He Got a Fair Approach I .n.. Weather TOday : ST. PAUL (.4') - Randolph 8ublaU, up 'rolll BrHWt. Guiana to eoroU at MaeAlemr eoUe ..e, asked &he .hort­ Partly cloudy today and tomorrow except est cut to learnJJI6 aU about America .... Dr. Kenneth Millard of the collere student penollllei widely scattered showers this afternoon. .erYiee .. lanced at the calendar .nd plaeeel • teJephoDe Little change in temperature. High today calL af owal1 90-95. low tonight 65-70. Yesterday's high Yeskrday BublaU went to 1nII1I: at Mlnnesota'. I .....,. state fair. 95; low 67. Pollen count 507. tSr. 1868-VoJ. 80, No. 28S-UP, AP Newa and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa. Sunday. August 29. 1948-Five Cents I iurvey To Discover Scope It's the Same Scene-But DUferenf Weather Of (ollege (areer Training .' Draft Registration B1 BRUCE BI08SAT WA aT GTON (.4')-The government is assembling data for • vital tory of the nation' hpman resources: For what careers art the many thousands of American coil ge graduates equipped T To Start Tomorrow t (p to now no aQcuratf' answer has be n po ibl exc pt in lim­ itrd fields. BJ J K aUTLEDGE The atomic age has lifted the trained scienti t to new eminence. WASJilNGTON (JP) - Selec­ The troubled worlds of busin\' tive service is aU ready to begin Registration Schedule and politics h a v e brought regi l ring men 18 through 2S mounting demands for lIliO[e ex:­ Report De G~ulle tomorrow tor America's peace­ Date 01 Birth Age Regigt r perta In these complex matters. ( time draft. 1922 (aft r Aug. 30) 25 . Aug. 30 Leaders in numerous walks of On1y 25-y ar-olds born in 1922 1923 24 ug. 31·Sept. 1 life decry shortages of trained Planning New Bid after Aug. 30 will register tomor­ 1924 23 Sept. 2-3 IDInpower. Yet no one has really r,:.w. Olh r age groups will regis­ 1925 22 S pt . ... 01' 7 t r on succeeding days, the old· known whether they are right or For French Power 1926 21 pt. 8·9 est signing up tirst. 1927 20 pt. 10·11 wrong. I PARIS (UP)-Gen. Charles De Tomorrow also may see the 192 19 pt. 13-14 Incomplete Data \ Gaulle was reported reliably last tiMt draft call - for 10,000 101· 1929 18 S pt 15·16 We have had no way of know­ night to be planning an immedi­ dlers. 1930 (if born before Sept. 19) 18 pt. 17-18 in, bow many people actually ate all-out campaign for his re· SftreiaJ7 of AnnJ ~aII Is wert being readied as chemists, turn to power in France. rl!POrttei to have prep rell a re­ aeronautical engineers, astronom­ Close associates of the tall war­ quest for dran bo reb to proCl­ Bare Charge ., trs, economists, even as teachers. Ume French resistance leader tola u e 10,000 men for lDdueUoJl R.eady OHices for AMG 1 But the U. S. office of educa­ the Unlted Press tha De Gaulle ~twel!n Nov. '1 and Nov. IS. tion bas just completed a survey Local R.egistration W,a!l \sPurred to action by the Whether or not such a call Against Russ Plan that may be the first shaft of downfall of Andre Marie's coali­ comes through, regislra n will Jonnson county men will re­ llchl Uon cabinet, France's latest middle­ continue as scheduled. alster at the r gistration oCfice For Berlin 'Riots' Tbe ."Iee has canvassed aU of-the road government. Who Moat Rerl!iter on the top flOOT of the Johnson ~Ue,ea and unlverslUes to About 20.000 specially atranled county courthouse. The oflice These sources said De Gaulle r gi tration centers have been pre­ BERLIN UP An American mlll­ learn exactly wbat fields 01 will be open from 8 a. m. to 5 tary government document yes­ is convinced that a middle-of-the­ par d by the 4,OOO-odd draft "ldJ their rraduate. bave fo­ p. m. terday ch rled th Russians with cued upon. road government cannot survive boards 10 slfJl up an estimated ip France, and that now Is the Non-resident university s\l­ preparing to us 50vl t troops In This kind of information has nin and a half million men b - time for his Rally of the French tw n Aug. 30 and S pt. 18. dents will register at the uni­ their driv to oust the anti-Com­ been available in such realms as People to make a