive tactics ,Cubs. Iowa lost only one game last Rucker, cf ...... ~ 0 1 0 as the University of Michigan'S -Bo- sto- n-----AB--R--)-(--E year- and thOlt was to Illinois b1 Mayo, 2b ...... 5 o Hausmann, 2b ...... 4 0 0 0 Cramer, cf ...... 5 o The Big Show By WHITNEY MARTIN first really great stars to return football squad worked out for its one point. Ott, rf ...... 4 0 0 1 opening game Sept. 15 against Culler, ss . 4 1 1 0 This is the conference schedule, Greenberg, l! ...... 5 o NEW YORK (AP)-When old after a prolo~ed absence, hit a Gardella, 11 ...... 3 1 1 0 Great Lakes. While the Wolverine Wietelmann, 2b ..... 3 0 0 0 with non-conference games to be' Cullenbine, rf ...... 5 o NEW YORK (AP) - Major Lombardi, c ...... 3 I 1 0 gaffers such as Red Ruffing and home rull in his first game, thell York, Ib .J ...... •...... 5 1 mentor has not yet named a likely Holmes, rf 4 0 0 0 announced later: league standings including ali Zimmerman Ib ...... 3 ~ 1 0 Tommy Bridges return and pick went Into a slump but has starting combination, three veter- Medwick, If ...... 4 1 3 0 Outlaw, ilJ:l ...... 5 1 games of Sept. 5. S8 3 0 0 1 up their baseball careers practi­ Kerr, ...... snapped out or It and is playing ans, quarterback Joe Ponsetto, Workmnn, 3b ...... 3 0 1 0 Dec. 22- JIIinois at Iowa City Swift, c ...... 3 o National Leape Jurges, 3b ...... 3 0 1 0 cally where they left off maybe Jan. 7-Wisconsin at Iowa City' Hostetler * ...... 0 o acceptable ball. And Hankus­ center Harold Watts, and Jack Glllenwater, c! ..... 3 0 0 0 Tea.ms W L Pet. Zabala, p ...... _--_. __ . 1 0 0 0 we should quit worrying about any Weisenburger, a potential triple- Masi, c ...... 3 0 0 0 Jan. 12- Indiana at Bloomington Richards, c ...... 0 o Chicago ...... 81 47 .633 Emmerich, p ...... 0 0 0 ' 0 deterioating effect of service in Pankus Is no longer a kid. Jan. 19-Purdue at Lafayette Overmire, p ...... 2 th\'eat halfback, appear to have Shupe, Ib ...' ...... 2 0 1 0 o St. Louis ...... _.... 77 52 .597 Reyes, x ...... -.....•..... 1 0 0 0 the armed forces on our athletes. It's true some of the returning clinched their jobs. Singleton, p ...... 2 0 0 1 Jan. 21-Chlcago at Chicago Caster, p ...... 1 o Brooklyn ...... 72 55 .56'7 Adains, xx ...... • 0 0 0 0 'rli.e abrupt return to normalcy lJ1.en were fortunate enough to get Nelson- ...... 1 0 0 0 Jan. 28- Minnesota at Iowa City Borom ...... 1 o ,542 Klutzz, xx ...... 1 0 0 0 of the major league players after New York ...... 71 60 in considerable baseball while Backs to Lose Cline. Hutchings, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Feb. 2-Chicugo at Iowa City Tobin, p ...... 0 o Pittsburgb ...... 71 63 .530 :Fischer, p ...... 0 0 0 0 their dlscllari'es' Is to us one of Feb. 9-Purdue at Iowa City .438 the most gratifying develop­ they were in the service, and a lot COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Ollie 3 Boston ...... 57 73 Cline, Ohiu State university's vet­ Totals ...... 29 2 G 1 Feb. 16- Wisconsin at Madison Totals ...... 4% 10 14 Cincinnati ...... 50 78 .391 Totals ...... 30 2 5 Z menta of recent weeks, more who wiIJ return will not have had their (Ic{ual playing inter­ eran fullback, has been accepted • Batted for Singleton in 8th Feb. 23 lIIinols at Champaigir * Batted for Swift in 9th Philadelpl'lia ...... AO 91 .305 - Batted for Emerich in 6th Practically everyone, you rs rupted too much. In fact, the by the army, Coach Carroll Wid­ Feb. 25 Indiana at Iowa City •• Batted for Caster in 9th Am~riea'n League •• Batted for R. Fisch in 9th St. Louis AB R H E very truly included, long had spec­ does announced last night. The March 2-Minnesota at Minne­ *.* Batted for Webb in 9th Detroit ...... 74 55 .574 .. Bated for Adams in 8th , league in Honolulu looked like a ulated on the effect of service on transplanted major league. big fellow (rom Fredericktown, Klein, If '" ...... 3 o spolis New York AB R H E Washington ...... 73 59 .553 E the ball players, and most of the Hopp, rf ...... 4 o ___~______St. Louis ...... 70 59 .543 Chicago AS R if Away Long Time Ohio, had been rejected twice pre­ :speculation was done with dark But it's also true they have been viously for a perforated ear drum. Adams, cf . .. ..•.. 4 o Stirn weiss, 2b ...... 4 1 () 1 New York ...... :.. 68!6() .531, Hack, 3b ...... 4 1 o glasses. That is, the outlook for Kurowski, 3b ...... 3 o High Resolve Wins 516 away from actual major league Widdoes said there was no in­ I. Crosetti, ss ...... 2 3 1 0 Cleveland ...... 65 61 . Hughes 2b ...... 5 2 o players away from the game for competition, and the fact they can Sanders, 1b ...... 2 1 two or three years seemed rather dication when Cline would be Hollywood Handicap Stainback, cf ...... 3 1 1 0 Chicago ...... 64 65 .49()6 Nicholson, rf ...... 4 1 o return and promptly take up where called for service, but it was Verban, 2b ...... 4 o Derry, cf ...... 1 0 1 0 Boston ...... 62 70 .47 Parko, cf ...... 3 1 o bleak. they left off either is an indication Marion, ss ...... 4 o o Might Lose Agility likely he would be around when INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)­ Keller, l! ...... 3 ~ 12 0 Pliiladelpliia ...... 40 87 .315 Lowrey, lf ...... 3 o that their service did not hurt the Bucks meet Missouri In the Rice, c ...... 3 o ..l.'wI ' o For one thing, it seemed they High Resolve, with jockey Charlie "Etten, lb ...... 5 v 0 YESTr.Rn... .. :"'f'S RESULTS Rl'ce ' c ...... 3 1 them 1.00 much or that the major opener here Sept. 29. Brecheen, p .... __ 2 o Martin, rf ...... 1 O 0 0 Otero 1b 3 2 o would find their arms rusted be- leagues they are returning to Corbett up, romped home the wiil .. . 