• THE WEATHER TODAY

Law's Arm Fails to Prated Lunch Partly cloudy and colder today. Cloudy and not WAVKEGAN. Ill. (JP)-Louls Smith. ZI. WallkeCall Ne_­ S.. repOrter, covered a pollee tralnlnc ProlTUll Clonduded here so cold with occasional snow tomorrow. High _bU, b, the FBI and afterward reported: • today about 30, low tonight about 20. HI lunch was stolen durlntr rece . owan" £.tabhebed 1868-Vol. .,. No. S7- AP New. and Wirephoto ...... Iowa City. Iowa. Saturday. November 29. 1947-Five Cent.

Italy Demonstrations Continue- Seek Compromise On New Home for Iowa's Governors Premier May Request Power I • • ' Palestine Partition; 9,000 Milan· Partisans Protest Vote Delayed Again . To Limit the Right To Walk Out ROME (JP)-Demonstrators in Milan were reported gathering again PARIS (Saturday) (JP}-Premler Robert Schuman's cabinet sum­ last night around the prefecture, besieged earlier by 9,000 partisans NEW YORK (JP) - An unex­ moned parliament to meet at 10:3 0 a.m. (3:30 a.m., CST) toda,. to act protesting the transfer of Leftist Prefect EUore Trollo. pected French compromise move Upon its demands tor extraordinary powers to cope with spreading Late yesterday a dispatch from the northern industrial city, Italy's yesterday put ott for at least 24 strik . The cabinet held a 3-hour emergency meeUng last night after second largest, had reported the crowd drifting away from the pre­ hours a showdown vole in the fecture, government building of Milan province. Interior Minister the premier hnd fired 66 police commissioners and called 80,000 trOOPl' Mario Scelba told newsmen here that Milan seemed Quiet. United Nations assembly on a back to the army. These actions were taken in the midst of a strIke But a later dispatch said the crowd was back and had grown by scheme to partition Palestine and of 2,000,000 to 4,000,000 men in 20 nntional unions, including rall- 4,000' in an hour. Partisans weal'- threw the whole controversiol Is­ waymen. r The demands th cabinet agreed ing red neckerchiefs were report- H Will P b sue wide open once more. upon were not disclosed officially. ed "!,romi~ent. Sixt~-odd carabi- ouse I ro e The assembly voted 25 to 15 Bev~n Asserts West nlem, na{lOnal policemen, were But they were understood to in­ for a simple request by France clude authorization to: :~~I~:~to~~ ~hy~ prefecture, and Purchasing Officers' that it adjourn 24 hours so the Will Save 1. Mobilize certain public ser­ delegates could make one more vice workers. Streets were blocked by barri­ attempt to find a "good-will 2. Take stern measures agall1lt cades erected by the demonstra­ formula" to end the connIct be­ If Big Four Fails sabotage, particularly of railroads, tors, who also had maintained Contacts With Firms postolflces. communications an cl tween Jews and Arnbs. LONDON, (JP}-BrIUsh ForeIgn picket lines around the prefecture WASHINGTON (IP) - Several The delegates had been on the electrIc light plants. part of the day. Secretary Ernest Bevin warned S. Deal strictly with civil ser­ more wartime purchasing otm­ verge of a vote on he so-called Russia last night that the Western A "citizens' committee" claiming vants and employes ot the nat. cers of the armed forces wlll be Soviet-American plan to parUtion pow fS possibly would nct on th ir \0 speak for the demonstrators called upon to explain their rela­ the Holy Land Into Jewish and ionalized raiLroads judged guilt)' own to save Germany and of breakIng discipline. kept representatives in the pre­ tions with contractors who made Arabic countries with several from "chaos" Jf the Big Four fall­ fecture throughout the day, along There was a possibility also. a farge profits, members of a house leading delegates predicting the ed to agree on Germany's fu ture. parliamentary source said, that with Troilo and Geneql1 Manlio committee indicated yesterday al­ plan would be approved. The warning came during a ses­ the national assembly might be Capizzi, commander of the Milan ter a long hunt for war frauds. But the concensus hours later sion of the toreign ministers con­ asked to limit the rieht to strike. army garrison, the dispatch said. Chairman Bender (R-Ohio) ol was that there might be a new ference marked mainly by con- The cabinet also decided to meet A prefect is head of his province the house expenditures subcom­ floor light over whether to vote , fusion and disagr ments, Inform- today to vote on proposals. for on a Colombian move, which has and direct representative of the mittee, which has been digging TID J THE GOVERNOR of Iowa I new 21,200 home, located at 2900 Graud a.ven ue. Des Moine. ants saId. Bevin, the sources added, recLa sllication of civil servants­ into war transactions for several the eUed or postponing acllon and formerly owned by Mr. Gerard . Nallen. Approval to pUl'cba e the bome wa p ed yesterday looked straight at Impassive So­ " national government. a measure that would In many months, said he is "ready to gO" until next year, before voting on by a peclal state CO Mmittee which IndIcated that redecoratlnl' and furnlshlnl would brlnl' tbe total pur- I viet For ign Minister V. M. Molo- cases result in pay raises intend­ Under Secretary of the Interior on cerlain cases involving plane the partition plan. chaae co t up to approximately 10,000. tov and asked: ed to satisfy the strikers' demands. Achille Narazza, forced down by contracts. These developments were noted "Are we going to I ave Europe Minister of Commerce and In. bad weather at Florence on a Bender told a reporter that the also: . in chaos? Is chaos our objective? dustry Robert LaCoste asked coal flight from Rome, arrived in Mi­ subcommiHee is "not out hunting 1. The six Arab countries in if It Is, we had beUer know now." miners to return to work. He clt- lan by train. The perfeot and the headlines." Nevertheless, he pre_ the assembly went over the new Roosevelt-Truman Bevin asked the questions atter .od critical needs :tQr fuel for' lenernl met him. A spokesman for dicted that the results ot its in­ situation thoroughly in a secret Veterinarians He.re Disagree Molotov blocked agreement on homes and Industries. a "Committee of Agitation" of the quiry will compare favornbly with caucus. ~nformed sources said they setting up a border commission Meanwhile, a splft widened In "Citizens' Committee" s a I d it those of the senate war investi­ wanted the delegates to know Policies Bred Chaos to examine territorial claims on the General Confederation of La­ would participate in the talks with gating subcommittee which un­ they were not "too stilt" on the Germany. bar between Communisis and an- Narazza. earthed the secret wartime deal­ Palestine question. This was an On Disease Dangers 01 Pels In Europe, Taft Says Molotov then charged that even ti-Communlsts over the strike In Rome, Interior Minister Scel­ ings at Maj . Gen. Bennett E. Mey­ answer to complaInts from 80me Three Iowa City veterinarians dlaagreed yesterday on the dangers before the conference started movement, which was getting a ba received a group ol leltist con­ ers, air force procurement of!!­ delegates thllt the Arabs would of disease transmitted by pets In the university housing units. WASHINGTON (JP)- A charge Britain had a plan to set up a stranglehold on the French econ­ stituent assembly representatives cer. not listen to conciliatory moves. "There may be 80me sanitary objections to havlor pels In univer_ that Roosevelt-Truman polfcles Western German Government. He omy. from Lombardy-the region that Naming no names, Bender said 2. Irnn and .Afghanistan, who sity housing units, but most people take good care of their pets," bred economic chaos In Europe then asked that the four powers The firing of tbe 66 police com­ includes Milan. He gave them the that Investigators have been ex­ have lined up with the Arabs said Dr. 1. P. Irw1J:l,-S12 S Dubuqga t. DT. Irwin ramar.ed that and led to deml,lnc:\s lor bUlions in rondemn the setting up of "seg- missioners, each In charge of a IOvernment's information on tbe amining the relations of several Ilpfnst partition, Were said to be Instances of humans getting mange or any other disease from dogs American aid was maoe yesterday ment German iovernment in place dlUrict corresponding to an Amer­ Iltuatlon in Milan and promised wartime purchasIng o![Jcers with conSidering bringing before the were very rare. by Senator Tatt (R-Ohio) liS the of the central administration de- ican precinct, was called a "purge" he would appear before the as­ manufacturers who later we r e usembly a proposal for a !eder­ Dr. J. S. Potter, 129 N. Gilbert street, claim d he had never heard $597 millions winter relief bill sired by the Soviet Union. .by the Communist newspaper L'- sembly today to answer questions. overpaid by the government. aUzed PalestIne, with Jerusalem of epidemics traceable to dogs but encountered a delay. Secretary of State George C. Humanite. as the capital. Radio and telephone stations in A report Irom the General Ac­ insisted it was "unsanitary the tissue of man or other ani­ Taft, while announcing that he Marshall said the record at the It was reported the step was Milan were reported occupied by counting ottice, turned over to and unhealthy to keep dogs in re­ mals. would vote for the bilJ, told the United States was clear on the taken because Schuman feared the demonstrators. Most"stores re­ congress early this year, is the .tricted areas." Hull also mentioned a tapeworm senate that the executive branch subJe~t at German unity. He polnt.- Communists might get control of mained open, however. (oundation for the Bender com­ BULLETIN ' "Dogs need range," he declar­ called dipylidium caninum which of the ,overnment let the Rus­ ed out the Soviet Union had been the pollee force as they did 1.n mittees' inquiry. The accounting ed. "I should say that the situa­ occurs in the larva stage of lice sians build themselves up as a asked repeatedly to join its zone some Balkan countries. The 68 office report said that some ol Six pel'lOll8 were Injured In tion wasn't good for the children." and fleas which infest dogs. Ac­ strong power in eastern Europe, with the economically merged I had been members of the war­ the army and navy otlicers who aD antomoblle acclden~ about Dr. E. C. Howe, 2300 Muscatine cording to Hull, children become and gave them the opportunity to BriUsh-American zones. The otfer time "resistance" who were al>- Mule Won't Budge handled war contracts since have mlcln1cht last nlcht near Park avenue, commented, "As long as Infected by aCcidentally swallow­ prevent the recovery of western still stands, Marshall said. pointed after the liberation. been hired by the manufacturers road. bridce on hl,hwa, Z18. precautions are taken for rabies Ing such lice and fieas or crush­ Europe. To Let Trains Pass whose contracts they renegotiat­ Unlvel'lUy hOlpl~l authori. control there seems little danger ing them and, afterwards, sucking He also declared that the Mor­ ed. Ues aald earl» this 100rn.... thal or disease." their fingers. genthau plan for reducing Ger­ NEW ORLEANS (JP)-An old "none _mod to be aerlously The orilinal recommendation to many to an agricultural state The committee will meet Mon­ injured." "Dogs are not generally suscep­ gray mule stood resolutely in the day behind closed doors. Later ban pets from the temporary hous­ tible to the rodent diseases, but dealt a severe blow to Europe's middle of the Huey Long bridge it will open hearings on a GAO Those Hated by tbe ho.pl~1 ing areaa was made June 30, 1947 economy. aa injured were: they may act as mechanical car­ across the Mississippi river for 4 audit of the reconstruction finance by Dr. M. E. Barnes, head of the riers of rat-bite lever where in­ The senate quit for the week­ OAUaleen BoUand. 18, ChaJD­ hours yesterday while train after corporation. Bender said some of university department or health. fection has followed the bite of end in the middle of the after­ palp., Dl. train lined up on the lengthy ap­ the airplane contracts would come Ba rnes said Thursday he had "no a dog which has recently fed on noon atter approving an amend­ proaches. under scrunity at that time. Dorothy Sparr, ZO. A3, Red further comment" to make on the ment to the $597 million measure Oak. an animal dead of the disease," Slightly injured by a passing situation. Hull stated. forbidding foreign countries to use Mn. William Wacner. 