hard-hlUing bid versity veteran's service oftice munist Berlin city government. medicine, law, dentistry and to Ortlcials emphasl~ d y terday at 110 Iowa avenue. Their re· tor power. that 011 men 18 through 25 must ThlI w ek' ommunl t-teel some extent engineering. But the cords w ill then be trans:!erred De Gaulle'S plan was disclosed register d spite the fact that mo t lDv Ions of the cil, hall lD tbe schools generally ha Ve lum ped all to the draft boards In their home auaalan leCtor were called part other graduates together under as President Vincent Auriol con­ veterans are ex mpt and even county. This office also will be of a ovl t plan to fO_D' ~uch vague headings 48 "liberal ferred with French political lead­ though 18-y ar-old. are not lia­ open from 8 B. m. to 5 p. m. "spontan~o riots" whl h eould arts" stUdents. ers in an effort to solve what has ble Alr s rvl e until they become Members at the Johnson provide the Incldtll II ded tor June Grads OnlY been described as France's most 19. serious poHtical crisis since the Th only Am ricans In this age county draft board are Ancher Inkrvention by the Reel army. The ew survey covers only gra­ war. br cket who n d not register are Christensen, Glenn Houston The docum nt came to Ught as duates in the sch:ool year complet­ m mb rs ot the rmed forces on and William R. Hart. Russlan-Am ric n r lation In this ed last June. But it Is to .be an Should Auriol fail in his efforts to create another "third force" activ duty, and forelgn diplomats beleagured capitol gr w more annual affair, and gradually the and memb ra of their Immediat tense after a wild Incld nt in nation will come to realize the coalition government, France's political future once again would (umllies. new draft are veterans with at which speeding Russians ran down true shape ot its trained man­ Tho. who ore not 18 by S pI. an Am rlcsn oldl r Friday night, power resources. be placed squarely between the least 90 days service In the shoot­ aspirations of De Gaulle on the 19 should reglst r on their birth­ Inl war betw n Pearl Harbor A Soviet soldier was r ported shot. Dr. John Dale Russell, director right, and Communist leader days or within five days after It. A red-beard d Rulan lieuten­ of the edUcation office's division (Dec. 7, 1941) and V-J day Sept. Maurice Thorez on the left. Notify Board 16, 1940 and June 24, 1948 (the ant-colonel who said he was rld­ of higher education, points out Draft olfici Is sald that if reg­ In, in a 1 nd-l II j ep told U. S. that to be tully useful this con­ De Gaulle is expected to de­ date the draft law went Into ef­ Istrants ar ill or otherwise can feel) . liaison officers: tinuing study must be matched by mand the dissolution of the na­ not sign up on de ignated dan, tional a5embly and a nationwide AI90 exempt are ordained min· "I didn't want to be stopped and In equally careful appraisal of th y should notify t>helr c1Talt fall into th hands or an unrivlliz­ manpower needs. general election. He cannot come board and arrange for a lat r reg­ is tera, divinity Itudentl, and con­ to power without an election be­ scientious objectors. ed, animal-like peapl who shoot But, granting that it is just a istration. without ony provocation!' rough sketch, what does this first cause his Rally of the French Peo­ But they were warned not to President Truman on Au,. 20 ple is not represented In the na­ ord red deferment. lor a much Council Meetlnc ~Ieture dra n by the edUcation d lay SUch notification too lonll. office show us? tional assembly, AI'o, if a man Is away from his wider group. Th e men n eel not As a furth r strain, the cit, anticipate miHtary service: council s rved nollc It would li'tnt ot all, the returns are The Communists, through Jac­ hom town, he 18 allowed to ree­ ques Duclos, their deputy leader, lst r at the nearest reglstraUon Married m n: farmers: all m n m et again n xt Tu day In the remarkably complete. Ou~ of city hall. Th mov wa planned 1,J08 aehools polled, only 25 already have stepped into the po­ cent r, IJnd his card will be mailed