0' American LearUe ' ...... o for the game. They would lose Yesterday's P I' act ice sessions ner ye terday In the $15,000 Hol­ Turner, p ...... 0 0 Bos,ton, 2-2; Cleveland, 1-5. Merullo , ss ...... 3 2 aren't major leagues as we know were devoted to defense, with the Totals . .... _.•.... _ 29 4 8 1 B evens, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Prim p 3 o their batting eyes, and pitchers Boston 200 000 000-2 lywood premiere handicap,fea­ Holcombe, p ...... 0 0 0 0 Detr?\t, 10-1; New York, 7-5: , ...... o them. backs drilling on pass defense. woul find their arms ru:sted be­ Maybe it's a little of each, but St.. Louis 100 300 00x-4 tured event of the opening daY's Robinson ...... 1 0 1 0 Washington, 2-3; St. Louis, 1-4. Totals ...... 35 5 10 0 yond repair. All told, they would we prefer to believe that their card of Hollywood park's 34-day . 3b 4 1 1 O' Chi 'cago~ 15-6; Philadelphia, 0-5. lose that beautiful sense of rhy­ Banrert at Purdue racing season. G rlmes, ...... 0 Nathlnal Leacue . New York ...... 000 020 000-2 service hasn't handicapped Ihem mixed and effective attack scoring Dteschel', c ...... 3 0 1 N Chicago ...... 000 410 OOx- 5 thm and balance which distin­ too much. LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)-Em­ High Resolve, from the Stice Bonham, p ...... 3 0 0 0 CYlicl\go, 5-10; ew York, 2-2. guishes a good major leaguer from phasis was placed on conditioning on an 8-yard plunge, two 30-YOlrd stables, finished three-fourths of (Second' Galne) By next spring dozens of other runs and a long pass against re­ other ball players. and a pa SSing and punting drill as a length ahea~ of Black Badge in Metheny, rf ...... 1 1 1 1 Broo~lyn, 5; Pittsburgh, 3. players undoubtedly will be b .. ck serve opposition. Ci'ftcinn'a'ti, 1-8; Philadelphia, New York H The athletes themselves have to bid for their old jobs, and the Purdue held its second football the six furlong sprint for three­ Totals ...... 34 7 10 Z 0-6. demohstrate4 how wrong the way it 1001<$ right now most of the practice of the season yesterday. year olds and up to be clocked ill T rea d way, I'f ...... 3 0 0 0 • DUnl Blocks • Batted for HolFombe in 9th St. L01Jis, 4; Boston, 2. tuessers can be. Ruftlng and boys will get them, and not be­ Ten new candidates were on 1:104/ 5 and pay $8 .60, $4 .90 and: Hausmann, 2 b ...... 4 0 1 2 Bridges, at an ~e wben most hand, including five freshmen, CHAMPAIGN (AP)-Coach Ray $4.10. Detroit ...... 300 020. 0Q5-10 cause they are ex-servicemen. It Eliot of illinois yesterday sent his New York ...... 102 000 130- 7 Rucket, cf ...... 4 1 2 0 ball plaYl!rs ar~ through it they ,simply will be because they still four ex-servicemen and one trans­ Black Badge, paying $6.40 and Gardella, If ..... ~...... 4 0 2 0 never had been farther away fer. The transfer was Bill Ban­ football squad through a long $5.30, s a v e d the place from (Second Game) are better players than many of blocking session to "find the seven Kluttz, c ...... 4 0 1 0 Nom a bal~ tiell! than the club- the lads who replaced them. gert, of the University of Missouri, Strongh~ld.'~~ewarded $9.60. D~trolt AB R It E NEW' YORK (AP)- Probable Zimetman, 10 ...... 4 0 1 1 Jiouse, came ba'cll: to win their national shotput and discus cham­ toughest men ror our (irst line." The' 1IIini have 12 more workouts pitchers tor todaY's major J'eag'ue Ketr ss 4 0 0 1 1 pion'. Hoover, ss ...... 3 o 0 0 games. (Won an'd lost records i'n Reye~, 3b":::::::::::::::: 4 1 2 0' first 8ta~S. be[ol'e their opener with Pitts­ Bo Office Op Jl 1:15-10:0' Mayo, 2b ...... 4 ~ 1 0, parenthes~) . Brewer, p ...... 2 0 0 1 Bob Fel er, back from the Cleve- Homer' in 10th Gives burgh hcre Sept. 22. Outlaw, cf 3 I> 0 A. ' ~ Ii~ Emmerich, p ...... 0 6 0 0 lahd Indians, is reported to have Brooklyn 5-3 Win Hoosiers' Wafeh Movies End Bill Heiss and fullback Or­ rtt!f'fJ1ft BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)­ ville (Bud) Hall rellOrted to bring Greenberg, If ...... 4 o 0 0 ', ' mer cia" Lea, ( . Ott, x ...... 1 () 0 0 m~re stuff than he ever had be- 5T ARTS TODAY "ENDS CuJlenbine, rf ...... ~ o 1 0 , Detro,t at New York 2)- It F' h 0 0 0 0 tore, and that's practically getting After watching movies of the 1943 the number of lettermen in tra in­ o 0 0 Tobin (4'-3) anQ Muell'et «(:.6)' or L' ~c e,r, p ...... 0 O' 0 another cupful into a bucketful of PITTSBURGH (AP)- G 0 0 d y Indiana-Michigan game yesterday, ATUR'DAY" YorK., 1tl ...... 4 Rosen's tenth inning ing to 17. Maier, 3b ...... 4 o 0 0 Ne~houser (21-lh vs. Ru/fing om a'rdi, xx ...... 1 water. Co a c h Bo McMillin's 52-man ETHEL L1~A WHlTE'S with pitcher Vic Lombardi aboard Hoosier squad baWed through a I': TrONAL NOVEL OF R~chards, c ...... 2 1 0 0 (5-.2j ~d zub'er.",<,f-.9) .L.. Totals .:...... 35" % 9 5' Keller&ehledYanks gave the Brooklyn Dodgers a 5-3 Wildcats Sprln' Benton, p ...... 1 o 0 0 Cleveland a i Doston-Klieman • Batted for Emm'eri'cl\ in 7t1\ Charley Keller's return to the stiff scrimmage on timing of plays TERROR BY NIGHT! win over the Pittsburgh Pirates EVANSTON, Ill. (AP)-North­ JOEL {cCREA Eaton, p ...... 2 o 1 0 (5'-6$ vs. W60ds (2-6') "Batted for Adams in 8th ialtering Yankees was like kind- and passing defense. western's Wildcats had their first Chica'go at P'lIila'a'etM'la (2)- ..,-,-:-~------:r--"""---rr--" ,lin'g a fire under a balky mule. The last night. Launching the fourth day of fall GAlL RU ELL The fi~sl pitch of the game into contact work of the senson yester­ Totals ...... 31 1 3 i Christopher (13-10')' a'nd' Flores ' trile&'«o JdJ It N t 'Yanks won 15 out of their first drills the gridsters opened their day wMn C6ach Lynn Waldor! HERBERT MAR HALL __-,-- ______' (6-9)' vs. Hutnptlrh!s (6-t2) a'nd Ii 20 games after he came back. the glove of Pirate Catcher Al tWice-daily s e s s ion yesterday Lopez broke 's 20- ordered a sUtf blockIng drill for all New York AB R ri £ Gro'Ve (12-9) .. ac~, 3b ...... 