55, any of the money to buy arms. train earier in the day, the sad­ Studio Fires Lardner Cedar Raplcb. Barnes' report stated, "This re­ According to Hull, dogs have al­ eyed, long-eared animal just gazed Chairman Vandenberg (R- Charles Wacoer, 17, Cedar commendation was based primar­ so been reported subject to the reproachfully at train crews and HOLLYWOOD (JP) - W r It e r ily on the prevention of the spread Mich) ot the foreign relations Ring Lardner Jr., one of 10 film RaPicb. organtsm causing scarlet fever and otflcers and refused to budge de­ of diseases to the children in these "acc~ss of a dog to a human case committee obviously was dis­ figures cited by the Thoma. un­ Ann Wuner, U, Cedal' Rap­ pleased that he could not dispose spite ear tweeking and tail twist­ Ids. areas and on possible injury to ot the disease might be a menace Ing. American activities committee for the children by the pets." of all amendments today to clear contempt in refusing to testify John Da.... ct, Mancbester. to children." Finally, the Society for the Pre­ Dr. Thomas G. Hull, director of the way for a final decision on whether he is a member of the WID. It. Waper, 38, of Cedar ----~.~------the bill Monday. vention at Cruelty to Animals dis­ Communist party, was dismissed Rapids waa drtviu hll oa r the scientitic exhibit for the Amer_ patched the mule with a bullet. yesterday by 20th Century Fox. 'nonh on Ute hll'h_7 wilen ican Medica] aSSOCiation, wrote In , hII car eolllcled with the Davbl his book Diseases Transmitted Good Luck Comes car. from Animals to Man (1941)\: Turning to Stone, Waner aald he had Just tlll'll­ "Animal parasites which iDlest Curley Returns, as Boston's Mayor cd north off ,.rk brielce anel most dogs form somewhat of a Too Late for Painter Boy, 10, Aided by had I'one about 15. ,anIa on tbe menace to man. The most dan- hll'hwa, when Uae 00111.108 hap- gerous is taenia echinococcus OMAHA, (JP)-Al Morris, a sign pened. ,. whlch carries on its adult stage painter in his 60's, had been down Vitamin ETreatment No turtller delaill were Ina­ of life in the intestines Of dogs on his luck. mediately av&Dable. while its larva stage is spent in CHICAGO, (JP}-C h i 1 d r en's He and his wife were separated. Memorial hospital reported yes­ Taft and Harriman Compare DiHering Views For several yellrs he lived alone terday that a lO-year-old boy, alt­ ina n inexpensive downtown er given vitamin E for a disease * * * * * * /.!' ; Omaha hotel room. He'd been out which virtually turns the body to City Council Votes To Change of a job for some time. stone, bas shown definite inprove­ Thanksgiving day things were ment and may be the first ever Taft ·Questions 'Good Faith' looking brighter tor all He bad to recover. prospects of a job. The boy, John Crowe, is suf­ . WASHINGTON (JP)-Sen. Talt (R-Ohlo) yesterdaY cballeaaed Engineers for Swimming Rool Yesterday morning a fellow fering from a disease known a!I the administration's "good 1'aitl1" in asking "limited" economic con· dermatomyos.\tis ossilicans, which trol powers, while two biJh administration officials dlaagreed on the 87 RAY DENBY guest knocked at Morris' door to best way to curb inflationary bank 10al1l. The city councll last night terminated the municipal swimming say the sign painting Job had causes the body to be calcified. The hospital quoted the report Taft took Issue with Secretary ------­ pool with the Howard Green Enaineering company ot Cedar Rapids materializ.ed. There was no re­ ot Commerce Harriman'. testi­ sponse. of his physician, who did not per­ with the proposal of Federal Jle. and authorized the signing of a contract with B. J . Lambert and Ned mony before the senate-house Morris had died during the mit use of his name, as saying that serve Board Chairman Marriner L. Ashton, Iowa City consulting engineers, for planning ot the pool. economic committee that only night. since undergoing treatment "there The termination of lbe Green company contract came by mutual "limited" authority was being Eccles that banks be required to Among his possessions were has been a dramatic disappear­ agreement. ance of the deposited calcium." sought by President Truman to set aside special reserves. In a letter to the council, Green stated he would accept the first found two nickels, a street car "The unusual recovery is at­ control and allocate scarce loods Eccles, in making the proposal partial fee of $2,000 u complete payment for work done so far. The check, and a 20-year-old letter from Jack Dempsey, written in re­ tributed to vitamin E," the doctor and commodities with the view to lut week, asserted the specW compan,. May 24, 1844, ,ave the was quoted. "There is a good sponse to a letter A1 had written halting the rising cost of living. reserves would cut down U. city plana and COlt estimated for be met by his firm in the tlme chance that this young patient will The Ohio senator contended that buUdlng a municipal pool, but be­ the council reconunended. H. after Dempsey failed to regain his what was really bein, sought was amount of money banks can lend heavyweight crown from Gene be almost normal within another cause of war-time restrictions con­ suggested that a resident enginee.r year or two." blanket "100 percent authority." and thus be anti-inflationary. Tunney In · the famous "Long struction could not be undertak­ be hired. A hospital spokesman said it "I don't think your proposals Snyder said he believes the belt Count" fight in Chicago in 1927. en. The contrltct with Lambert and had no knowledge of an,. cases of are in good faith," he said. way to reduce the banks' len~ Not until recently were the re­ Ashton specifies that the $2,000 The Dempsey letter said, in the disease in which a patient Harriman replied that there is ability is to keep tax revenu. .trictlol1l removed, and then the paid to Green be subtracted from part: "Pechapa I did not get a fair fully recovered. a difference between the Truman higher than government lpencUq break in Chicago, but we all get city found It necetlary to get re­ their fees. When the Crowe yo~ngater first plan for "standby" power and the and use the surplus to Pa7 off bum breaks in life. We must take vised coat eltlmates because of The council also voted to accept went under treatment In July, 100 percent authority Taft men- iovemment securlties owned b)' higher bulldin, costs. The city preliminary cost estimates from them with the goad ones .... 1942, he was able only to crawl tioned. banks. .wlmming pool commisSion a1lo Ashton for the Benton street and to sit. HarrIman told the committee the Snyder gave support to BccleI' recommended lome cbanles In the bridge of $197 ,600. Finns Return to Jobs Hospital spokesmen said the7 overall aim was to channel searce proposal to restore controls over IELIAsED from federal prison b,. PresIdent Tr1IDWI'l collUllata­ pool planning which tb~ 'council Ashton laid iast night an ad­ HELSINKI, (JP)-More believe this is the first time vita­ supplies into the mOlt essential consumer credit and iJlltallJMDt '!til, .Jamea M. Curley returns to his fanner ofnce U lDa,or of ..... voted to incorporate In the origi­ ditional cost of about ,10,000 can than 40,000 Finnish government min E has been used to treat this uses. He mentioned meats, steel bu,.ing. And he served notice he - after servl.., five month. 01 a six-to-ll monUli sentenoe for mall nal drawing•. be added to the estimates for employes called off their strike disease. The treatment alllO in­ and lumber u major fields where- will ask congreaa for fUndi to lteD i'tIU. Curley lUll haa two yeal'l of his term a. maJor remalulu. Be C. D, MullinIX, representative rilht-a-way property to the bridge yesterday after Premier Mauno cluded X-ray therapy, phyalo­ in he "hoped" lower pricel would up the campallD to sell ..vJnp .... It known be haa no Inkn&lon of retlrl.., from pollUea. euleJ, of the Green company, told the approaches. Pekkala's cabinet reportedly made therapy and surgery to lengthen result. bonda to I08k up potential buJ- , '-er Democratic covernor and COQreuman, II tree&ed ...... , coUncil on Oct. 20 that these two The next move is to file final plans to conscript the ,triken into tendons of shortened muscles and Secretary of TreuW'J Sll1der inc power in the banda of the ., lafrIIDIII,' Gat, ball. (AI' wall'llO'l'O) o~·aU plall cbaDIel collld no' (hi Ca&1 COUCU, ,.,e ') the an1l¥,,. to remove calciulil dePQaite. told the committee bt diIaIrttd public:. I \ , THE DAlLl' IOWAN, SATUIlDAl', NOV. %11. 11l"7- PAGE TWO li • Army-Navy (3rid €I assle Attracts 102,000 ~ ' ------.- - (I P,ollard Sets Mark Taking Middies Fired Hawklels Sink Newlon, 36·19 Special to The Dally lowall IOWA CITY NEWTON As AII·Stars Down (,Itpl IIU" Bob Diehl and Bill Reichardt Hettrick. 1 I 0 3 Leydenn. I .. I S I for Traditional combined some fine floor play Diehl, [ .... 6 Z 1 Shields, I .... 4 0 S Indianapolis, 68·62 Dunham. ell 0 Shepherd. C ,I I 2 Time Out with timely sharp-shoaling to Beals. I: .... J 1 4 Brayton, I , .0 I I lead City high's Little Hawks to Reichardt, g 5 2 4 Gardner, , .. I 0 J CHICAGO, (JP)-Stanford's Kim Snook, g .. 1 0 0 a 36-19 cage win over Newlon in' Wood. f .... 0 0 01 ,,"======Wlth Buck Turnbull ======Z'I Pollard scored a record 19 points Cadet Rivalry the Newton gym last night. Hem·g·.y, cOO 0 to pace the College All-Stars to a B, Fenton, ! 0 0 I (Second in a series of three -sophomore, played with last year's 68-62 victory over the Indianapo­ By GAYLE TALItOT After a slow first quarter, Shain. c .... 0 0 0 columns on Iowa's 1947-48 bas­ Iowa B squad and has moved lis Kautskys, National league PHILADELPHIA, (JPj - Army which ended with the score tied Tola" .,. ~ Ii j;/ Tolal. .... 7 IIJ ketball team.) right into the Harrison type of champions in the eil~hth annual and Navy, two oHhe nation's mid­ 9 to 9, Bob "Whitey" Diehl Score at hall-lime: City high 19. New· ton 13. After discussing the three cen­ offense. College vs. Professional basket­ dle-calibre footban units, moved sparked the HawkJets to a 10 to ters in our first Folumn and re­ Parker, a good set shot, also ball game before a capacity 20,204 into town yesterday and took final 13 haIr-time lead which they Diehl, who scored 14 points and marking that their lack of height desires to be a coach. He is from at the Chicago stadium last night. light workouts at sprawling Mu­ never relinquished. played an excellent floor game, was one of the great drawbacks Elgin, Ill., where he was second Pollard's eight baskets and three nicipal stadium for their annual The third quarter was over four was high point man for the eve- ' to this year's Hawkeye cage team all-state while in high free throws topped the previous clash today before 102,000 spec­ minutes old before Leydenns, ning. But Reichardt was probably squfd, we now turn to the seven school. collegiate record of 16 points held tators, including President Tru­ speedy little Newlon forward, the most outstanding man on the ' guards, none of whom stand less Pushinl' Parker for a startlnl' by George Mikan of De Paul and man, tossed in a free throw. Newton iloor. Besides scoring ]2 points, than six-feet. berth in an Iowa all-stater, Bob was three shy of the individual They came into a community didn't score a !leid goal until the sturdy Hawklet guard dis­ . For a set of I'\lArds. these Schulz, from Davenprt. Schulz professional mark of 22 held by boiling with football interest, three minutes later, when Shep­ played. a brilliant floor game. The boys ha.ve more than enoll&'h lettered as a freshman In 19""­ Bob, McDermott formerly of the where vacant hotel rooms were 8HAD HANDS, COACH-Army football Coach Earl (Red) Blalk herd scored from close in. With rebounding work of Beals and height, averaging a little more "5 on the title-winning team be­ Ft. Wayne, Ind" Zollners. as scarce as 50-yard line tickets (left) and Navy Coach Tom Hamilton are shown shaking hands at Diehl hitting from close range and Dunham was also good fbr the 'han six·feet, two-Inches. They fore entering the service. Pollard, now playing with the to the service classic, and where Municipal stadium in Philadelvhia yesterday in a frlondly