with dependents: most publicly litical vacuum lett by Marie's re­ to th proper board. I cted otflcials: men Involved In in the face ot two invasions of the failed to ~ePOrt. Of those, Just hall by Communist-led demoDS­ IIIrte are bl.. Institutions. signation with a demand for a 50- Failure to register Is punishable study, research or medical, scien­ clalist-Communist coalition. by a live· year prison t rm, a line tWc or other endeavors conllld­ trators d mlinding their own r 4 The survey results? gime. For one thing, they show a re­ Duclos said such a new govern­ of up to $10,000, or both. There Is ered nec SIlry to public salety or cord crop of graduates. Russell ment would be pledged to increase also a heavy punishment for in­ Interest: sole surviving sons of The coUll II !8nnOl~ tel ,. wouJd describes the totals as "startlingly French trade with eastern Europe fluencing anyone from registering. famJlles whose children wer 1d1- meet de pit a Ru I n bruah­ hl,h." in order to "defend our monetary A tual IIlllnr out of reclstra­ led in world war II: aliens: and off of Its appeal tor protection lion torma with their 16 qu~· many others. 313,000 Derrees system against the manipulations ••• REMEMBER LA T WfN ER when the same scene looked like this? 'lllnmt'r eemed 0 wonderiul. from tbe ovl \-ba ked eu\ which American millionaires want The season mllst be most appealln~ when they're about three months away. \ on't tt bl' nll'e when win­ lions should not take over ten Ilhool . ludent, are defened Berlin pollee. In the school year just closed or fifteen minutes II board. are U. S. colleges and universities to impose on us." ter comes? until tbey rraduate from bl&'b Four gun-brandlshln& . Soviet ('(tiel en!. Veterans are ur.. ed to Ichool 01' unUi OIey become 20, soldiers led by the lleutenant­ awarded more than 313.000 de­ brlnr . lon.. proof of mllIlar), ,rees on alJ levels. This was 100,- whichever I, flnt. Coil ere atu· colonel zoom d wildly through the I"rvlce In ord r to slmpllb prO­ dents are deferred for the dura­ American sector or Berlln and ran 000 more than in the previous re­ eedure. cord year of 1939-40. tion of the academJc year. In down an American milltary police­ Spy Probers Truman, Ask Legislation Registration centers set up spe­ bo\h Instances, .iudents must man who tried to stop them. Pur­ Dr. lussell eltlmates that cHically for the Aug. S0-5ept. 18 be dolnl aatllfacton work to suing Americans opened fire and, 't'Ituau atudylnl under the GI ------~-- WASHINGTON (UP) - House p riod will cLose on Sept. 19 and be deferred. 'lIcotdlni to the Russlans, wound­ ~Ul earned about 140,000 of the in large part responsible for the lay "secret and significant" in­ or comml' ;ions of f deral oWc· red hunters yesterday accused th reatter registrations will be The married man clause ruch­ ed one of the Soviet soldier•. Jear derree•. growth and power ot the Commu­ formatIOn to representatives "of ials or Re erv of ricers who re­ handled by draft board oWces. '.IIl- President Truman of hindering nist conspiracy in the United Sta­ fus to slatc wh ther they are or es a deadline of sorts durina the The Soviet j ep roared through What did these graduates spec­ their investiga tlon and proposed any foreign power, friend or en­ IDeal board. - Which have full laUze In? tes," the legislators said. hav be 11 Communists. registration period. The law has roadblocks Ind eseap d Into the a nine-point program for protect­ emy, in peacetime or war." control of Ihe dratt procedure - be n Interpreted to mean that if a Russian sector. The Americana Business bulks largest as a top­ To combat these activities, the 9. Revo lion of til job rlcM wlU begln sending out classitic.­ ing national secrets from Q~mmu­ 6. Le~lslatioll compellln~ exe­ man Is married up to registration gave chas for 800 yards Into So­ 'ie o' study. Collelles granted 35,- group r~ommended: ~l' commlSliIOns of fedel'al official.:; nist spies. lion Questionalres to the single, date he Is deferred. It he marries viet territory and then withdrew. 