4 2 I 0 Hank Greenberg, one of the morning with a routine of punting, year league record of 1,793 games hands. "Pappy" Lynn also intro­ ------I--1~O St. LouTs af Wa'sMH~on (2-twi- Schl.\ster, 3b ...... 0 0 0 0 pract.jce kick-oUs, passing and duced daily wind drills and learned Stirnweiss, 2b ...... 4 nitfi{)'-K,rarh'ef (9'-13i aM Shir- IiY,gheS, 2b ...... 4 3 3 0 c~ · .~ behind the plate. A crowd of 19,504 fans observed blocking. end Max Morris was hIs fastest ~;:~;,n:l .~.~ .. :::::::::::: : ~ ~ ~ fey ' (S-10'j vs. NiggeTrng' (#-10) ' Nl~O~of' tt ...... 5 1 I ~ "Honus Wagner nigh!!' in honor lihemlln and Bruce Bairstow the , JJ ana IRonatd (15-7) Pa 0, c ...... 5 2 1 11 A_rmg' Arrested, of one of the game's greatest Gophers Pick 'flp End sp_eedlest bOlCk. Keller, J! ...... 4 2 2 u Lowrell, It ...... 5 1 1 O· I ~ Br",· L Cha ' MINNEAPOLIS (A :P) - Leon • Etten, lb ...... 3 1 2 0 ' Nailofjal tMe Livingston, c ...... 4 1 2 6' un J fSn rge . , z Brooklyn 000 300 000 2-5 6 2 Kassmlr, Duluth freshman candi­ Robinson, c ...... 4 0 2 0 Brooltiyn' at PittsburBh-Gregg Otero, 1b ...... 4 0 1 0 date for the Minnesota football Grimes, 3b 2 0 0 0 (15-10) vs. Strincevich (13-9) Merullo, ss ...... 3 0 0 1 Pitt.sburgh 201 000 000 0-3 10 1 HERFORD, Germany (AP)­ Branca, Buker, Lombardi and Pea­ team, appeared yesterday at end Crosetti, ss ...... 4 0 0 1 Phi'lfideTpJiui a't Cincinnati _ Passeau, p ...... 4 0 0 0 in the (irst string lineup as the [ I· l :;~~! I and - "IDs Former h e a v y wei g h t boxing cock, Sandrock; Gablcs, Sewell, Page, p ...... 2. 0 0 0 Schanz (3-13) vs. Carter (1-4) Gophers engaged in an intensive TODAY THRtr FRlDAY I Royal Hawallans" New' Yorlt at Chicago'--Voisell(! Totals ...... 38 10 10 1 champion Max Schmeling was ar­ Cuccurullo and Lopez, Davis. rested by British military govern­ scrimmage despite the heat. Totals ...... _...... 31 5 11 1 (l4-lt) vs. Boro'wy (6-2) Kassmir, who has been out. for Walt Disney's ment authorities last night and "Canine C&Sanova Boston at St. Louis (2-twi­ charged with "breach of military the Gop her squad r 0 r only night)-Wright (4-2) and Lee Cincinnati, Pf1illies ttmeye tflrriets government orders." two days, has already caught the Occupations" ovel mt" vs. Bu)-kh8rdt (15-7) arld (8-8) It was expected that his trial Divide Twin Contesf eye or the Minnesota coaches. BtowritesSpli t lwo Barret~ (20~16). -Late t NeWS- Oft wDuld be schliduled for some time Stld W *n CINCINNATI (AP)-The Cin­ WISllOnsln Serlmmai'es next week. The charge is the first MADISON, Wis. (AP)- Desplte GamesWith S.fta181t Cross country squad, rheinb~ 6f its kind' to coine before military cinnali Reds and PhiJa-delphia will bes'ln work06ts late i'n' Sep- courts in the British zone. Phil lies took turns rubbing each the heat, Coach Harry Stuhldreher sent hIs University of W.isconsin W A SfI I N G TON (AP)-st tember in pre~a'ration 10'r a' scnM~ Schmeling's arrest followed his other.s noses in the dirt at Cros­ '1"Clab I'n ley Field last night, the Reds win­ football hopefuls through a leng­ ute Which will inctud'e abbut eUorts to obtain a license to ehter Louis came from behind lag n'i~h! thr~ thy scrimmage session yesterday or Jour d'uB'l mee s aM coW~ the publishin~ business to "reed­ ning the twilight half of a double to win the second game of a' dou­ th'e wIth some newcomer.!! showing of­ bleheader, 4-3 in 10 inninfs, aHer le~ence titi~ \Iffairs, acc.ordmi U> u'cate' the youth ot Germany." The bill 1-0, and the Phillie;; taking the Washington won the twiJ'illht con'­ pla'ns ot Coacn Geor,e Bran.han. license was denied by the control sec.ond game 8-6. In each game the fensive promise. Ann.IM. lO Sing team outhit the winner. It Is possible tha't several rHefn.'- comml'ssion, A senior officer said The varsity lineup showed '! ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ test, 2-1 in U innings. NOW "ENDS The Senators almost had bo·th bers of th'e 1944 squ~~ ' vii1l be the denial Was Issu'~ because FllfttAt "" victories wrapped up with' a :t-2 MeM1i&r. ot the univ~rsfti 0'( available again. The a'ti'l~f~s wm' "Schmeling was a symbol of lead and two Brownies out in the I6"ia:s a'fufnnl "I" ct~b will elect train over th'e unlversfty's furl Nazlsin dutlng the war for the 2-FIRST RUN HlTS-Z ninth inning of the second gam'e, o/tlcers jor 19'45-4W at {fie anriual cou'~se of two to ttve' mn'es. you'th ot Germany." " F~~~~::~:M~A~:E~:V~l E~1:9miii,i~fiBiiiititit~11l -./ but Lou Finney tied the score with m:ee'flH~'ere No¥,. 3 bn it/e mort'i- Th'l!' Ftawkeye coach also ~icp.ecfs Since the refusal 01 the license, TODAY AND FI10AV an' inside-the-park homer. rHi pi o'ineco'infn«. to' cond'uc{ farr drill lor cmdfcfrdes military government authOrities ON THE STAGE- CEDAR llAPIDS First Rlod(1j.q lrl·.II 'tit! Vern Stephens' triple and Mark TM cub, n'oW, In itll nin£h year, for the 1~411 · track. tea'n't'. lhave made a tun investigation Christman's single produceci St. has a mem'Dersh'ip of. nearly 900 into Schmeling's activiijes durmg Louis' winning run in the t~nth. mafor let:ler-wlnne'rs ar1& hoflor- Otit ~ .fnt the war and since the surrender ~.:.:-.'"..