gesture Reichardt making lhe crowd HawkJets. could turn' otlt to be ihe strong­ While In the arlllY, he captain­ Minneapolis Lakers of the National generals and admirals were a dime before the two servlc.e schools hook up in their traditional clash on gasp with his long one-handed Leydenn, Shields and Shepherd ' ed the Camp Walters Rockets, esi croup on ~ Iowa. team. league scored 15 points in the last a dozen. It was estimated that 65',- the same field. (AP WIREPHOTO) push shots, the Red and While were the Newton stars last nillb!. Led by the "Thin Man," Jack camP champions. He stands slx­ two periods as the All-Stars grad­ 000 of today's witnesses would hoops LeI's increased their lead to Shields led the Redmen scoring Spencer, a regular in 1944, '45 and foot, one-inch. ually pulled away after hold a be from out of town. 32 to 16 at the end of the third department with four field goals period. '47, the majority are still untes~ed 'Bill Hall, letter-winne~ , last sea­ 32-31 halftime margin. ~h teams reached the battle and played a good floor game in big time competition. Besides son while seeing limited action, It was the sixth collegiate sUe In top rdtape. Army, a one­ The Hawklets scored only While Leydenn, the other Newton Spencer, the rest of the guards is another stro!1g con~nder for triumph in the eight-year series, touchdown tavorlte to win Us Go. Tech, Kansas lour more points In the flnal forward displayed a lot of speed are Tom Parker, Bob Schulz, Bill a starting job. Hall is a , ix-toolt Leo Klier led the Kautskys with fourth stnQ1lt over the Mid­ quarter while Newton was mak­ with his spetacular floor game. Hall, Tony Guzowski, Norman two-inch junior from MoUqe, Ill. six- field goals and four free dies, was without a scratch or ing but three. City high's staU­ City high returns to lhe local "Bucky" Harris and Jack Wat­ He played one year a t Milligan throws ior 16 points. blemlsn. Navy ha.d all Its best ing tactics was the main reason gym to play Washington high, tbe in for ihe low scoring in the final third foe on their 20 games sched­ performers in prime condlUon T:o Meet Bowl Tilt kins. college, Milligan, Tenn., wbile in for the first time in alx weeks. period. ule, next Tuesday night. Spencer, who slands six-feet, _. h D_ MIAMI, Fla. (JP)-Gcorgia . P.m. two~inches, is a steady floor man vuth 00&0 es. Earl (~d) BlaJk Tech has bcen sclected La oppose Thompson said the bid was and ball handler but not an ex­ of Ahoy and Tom Hamilton Of the University of Kansas in the made this aflernoon, Dodd called ceptional scorer. After playing Navy, annonneed there would Orange Bowl here New Year's his players together and II vote fiye sports at Davenport high be no aUbls In tile chill of to· Day. was laken. The vote was unani- school and being named to the nll'ht. Announcement that Tech _ mous to accept, Thompson said. all state basketball team in 1941 Nothing wilt be at stake except Ibeaten only once in nine games- Georgia Tech has piled up 213 aDd again in 1942, lanky Jack the championship of the two had accepted the bid came only a points 35 fOr nine opponenls. entered the university and jump­ academies. Both teams have been few hours after lhe Orange Bowl They started the season by drub­ ed into a starting role on the cage well beaten, Navy on six occa- committee announced that the bing Tennessee 27-0; Tulane, 20-0; team in 1944. sions and Army twice. Neither has Kansas Jayhawkers would appear VMI, 20-0; Auburn, 27-7; Citadel, This was the beginning of three a claim even to the eastern title, in the 14th annual New Year's 38-0; Duke, 7-0; Navy, 16-]4; and of Iowa's greatest basketball sea­ and it is doubtful that either ag- day classic. lhen lost to Alabama, 14-7, and sons and lhe second year in the gregation could get into one at Tech's only loss was 14 to 7 last week swamped Furman, 51-0. coaching tenure of Pops llarrison. the better bowl games wiihout beating by powerful Alabama. They have the traditional Tha~ seflson two other freshmen paying admission. It will mark the Hamblin' Georgia game to ' play today in came out for backetball to sky­ Yet there is something about Wreck's third appearance in lhe the regular season, rocket Iowa into national head­ lines-Dick Ives and Dave Dan­ today '5 spectacle which sets it Orarrge Bowl. ner. apart. For one thing, the sight of Orange Bowl President John G. Positively LAST DAY While Ives and Danner were the serried ranks of Cadets and Thompson said lhc bid was ac­ Shows at 1:30, ":00, 6:30 irading baskets and running Midshipmlln marching onto the cepted by Tech head Coach Bobby 9:00 - Feature 9:30 one·two rupeclively for confer­ field beforehand is not easily for- Dodd by telephone about 5:30 ence scoring honors, Spencer gotten. Perhaps the realization quarterbacked the club to a that the handful of players on the second pJace tie with Wisconsin. field were chosen from this mag­ the Wghest IUl Iowa team ha.d A two-year letterman of 1946 READY FOR OPENER - Iowa nificent collection of manpower finished slme 1928. and 1947 is Tony Guzowski, out Guards (left to right) Tom Park· is what makes them loom as giants The next year the Hawks came for basketball after completing er, Jack Spencer, Bill Hall and bcfore the kick-off. ENDS TODAY Doors Open 1:15 p.m. home with their first undisputed the football season. Tony is a Bob Scbulz shown planrung their There will be no all-Americans 35c Anytime Big Nine title in modern history six-foot, two-inch junior from sirat~gy in a practice dr{U before in action Loday. Glenn Davis and "Y ou'll Hate with Spencer still doing a lot of Iron River, Mich. the cage opener with Carldo. col­ Doc Blanchard are gone from the the play-directing from his guard Another fast-coming newcomer lege of Northfield. Minn., Mon­ Army Hne-up and their places Yourself if You l~iI~~~:ij position. Jack dropped out of from last year's B squad is Bucky day night. (Daily Iowan Photo by have been taken by mere football COMPLETE NEW SHOW school in 1946 but returned to his Harris. A six-foot, two-inch Joe Shoqulst) mortals. West Point has a good Miss It." old position last season. sophomore from Palatine, Ill., he team, but noj;hing to compare with '----'-'J. ARTHUR RANK p'l$tnll • SUNDAY· Now in his final year in a is probably the most improved its wondrous scoring machihe of. DAVID RAYMOND Hawkeye uniform, the "Thin player on lhe squad, according to the past three years. NavY, de- NIVEN MAssey Man" hopes to go into the coach­ Pops. U-High Wins Opener spite its record of only one vic- E. ' Th;flls;~d . ing field when his playing days One other guard up from the tory and one tie in eight games, Excitement are over. So far, he hall scored B squad is Bob Watkins, six-foot, Over Williamsburg is a good football team, too, on in the 238 points in 54 games for Iowa. four-inch sophomore from War­ the upgrade and fired with zeal Orient! The Animals Talk Spencer's probable running­ ren, Ohio. He was honorable University high school popped Ito turn back its old rivals. "In Country Life" Coach H&milton rerards bls mate in the opener against Carle­ mention on the Ohio aU-state the cork on its basketball season Sportute -:~ Colortoon ton Monday night is 'rom Parker, prep team while in high school last night and bubbled up with a team as the underdeg but eives Late World News r"enls steadily-improving new c a mer. before serving two years in the 31-24 win over Williamsburg. it a good chance to upset the Parker, a six-foot, three-inch imantry. The Bluehawks ignited Mfensive Cadets. It is recalled that he ------play when Guard Bob Ojemann felt the same way a year aro T dumped the first net-splitting at­ and ihat the Middles lost by tempt. Coach Lou Alley's Blues only %1-18 after havlnr !lCared ENDS TONITE - "Blondie Knows Best" "Land Ruth" never lost control of the contest Army's vaunted array out of Four Major Bowl Games Sel a year's 1T0wth. Coach Blalk, STAITS from there on, doubtless recalllng that near BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cotton Bowl-Southern Meih- Ojemann continued to hit from TODAY disaster, Is maldnr no predlc. XTRA • TEX BENEKE An~!tme. 1 [I 1 \ '1:,. , the war-out position and racked Selection of the University of odlst VB. Penn State. tlons whatever. ----- Ends TueI!IrIJ Kansas and Georgia Tech to play up seven field goals 101' 14 points in Miami's Orange Bowl yesterday The Delta 'Bowl, a new post­ before lhe fray ended. No team except Illinois has halt­ STARTS SUNDAY ~OLlYWOOD SAID IT NEYER COULD B rounded out the New Year's Day season fix,turc to be played at The 'Bluehawks led, 26-11, at the ed Army's running attack for an Your All Time college football picture as far as Memphis, Tenn., yesterday invit­ half. entire game. The Cadets went all the "big lou r" post-season games ed Texas Christian university to Except for Oiemann, balanced the way once against both Notre French Film al'e concel'ned. meet the University of Mississip­ scoring aided the Blues, "Forwards Dame and Penn. where Navy was Favorite Unbridled, , " Georgia Tech, beaten only once pi. The sponsoring AMVETS or­ Curtis Miller and Bob Rasley, as slopped cold by both those mu­ in nine games an'd still holqing ganization said Mississippi had ac,­ well as back court Protector Den­ tual opponents. In Elwyn. (Rip) * a chance to win the Southeastern cepted. TCU officials said they nis Hagler, contributed mightily Rowan, its 172-pound fullback, * * would accept if permission is Army has perhaps the most ex­ CARNIVAL "rea!;S"', ~' conference championship - de­ to the total points. Pivot man pending upon the outcome of to­ granted by the Southwest comer­ Fritz Harshbarger worked well in plosive runner in the east this In defying evcIY day's games-will meet a Jay­ ence. j'ermission later was forth­ the slot and accounted for two year. r hawker team whil;h sliares the coming. tallies and three charity tosses. Navy is believed to be basi", FLANDERS tradition ~ Big Six conference title with Ok- Catawba college of Salisbury, ''Doc'' White sparked the Wil­ much hope on the passing arm lahoma. • N. C., accepted a bid to Orlando, liamsburg attack, scoring eight of Robert Horne of Plainview, lilt's the Sauciest the screc,n.· Both Orange Bowl opponents Fla.'s Tangerine Bowl. Catawba's points and dominating the defen­ Tex., and on the catching of left wind up their regulation seasons opponent will likely be selected sive play of his team. End Arthur Markel of Los Ange· Most Hilarious tQday, Tech meeting its traditional from either Muhlenberg or Mis­ Harshbarger he I d Williams­ les. If the cpmbination clicjs:s it Comedy of Any rival, Georgia, while Kansas-un­ sissippi southern. Davidson and burg's center, Bob Menary, to a could easily prove decisive, for Year" t beaten but twice tied~takes on Wesleyan university declined bids. statistical recol'd of five personal Army's pass defense has shown Arizona. fouls. Meanwhile, officials of the Al­ a disposition to go to pieOes un- @HOWS Sponsors of the other major amo Bowl at San Antonio, Tex., The contest was a wrought up der fire, as in the Cadeb;' 21-20 \ E~~~~~E~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IIiee Jan. I bowls have lined up the sought 10 sign the University of affair with Rasley, Harshbarger, loss to Columbia. &ad following ~allts: Oklahoma as one of the oppo­ White and Menary leaving the "Doors Open 1:15" Men R 0 8 e Bewl _ Hicbkan VB. nents, with Georgia, Mississippi game via too many fouls. ai , liIouthern California. State, Virginia and Vanderbilt The Blue and White engages Ramblers Lose to I ~ J:t7 8.,ar Bowl - Alabama VII. possibilities for the other hall of Roosevelt high school of Cedar 6:43 Texas. the cast, Rapids here Dec. 2. OHumwa Five, 40-30 1':15 I Topper t a.... st, Mary's Ramblers absorbed '.'~I l~ STARTING-; 1:37 lheir first loss of the season 5:13 I Thursday n igh I, bowing to Cen­ 8:49 I tral Catholic.ol Ottumwa on the TO·DAY WANTED!! latter's floor. 