218 bachelor's degrees and 2,318 1. Registration 01 all Commun· cutive agencies to open their lOy­ or Reserve oflicers who refu e to non-father, non-veteran group im­ advanced degrees in that subject. The program calls f9r registra- alty tiles to congress. state whether they are or have after his signing up date, he faces ExplaIns Shootlnl tion of Communists, punishment Ists. mediately after registration. Induction if otherwise qualified. Col. IWbert A. Willard, U. S. 7. Adi~p tion of the Mundt-Nix­ been commuDlsts. In englneerlni there were 29,- ot federal officials who irive sec­ Z. Denla] of federal 30bs to Lis' ClaSSei troop commander in Berlin, said In on anti-Communist bill with am~ AS four-year and 4,082 advanced rets to any foreign power, and Communists. The report paid parhcular at- The board then wUl use them to a wrl tten formal protest to the diplomas. curbs on the right of witn~ses in 3. Denial 01 passPor~ to Offi­ endments to guard against the tention t the [Jiss-Chambers slIt registrants Into live classes: To Mourn Hughes "unwarranted and unjustifiable" Russians that American pollce PAlnty 01 BAs Qongressional hearings to refuse to munists. "who Is IYiOg?" controversy. la • - AvaJ1able fler military W ASmNGTON (.4')-President "fired only as a last resort." Baehelor's degrees In educat- answer questions on constitutional 4. Legislation "making It more abu, e ot constitutional safeguards, A Iger Hiss, l'lt-. tate department service. Truman yesterday ordered the such as the filth amendment whi­ The Russians riled a counter­ ion totaled 28,818, with ll,868 stu- grounds. difficult for unlimited numbers ot orriri~11 has b n accu,ed by Whit­ la U - Deferred because 01 tlag to be tlown at halt staH on protest char&ing the Americans foreign Communists" to enter this ch permits witnesses to refuse to occupational atatus. dents earning advanced degrees. In a l5-page "lDterimH repori, aker hamben., ex-Communist all government bluldings until af­ answer questions in official pro­ with violating Soviet Jurisdiction Says Russell: "'Ibis augurs well the hoWle unAmerlean acllvlUea country and making their deport­ courier, of m mber hlp in a pre­ I m - Deferred because 01 ter the funeral services Tuesday by entering their mDe. for the future supply of well- commUke aid it hal been ation easier. ceedings on the grounds that the war R d und rground. Hiss has dependency. answers might be "self-Incrimin­ afternoon for C h a r I e s Evans The R lans releasecl yeskr­ trained teachers." S. Tl&,htening of the esplona&,e denied the charg ~. but his de­ lass IV - Deterred speclflcal­ Hughes in New York. claJ an American newspaper "bampered at even lUI'll" b1 laws to penalize government ot­ ating." Chemistry? Flour-year degrees the admlnlltraUon'. nfuAI to nials, the report showed, did not ly by law or because unfit for ser­ correspondent, lour U.S. 101- flcials wh.o, without authority, re- 8. Legislation of the job rlchts vice. He also asked the nation's citi­ totaled 7,166, the hig~er awards clve Infonnation. U proilalaed to impr s Ihe committee. zens to "render every appropriate diers, and tbree Germans arre... 1,829. In physics 1,IH6 bachelor's dlK up the facta from o&her la V - Over the age ot lia­ eel and Jailed Friday nirM lD U.e bility for military service. reverence to this areat American, lIId 806 diplomas were awarded. lOurces. SOVTETS AC RTHUR Soviet sector or Berlin• Draftees will be taken from the In their homes, their schools, their The correspondent was John J. Manpower-hun,ry industries, The report, outlining the com- • •• But They Haven't Lost a Father Yet TOKYO (UP)-Russia charged class I group. These men will be churches and In other suitable Meehan, 26, Freeland, Pa., of the laboratories, acbools and rover- mitte 's month-old probe of Com­ yesterday that Gen. Douglas Mac­ I-A, as in the last war, and sub­ places." United Press. Seized with him -.ent. will prohably .t"d), the Imunist spying, tlaHed attorney MEMPHIS, TENN. (.4')-Just imagil1~ hi . tn·pri. e! ...... Arthur's labor policy in Japan vio­ ject to calJ by age, Ihe oldest (25) were the three Germans, emploYei ftnrea e&6erlr. general Thm C. Clark for his lerks in the admitting office at St. Joseph's hospital here lates the P ctsdam agreement and going first. Within the 25 year AWAaD TO MABSBALL of the United Press and the New Some will find unexpected en- "failure" to enforce antl-espion­ are giggling oyer the exp clant f th r who arriYed in great Far Eastern commission policy group, older men will go first, W ASHlNGTON (A» - The Var­ York Herald Tribune. couragement. others may be dis- age "and other" laws. excitement--only to find be had forgotten his wife. and demanded that the Japanese with others going dependinl on Iety club humanitarian award for mayed. "The failure of the Attorney Tbe man had carefully placed a baby's crib in the family car go ernmen! revoke its decree birthdays. 1947 will be presented to Secret­ B-29', TO HEAD BOMB Take the astronomers. Last year General to enforce the laws as and dashed off to the hospital-all alone. banning strikes by government Veterana Esempl ary of State Marshall in ceremon· WASHINGTON (.4') - Fifty B- only 11 bachelor's degrees went to vigorously as he should has been He made another trip to bring his wife. workers. Completely exempt trom the les here Sept. 18. 29 superfortresses will tJy from ltudents of the stllrs, and just 12 overseas bases to the United sta­ more got higher degrees. The men tes on &!pt. 18 as part of the ob­ probing the mysterious universe • servance of the U.S. airforce'l '., they must have more help first anniversary as a separate than that. 'I Spent Thirteen Hours In a Russian Jail,' Says Reporter branch of the armed services. (Edl~s Note: JIWlII Jlleehl'" Expened LOmakin Sails, n, .. UDitect Prell statl eorre­ Exactly 15 hours after we ed by a sexy Russian woman lUaJ. Gen. Alexander KotJkov, I did not have one. He went oU queslionilll· spondent slDee Dee., IN, was drove into the darkness of the wearing what looked like Ameri- to Otto Suhl'. president of Ber­ glowering. They asked me everythln, they Ie Temperatures Booed by Longshoremen arrested early Jesterday by &be Russian sector, lwo German re­ an nlyons. While a Russian of­ lin's antl·Conununisi city as- Two RWIIIJan &'lW1Ia berded could think of. WheD did I come porters and I passed the bomb­ ficer watched with fi shy eyes, she embly. • WI uP8laln to eell No. 15. ADd to Berlin? What was I doin, meet­ Here Is an hourly report from NEW YORK (UP)-Expelled RWlIIlau while ClOverta. a Ron .t the oily hall .. &he Sovle' scarred portals of Brandenburg said we were picked up because TWlt German reporters, Werner from &ben until the qoesUonlnl' ing German politicians Ifter mid­ the CAA weather station at the Soviet consul Keneral Jacob M. gate this afternoon to freedom we were "up too late, up too Stangenberg, United Press Ger­ bepn our lIrb&. came -'lJ night in the Russian sector? What Iowa City airport for the mid­ Lomakin sailed,on the liner Stock­ sector of BerUn. He was held for IS boun. TIle foUowtD8 dis­ and the American sector. late." man night editor, and Ellen Lentz, Ulroucb .. peephole Ole alae at did I do in Germany? Was The day temperatures yesterday. boIm for Sweden yesterday and patch I. bJa lUoun' 01 &he bId­ 01 tbose 15 hOlU'!I, J, the Ger­ She said no Americans could German woman reporter for the an Americ.1It quaner. United Press a military organi­ hundreds of spectators and lcmg­ deni.) Jnall reporters and our Germa.n prowl Ihrough Russian-occupied New York Herald Tribune, were Occasi. nal wails of women from zation? TIme Temperature Jboremn linin, the pier, booed Jeep driver spent 13 hours lock­ Berlin after 11 at night. standing with me in the dark in a cell down the hall echoed Alt. _-eheek1nc my sa­ his departure. ed.1n the local RllSlllan Jail. The Later the other Americans said rront of the smashed gates of the through the dim corridors. The awen aplDSi ..,. PUIPOI'i aM 11:31 ...... ~. n By JA.CK Ml:EIIAN • The ousted consul general, rest of the tl.me we hanled with the Rlfssians told them they took city hall when a Russian jeep girl from the Herald Tribune had & a1llllllall map 0' BerUD. & 12:31 p ...... :... !...... II queried by a representative of the BERLIN, (SATURDAY)-(UP) .urly· RllS8lan a-ua.rds. use because we were "prowling" swooped up beside ours, which been locked in a cell with three woman queaUoaer ouaaUJ III 1:31 p ...... _... n Swedish American line, said he -A) Russian sign above the door While locked in our 12-by-18- near the city hall, where Friday was parked. other women. Two of them had & elpret. 