-- Rick Ferrell's safety brqke up ary mein'/)e'rs. M. W. jiyland ot HEIMS " 'ranee (AP)-1fJ~ b~e of Germany. .. the first game as Mickey Haefner Ta'ina is the ctitrlmt president who Ibu& went ahea:d in the G1 wotk\ The chatge, "breach of militdry "A MU leAL posted his 15th victory. Is servin, his !lIixth term. series ye~terdl'Y d'efbtin, the ,ovemTilerit orders," was unex- A nominating committee will Third army baseball team 2-1 be- pr~lned but it probably means TREAT" Chisox Win Two submit" a slate of two candidates hind the brillfant pltchi'l'lt ot that Schmeling oversftpped or Ig­ ~N PHILADELPHIA (Af') -The lot each ot the itve otf£eer. presl- Sfatf se'~gtl Sam NaMm, formel' nor e d mflltary regulations In UI! Chicago White Sox won both ends dent,' three vlce-presfdenta, and st. Louis CBrd4n811J and PhHa~l- I Hambur" MAIN FJ,OOwl-,S.'N. n ...-, .,.• II-LOOI-.~.Clll-n . u ' 44 ot a doubleheader from the PhlJ­ sec~rtllry-t"asuret. It IS' e,*~ted phia' Pnillies hurler. N'a1'iem ~cat- OJ\e . Brlflsh officer said the' SEAT BALCONY-,l.Il1-2ad. BALCONY-,Uf-Tn Jaelud.d I to tMt th~ 1~& tlieetlng ~Hl be close- Ured four hits to givf t~ <>tie charge may' be Just a "fortnallfy to SALE OIII!CK DB "MONEt" OBDEI AOCEPTED WITH I kB idBphi!l' AthletiCS lasf rughf, 18-8 NOW SELF.ADD.a8SI!D 8TAMPillY ENVELOPE Faa and 6-5, the second lame' to ptl-wat 8tlb\datd. of atttlld- base a two /fames to OM lead In tAe hold Schmelin, in custody until a Un Infm, ______U innings, ance. IOld~ c1_lc, more detiDite charge ill lodled." 1~::::::::::::~ ______~.~!T~U~.~N~O~'~T~I~C~K~IT~.~ -1 ~~~~~~~~::~~~~ en • " _'nru~' ~'R~S~DA~Y~,~S~~~T~~~=ER~61;1~~4=5======T~H~_ E~D=A=i=L~Y=~ I~9~' W~A=N=,=i=O=W~A~- C=I~T=' y=,'=I=O=W~A=' ======~~~~======~==~======--=P=A=G=E=Y.NB=- Geor,e J. 'Louia, who w .. shot howled. The s tal e department signed 10 (ree aU prisoners in its and woundecl while rehunin, to named names in relating that inci- area ot northern Honshu, and also P ~ P EYE the Loa Banos camp in the Phll­ dent. First Lieutenants Seto and in the southern areas which cover , (Continued from page 1) l"plnes after buylll&' food. An appeal by other internees to Watanabe, all ot the Japanese 26th all Japanese home islands and For­ did not get out were killed in to take Louis to the ho ~pital lor air construction unit, were named mosa. the hold py Japanese grenades. treatment ot his wounds was de­ along with Inouye, an overseer of 'It is probable that many guilty Four American civllians--Car­ nied. Finally, the J a pan e s e coolle laborers, as gUilty of 'want­ persons may have killed them­ roll C. Grinnell, Alfred F. Duggle­ guards carried Louis on a stretch­ on murdel". selves by this time', Eichelberger Ernest E. Johnson and Clirford er to a clump of bamboo outside At a Phlllppines air base, 150 remarked in dis c u s sin g what Lar90fl-'well'e arrested without the camp and shot him fatally Americans were hurled Into tun. would be done with Japadese wHo at the Sanio Tomas through the head. Dels used as air raid shelters. killed and tortured American pris­ camp n ear Manila. An American airman bailed out Fifty Japanese .. u a r d 8 then oners. • There bodies were later found o~ his crippled plane over the "t/ew pourecl buckets of rasoUne Into The orneer said that While the wired to 10 unidentified cor pes Guinea coast. Al t e r . swimming the tunnels and set afire wi' h matter was strictly • headquar­ 18 a field near Japanese military ashore, he was captured by Japan­ torches. As burnin .. Americans ters CMaeArthur) task, 1.be ae­ police headquarters. ese troops who beat him with fled frohl tbe tunnels they were cused would be tried on a collrl­ . Their brutal murder constituted sticks v I r t u a 11 y all tha t day, machinennned and bayoneted. martial basis. Il 'flagrant violation' of the Geneva throughout the night, and until the Forty of them tried to escape by A new interment camp, where 31 rilles regarding civilian internees, following allemon. pI u n gin g from a 50-foot cliff. Americans and several Canadians , the report said. Then a Japanese civilian named Some who survived the leap were were conti ned, was found about 90 The only other American vle­ Inouye beheaded the flyer with six shot; others were buried bUve by miles north of Mukden, headquar­ tllll name4. !n the repott w .. thrusts of a sword while the (roops the Japanese. ters of Lieut. Gen.Albert C. Wede­ Associated Press Correspondents meyer, United States commander BLONDIE CHIC YOUNG mon C. Kelly at CalcLltta said sur­ in China, announced: A field pro­ WSUI To Air Medical Society p'rogram- vivors of the sunken U. S. S. Hous­ ceSSing team in Mukden was ar­ ton and members of t!'le ~31st ranging to contact the internees. (Texas National Guard) field ar­ Three Ca~hoUc Jesuit mision­ tNt, (Ill, CBII-WB811 (,.., 8:00 tillery regiu(ent told tales ot tor­ aries, prisoners since Shanghai fell lIII0-''80 (INt' MBII-WON ("It, Andre Kostelanetz Program ture in Japanese prison camps. in November, 1937, arrived it Nan­ l1li-"." (.. , BI.. -JI[X." (11411 (WMT) The survivors said. more t han king Tuesday. The prients, freed ---- Music Hall (WHO) . 3,500 died on a 'death march' of by American humanitarian teams, The Iowa State Medical society America's Town Meeting (KXEL) nearly 140 miles in Thailand; that had been at the Zikawei prison program will be heard over WSUI 8:15 Korean guards perpetrated unus­ camp at Shanghai. United States at Jl :30 this morning. The script Andr~ Kostelanetz Program ual acts of cruelty, and that some army censors at Chungking per­ men ate cats, dogs and snakes. mitted revelation that two were was prepared by Dr. H a r r y A. (WMT) Music Hall (WHO) Eight United Slates generals from California and one from New StribJey of Dubuque and Bill Hub­ America's Town Meeting liberated August 18 from prison­ York, but deleted their names and blrd of the WSUI stal! will read (KXEL), er of war camps Inl Manchuria addresses. il 8:30 passed through Hawaii en route Hobby Lobby (WMT) home, and AP CorreSPoDdent Philco Vance (WHO) Kenneth L. Dixon said \.here was Travel Restrictions Off THURSDAY'S PROGRAMS Variations by Von Cleave a. probali'uity t hal previously 8:00 Morning Chapel (KXEL) told stories of Japanese atrocities WASHINGTON (AP) - The 8:15 MUSical Miniatures 8:45 would be supplemented by dra- "don't travel" campaign, Uke the maUe revelations. war, is all over. 1:3' News, The Daily Iowan Hobby Lobby (WMT) HENRY CARL ANDERSOII 8:45 Program Calendar PhilcQ. Vance (WHO) The g e n I'¥ a 1 s, haggard and From here on, the office of de- 8:55 Service Reports Variations by Van Cleave gaunt-eyed, htHd a press confer- fense transportation will not ask 1'M GLAD YW 9:00 Second Cup of Coffee (KXEL) eDce, but permission was not given "Is this trip necessary?" DIDN'T FORGET 9:15 Sports Time 9:00 .