40-30. I "They beat us at our own WE ARE BACK game," Coach Frank SuepPfl said '1'0 OUR REGULAR yesterday in reviewing the game. S'l'RAND POUCY! '" DAilY· IOWAN The ,arne was highlighted by •. JOHN 8~'_ being tied 11 times during the bell·.... and prtW' evening, and was dead· locked go­ ing into Ule final period, 27-27. ....eJla1 Then c.ame the 6utprlse. St. beeomea 1If', ~ARRIER II14II& dlItIJI.. ' Mary's, which halt characterized ,•• "l",' "_' ,'1"1 all of its wins this Mason by QUOOlY 1 JAtfr· 'i; IUlsbeei p1e&are. fourth Quarter splurlet!, had the ECK'. WY.MAN For Roule in tables turned On them. They lit· tI.... JM~", J'~ a. -J..I." . erally feU apart under a deluge of baskets by the Ottumwa team. /" FECHNICOLOI "!t's an unusual sight to see 'ST'Rr .1t0 Mfll~tE! EAST and 'SOUTIi our boys chasing the other team HAL ROACH PreH"t. in and around the basket, but I (OMPIINION nDrUAE SIlW it Jast night-too much of Jt," Sueppel saId yesterday as he BUSTER CRABBE 1O"ER Pari of'Town ' scratched his head and reflected "CODE OF ."Ji, JOAN BLONDELL upon the fortunes of the basket­ ball wars, THE PLAINS" ROlAND YOUNG CAROLE . CAlL PAUL PARKER 4191-TODAY Flannery scored 11 points for With AI. (Funy) S~ Johh the Ramblers and was raftehed ; j ~\ XTRA for higher scorini honors by Carr...... Dmy low1x. IHIlhU. ttov. !f. tNT-PAG! 'I'IIIn I The Word IOIlD .. 6eUmd to tat mixed with aJIWl IDd ubes tJl"ft 6YDthetlcs program on the have been derived from Sapo HlU, We~dings InnoiinceCI PERSONAL NOTES C6urcti Ceremony from the altar fires, proved URtul vast coal fields of the Ruhr. to Lisl Adivilies a sacrificial spot near Rome where in washing clothes. make up for such lacks as natural the clay. which was satUl'ated with ~rmany used to base lts en- oU and rubber. Robert J. Lolan, Chicaao, Is Unites Befly Pierce visitini Robert E. Buffum, A2, 01 University this week end. And Rene Jacobs Norma Thornton, who is study­ Betty Jean Pierce, daulhter of in, ballet at tbe McRae School of Mrs. Clem Pierce, Rock Island, Cllib for Dec. the Dance In Ghiclllo, spent m., became the bride of Rene C. Luncheon, bridge and tea ac­ Thanksgiving with her parents, Jacobs, son of O. C. Jacobs, Wall tivities win center around the Prof. and Mrs. H. J. Thornton. Lake, Thursday afternoon at the theme of Chris~as for the Uni­ Congregational chUl'Ch. versity club in December, Mrs. L. Mr. and Mrs. ArthUl' Picker:ng, Dr. Marcus Bach of the univer­ A. Van Dyke, president of the 8UI N. Dodge street, entertained sity'S .chool of rell&ion, officiated Our empty Handi-Square croup, announced yesterday. their three daughters and their at the double rini ceremony. Mrs. Clayton Gerken will be famitles Thanksgiving day. Those Mildred Lee Hansley, Des milk boHles ,eneral chairman for the month. present were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Molnes, cousin of the bride, was All club functions will be held Wagner and Connie, Mr. and Mrs. maid of honor. and Mrs. Orville In the University club rooms of James Talner, and Dr. and Mrs. Brinkmeyer, Hubbard, was brides­ lowa Union. Orie Couch. maid. Activities are: Richard Boeke. Hubbard, was Dec. 4-3:3 0 p.m. Christmas gift DON'T Jean Breckenridge, A3, Boston, best man. Ushers were Mauro tea. Mrs. Kenneth Spence, chair­ Checclo. 5<:otch Plains, N. J.j Ar­ man, assisted by Mrs. Howard will spend the weekend at the home of Dorothy Bregman, A4, nold Espe, RadclifIe, and Harold return them to your Itore Beye, Mrs. H. H. Comly, Mrs. E. THE ENGAGEMENT AND AP­ TWO UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, Showers, Galesburi, A. Gilmore, Mrs. Arthur Steind­ Dubuque. m. PROACHING MARRIAGE of two Rei en McCue and James P. Smith, A reception was held at the or throw them away ler, Mrs. E. F. Van Epps and former university students, ~­ were manled Thursday tbe at Hassan Shabrudy; Teheran, Iran church Immedlately aIter the Mrs. C. H. Dunn. bara Joyce Render and Donalcl A. Methodbt parsonal"e. Mrs. Smith is a guest this week of Alpha Chi weddinl. Dec. 9-2 p.m. Bridge party. Morris, wall announced recently Is the d&ul"hter of Mr. and Mra. PHONE 4175 Mrs. H. M. Hines, chairman, as­ by the bride's parents, Mr. and WUllam McCue, Kirkwood. DL, Sigma, chemical engineerin' frat­ The bride is a araduate of the • sisted by Mrs. W. R. Whiteis, l\lrs. Walter E. Bender, Rock and her husband I. the son of Mr. ernity. Shabrudy graduated from University of Iowa's IIChool 01 Mrs. J . E. DaviS, Mrs. A. M. MariS Island, Ill. Mr. Morris Is the son and Mrs. James R. Smith, Me.n­ the University of Iowa last June. nursing and college of llberal arts. and Mrs. W. R. Kern. of Mr. r.nd Mrs. A. F. Morris. asha, Wis. Dr. L . L. DunnlDl'ton She has been employed as assis­ Dec. 11-12 noon. Luncheon Lincoln, Neb. Miss Render, a offlelated at tbe ceremony. The Lt. and Mrs. George Gibson, tant supervisor of the university and our driverl and program. Mrs. Dewey B. cradua.te of Aucustana. collece, bride, a. I"raduate auistant a.t the Sprinifield, Ohio, are IUests WI! hospital's orthopedlc ward. Stuit, chairman, assisted by Eliz­ Rock Island, hal done paduate Unlvcrslty of Iowa, II now work­ week of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Paul­ The bridegroom is a junior in will pick them up. abeth Hunter, Mrs. Thomas Far­ work at the university. She Is Inl" for a Ph.D. de.ree In mathe­ son, 405 E. Jefferson street. the university's college of liberal rell Jr., Mrs. John Reilly, Mrs. now a. I"eo on Instructor at Au­ matics. She was I"raduated from arts. F. W. Kent, Mrs. B. J. Lambert, ustana. Mr. Morris is 'On the staff Monmouth collece, Monmouth, nt, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Demp­ Mrs. Helen R. Scott, Mrs. Ken­ The couple win be at home at of the Iowa City office of the U. and received an M. A. decree from sey, Lincoln, Neb .• are the week­ 119 Quonset park after Dec. 1. neth Spence and Mrs. W. R. Kern. S. geological survey. De Is a pad­ the University of Iowa. Mr. Smith end guests of Mr. .and Mrs. John Mrs. Don Lewis will discuss her uate of the University of Nebraska waa &Taduated from the unlver­ P . Highlander, 625 E. Market Thank You views on Russia. and also did &Taduate work bere. street. Mr. Dempsey is a former Dec. 18-3:30 to 5.30 .p.m. aUy In 1947 and is now ... I'racluate S · IH t· The weddlnc will he at 7:30, Dec. auisl.&nt In ma.thematlcs. The lIl'aduate assistant in the unlver- qUlrre un mg Christmas tea. Mrs. R. H. Oje­ aity's speech department. mann, chairman, assisted by Mrs. 20 In the Aupstana Theolol'lcal couple are at home a.t 10 N. Van I ' seminary chapel. Buren street. Thomas Farrell Jr., Mrs. A. M. Capt. L. D. ~In Is spendlng Inland Fishing End Maris, Mrs. Howard Beye, Mrs. his weekend leave with his par­ J. E. Davis and Mrs. Dewey B. ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Good­ The 1947 inland fishing season Stuit. Christmas music will be Religious Leader win, 112l S. Riverside drive. Capt­ tor protected species, and the played during the tea. 'Youngsters' ain Goodwin is on the medical SQuirrel season over the s tat e , Dec. 3(}-7:30 p.m. Par t n e r staff of the veteran's hospital, close at midnight tomorrow, the bridge. Mrs. W. R. Kern, chair­ To·Deliver Series 60 to 90, Have Fun Marian, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin Iowa conservation commission re­ man, assisted by Mrs. John are also entertaining their son-in­ minded i1shermen and hunters Reilly, Mrs. Ned Ashton, Mrs. F. At Ree. Center law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. yesterday. W. Kent and Mrs. N. B. Conk­ Of Christianity Talks Grandpa has fun at the Iowa Robert W. Green, who are stUd­ The commission also reminded wright. Husbands will be invited Inlervarsity Christian fellow­ ents at the University of Chicago. to aHend this affair. City Recreation center, too. hunters that squirrels may not be ship will sponsor talks next week In addition to the basketball, held after Dec. 10 without a per­ by Robert Finley on "Consider ping pong, billards and table Bob StaUord, a senior at North­ mit, which the commission will Christianity," according to John games provided 10r school chil­ western university, Evanston, Ill., give free on request. Main Break Cuts Montgomery, president of the dren, the Recreation Center lur­ was a Thanksgiving day guest of Hunters wishlng to hold pheas­ student group. nishes entertainment for a group Virginia Rosenberg, A4, Burling­ ants In storage after tomorrow SUI Water Supply The speeches, open to the ot "youngsters" whose ages range ton. They will visit Mr. Stafford's may also obtain a permit. Ducks public, will be held at 8 p. m. Mon­ from 60 to gO-men who would parents in Ames, this weekend. may not be held after tOday with­ day through Friday in room 207, normally be found snoo:&ing on out a permit. Breakage in the university wa­ Mary Ann Willett, L1, Daven­ ter main north of Old Capitol yes­ Schaeffer hall. park benches in the summer or Finley, who is making a tour of sitting at home whittling. port, has as her guests this week­ terday will result in limited wa­ end, her sister, Barbara, a student ter service to eight buildings. campuses across the country, They make their way, many of them with. the aid of canes, to the at Augustana colleie, Rock Island, Why This is the second water main graduated from the University ot Virginia in 1944. While student, Center every afternoon about and Edna Kepka, Marycrest col­ in two weeks to break ' on this lege, Davenport. line. R. J . Phillips of the physical he was. the first president of the 12:30. There they play a lorm of plant attributed "changing water Student Christian fellowship. euchre, according to Edgar J . Frame, director of the recreation Weekend guest at the home of Not Give Yourself temperature causing contraction Monday he will speak on "What center, but he says he has never Melbourne C. Walsh, AI, Cedar oi pipes" for the breakage. is Christianity?"; Tuesday, "Chris­ Rapids, will be Robert Johnson, Wben repair work starts today, tianity and Philosophy"; Wednes­ been able to figure out the rules ot the game. CS, East Tawas, Mich, the city water company will sup­ day, "Christianity and Other Re­ The group started with a nu­ ASuit or Topcoat, ply limited service • to the old ligions"; Thursday, "Is God Know­ Marie Stie,lItz, Chicalo, ls visit­ • dental building, Macbride hall, able?" and Friday, "Christianity cleus of three men and has grown until three tables in the little ing her parents Mr. and Mrs. Ditt­ mology building, veterans admin­ h Practical." mar Stieglitz, 811 Florence street. Istration o[fice, electrical engin­ room off the lounge in the center For eering building, East hall, music are often filled by the men. , buldlng and the university laun­ Social Studies Group Cold weather and slippery Wild turkeys, in the' old days dry plant. Meets Monday Night streets have cut down attendance of American colonization, used to but a few ot the hardier old sell at 6 to 25 cents each. Christmasl· -. A meeting of the social studies gentlemen had the game going Boy Scout Conference group of the American AssocIation yesterday as usual. Sam S. Waymer, a representa­ of University. Women will be held The game, which Frame says is tive of the personnel division of Monday at 8 p. m. at the home of liberally interspersed with heated the Boy Scouts of America, will Mrs. Paul Huston, 445 Grand arguments, breaks up about 4 be available in the' YWCA rooms avenue. Mrs. Miller Strack will o'clock and the "kids" wander In Iowa Unlon at 3:30 p.m. discuss "The Effects of Advertis­ home, looking forward to the next Wednesday to discuss scouting ing on the Consumer." afternoon's engagement. with interested university men. Anyone interested in joining the Waymer will speak to men's ad­ social studies group may caU Mrs. The first cable was laid across visers and counselors at 2:35 p.rn. E. L. Marietta, 2545. the English channel in 1837. Wednesday in the YWCA rooms. SUITS by Made by U. S. 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... me •...•• PaIn u..... Glo•• at lola pial ...... taL __ •••••••• / NA.:MB •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• , •• .L ••••••I."'~. I , .. . I ADD...... , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••~.:~n . "Quality First-With N~11y AMrtiHcl Brands" LOUIS' .. . ". ., ' rrnE DAILY IOWAN, 'ATURDAY, NOV. 2:J, U4'-PAG! "OUIt - - The Dady Iowan ETABLISBJ:D t la Battle Agqinst Pub1lablJd dall1 ac:eJlt Monday b, MEMBER OF TID: ASSOCIATED P1IZ88 ltudenl l"ubUcltlOllI, Inc. Entered .. The Auocl.ted Prell Is entlUed a- -..n., "'.au _Il matter It the palloHlc. clualvel, to the ute for repubUcation of lit Iowa City, low., under the act of all the local new. printed In this n~ You Ineessantl, keep ap Ute sue is, CAN WE MAD D£MO- Democracy. and only demo­ ment, responsibility. For the es­ government by responsible cIti· -.reu of M.