2:3' P...... _.• 5 said "Thjs Pigpen is Good Enough foot cell we learned that four a Communist mob of 10,000 The Russians, aU armed, drove been there lor several days, one "Now ,.ea are lree,'" abe_II. 3:st p. m. ."_ .. _.. _... It walolng to Paris for Ihe meeting for Ge.rmans." other Americans and one Bri1ish smashed through the gates and us back to within sight of U.S. for "rolling" a Russian Major "In a lew mlna,- 7_ ~ ,,0." .:30 It- ...... 3 next month of the United Nations A IUl'lJ a....,. ~ ...... _ soldier had been locked up earlier stormed into the building. territory, but we SW\.lng to the when he visited her bedroom. Two hours later, the Russians 5:30 p...... _ ... n Glnerll assembly. eel ml Into a ibQo eeIl at OIU! In the night by the Russians. ActuaUy. we went to RlISIdan­ right Ihrough dreary, bombed al­ Shortly after noon the follow­ turned me over' to a U.S. military • He 'Ididn't know" whether he o'cloek &Ilk monUlar &a d The first explanation of our occupied BerUn to learn what leys to the Russian jail. ing day a Russian officer and a pollee "rescue party," and we Yesterday's high wal 85 aDIJI ..uld 10 directly to Paris from slammed &be Iroll pte. I -..ret arrest came at 12 :30 thjs after­ was In • letter 'rom Berlin's When we entered, a Russian soldier came and invited me - drove back to freedom. the low was 67 . (w.... C.J"qId. I .....~ rile t1a1M41 ~~ or vWt RUllia iint _ __ _tIIere for 1S Jaou..~ ____ noon while ~ was being question- au.sslaa miUlaI'y ,overaor, asked me for my pistol I Aid "AmerikaJulti" - floWllltain for rr-)

• THE DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1948-PAGE TWO • ...... , 232 Lettermen To Retur.n In· Taking

NATIONAL LEAGUE \) proved. Ullnois, Iowa, Indiana, Milito and Bob De­ had a 75 man squad tn­ W • L. P T. G.B. W. L. rT. G.B. Purdue, Minnesota Northwestern and Ohio State Moss, who has passed 1,471 yards eluding 27 lettermen and four B. t...... 00 &! .{\70 Rodon • . • . . . ..• . . •.• " 47 .61% 61. L .. I...... 67 Ill! .55M I' ~ New York •.••.•• ,. 1'! 48 .~ Time Out tn seem stronger spots, at least. in 18 games during the lasl three regulars. They are Guard Herb Brookl,...... •... 6-1 $1 .!h77 ~ Cleve:land ...... ,'! 49 .G9~ Michigan has lost its backIield sea.ons. Siegert, Center Lou Levanti, Half­ PllI,barrh 61 5' .1138 II PhlladeJphia . 0' . .. oi,! $1 .G83 Grid learns Favored New York ...... 80 37 .iUS 7 Ddro ft . " ....•.. 58 ;\8 .601 of Yerge , , Chappius Minnesota' line is reported back Dwight Eddleman and ... • , .... With Buck Turnbull ..... eo .. Pldlad olphla ...... IIi r.6 . 4~ Uli t. Louis .•. . •• . • • 0 7! ~ and Wiesenburger but has good just. a good as the famous pre­ Steger. CI.da. aU ...... lIe 7. . 11 , IM\~ \Va hln,. •• n ... _. .46 7i1 .3841 replacements in , Gene war lines t.he Gophers had. With Cblnle ...... 49 11 .40 IO\ ~ Chlc.co ...... 10 l!O .1133 F,or Conference Title Halfback George TaliaCerro is l featerd.,.·1 aeaulls l' f:ltt:rdl,'. He UUI A Swing and a Miss When Reberry Pitches - Derricotte, Walt Teninga and Dick a little speed, tlle sophomore­ among 20 letlerrnen on Indiana's ~ o"y" 2. CI._IDnall U Pfillad olphla 9·\1 , Pllllbu rrh ~-1 Phlladelpbla ;i, St. Loal .. CHICAGO (JP) - With. Minne­ Kemplhorn. jWlior team of a year ago bould 57-man squad. There are five reg­ Bo.lon rJ.. Chlea,. 