- to djvide details of their treatmen Officials ot the agency I'TUlde 9:30 'Treasury Salute The First Line (WMT) while they were prisoners. this clear yesterday in announcing TO,.OW THE ':45 News, The Dally Iowan Mystery in the Air (WHO) Genera\ Eichelberger announced additional revocaJions of r a i I LAwN - HENRY.' 10:00 Paging Mrs. America One Foot in Heaven (KXEL) that the Eighth army hod bee~ travel restrictions. 10:15 Yesterday's Musical Fa- 9:15 , , vorites The First Line (WMT) 10:30 The Bookshelf Mystery in the Air (WHO) 1l :00 Master Woeks ot Music One Foot in Heaven (KXEL) 1l:30 Iowa State Medical Society . 9:30 Il :45 Farm Flashes WMT Bandwagon (WMT) Daily Iowan Want Ads 12:00 Rhythm Rambles Rudy Vallee Show (.WHO) ~ 12:30 News, The Daily Iowan Hotel Pennsylvania Orchestta 12:45 Beyond Victory-What? (KXEL) I:()() Musical Chats • 9:45 • %:10 News, The Dally Iowan Frank Singiser, News (WMT) FOR SHOES OF MERIT 2:10 Sign Off Rudy Vallee Show (WHO) ? NETWORK IIIGIlLlGUTS Hotel Pennsylvania Or..c:hestra (KXEL) 6:00 AND STYLE 10:0.0 Jack Kirkwood Show (WMT) News, Doug Grant (WMT) Lucia Thorne and Company Supper Club (WHO) (WHO) Visit Strub's Mezzanine H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) The Grain Belt Rangers (KXEL) 10:15 6:15 Fulton Lewis Commentary 2nd Floor Jack Smith Show (WMT) (WMT) New s of the World (WIlO) News, M. L. Nelsen (WHO) Air Conditioned H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) I 6:30 10;30 I ------M~. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons Rom:mce, Rhythm and Ripley WANTED TO RENT (WMT) (WMT) CLASSIFIED I. News, M. L. Nelsen (WHO) WHO Billboard (WHO) W ANTED: Discharged \I e t eta n Did You Know? (KXEL) Roseland Ballroom Orchestra RATE CARt needs apartment immediat'ely for 6:45 (KXEL) family of three. Write (fene Good­ Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons 10:45 CASH RATE win- Box 552. Romance, Rhythm and Ripley lor 2 da,l- (WMT) IOe per line per day WANTED: University Faculty lady News, H. V. Kallenborn (WHO) (WMT) I consecutive daya- Copacabooo Orchestra (WHO) and mother desire furnished one \ ...... Preferred Melodies (KXEL) 7c per line per da)' or two bedrom apartment. Dial 7:00 Roseland Ballroom Orchestra (KXEL) • L'Onsecutive daJt- 7595. Fresh Up Time Wit h B e r t IIc per line per da7 Wheeler (WMT) 11:00 1 month- INSTRUCTIoN ETTAKETT Adventures of Topper (WHO) CBS World News (WMT) .c per line per da, PAUL 1I0BINSON Lurn 'n Abner (KXEL) News; Music (WHO) Dancing Lessons-ballroom, bal­ -FiiUl'e II words to line­ let, tap. Dial 72U. Mimi Youde 7:15 • News (KXEL) Minimum Ad-2 Jinea Fresh Up With Bert Wheeler 11:15 Wuriu. (WMT) And So the Story Goes (WMT) I ------CLASSIFIED DISPLAY WHERE TO 6UY IT Adventures of Topper (WHO) Art Mooney Orchestra (WHO) !iDe col. incb Earl Godwin (KXEL) Rev. Pietsch's HOUl' (KXEL) I ' Or S5.00 per month 7:30 11:30 I PLUMBING AND IlEATIN'O The FBI in Peace and War Jerry Wald's Band (WMT) I AU Want Ads Cuh In Advance (WMT) News, Garry Lenhart (WHO) Payable at DailJ JowaD Busi­ bpert Workman.l. Dinah Shore's Open House Dance OrchestI'a (KXEL) neM oUlce daily untl,l 1\ p.m. (WHO) 11 :45 LAREW co. 227 E. Wash. Pheae f881 America's Town Meeting Jerry Wald's Band (WMT) CUlcellaticIl8 must be c.lled fa (KXEL) Music, News (WHO) belore II p. m. 7:45 Dance Orchestra (KXElj.. Responsible for one Incorrect The FBI in Peace and War 12:00 lI18ertlon onlJ, You are alwan wel6ome. (WMT) .,ress News (WMT) and PRICES r.re low a& the Dinah Shore's Open House Midnight Rhythm Parade (WHO) (WHO) DIAL 4191 America's Town Meeting Station Break and Sign Off DRUG SHOP • (KXEL) (KXEL) SIGNS SURRENDER OF MARCUS ' HELP WANTED WANTED: F'raternity needs house­ keeper. High wages, special pri­ I'ine Baked Goodl vileges. Call 4191 or write Box n, Plea (lak.. • ..... Daily Iowan. )lou. Paltrlel ipecial Ordfr' Men Wanted to supply Raw­ City Bakery leigh's Household Produ\'ts io COIl­ III .. WuIIJ...... blal ... sumers in Iowa Clly and Mu,;catine Oounty. We trajn and llelp you. Good profits for hustlers, No ex­ perience necessl'ry to start. Pleas­ FURNITURE MbVlNG ant, prdfitabl~, dignifietl work. Wrile today. Rawleigh's Dept. lAI-284-53. Freeport, Ill. MAHER BROS. TRANSFER For Wicient Furniture IioviDI Ask About Our WANTED: Secretary - half-time. Hours arranged. Shorthand, typ­ WARDROBE SERVICE OLD HOME TOWN by S1 ANLEY ing, filing. Respon ible. Call 7346 DIAL - 9696 - DIAL or 430l. -