~h S. 18'11. piper, u well u all ~ D.". .u.. patcIwL Studlnls Have tl&JU al'alDst ~018 aatlllll&l stu- CRACY WOllK? All other poli- cr~y, can be &be &,overnment of sential foundation 01 democracy is zens. l:his means a great deal pidli:r. tical issues palp by comparison, freedom and individual Ilber1.v. individual responsibility of the "tED M. POWNALL. P-..bUlbv more than just casting your own "ALLY 8't'RINQHAM. BWIIo_ - - Ordinary, easy-going, average all others rise from our fa.ilure to But demoer8()Y is a &,overnment citizen ... Board of Trultee. LeaU. G. MoeDe, ballot, which has precious little Manaler Kirk H. Porter, A. Crall Baird, Paul R. make democracy work. in our of freedom only when tree men There Is no need to labor the R. BRUCE HUGHES, MIlO! Olson, Dorothea Davidson, Jack O'Brt_ "citizenship" is nQt enough. OnlY work ).qcessanUy at U. influence. It demands aggresslY!, ,. Lest• .; BrooD, Lo, M. Booton, S\e9a ti Sf blCrlptlon rat~ ... -B, carrier ln low. Weapons Now by aggressively a.Pl?lyin~ YOW- su- me. fact &hat eaUnc at olJl' vUals ia a in'telligent leadership an,d effective ... ------DlnnlnC. Cit) 10 cetlta week17 or fI per ,ear ~ perior talents and the knowledge De-.oraey is on ,rial In our l! we are to m~e pur republi- social dlMaae whlcb baa leta to following in all phases' of the art I e. IIdvance: a1x months t3.85: three monthl TJ:LEPHONU (P.res. Lyndon O. Brown of acquired through your edueatil)n own cooky. . can form of government work in tl,lO. B, can In Iowa . ' .51 rer ,ear; 1In. almolt eompl. breufiwn of government by the people. lilt am ....,..,. t3,IO: three monti" 12. All Bualne.. OW"" ...... , ...... m! Knox college delivered a speech In the fight against nation"l stu- Th Ith· st tr t t' this country; we must disabuse ather m,.. IUbarrfp:JOnB f8 per year; a1x Editori.1 OWca ...... ua .. e wea Ie, s onges na Ion I)urselves of several false notions. of pencmal r"PQUibill$y ., iIle You ha.v,e ye~ to develop rOIl _Uut f4.25; three months $2.~ . Sociely OHlce ...... t1t111 entitled "The Decline of Indivi- pidio/ can you settle yow- balaT).ce in the world is gripped with mor- In addition to the erroneous skills In leadership. DoD'~ f.,· Individual. We haave de&,enera­ dual Responsibility" at the Unl- with your com,munity, yoUr state tal fear which springs from lack of &et the imjlOrtanoe of Intelllatli -- assumption that democracy is au- ~&lon SATlJRDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1947 versity of Illinois commencement, and your na. t ion. confidence in a fundamental of tomatlc in its action and that its tecllnto a of se1f-seekillf, irresjlOu.sIb&e people. We shun followlll&' . . .The lubJect .f 1.. - Oct. 5. Exerpts from his address When I use the term national social relationships, government. blessings can be achieved by the - personal responslbUity for rood dershlp has been so overwerk. CL follow-The Editor.) stupidity, I reter to a condition, We are not even soothed by the mere existence of its forms, we on conunencement - ,overrunent. We &h1nk too pla"_ . , . My main purpose is to show a tHude or policy which is suffi- narcotic effects of our present must give up other widely held th.a.t one is tempted to ~ecoa­ much of what we ,e" too U&t1e Aid Program Needs Speedy yoU what an immense debt every ciently basic to impair the national false prosperity. We trembie at beliefs. One is the attitude that mend the institution 01 a ~ Enaclment of what W 'l .ive ••• one of you owes to this university welfare in the broad hiStoric the dangers inherent in our posi- democracy is the only absolute on Intelligent followln" for" II (»II We respect no authority, our Congressional debate will n ot feed Europo's hungry people. and to society, and how you mWlt sense. I am not speaking of tem- tion of world power. and moral form of government. iJt tha.t way that molt of • 011 - manners are rude, our aims are Without immediate aid, it would appenr tilat Europe will undergo practice ilie art of de.­ and can balance your ~c<;ount. porary newspaper headline issues For the weakness of our demo- Actulillly, democracy is only one selfish. We expect the state to oe best cracy. extensive suffering this winter. 'I'hat has been the opinion of What I am about to say also ap- '" Neither do I n:lean the politi- cracy today is attested by every of several basic philosophies of responsible for feeding us, for most of the congressmen traveling abroad and the administration plies to every college or university . cal balloons which certain candi- lad who watches a traffic police- social organization, and at certain clothing us, for educating us, for I am not speaking to poteDtiJ! expert , plu~ the recommendation of Secretary of State George g~duate in America. . . dates for 1948 are blowing up to man repeatedly wink at violations, times and places other forms may preparing for the future. congressmen and presidents in this Since you are graduates of this carry them through the presiden- every newspaper which daily re-' be much more effective. The Mar hall. Instead of playing, we want to audience, but to you who will F That's why Senator Joe Ball's statement that the administra- university, your debt is owed in tial" conventions, such 'as the so- ports our criminal record, every idea thai this nation is destined by into your communities as fnltlli· the first instance to that institu- called issue of "too much govem- observer who sees the bickering of fate to force republican forms of be. amused. Instead of getting in­ iI tion is u ~ing "rush !acties" to. get tho aid bil~ through ~ongl'ess to the game, we want to be spec­ gent citizens. You probably will not be a t the top of the eoonoll\it, d sounds like an ~ngLU 'hed par~1 an cry. 'l'he progl'~m IS thor-I;~~~n H;~e~~~ C~~I~~ee:sa~d p:~~~ me~ail~~~ are ever threatened ~~:~~~r~ ~~~eapua~~~~lY ~?~ ~:r~~n~::st g;e:tth~:~tge 0: ~~ tators. Instead of learning, we 0 insist on being caught. Instead of social or political scale, bul Dei­ ougbly substantiated by the eVIdence, ~nd t~le senator s plea for a versities do not demand a specific with drlftln«' Into a. condition back in the notion 'that none of abiPty to make democracy work ther will you be at the boltom. J two or three weeks delay means our alel wlll be that mueh de- accounting from their own iradu- which doeS them irreparable this is his personal responsibility. in this country ... working, we want to be paid for Yours is a two-way duty-to s! layed. ates. These institutions were harm. The lJnlCed States' is no Democracy is not an automatic To see the nature of our present not working. Instead of practic­ Aid cannot wait for a complete 4-year plan to begin. The founded and are maintained In the exception, and failure to reeo&,- formula for government. We crisis, we must probe beneath the ing citizenship, we leave it up to lead your associates and to foUow the politicians. alTlOlUlt of aid to Europe to be appropriated is bound to be]~ social interest, hence your debt as Dlze ibe fundamental character cannot sit idly by and e~pect that machinery of deJl)ocracy and avoid intelligent leadership in democra­ than the eight billion dollars E~l1'ope wants from the United an individual is a broad debt to of the crisis wblcb we Jl(esenUy it will work by itself. As a mat- the generalizations of "social con- The crisis of democracy in cy. For many the pattern should America is brought about by the be leadership a t the local level and a States for the first year of the ~farshan plan. society. . . tace would be a. nON national ter of fact, democracy is the hard- ditions" necess8J'Y to make it Jl1luis ICrug, secretary of the interior, saiel that the United There is really only one way stupldJty. est kind of government to operate. work. We must dig down to the laCk of individual responsibility intelligent following al the stall! and national. tate "eanLlOt long underwrite the material defieits of otl1er na- In whjch those who have bene- Behind the headlines there is Democratic forms of government essential foundation, to the least of eacb. citizen, in combination p tions without serious impact upon its economy and its resources." flted from higher learning can only one real issue, which, if we and the mach'inery of democracy com\YIon denominator. When we with the spread of democracy to Above all, you must practice G . . ... t' h . tIl th M h 11 1 completely square their account fail to resolve it, will go down in are merely devices through which do so, we must go beyond mere the masses. What is the solu­ and preach the necessity for in­ TI1e b aSlC Cju\: LOn, owever, IS no lOW muc 1 e ars a pan . . . I'dentl'fication of the indl'vI'dual tion? ... will cost but how much it would cost the United States not to ThIS Is by your own personal history as a gross national stupi- a democratic society governs it- dividual responsibility for making You, and others like you, hold democracy work in America. 11 help. An isolationist policy is not possible. World peace rests e ftor is over the years, In w bleb__ -...:_I:::.tY~I_n d· . __Am'er_Ic_a_o_a.:y_. t d __Th a___ t ls_--:-s_e_.. lf -!.______citizen, and add one further ele-_ the solution. The survival of ef­ ,democracy fails in America, iii on Europe's economic recovery. fective democracy in America de­ failure will go down in history as 'l'bat is why we were Ol'l'y to ee the action of a hou e subcom­ pends on active partiCipation in a great national stupidity. mittee cutting ovet· $100-milJion off President 'l'ruman's $597- Fourth Annual Iowa ------million request. And that's why we were glad to see the senate ,Casualty List beat down attempts to eut the aid program there. Church- Calendar ,Forensics Meeting Only through aid can America hope to hold Communist expan­ Includes One Who OFFICIAL DA~LY BULLETIN sion clown. Sixteen EUl'OP an nation have tried to submerge Just Ate Turkey their national rivalries und ambitions and agreed to work on a Set for Dec. 5, 6 CORALVILLE BIBLE cnURcn FlRIIT CnRISTIAN CII1JBC. By JOH~ C. M~TOSH basis of lnt mational eoopcl'ation to solve their common problems. CoraJ,,'Ue, Jowa. l!11 Iowa .veD •• G. F. Hoffman, L, was one of II til(' .goverllments of western Europe ean meet their pledges Sunday, 9:45 a.m.. Sunday schQol,. wlth ~ . Sunday. 8!4G a,m.. Christian. radio Sixteen universities and oolleges classes for 'Ill a,... Adult Bible class. hour over WMT, 9:31) a.m.. Church the numerou,s Thanksgiving 'Cas­ will be represented at the fourth of more production, internal stability, and increased cooperation 10:50 a.m.. Momlnc worship service. IIChool for .n ages, Cia .. [or unlvenlt)" S""mon: "Secret Sins." 7:30 p.m .• Pre- students. 10:30 ,. ,m.. Morning worship ualties, but be didn't behave in Ithe aDnual Iowa Intercollegiate For­ with ('ueh ot ht'l', the p ace will be nearly won. prayer meeting. '1 :45 p.m., Evening and cQrnmunlon sel"{lce. Sermon: "I conventional pattern and get in a Evangelistic service. Sennon : "Members Will Be A ChristlaD." 8 p.m.• Betha"y ensics conference to be held on 'fhe cost is high, but thero is no alternative. Without delay, the Church Can Do Without." Monday fe11ow.hl p ,ocW hpur .nd devotio .... car wreck or fall on the ice. the University of Iowa campus VOL. XXIV, No. 57 ongre' mu tact. through Friday. 7:45 P.m .. NIgbUy Evan- Tuesday. 8:30 p.m,. Sarah Hart guild gellstic series. Monday and Tbursdlly, meellng at 721 Granl aIred. Mn. Otto He took the literal approach to bec. 5 and 6, according to Prof. 10 a.m" Pray.r meeting .t th .. chU{ch, BowlIng In ohM,e of Ihe I1ronam. the season-he dislocated his jaw A. Craig Baird. Tuesday. Wedn.sday and Friday, II) 8.m" Wednesday. 10:30 a.m .. Pearre mission­ while chewing on a piece of tur­ UNIVERSity CALEND AR Cottage praycr mcctincs l'>l.ac;es. .1Q be ary society wJlJ hold an .U.day s.,..lon The general program is design­ Saturday. Nov. 29 Thursday, Dec. 4 announced al evening oervlC<1Jl. at the church. 