4 ew York 3, Cle:veland I! Paul Reberry's pitching feat in tile state softball tourDADlftl\ sota and Purdue tabbed as pre­ Purdue is banking on 10 play­ be plenty rough. It won three 8 t , Leu ls 5-1. New York 4·8 Oetrolt. '7, W ashinl(Ol1 G ulars. Others nt'e Tackle John Bodon 6, {'hlulo ~ at Cedar Rapids Friday night must have b en a marvel to lfit. ers returning from lis 1947 line­ of sLx ICa,'!le games last year. Tod a)"s P ttt h ~n season favorites for the title Goldsberry. Center Joe Polce and BOllon _I Pillabareb I:)-Spabn Ili­ TOdIY'. Pltr bu'. ne . Reberry, who pitches for the [owa it ' 'ardinals of tie Michigan holds, first Western up. They include Tackle Phil Bud Gtant, layton Tonne­ Fullback Harry Jagade. a) a.4 V.I.elle (14- 11 ) VI. Cbun .. IIU­ ('le,..land 01 W •• hln,'.n (U-L ..... NationaL oftbal\ league, burled Cochran Roofing of Iowa City conference football drills will start O'Reilly, Halfbacks Szuloorski maker. Nomelliui and Billy Bye a) ."d Lo",bard l 16-1) (17~' U and 8laC!k ('!-''!) v •• 'tbOIllPIOD In addition to DiMarco at Iowa, New Vo,ll . t C lneJnnati - KOllo (4-6) an d ' \') n" (7- 1t\) into the. emi-final of the turney with a no-bitter and a Ole· Wednesday. About 585 candidates and Norb Adams, Fullback Jack nre tlJe big gullS. the Hawkeyes show Guard Earl (8-0) and IJaJr . n c (8~8) or Janl'en ("hl('a,o aL Phlla.drlphla UO-O_m peri. hitt!:'r. will open practice at the Big Nine Banks, Fullback Ron Headington 115-91 VI. BI&

'I'IIE bAlLY IOWAN, SUNDAY, AlJG. !I, l~PA01!: TRaU Book Review - The Vanishing 'Piggies' Podiatrist Predicts Toes Will Disappear Scampering Shivers - Unless Men Start Going Barefoot Ride Reviewer', Spine a, She Punues By RUTJI 0 TAD 'Little White Horse' Through Fantasy NEW YORK (UP) - EIther stead of very wide ones thaI would (Th LlltI~ Whit Bor by El;!oh th GOl/dg . 280 pp. C01lI- th.row away your shoes, men, or give their toes a chance to wiggle. ard, J/{'Calln 250) 1oti4! your toes. In uad of 11 tbls restrl Unl • • • Dr. Lawrence Cumings, New foctrear, tbe doctor said, they (The re lewu toda Bela, U-,eu-oId daudder " York state's director of health ed- houJd h ave their hoes out the :aarue,.. Mr. and Mrs. \\-l1Uam H. Bartley, 1l!4 N. ~e atreeL ucatlon for the podiatry society, window aDd run roulld bare- Betay rea.ds an avtral'e 01 lour booId a week.) lossed out this advicp yesterday. toot. "The little toe bas lIractl lIy "But above all, the gentlemen • • • i!aappearedbecause of th shoes must give their toes a chance to men wear," he said. "And all breathe and spread it they want to five will soon disappear If they k ei> them," he ,;aid. "Why, 30 keep 011 h))/lrUnl the same foot- y"ar5 ago an aching pair of feet lear." changed history." Not that women's tres are guar­ Feet ba.nre lllstory anteed to stay on their feel No Pr ident Wooarow Wilson's air, women probably will lose dogs alwoys hurt him he added. theirs too, and for the same rea­ And hiS xcrucllltmgly painrul IOn, the podiatrist said. But h 's feet l'oused bursts of ill temper. concerned with the males bec8u'.e These in turn, he related, so an­ they're smy enough to think th lr l.ngoniz d the men about him thal feet are healthy. Women know the Lf'ague of Nations was reject- theirs are not. ed by th nate. The eentlemen, said he, get corns, On \.he other h nd Abe Un­ callouses, bunions and llattened Celli got what be wanled, the f~et equally as much as the fairer dOt!wr said, beeall e be saw the Itx. need for healthy feet a.nd cot a Male Fee~ Ache lool- dOt!tor to help bls boolmak­ As a matler of lact, halt the er d IKJl tbe proper foolcear for male population have dogs him. that hurt plenty, he said. And they What about being able to fore­ ache because men ace vaIn and cast the weather by those achIng buy shoe styles for appearance in­ corn ? stead of eorn1ort. "It's true, you con," the podia­ They wear heavy buck and trist said. "The corn is a mass of leather shoes that don't allow the skin cells that press upon the air to penetrate. They wear their nprves in an affected area. Wh n shoes too narrow because they the normal air prelo"iiure balance want to avoid looking clumsy. chang , it disturbs the paln1u1 And they wear narrowed lips in- area." * * * * *.. ,. * ......