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Call Your Want Ads to , 'he Daily Iowan ANOTHII JAP-HELD ISLAND ot the Paclflc-Marcus-surrenders to the .\l\ies &I the Nips' commander on the Illand Itronghold, Rear BUS'INESS OFFIGE · Adh{ M. Mataubara, .hown leated at the table, affixes his .Ignature ( to capltulatlon paper•• Aboard the U. 8. 8. Bagley, the surrender of Mareul I. accepted by "ear Mill. M. Whi till&'. Thta II an official PHONE 4191 United State, Navy radlop'hoto, (Int,rnltiollIJ) r " . PAGE SIX ,1'HE DAILY, IOW,AN, ,IOWA CITY, lOW A. , THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1945 ~~~======~======7======~======~=====~======-======~==~~~======~======~~~~~ textile industry is the largest em­ Rocket Craft Chief ployer 01 industrial labor in these Synthetic Fabrics to Be Vital in Future states. Wins Honor Medal University Approve: S tRe~etvoir ! Brandies Jlolnts out these 'ao­ For Iwo Gallant". ATLANTA-What* * * of the cotton stalled In their* * mills. * The attempt tOI'S: Unit labor costs In .outh­ I ern cotton m 11111 have risen *** . *** '. textile indu!\l.ry in the postwar was generally made to sell rayon WASHINGTON (AP) - Lleut, Trum&n Endo ..... ,reatly. But the Industry 15 now Rufus G. Herring, of ltoseboro years? and nylon to firms already pro­ desllnln, better mac h I n e r y Text of Official SUI Statement Annual ••Ugious In wartime it is running at ca- cess!ng cotton, wool and silk. which may reduce unit labor N. C., was awarded the COIIIJ'I!I" Industrialists sional Medal or Honor yyterda, pacity. Bai, laYi Brandies, "" post- COila appreciably. Cost or cot­ Here Is the statement by the derly fashion and rlliallvely i Education Week There ha s been much techno- war pOulblJlly II Ihat techno­ ton to the mill can be reduced for his gallantry as commandlnc State University of Iowa in which conslant volume. I. ' logical progress in synthetic fibers. lorlcal advances In .ynUletic by Improvements In m.rkeUDlr officer of a rocket craft durl", d the uni versi ty a pproves of the "The benefits whi~h the unlv~r-I ' .c It I C,A GO CAP) - President Just around the corner are syn- fl~rs, rayon, nylon, vln),on, and pracUces. preinvaslon attack on Iwo JIIIII. · Urge Flood' sity would receive, from ,the ,con- Harry .•S. TrUI'lUln endorsed the thetic fabrics that do not require other material. will Ipro,rel­ Research is currently tryIng to Eight other officers, comman. proposed Coralville reservoir. The structJon of the proposed Corat- I 15th ahnual reIlJious education spinning or weaving, They are .Ively dllplaee cotion In textile Improve the. quality of cotton tex­ ders of other craft in the SlllIIe ac­ statement is addressed to Lieut. ville reservoir may ,be summarlt~ wee~, Sept. 30 to Oct. 7, and manufactured by extrusion in man.faclure. tlles. Attempts are being made to tion received the Navy CrOll from (ontrol Plans Col. J. H. Peil, district engineer as follows: urged .' that religious education sheets. So long as staple rayon replaced develop machinery to remove the Secretary Forrestal in a cereJllonf of the army corps of engineers. "1. The proposed reservoir will of the nation'. children be "fos- BUford Brandies, discussing the cotton. in the processing plants, dirt picked up by mechanical at the navy department. Two pth. protect approximately 90 acres of tered and extended." question in the monthly review of cotton mill operators had no cause pickers and to remove the seed ers for whom navy crosses wen (Continued from page 1) It is signed by President Virgil building sites and , 50 acres of . In a .letter to Dr. . Roy G. Ross, the Federal Reserve Bank of At- for afarm, Brandies points out, with less damage to the lint. authorized were unable to be pre. M. Hancher and was read at the Finkbine field from periodic in- general 8e.Cr~t8ry ot the lnterna­ lantli, sees little danger of the except over the development of "Thoqh cotton IItlll has cer­ sent for the ceremony. plds, outlined 10 ways in which public .hearing in the courthouse undation. Honal coUncil of reliigous educa­ cotton textile industry being by- new spinning and weaving ma­ 'aln advanlarel over the Iyn­ The secretary aIso presented the the society would be adversely af­ yesterday by Fred W. Ambrose, "a. This will eliminate flood tio", sponsor of the program, passed very much in the imme- chinery. thetlc fibers, In IIplnn.bUlly and presidential citation to LeI (0) fected by the proposed reservoir: business and secretary of protection of buildings during high President TrUman wrote: diate postwar period. But recently developed rayon IItrenrth - retalnlnr absorptivity Group 8, to which the vessell wen But later, say, ten yeal'S from mament doe. not need to be attached. Dama.. e to Farm Land water periods by sand-bag walls "At II time when stars hang in for Instance, these advantares the university: and other protective devices. the wmdows of the nation's homes now .•. ? spun, and UI ule thus short- - will probably be met In larre "1. Damage to valuable farm "Dear Sir: "b. It will saferuard tbe cen- to honQt the absent warriors; when It is well wl&hJn the realm of elrcultaj the Iplnoln, procell es- part by technical research In weather and other natural haz. and timber land along the river. A "The State University of Iowa tral power plant nad' utUlt)' 411- millions of Ahlericahs lIve In tem­ pOsslblUty, says Brandies. that sentlal In cotton manufacture, the Iynthetics Indus'ry," san ards." prolonied retentlon of water in has given considerable study to trlbutlon s),stelM from water porary'/h?mes! and In migrant cen- sheet plastics will ' berln to althouch wuvlnr II stili neces- Brandies. As for empioyment, says Bran. the reservoir would kill or partly and flood dam... e and Will par- ters wll11e they :wor~ at war jobs, make real Inroads In markela sary, Brandies says. "Synthetics, on the other hand, dies, any potential loss would be kll1 timber submerged in the flood. the effect of the proposed Coral- antee 'the continuo... operation It is I~portani to urge t~at the re­ now supplied by fabrics spun She e t plastics are already have the adanlage ot dependability partly offset by the Incte... or In addition, during. wet cycles, ville 'reservoir upon the camp\Js of the university baapllal, aDd lig.lo~s education of the country's and woven from natural fibers competing with woven textiles of supply, uniformity of produc­ employes in plants manufacturing areas adjacent to the storage pool and properties of the university. medlc~1 cl!nter. and all .