7 p.m., Choir practlce key. ed to pr vide training and experi­ ~ew Supersonic ShOWier Bath .at the church. Refreshments will follow. "I don't know whether it was B p. m. University play, Uni- 8 p. m, University lecture by CUVRCII OF CUBI T ence in all the major fOl'ensic ac­ versity theatre Henry C. Wolfe on "What is Hap- i,311 S. Dodre at.reet because I hadn't had any break­ A lIlUll can't teU what will a S] lOW er . One hu1i 10 cruueh FmST CONGaIlG-'TIONAL CHUBCH tivities. Included will be compe­ Sunday, 10 8.m.. Blhle .tudy. Subject: Sunday. 9:30 a.m. Church school, fast and was especially hungry, or Monday, Dec. 1 pening in World Atrairs," Iowa happen theRe days of 50-cent and cringe while the hot and HChurch Organization." U a .m.. Com­ Classes lor all. 10:30 a.m.. Morning tition in deba te, discussion, ex­ Union tQ whether the turkey was extraor­ 8 p.m. Humanities Society, munion. Wednesdoy , 7 p.m.. Mid-week worship. Serm,on: tiThe Anwaer Des­ tempore speaking, public speak­ 8 p. m . Lecture: "Economic salt POl'\{ and new-type cab­ cold water get adjusted. IVs devotional. pair." Nursery. 5:30 p.m. Student IUP­ dinarily tough," Hoffman said, senate chamber, Old Capitol per and IOng-f.st. 6:30 p.m.. Siudent ing and after-dinner speaking. Aspects of Atomic Energy," by bages without the traditional labor to soa.p up null hard vespen. '7 p.m., Discussion at the winCing and holding his jaw as he 8 p.m. Basketball: Carleton col, COM~tUNITY CIIU.CII CENTER Prof. C. A. Hickman, Macbride smell , work to towel otf. But all that Communlly bulldlne • church: "Tbe Place of the. ChW'ch In laughed. The two-day conference will lege vs. Iowa, field house Modern Society." Dr. George Mos.se will auditorium A r(,(,(,11t item about a super­ wiLL oon be llistory. Donovan O. U .. rt.. ..lnlder 6peak. Tuesday. 12:30 p.m.. Student "I had gone over to the Aman­ provide a sounding-board of stu­ Tuesday, Dec. 2 Sunday. 9:30 a.m .. Church IIChool and dent opinion on "Postwar Prob­ Friday. Dec. 5 'o uie shower bath forete111S a The new electric eye will di scussion of the Bible. 10:30 a,m.. iorum luncheon. Wednesday, H a,m .. as to get in on one of those 'all you Conference on Educational Ad­ Morning worship hour. Sermon: HJuda-e annual church bazaar. Thurs(jay. 7 lems," theme of the conference. Iowa Univel'sity Invitational Tour· happier future. Of coursc, !Llrn th wate\' on at th right Not Lest Ye Be Judged ." Nursery. 7 p.m .. Mo~er troup meetinll and pot-luck can eat' meals when the mishap ministration and Supervision, sen­ nament, Old Capitol p.m., Evening worship service with sup",r. I p.m" Stu., .. nt Bible- stud, a1 High point of the session, ac­ those who CUll r emember the tempera.ture. There will be 328 N. Dubuque otreet. 9:\5 p.re" ,stu­ occurred." ate chamher, Old Capitol Saturday, Dec. 6 hymns. cording to LQwrey Cowperth­ old tin tub bofore the kitchen soap mixed with lhe water fOI' dent Bible ~Iudy a.t tbe L1We chapel. "It looked just like another 7:30 p,m. Affiliated Students of Iowa Uni vers~y Invitatiollli iour· ST. PAUL'S LUTIIEBAN OHAPEL Friday. 3:30 p.m., Student coHee hour at waiote, graduate assistant in the American Institute of Chemical stove won't get unduly ex- a few m inntes. .A nother de­ 404 E. Jefterson stree.t tbe lounle. piece of turkey to me-dark meat nament, Old Capitol speech de~artment, will be the citrd. . vice will give one a I'lorida John F , Cholh, putor I think." Engineering, chemistry auditor­ 10 a, m, Psychology Col1oqul\llD, Sunday, 9:30 a.m .. Sund!lll IICh()()1 .nd FIRST PIlE88YTE.IAN CIIU&CH final round of discussion satur­ Lads 8 or 10 years will con­ tan as he bathes. Bible class. 10:30 a.m .. Divine .ervlces. e6 B. lIIarkel llree' "I took a bite, bit dGwn, and ium room 221A, Schaeffer hall Sermon: "Purposc of Chrt.t's Coming," P. Be.l.. n PoU.ck. "ad.. th jt h ed S thO g day aLternoon. Wednesday, Dec. 3 8 p. m. Basketball: University 01 tinu to believe that washing Then a magic affair ill 2:30 p.m., Church oUlcers' conlerence. Sunday. 9:31) a . ~. Cbllreh school with en appen • ome In .1 ...... for ajJ. 10:~ a,m., lIlo,rlling war- snapped. I tried to open or close One hundred participanis who South Dakota vs. Iowa, fieldhowe all ovl'r every day i" an ex­ waft warm' br eches alld ilry 5:30 p.rn, Gamma Delta ves~rs, 5:40 Conference on Educational Ad­ p.m.. Supper, 6:30 p.m.. Gamma Delta shiP. Serl!\!\n: .. Lett.... Fr_ Prlson- my J'aw, bu' couldn't. Visions of have been discussing in ten groups ministration and Supervision, se­ Monday, Dec. 8 tr8yag-ant waste of t1me, soap the body. Life g rows more discussion. Monday, 8 p.m., Church Ill, No Other Foundation." Nursery. • membership elass, Friday. 8 p,m'l 4:30 p.m., WeslmlnsWlr .twlanl vespers the time I had b~tten down on their topic, "What should be done nate chamber, Old Capitol 8 p. m. American Association 01 and watcI·. simple and inoreasingly eom­ Church council meotng. Saturday. 9:3u and IOclal hour. 5:30 p,m.. Hi-club k 1 to h ' b' k h t ~o insure peaceful relations among Iowa University Professors, senlte p,m.• Children's catechism class. meeting In the student loung'll Topic: some duc on y It uc S 0 8 p. m. Band concert, It's been hard work to take plex all the time. "Who Cares?" Monday. 7 p.m" Geneva raced tha-ough my mind. I tried the nations ot the world?" will Union chamber, Old Capitol FIRST CnURCn OF CURIST. .holr rehearsal. Meeting of the board of "'0 w·l·thdraw the bU " but the da- meet as a parliamentary body in SCIENTIST deacons In the dud,. Wednesday. 2:30 '. n .... (For Informanen rel'ardln, dales beyond WI 1ICh...... _ ... 72~ t. Colle," olreel p.m .. Women's as.oclation meeting in the mage was done." ,the senate chamber of Old Capitol. Sunday, 9:45 a.m.. Sunday schoQI. 11 church parlors. 7 p.m.. Westminster Here they will attempt to formu­ lenaUon la DIe office of the President, Old CapU.L) Game of Russian Roul~tte in France a.m., Lesson-sermon. Subject:"Ancient choir rehearsal. Thursday. 6:30 p.m.. "It isn't too bad today, Ibut end Modern Necromancy." Nursery. Ninth CoWny supper. FrtdlQ[. 6:30 p.m.. when I eat I have to favor the left late a resolution representing the Wednesday. 8 p.m. . Testlmonlai meeting. Club sU'Pp~r at the church. 7 p.m .. meet- of the SWlIOIl . • side and make two Qr three passes m ,jority consensus in answer to G EN ERA L N O TI CES En'l' heal' of Ru~sian l'OU- forlU a new cabinet, but B1uUJ Daily except Sunday, a p.m.. Public the question. lette' £ail I. reading room. ZION LtlTIIEkAN CHUBCR at the food before I can get it in- WOMEN'S GYM tOI·ium. Dr. Edward J, Shoben of W 11, we've got it on an in- Another spin, and Auriol UNITARIAN CnURCD Jobn.on and Bloomln,lon Ilroell to my mouth," he said chewing on The pool in the women's gym­ the university psychology depart· Evanll A. Worthle)', pastor Sunday. A9 : lfa~~0~~,,~:~I°:WoOI. 9:30 an imaginary bite to demonstrate. nasium will be open to all women ment will discuss "Factors Actual· tel'1lational scale 110W, lor pulled tile tl'.igger again. Again Sunday. ~ : 30 a.m.. Church school. 10:45 a.m.. Student Bible class. 10:30 a.m.. Hoffman gave an unhalanced students lor recreational swim­ Iy Influencing Successful Mar· somebody is playing- t he game he drew a blank-both Soeial­ 8,m .. Morning worship. Subject: "Who Created the Bible. and Why?" No Divine se rvice. Berm",,: "The Song of smile and said, "The next time I Williams To Explain ming, Monday, Thursday and Fri­ riage." with thc 1<'rench proplc.lt's a i. t Andre Marie, fOl'luer min­ meeting of the Flreflde club, Redemption." 5:30 p.m.. LUlheun stu­ dent association m ..~lni at \be First think I will order something I am day afternoons, 4: 15 to 5:30 and Josiolt game from the start, so is tel' of justice j and Yvon D el­ TRINITY EPISCOPAl. CnURCH English Luth.~ church. J'ellowshlp more certain of." Saturdays, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. UNITt:D WORLD PEMaALISTS 3~O E. Colle,.e ILred and supper. Tul\Sd.aY, 7:30 1'.""". Adult New Athletic Policy one of th ~,' clays the Fr('uch bos, RadicaL ooialist minister Sunda. 8 a,m.. Holy Communion membership cl"'l' at the church: y,'-.:Ines------T)l.e Unitect Wp.rld FeferaIWI al' going to get Ihrir hl'aills of state, declined to even try (first Sunday aller Advent) . 9:30 a.ll}, .. RIVERDALE l\ Upp.r church school. 10:45 a.m., Morll­ day.Church 7:30, COU!)cU p.m.. meeUn.C~lr . practice lit. the parsoo_i the-, ~anhellenl' c Starts Rollie Williams, assistant dircc­ will hold meeting Dec) 3\ 1:1 blown out. to I'ornl a govCl'llmcnt. lng prayer. Lower church IIChoot. and ace. Thursda~. 2 p.m., N~.unl ~ of athletics, will be the fea­ Christmas party 10/ Riverdale p. m., Y. M. C. A. confel)ll!l' nursery in lhe paris.h house. :S:30 p.m., Christmas pa~y .. , lbe Ladle. A,id p- I tor lleL'l"s how YO ll play the Allotliel' tl'y whell Robert Canterbury club waWe supper, Tues­ tured speaker at the Town Men's residents will be held Dcc, ] 1, 7 rooms. game': take a t'evolver, any ,'cllllluau succeeded in gaining day. 2:30 p.rn .. Arts and Crafts cuild. CI.tY·FI.ST ' "gct acquainted" meeting Thurs­ p. m" in the Community building, Wednesday. 7 p,lII" Junior choir rehear­ ENGhl8iI~UTHEB~N Pledge Programs instead of the Iowa Upion, as pre­ BRIDGE TOURNAMENT Aize, and pili 011(' bullet ill the 11 votl' of confideucc. But it sa l, 7:45p.m,. 51, Rose'. guild meeting (Vnllod l.ulbeuD CHub In Amorlca) day, at 7:30 p. m·, in 221A Schaef­ viously announced, Play-olfs for lhe unl¥8l1it1 'ylindel', give it It . pill, point 1001,1; lil,e more direcl aetioll at the parish hQU5e. Thursday. 7:30 Dull_Cl.· U' ...... , --" Panhellenic cOWlcil yesterday fer Hall. p.m., Inquirers' class. Friday. 7:30 p.m., ~. ~""I" ...... r . bridge tournament will bec!I\MOII' th' gUll at Yolll' head, and pull by the Communists is coming. BaU and Chain club meeling. Saturday. Sunday."I." .;.:10 •.~, ""'!l\IiIY school., a(lernoon announced the first In a Williams will discuss and ex- 7 p.m .. SenlDr cholr rellearsal. Film "n.. CUll", ..f Matt.bew" will be' series Of six prograll')& designed to SPEECH PATHOLOGY day, 4:30 p, m., in the wo~ '1 the trigger. Then YO Il hope for De Caulle exit'emists, too, shown.. IQ:4Ii a.m., Mornfnjl won.l,\jp. plain the . university's newly- SEMINAR loun~e of Iowa Union. Tbey will Sennon: "TIle Ady~1 Y'l Christ." 5:;IOi prepare sorority pledges for initi­ adopted athletic policy. the best. will not give up in their at- not show continuing hunger. They p.m .• LuUacran ~Iudellt ie1towsb41 hour ation, Speech pa~hology seminar will continue through Friday wh8\1 1ht 'fhe French g un is Loaeled. tempt fot· control of France. and lunch-' at First cb~n , ':30. Others on the program will be meet in room 303, Jefferson hotel, wipner will be announced. might show, as they do in Ger- p.m.. Lutheran · Itucleni ~Unll at Prof, H. J. Thornton of the uni- General Cllal'l s De Gaulle i, It's pO' ible that the reolilting many, approximately the number Flrst church. 6:30 P.D\ .. ~ulbetan .~- ·t' h· ... - d t t 'll Ray Hudachek, president of the Dec. 1, 8 p. ro. Norma Ansher, denl meelinc at Flrsl Chun:h. Mr. D~l- VI1l'SI Y s l"..... ry epar men WI Town Men, and Richard Sweitzer, graduate assistant in speech, wlU HAWJ[EYI the bullet in the cylinder. A clash will collapse. the Schu­ of people who had died of actual bert Nordquist will apeak on -"Church be 1\1e speaker for the first lecture few we ks back. F'renell Com- man cabinet. undernourishment, But there is no Architecture." Monday. 7 P,m.. BoYJ Mdt 430 . R adviser lo the jJroup. Hudachek discuss "Children in a Residential All seniors In the colleges 01 Seout meellng at the church. Tuesday. qn ay a : p. m. III oom will give a short talk on intramu­ School tor the Deat." liberal arts and cOmDIllrCe \1IIID l1luni, ts gave the eylind('t· IL When that hapPclls, wJlat is way that they can record that the 8 p,m., Church council meeting at the 221-A, SchaefCet' hall. His topic )'cal spin whon Ihey wellt a ll Auriol to do but pull the trig­ h home of Dr. and Mrs. R. A, Domer. , ral activities, have not kept appoil\tl!\en.ts ~ real cause was unger when, ac- Wedn.sday. 7 p,m .• Choir praclice at the will 'be "Our University Inheri- CONCERT TICKETS Hawkeye pictures are requesteO,lIi out for labor llllrest, directly gel' again' Tho French can't' cording to the certificate, death church. lance." In addition to these talks, a speaker representi.ng the campus Free tickets tor ,tl;ie concert to be nave these pictures taken b~ ~ causing thc downfall of the hope to draw blanks each time, carne from pneumonia or Wber- FIBST BAPTIST CIIUBCII The six programs cover tradi- culosis. 8. Cllnlon and Burlln,lon sir ••" community chest will be present presented by the University con­ 5, at ENTB templ)rUy batA,N Rfilundit'l' gm·ernment. so perhap~ at last the Dc cert band on Wednesday, Dec, 3, U Elmor E. »1.,-" ...... , lions of the uDiveni\)" the frater- 10 discuss the community chest between 1 and 5 p. m. PI'esirlcnt Vinccnt A11l'iol is --altldlc bnllet will come to II At a news conference recen y'l Sunday, 9:30 a.m .. c;a.urct> """001 In nity system and the origin and 8 p. m., at Iowa Union, may be ----.- Prl!sident Truman used the phrase all d'p"rtments. ~hoe coll.. tion hIlor re- d-elopment of "he Panhellenl'c drive and explain its purposes. pulling the tl·jg(,\'l'l'. '],he first top in the .ehamber when the " . kn • ". d lb' lief of ...... - - I:w'o-" ~ Idr.n. ~ ., secured at the Union desk, Whet­ HOME t:CONOMIC8 CLUB starvalton .,."SIS, In ~scr lllg 10:30 a.m " Mornlni worshIp, Sermon: d f t it . t' time Il e pulled the trigger he tt'igg r is puJ]ed. conditions in Europe. It was more "Too Good to Be True?" ' 5 . ,m" V_r an Inter ra ern y organize Ions. stones and room 15, music studio Marie McCally. of ~UiIJIIo drew n blank. lie had Sllm- What an explosioll that . meeting of Judson fellowship. POI-luck Phyllis Teasdale, A4, Wilton building. . Cedar Rapids, will spe4k ~ accurate than perhaps he realiz- supper. 6:30 p.m .. ROier Williams iel- Junction, is chairman of the com- moned Leon Blum to try to would be! ed . low,hlp vespers, Dr. ljester D. Lonlman Kof CT oHonor "€areers in Clothing alld BtlY­ .~------~ . . of the unlverslty's art department wiJI miUee in charge of the program MAJ OR IN MARRIAGE at the Dec, 1 meetina of t.lIe ifIIIII Except in Germany and , speak. 7:30 p.m.., l,Tnlveraitlo of LIfe fpr series. . Major in Ma~r\a,ge group of Economics club. The .roup ,. you will not find very many peo- hl,h. acIoooI .Iucleats. Meet at "'a Meth- ,.. odlst church. Thursday. 8:30 p.m.. Women fraternity members are Deceased Me~bers YWCA will meet Monday, Dec. 1, meet 4:30 p. m., in the horDe "" Hunger Is a Dangerous Thing pJe who are actuallY starving. You Monthly cbw:.h nlRht and POI-luck 8UP- 4:30 p. m., in the Chemistry audi- t u.. ~W'd\ weJCQll'le to attend any I of the nomics rooms. do not see such sights as we saw per a e . I The Iowa "ity Krughts o! Col- lectures, Helen Reich, Panhellenic l- By RELMAN MORIN Others were perplexed by the in India, in 1944, when terrihly METHODls;J' CH,URCH - ad . 'd umbus wil) observe their annual ------(AI' Staff Writer) lavish restaurants in Paris and emaciated bodies simply dropped J...... - n.1I11'l.~ .....11 clHJnci1 VlseI', sal . . Dr. I.. L . D... 1811.a v. V. v. Others lectures will be held Dec. day ot retreat and ecollechon Hunger is much more danger­ Rome where the menu frequently in the streets, or the fast and G.u. ",Inll'o".n' •• tomorrow. WSUI PROGR~M CALENDAR b h t f . . SundllY. ' :30 ...... CbijNla ,ehOOI in 8 and 15, and JBn. 5. 12 arid 19. ous than starvation. is longer and more varied than o scene orror . 0 a am me In all departments. 9:30 .nd U a,m,. laenll- The memorial for decreased R:OO a.m. Morning Chapel 2:00 p,m, Johnson County News The reason is that starvation is anything you would see in New China. cat mornin, worshlp ...... rvlc ... , Sermon: 8:15 I.m. New. 2:U p.m. Salety Spelks "A Yellow lAIMl." Alrierprt.. 6:15 n. 'I80J1AS MOa. caUEL members of the 01'4el' will i;legin 1:30 a.m. Melodic Mom,ntij 2:30 p.m . Gilbert " !IuI".. n PII,1MJOIIIo acute, and you can immediately York. It is not like tha t. p,m.. Supper in Fellowship 'hall lor un- eN N.• lv".ld, drlva t 9 ' ook 7:15 p.m. Muslca' Moodi be aware of what is happening to alent of about $3. The same thing on scarcity-based prices. But the ' OHUtK:* 0 ... "liE N\\UBENE' ~~s~ ~? t!~!.30~. 0g.;!1 ~~td ·E. Washinaton strllet. FoLlowilll 1l:20 a.m. Johnso.n County New. ':30 p.m, Saturday S"lnli !ll!alon him. is true near the Grand Bretagtle others will simply grow weaker ".,U8,lea ::1\ a ...... n I\IetIM ~~ 'Prfday.. AI •• 011 ~de:rs from :10 the brdklast, services will be con- II :30 a.m. Latin American j\l;Iythlll ':(1) p.m. Hemln/sclnl TIm. He might not recognize \hat his hotel in Athens. li:4S a.", Aljven1ur,s In Research 8:30 p.m. Proud-Iy We ~ and leu efficient and more sus- SUnd:.~·t~f :~.~·-en,t ape attA~'''"'' 4:4S p,m. Kine Col, Trio 0, I IS no s arva Ion In urope IT. PATaIOB'S C)lUaQH , ""NOIM.... GOSPEL MI8SION I ...... • . -~ . 'S: 15 p:m, Foolball Scbreboard 4:30 p,m, C.rIIPua PanId. came back confu~ed, with ll1ixed The .tatistics, too, were of little now. It is plain hunger, the slow al..... IIlIr. P..-tak G'aeIII,. ,..or I N.r_a ...... ,...... t the ann~al . £AAVel)\iIln ...01 the. ..6;1~ P.m. !\Ju."'al Memorl .. 5:00 p.m. Olso J~key Impressions, lind with greatly dH­ hclp to OUI' congl·essmen. nnd sOllndles ril'ninltv' awny oC TI ..J ...... ,...... PM.. _looIa., SII"'Y, III un. lIunday "",,001 tor all Amerlcnn Mathematical Bode'" at 1:00 p.m. I,.lte of Riley 7:00 p.m, FI ..t Niallte, .. ' p..., " ...... II • .In. -.uKeli.tlc "'rlnon. 11:30 , ., .., 1:00 p,m. '!'rulb 01' Cons~qu.n c 7:30 p.nl, Leave It 10 Blh ~ering reactions, One said he The hospitaL statistics would llfe, 11 much OIore dllngerous 8:30 a,m,. iow m_. 1:30 ...m .. hllh p.m. ShlllplraUon. Wcdnesctay. 7:45 p,m' l \yaahinlltnn Llnlverllty, St. Louis, I:M p,m, Your HII

FOR 8ALB TBANSPORTAnoN WANTED WHODCBIl' • PERSONAL SERVlCB IQA$SIRED RATE CARD APT. size washer portable elec- WANTED: Ride to and [rom Lake RADlc.;, appUaDcee, u.mp., aDd FOR CHRISTMAS CASH RATE tric Handihot with wringer, $30. View or vicinity. Share ex- lilts. Electrical wirmc, repair­ GIFTS FOR THE HOME t.1 Dap--I...... Original guaranlee still good. penses. Can leave Fri. Dec.. 5 InC. Radio repalr. Jackson Electric GIVE YOUR PORTRAIT. 4 ., Phone 80124. 2:30 p.m. CaU Shiley Cave, 4169. Illd GUt. PbODe MIS. 8pec!lal ChrIstmu raus. ?jwe Iwa, • Motorola RadiOll • cw.. allft eu.-u. .. ------1935 STANDARD Chevrolet, $225. PHOTOGRAPHY NOTlC~ • Stewarl-WarDer BadIOII Phone 4031 or 6056. C. D. GRECIE STUDIO HOOVER .c.u.e.&IT.~""""7 .. • SeDUnel 1la4I0II l!7 8. Dtl1nacae DIal t885 .... dv RAYMOND Selmer Clarinet. Just KENT PHOTO Same. EXPERT MOVING SEllVlCE ~--::D:-a-n-ce-Y;:-ou-r-;W=-ay-"-to-a-~ • G. E ••Dd Sunbeam AppUaDCd Give her a cleaner to help IIpre I-WOl'el ...... ~ .... CIR.I TMtY; overhaUled. Call 7292 after 7 Plc&ur8 bt 'l'be _ to MERRY CHRISTMAS! • Mannln,.-Bowman APPDauces her. The cleaner that women 1IIDta_ A.s-I u... p.m. ""7 ADUQ.et, LIDeDs. Chtaa. Modem We441D1 ~ ANY POINT IN TIlE U. 8. American Veterans' Committee • HamUtoD .Beaeh AppllaDoes say is the lineat - AppUcatiou Plctan. Pre-Xmas Dance .Dd ADUpe Jew~. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY FOR SALE: 38 Cal. Special Coli QuIIt7 Is-. DeY.• ....,.. THOMPSON Dec. 12, 1947 Community Bldg. • TIlE HOBBY HOPPE "The Hoover". Commando. $50. Phone 6336 . 21 W. Burl tie per Cobuall IDeIII .... O ...... -JaII_ ...... Tnlllller & Stora&'e Ca. Tickets $1.00 Per Person Bob's Radio It Appliance Or .. for • II_til IftpQ Music by Nat Williams's Band FAYO. EVENS Dial 2161 %l!'1 MuseaalDe 211 B. W ~n ClDceDaUOD ne.clUlUI I .... 111" .... A.e. DIal IIIl Dial ''" FOR SALE Dial !1St ...... bl. for OD. laeln'" DID you know that you can READ IDIentOD ~ Desks and chairs to nu.tcb. TYPING - MIMEOGRAPHING choose your Air Force specialist IIIIq AclI to DalI7 I ..... T)Jle.rI~n .... V.l...... I school before leaving home? Plnd The Daily Iowan ...... OHIce, BaA BaD. Or Ches~ of drawers. Mirrors. Odd keep 'the• A CHRISTMA GIFT , TYPING I out about this at 204. P.O. BId,., DIAL 4191 chairs. Rollaway bedl, smeles MlMBOGRAPIUNG CLEAN and in REPAIR Iowa City. for the NOTARY PUBLIO Frolaweba Sapp.,. c.. SHORBEPAD Shopping Directory and doubles. MAR Y Y. BUR N S WHOLE FAMILY 601 Iowa tate Bid,. • 80. 010... neue .." for Day beds and ru,lI. Dial 2656 c BRIDGEET ...... _... StU5 HOC K-E Y E LOA N TYPEWRITERS- Gifts Suggestions THESIS typing, dissertations, class \ ales Re A practical, ecoDomical ail' that for papers, etc. Call 9266 after 5 uppU.,. epaln p.m. S "'ill ,Ive many years .f enter­ A Christmas Gift "ALL KINDS • Late Model R.ntal • of LOST: Necklace with gold chain OF INSURANCE" WHERE TO GO jalnment to tbe family. Everyone and black enamel locket inset Typewrite", S. T. MORRISON & CO. ALL METAL ALL COLORS Lasting Remembrance with pearls. Please telephone 6334. A. O. KELLEY • AU work GUCI1'

S$S$S$$S$» loaned on camera, ROOM AND BO. Dr iUlJ8. clothing. jewelry, etc. ~ Br GENE AHERN lIeUabl, Loan. 110 S. Linn. , If I'LL GO [)()WN AND winDRAW $10 P'OIt " TIllS 'EVEHING !'". you JOIEJ. .. WH"'T '" lASH LOADS DIFFERENCE NaN ~ 1-DAY IERVICI THOS~ DESTITUTE D'.YS Don't Come to HOIJIehoid for a loaD WHEN I USED 10 LOOIC. on your wary, car or furnlture fOR COINS UNDER. -without endorlert. Take up to OIA1RNID Need It 20 monthl to repay. SOfA CUSHONS! ETTA lETT PAUL ROBINSON A WANT AD ItiltOD CHOO .. A MONTHLY PAYMINT PLAN DOIS .... "-...... ,...... , ...... Uot • 41.75 S13.11 S19.31 • 8.40 16.« 2UI and "u I5.CD 10.07 19.78 29.33 f '.24 lUI 36.60 501 .55 HouoehokI·. cb8rp II tlIo ~thJy ",II 01351. GIl that part 01 a balanc:e nol u , will coedl", $100 .... 251. ... ~ part 01 • ~ ill __ 01 ·'100. • Pay You ~HOUSEHOLD '!!!P FINANCE ' ~ • .z'&~ •• Cash for It lSOU E. Wuhill&'ton, 2nd Floor Cor. Dubuque St. Phone: on '-...", I. ''"_, .... rai-. '" Dial 4191 "t.rb,IIW"' Q THE DAILY IOWAN. SATURDAY. NOV. 29. 194'7-P'(GE SIX Campus Gr,oups To Discuss Stu.dent Government • ------Iowa in Focus- Baker's Latest Book AII·(amp~s Hunting's Good Up Canada Way Who Wants 10 Be Mayort Contains Collection of Statewide Browning's Poems Congress is Prof. Joseph E. Baker of " English department has allJlOUll(· ed publication of his latest Mol, "Pippa Passes aM Shorter Po. Possibility Spotlight ems." a collection of \IGbIrt Browning works. An all-campus congress appear­ KEOKUK (JP) - Robert Perry, Pu blished by Odyssey Pnss, ed as one possibility last night as 15. youth who escaped from the New York. the 658-page volumtls representatives of campus stu­ Eldora state training ~hool Oct. the most compl* collectloe 0/ dent organizations prepared to 18. last night confessed to a Browning poetry ever printed, ao. meet Dec. 4 to consider plans for .cording to Baker. Improving student government. fourth auto theft since his escape, Police Chief Louis Atkins said. His tirst book. "The NovelllJd Specific objectives of the meet­ the Oxford Movement." was pub­ ing are: The police chief said Perry was llshed in 1933. It dealt witb the 1. To imProve cooperation found hiding under the bed at the revival of Catholicism lu the and liaison between students home of a friend a few hours Church of England as loWld ill and university or,anlutlona. after he had wrecked a car he the novel. Z. To prevent eampus croups took from W. K. Burchett Thurs­ Baker has taught literature bere from overlapplnl' in lIlelr ac­ day. for 12 years/ incl ud ing a gnduatt tivities. Earlier. Atkins said. Perry had course on 19th century wrllen. 