~er children be (catered and extended. and rayon. in the ' manufacture of such tion, and stability of price that can rayon and other synthetic fibers would be damaged thrQugh seep­ The Iowa river flows for ap- educational and pllylleal fulll- "It Is likely that there are mil- Since 1938 10 different types of products as raincoats and shower probably never be met by any na­ Rayon Is a comparatively hleb age and interference with natural proximately one mile througp the ties. lions of youngsters who need initial nylon, rayon's closest competitor curtains. tural tiber whose production is wage industry because it requires drainage. Tiling systems in about middle of the university cam. pus, "c. It will protec;.t the hydr~ulics and ~lc reli~ious instruction. among the synthetics, have been "It is at least reasonable to as­ conditioned by vagaries of the high sklll. 500 acres of land would be ren- and it flows adjacent to Finkbine 1aboratory from "ater and flood Th~y should ~lve It and learn of put in commcrcial production. sume that research will widen - dered useless and the tiled land field one of the properties of the damage and wlll' insure the con- the ; t,iherh~ at God and the Rayon is developed from natural their field of usefulness rather rendered useless by flood water As a result, approxi- tinuous prosecution of the pro- cif man." cellulose, but nylon ig chemically rapidly in coming years, writes univ~rsity. broth~rhOQd synthesized from coal, 'air and Brandies: backing up in the tiling systems. mately 90 acres of building sites gram of government researcb car- Ninety Il&:cent of Amelli~an Pro- C. O. Do CLEANERS "This land damage would affect and the buildings thereon on the ried on in the laboratory. testantls!,,\ wlll ~ke part m. com- water. - Many people argue that produc- a substantial reduction of agricul­ main campus and approximately "2. The rerulated flow of the munlty ;observa,:!ces of . relIgious BrandJes also points out that tion of sheet textiles will never 106 South Capitol w.ltlhln the last few yean.. be a serious threat to the cotton tural income and profits over a 50 acres ' of Finkbine field are river if such a reservoir II con- education week ,through the.40 Qe­ number of other synthetic fibers te~lle industry because health Cleanlnq PUllin; long period of tUne with a conse­ threatened with damage when- structed, will reduce the maklnr nom~~~tllolna I!nndl'1s183fstahte, Clty and have reached the sta,e of com- requires air vents in fabrics. quent upset to the society's cor­ h Ii· fl d d d provu,c a c,ou C 0 c urch es an d and Bloclclnq Hah ever t e owa t vet IS 00 e an of slit deposlla and the periodic reUllous educiation which are merlcal production. Many othen However, Brandies says this isn't , porate economy. spreads beyond I~ banks. A~ for alteration of the cour.. of &lie member a~cles dt the Interna­ have been produced experlmen- necessary in some industrial and Our Specialty Reduce Power for MIIII a:' we can determJn~, .the uruvet- river throu.. h tbe waahlnl" of tlonai council Dr. Ross reported. tally_ven from peanula anti household fabrics, aii'd this prob­ "2. The backing up of the water 81ty would suffer no lI1Jury. but on banks durin, hl,h water. ' com meal. Item may be solved economically Pickup and delivery service above the proposed dam in time of the contrary would experience . "3. The reservoir will permit The development of rayon didnt for clothing fabrics. DIAL DIAL flood would definitely effect the very ~ubstantial benefits from the the reclamation of ~aste lan,d for CalUornia leads aU states in the greatly change the textile indus- Sixty-one percent of all spin­ tail race below the turbine at the establlshment of the proposed buildlng sites or other campus amount of gold mined In the try. Cotton textile manufacturers Idies in American cotton mills are 4433 4433 ' Amana Woolen mills. This would reservoir. uses. United' Statel, producing about 40 merely had to make minor adjust- situated In the Carolinas and - We pay Ie each for han,er. - reduce the power output of the . "We have no means for deter- "4. The reservoir willl'l'\ake pos- percent ot the total. ments to machines already in- ' G~egor~ggia~.~ln~pge~a~c~e~ti~m~e~t~he~c~o~t~t(l~n~! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ turbine and in case of flood stage mtnll1l'the meritS of the ·sUe of sible a pro8ram for. the permanent would eliminate it entirely. -the proposed dam, .. compared development of tile .rIver ' front "3. The propose4 dam would ag­ with other sites above Iowa through -the university campJ.1s. gravate flooding conditions near City, or many otber details of "5. 'rhe reservoir wlll create the mill with the result that it the projeet. The benefits which Increased facilltes for the study might be forced to discOntinue op­ eration. Machinery in the mill would come to tbe unlversUy of hydraulic problems 71~ted tb ",lght be damaged. Such 'an ag­ depend upon the construction of flood control. '. , gravation of flood conditions would a reservoir upstream from Iowa "For the reasons given, it·ls'be- City 0; a. capacity sufficient to lieved that the constructiorl of 'the put the village water system fOl· . , domeBtic use and fire protection catch and hold the flood waters proposed reservoir wbuld ' be of MAYBE YOU CAN ' READ YOUR FUTURE IN ••• out of commission. of the Iowa valley until they can great benefit to the State Unfver- be released downstream In or- . sity of ]owa." "". ~ .' ---.