3. To promote better contact told that after he and two other Browning was one of the •• between students and the ad­ youths fled Eldora. they stole a pal authors studied in this eount. ministration. car and drove it to Davenport. to 4. To inform students of lIle Michigan and then to Chicago, Civil Service Exams activities of campus orrantsa­ where they parted company. The civil service cornmlJslon tlons and to eet student opinion MAYOR TALKS MOVIES_Mayor WlllIa. yesterday announced examiDa· O'Dwyer 01 New York. ellmpal&'llln, to have more movies made' tions for career appointments II on ca~u8 1'0vernmeI1t. DES MOINES* * (JP)-Contribu-* In his city. talks with Barbara Hale, setre.. featured In a \DOUGIl general staff nurse. $2,644 and An all-campus congress Is one lions were beginning to pour in pictUre bei!lJ. pC't entlrel)' In Gotham. . • • head nurse. $3.397 a year. of several plans which will be yesterday in the clothing drive for presented by an interim commilt-­ European relief sponsored by the tee to meet these objectives. Com­ Des Moines churches affiliated I mittee members are Tom Neenan. with the Iowa conference of the ARROW SHIRTS A4. chairman; Ruth Reese, A4; National Association of Evangeli­ :Paul Lange. C4, and Ralph Brown. cals. Every man needs them ... white and colors in pattema C4. Wl11I TWO DEER slun·g across the front of tbelr car, William and Robert Zelthamel. R.R. 4. display tbe II Although the response has Grimm's The congress would include rep­ fruits of lIlelr Nort.b Dakota bunting trip. The men lett Jast week and returned yesterday. The deer been good. a great deal more will a nd stripes. resentatives from each student or­ were barred about two miles from the Canadian border. (Daily Iowan Photo by Rick Timmins) be needed to fill the carload we ganization, housing unit and col­ hope to send," the Rev. Z. Ever­ Store for Men 3.25 . ,and ' more lege who would act as an advisory ett Kellum. Des Moines. an­ group between students and cam­ Postmaster Urges nounced. pus organizations. 'Was Framed: City Council- It would function to better cam­ Early Christmas (Continued from page 1) OMAHA *(JP}- *Oscar * Heline of pus cooperation and eliminate Marcus. Iowa, has been re-elected overlapping programs of st~dent plans. When this is completed. for a three year term as. a direc­ organizations. Its powers would Aclress Says Shopp~ng, Mailing the council can set a date for a tor of the Farm Credit board of bond issue election. , , be purely advisory. Postmaster Walter J. Barrow Omaha. General Agent Nels G. . Ideas or suggestions brought to LOS ANGELES (JP) - Actress yesterday urged Iowa City resi­ If the election favors building Kraschel of the Farm Credit ad­ the congress by members ' wouid Madge Meredith. former Iowa dents to do their Christmas shop­ of the bridge. a public hearing will ministration said yesterday. be held and construction bids will be diverted to the organization Falls girl. on trial on charges of ping early if they expect to avoid be accepted. concerned. For example. student kidnaping and assault. testified the last minute mailing rush. yesterday that restaurateur Nick Two new ordmances were pas­ government problems would be He advised that out-of-state LINCOLN.* Neb. * (JP)-Robert* E. GlanacUs not only "[ramed" her sed providing parking limitations referred to the stUdent council and mailing be done by Dec. 10 and Reninger. 20. son of Mr. and Mrs. but ambushed her In the Holly­ on certain stree ; providing for suggestions about social actlvi.ties Christmas greming cards for local G. R. Renninger of Sioux City. would be given to the Student wood Hills were. she said, she was parking meter zones; designation was injured fatally yesterday rescued by her three co-defen­ addresses be made before Dec. 15 Union board. of the zones; hours of operation; when trapped in a sand cave-in at dants. to assure delivery by Christmas. Other plans for improving stu­ and providing for penalties. the cement company where he The actress said she was driv­ Barrow stressed the Importance dent government were still in the A public hearing Dec. 22 at 7 was employed. ing up laurel canyon when she of correct address to assure im­ p.m. will be held to consider rec­ formative stage yesterday. accord­ met a car bearing Gianaclis and mediate delivery and avoid late ing to Ralph Brown. Reorganiza­ ommended changes of several re­ a companion. Verne Davis. arrivals. It will also prevent MARFENGO* *(JP}-Harold * Van- . . tion of campus groups was pro­ sidential areas to business dis­ "I Iltalled my motor on a curve." thousands of packages and cards tricts. devier. 151 of Belle Plaine was posed Oct. 30 at a student activity .she testified. "Then GianacUs and from ending up at the dead letter A bid fdr improvement by killed Thursday afternoon when conference conducted by Prof. H. Davis drove up behind me. Nick office. he said. draining, grading and roadstone his gun accidentally discharged C. Hand of the University o.l Il­ came toward me and said. 'Well. He recommended that Christ­ surfacing will be accepted at the while he was hunting eight miles linois college of education. I finally got you alone.''' mas cards be sent first class. This same time of the following streets: west of Marengo. Hand explained that in large Then. she asserted. the three co­ will assu re their being forwarded Templin road from Park road to TIES universities leaders in student defendants. Albert Tucker. Damon if insufficiently addressed because Oakridge avenue. government are necessarily out Klinkenberg and James Hatfield. only envelopes with 3-cent stamps W. Benton street and from end DES MOINES.* * (JP}-A * man with ~ by Beau Brummel, Arrow, of touch with their constituents. drove up. have forwarding privilege. of present Benton street paving a broken arm traded punches with Botany. McCurrach so that the leaders do not know "Klinbenberg asked me if I was Heavy cord. sturdy outer paper to west limit of city. an alleged pUl'Se-snatcher early what the students actually want. being molested." Miss Meredith and heavy cardboard on the inside Friendly avenue from Pickard last night. and rescued Miss Nettie (prices from "The root idea." he said. "is to said. "He told me to drive back should be used to assure that par­ street to Marcy street. Livingston. 39. aft~ she had been $1 do everything possible to make down the canyon and that he cel post packages are accepted for Hudson avenue from Benton slugged and knocked down. the campus a laboratory of de­ would take care of everything." mailing. If they fail to conform street to Highway 1. Miss Livingston told police that mocracy." Gianaclis had charged Miss :0 these regulations. they will be Also listed for street improve­ Ralph Smith. a passerby whose The interim committee was ap­ Meredith had "lured" him into rejected. Barrow said. ment were Clark street from right arm was in a cast. rushed in pointed to study the reorgani~­ the hills where he was set upon In preparation for the expect­ Sheridan avenue to C.R.!. & P. and struck her assailant after she SCARFS ... tional problem and recommend 'and beaten by the three men. He ed rush, local post offices across Ry. and Marcy street from Kirk­ bad been knbcked down. In Rayon and Wool. Cisco and sol utions. said he and Miss Meredith h.~ the nation are employing extra wood to Highland avenue. but the SmIth said the man knocked quarreled over ownership of a mail clerks and carriers, collect­ council amended the improvement him down once. but Smith regain­ Botany. house. and that. after he had stop­ ing and overhauling delivery resolution because property own­ ed his teet and struck the man ers on these streets did not want again. The man then ran. Smith Tau Sigma Initiates ped his car in the canyon, Miss trucks, and oiling up the stamp (prices from)·· $1.95 Meredith told the I three men cancellation machines, he added. the changes made. said. "There they are boys. go get ·em." Nineteen Engineers The actress specifically denied yesterday that she had given any Pi Tau Sigma, national mech­ such directions. 'The other de­ anical engineering fraternity, In­ fendants previously had testified The Barbers' Message GLOVES ... \tiated 19 engineering stUdents at they 'Yere ' the victims of a Fownes. Craig. Osborn and .' a banquet held in the Iowa Union "Frameup" by Gianaclis. Gates. Wool and Leather. River room Wednesday evening. Miss Meredith testi!ied that on Prof. Walter L. Daykin ot the one occasion Gianaclis had threa­ to Students (, Citi.zens commerce depart~ent spoke on tened to throw acid in her face from "Labor Relations and the Engi­ and "I was afraid to go home af­ $1.50. neer." ter dark." of Iowa -City Members initiated: Richard K. Caldwell. Howard M. Gammon, Sharp Drop In Iowa In view of the current controversy over increased haircut prices fr9m 75 Richard Kidd Jr.• James F. Gei­ cents to $1, we, the Master and Journeymen barbers of Iowa City, feel that it is PAJAMAS ... ger. Ivan E .. Beckwith/ Merle M. Readjustment Claims our responsibility to present the facts to the students of Iowa university and White. Jules D. Erickson. Robert the citizens of Iowa City. by Weldon and the famous B. Shatfer. Norman A. Hunstad. Nine hundred and one Iowa "FIRST NIGHTER" and Ski­ Richard M. Barry. Logan G. Fin­ veterans have claimed readjust­ We do not doubt the sincerity of the student Long·Hair society. On the Mo. erty. John C. Scheibenberger, Wil­ ment allowances this month in other hand, we feel that these students are misinformed. We believe that if the liam R. Kelso. Edward P. Wright, comparison with 5,751 veterans In Long-HairS understand the facts involved and consider our position without Nov. 1946. the Iowa employment Russell C. Hagerman. Raymond J. prejudice. they will agree that the haircut price increase is warranted. from $3.95 Hudachek. Harold J. Gronsky. security commission announced Robert G. Keller. Edward C. Wal­ yesterday. . Meeting with representatives of the student group Monday. we attempted lace. 'l:he high point in veteran un­ to explain to them why it was necessary to raise prices to $1. For the benefit ::r:: employment was reached i n of those persons who were not at that meeting. we want to make this informa­ eo jMarcho. 1946. when more than tion public. SPORT SHIRTS ... IsId WSUI to Broadcast 28.000 ex-servicemen claimed and inc received readjustment allowances. 1. At 75-cent haircut prices. journeymen barbers have, in the last year. Wools. Cotton and Rayon, by jlla Operetta, 'P.atience' Since that time veteran's unem­ made a weekly wage of $45-54. We do not believe this is an adequate living Arrow and La Playa. < ployment has gradually decreas­ wage in these times. Furthermore, it should .be remembered that journeymen ape Today at 2:30 p. m. the WSUI ed. the commission said. barbers receive only 70% of their grqss income. to radio workshop players will pre­ Irom In the past two years. 92,250 2. There is a shortage of trained barbers. Unless wages are increased, our $3.95 ball sent the Gilbert and Sullivan veterans or about 40 percent of b~ operetta "Patience." a satire on the total have filed claims for al­ journeymen barbers will leave Iowa City for more fruitful locations, or abandon 'e. Oscar Wilde. assisted by recording lowances. .Less than two percent the trade altogether. ., I ~ of the D'Oyly-Carte Opera Co. of these have drawn the full al­ 3. Increased operating costs are a contributing factor to the haircut price IICl This is one of a series of GUbert lotment for 52 weeks. the com­ boost. Cost of supplies andl equipment has increased steadily, in addition to and SulliVan operetts. presanted mlssi~n reported. over WSUI every Saturday atter­ rent and depreciation expenses. noon trom 2:30-4:30. 4. By charging $1 for haircuts, we will be able to maintain a proielBional The scripts have been1especially standard in Iowa' City comparable to that in other cities of the same size and adapted for this radio series and SALE OF having the same living costs. the production is under the direc­ S. Remember, a barber works an average of S5 to 60 hours a week. At an .. tion ot Dan Schuffmal\. WSUI as­ HANDMADE ARTICLES 'opular Beau Brummel, sistant program dkector. average weekly wage of $48.50, a union barber earns Ie .. than $1 an hour­ considerably under the standard wages of a union laborer. Men's Toiletri .. Th1& ulJ 01 candles. woven On the basis of these reasons, we must remain firm in our atand. We Now art. block prlntlnr aad other desire to be fair with our customers. and we ask them to be fair with us. In Aluminum Flask CQntainer line pieces 1& sponsored by lIle Consider our side of the question honestly, and we believe that you will 3 DAY Iowa Clb' Cran Galld at the agree our price raise is nace.. ary. . Cleaning & Laundry Iowa. nUno~ 0... and Electric Allembly Room. "IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL" Service •

Mon. Dec. 1st. , 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. I THE MASTER and JOURNEYM.EN . " Tues. Dec. 2nd. 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. BARBERS of IOWA CITY Store for Men