~- Ref~lreration Plant "4 The societY'sJ refrigeration '" ~ __~ ______A ______~ ______~ ______~ ______~~ ______~ plant, located at Middle, would of the location of the dam site that the commission ' wOl!ld ' favor undf,lUbtedly be affected in a simi­ above Lake MacBride instead of erecting the .. fJood · control-dam ·at lar manner, with damage to build­ ings, machinery, supplies and below the lake .'1 Turkey creek site p~oposed" in 11140, equipment, s\oppage of operation Lieut. Col. J. H. Peil, district en- below Lake Mac/3ride state' pa~k, " and building a new plant on higher gineer 'fro'm Rock Island, Ill., who and the building of an' enlarged ground. ~ presided at the hearing, asserted recreation area. ." "5. Private homes located n'ear that any adverse effects from the In their written statement, the Price creek and in toe lower part reservoir would be taken care of commissioners furthe~ . ask -that of the village. of Amana would al 0 by the federa I government. He the Llike MacBride dam be .raised be endangered if the present flood said army surveys indicate the re- so that the lake will have an -area condition"s were to be aggravated fridgeration plant would not be of approximately 700 acres. ' This by the erection of the proposed endangered at any time because' should be made part of the federal dam. of the dam. Coralville project, they asserted. Damage to Roads ,Quotcd 1929 Report According to the comrpis~lon, a "6. The creation of this dam and In their statement, the Amana strictly fiood control projec~ d.oca rese.rvoir would unquestion!\bly Isociety quoted from an engineer's not include full consideration for cause damage to established farm report ade in 1929. Colonel Peill other posible water uses, partlcu­ roads, lanes and fenceS and ClUlse said that conditions had altered lady recreation. a disruption of the communication considerably since that time and Conservation Pool co between field:; and comm,unities certain newer studies had also In his remarks preliminary to and between the communi tit's changed the picture. the hearing of statements, Co-lone I co themselves. ~ During the morning session of Peil said that a small conservation th "7. Railroad facilities would also the hearing, the State Uni versity pool behind the flood control dam an be impaired and interrupted and of Iowa, the federal soil conserva- at the present proposed site as a gu corporate facilities along the rail- tion commission and the {ovia Ve- "possibility." But he gave no in­ Ba road might have to be changed. getable Growers association \!ame dication that such a project as that go "8. The co unty taxation rate will out strongly in favor of the pro- proposed by the state conservation be reduced by taking the land out posed reservoir, commission would be . acceptable of taxation. ., The statement read by Fred. W. to the corps of army engineers. I Menace to Health Ambrose, business manager and Before the actual hearings op- S "9. There will be a probable secretary of the university, is ened, Maj. 'F'rank W. Asl1ton, in o serious menace to the health of quoted in full on this page.) charge of the district engineering our communities from water and . Soli Erosion division, presented maps o~ , the refuse standing in the land pockets A. R. Wilcox of Ames, speaking reservoir area showing the flood for mnger periods of time on ac- for the soil conservation commls- stage which might be expected at count of this dam and re,servoir sion, indicated the favorable ef- five, 10, 15, 20, 30 and 40 year fre- and by reason of the possible con- fects on soil erosion by flood con- quencies. . tamination of our domestic water trol projects, C. E. Kelley, attorney in charge THIS • • • OR THIS ••• supply and the stoppage of our Colonel Peil said that there is no of real estat acquisition at the dis- I sewage system. • conflict between flood control and trict office, explalned the proc'ess I "10. The society has no way of soil conservation. where!;>y landowners will be com- . -.- --..... knowing how more serious flood~ The representative of the state pensated if the project report is Ing conditions may become because conservation commission stated accepted. ONE LONE ATOMIC BOMB DID THIS· TO HIROSHIMA

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No maHer what the palmist may tell you come true i. to buy more War Bonds. Remember- 11m. RII!'. In ten .hort yUJI , •• no matter what you may read in the.tar.­ Put more and more of your money Into you~1 be lIettin. bac:k four dollar. for every you can be absolutely certain of one in tit, .. you've put into "E" Bond .. thiDa them-the bett Ino ••tm.nt In tit. World. And your future. once JOU've bou.ht War Bond.-hold onto You loullln't a.k for a bette" or wiler, way And that'. what your War Bond. promiae th,m till they mature. to help yourlel! to a happier luture I you in ju.t ten thort yean. Whether you want to buy a plane, or aend , your &on to collelle, or take a lood lonll vaca­ tion, the best way to mako your future plan WAR 80ND~ ...TO HAVE AND TO If OLD !

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" . THIS VIEW FROM THI All of Hiroshima, Japa'" the target for the ftr,t atomic bomb dropped bya U. 8. THE DAILY IOWAN B-29, shOWI the total de.tructlon which reaulted. 'lIhe city wu picked .. a tar"t. because It had never been bombed and would, thu., five airmen a chance accurately to ...... th. bomb', mlfbt. .. ~I II an Q~clal ~.!!!t!!lJU!!!!ArIP1 Air I:m! p.hotoma._ U.Jm.utiGi}), This is an official U. S. T" easury advertise,"ent-prepared under (JIIBpices of Trea,,~, ' y Depal'lutellt and lVar Adv()rtising COltl&Cit