Mi. I Ippl betw n Mu.scaUn Th 1 rry 1 nding Ia noted on and Burlinaton. fowa highway maps lind thi ap­ Wh n I rry rvlee Ia al Oft­ parently serves a an attraction He ays that army engine rs all of t1nuecl r Id~n on both Ide tor Inotorl ts. l,nve b~ n pumping snnd from the . Eight "PllI'r mouth of the lowa river or th river wW have to drlv A simple ignal y ll'm 'TV of th1 intu the lower mouth and making betweeu. 40 and 50 mil to do to keep th pilot advised wh II It WlI O, ha. l 'U tom I'll wlullng. 11. L. Odell, lire 1'111 ownf'r th:!l . 'dion of the river too shal­ bllsJne directly a KeRG a.nd pilot, sa.y" 111' will have til low tn Oil rate his boat. river. At the landlnp 011 bOib iJd home 1\ close dOWIl opl'r' lion for ~~",d II has change4 landing spots The r ny conqi. ts of a barg Caroline Sets Two Records- when thl" ('olllina: of wiutH tt'wral tim' but has nowhere and a tWll1 engine-powered tow brlJll' a halL to ft'rry M·J \' Ite 1'1 p to go. No other spot wUl give boat. Its normal period or op ra­ Giant Plano Speeds from to Chicago this year. him III'C to roads in the area. tion annually I belw en arly But Not with the Greatest Comfort His little ('raft, which hll '00111 Ro, \\ h n April, 1949, rolls April and late Nov mber, The Jor nine pass 'ngcr uUtOlllolJ It oil around til re will be no ~p­ bus! st lime, Odell says, Is during It lakes Ie. s than 15 minules to By WILLARD BUHART a single trlP, pll shack .mo I rth tion of rl'rr serville, he .,. . the summ r months. make nero'. ing so no I ngthy CHICAno ( \ J» ~ 'J'''I' giunt flying boat Caroline Mars landed across thp Mi. is jplJj II' m 'w Thi will go hard on tho$e who Od 11 transports an averag or waiting is required. A sign 01 each itl IJllke '\Iit'hi~ltll III II :25 11.111., (Iowa Time') yl! tt'rday to break Boston, Ill., to th Iowa shore ttt have ce<.·ome accustomed to using about 125 ars a week across th landing advises the motorist how two t!'('ords 1111 It lIon -R top flight from H onolulu to hi('ago. the mouth of the Iowa riV{'I' l1('ar the ferry for II short cut. It has river. About 110 p reent of thi much the trip will cost him: $1.50 Th·: II vy's IH'WI'st IIl1d b~~ge!;t oi reralt, offi 'ially known a a Oakville. bl' n the only means ot crossing the busine 's comes from tourlslll. "ne way, $2.50 II round trip. J fUJ -2, rirl'lpcl th!' ('hirngo I ------~--~,------~------lukt' frllllt uno 11I1I<1('d orr Ih non-stoop hOll from Honolulu to Adler t>lanetarium to compl t the Chicago was ·'a very nice, routine ( Tattooist Sug9 sts- How Many Sodas Will that Buyt longest flight ever made by e tliaht." Mars typ lIyin& boot. Passengel"l agreed only that . it DETROf'r (!'P) . .rrht'rl' IVII: " 110111111' 011 D!'troit'H l'OIlL iell' The night covered 4,748 miles was routine. The Carollne Mars and took 24 hours and 13 mlnut s Ohid yrstpr shout feW lound inches her and ther , to make ourselves heard In norm­ Iw'lI be tattooed all over. She al conver all on aboard the plane ah'l'ady has been embellish d with because of the roar of the four 150 de igns-at a cost of $600, engines. Many women seem to go for The plane wl11 be christened fo­ m rmaids, lizards or birds tat­ rmally today at the Cook oount)' tooed on their legs and bosoms, fair and will b placed on public nur('hell id. display. Later it will be nown to " Why, only just now I put a Alameda, Cal., to be placed in ser­ llttl snake on a lady's ankle," h vice in the pacllic. .aid. "'t was a birthday presenl from her husband." .. Decoraud Sealp AT LEFT, 'he Caroline Man Burchetl took on look at sta­ roar. pasl. the skyline of Chl­ Ii. tIt" on balding men and decided ca,o's loop In Ilnal approacb hi bUsiness would soar if he could for landin, on Lake Mlchl­ get hi~ needle on a few bare male ,an aller nonstop III1M lrom . call'. He said bale;! men owe It HawaU, to lhpmselves to cover their BELOW, the &1an' nJiaw palche" with the name of the wife boa' rides at anchor M eDd or girl f.rl,end, encircled by Ii of trip. Note crew memben I nccklace of roses. In DIllIe hatches and on win" "Or perhaps a scroll of leaves or butterOies," he added. Buchelt said his designs won't rub off, but he has the proper removing apparatus for men and women customers who change their minds, farmer, family followed by fire

MACOMB, ILL. (JP)-The Char les Willey family, burned out of house and home recently by mys­ terious Cires, has encounlered new blazes in their new quarters Members of the family disa­ gl'e«:>d as to the number of fires they say have popped up in the [lYe room cottage where they now live. Mrs. WiUey said she found the ~hel1 paper in her kitchen cup­ board blazing while she canned to­ motoes yesterday. State fire officials still are in­ AMONG the perennial object­ ives of a great number ot Amer­ vestigating the 200 or so fires re­ '91d Faithful' Stin Attracts the Toutists- . leans every yeaI' Is Yellow tone ported by the Willeys in buildings JU\ In northwest 'Vyomlng. And sooller or Ia.ter, of COUr&e, every summer val' UOller reL arC\md to at the farm where they formerly tile 01 the park's main attra.cUons - "Old Falthful."Bere Uae famoua n,ser Is faithfull, eruptinr for lived. No official conclulioDJ have t!\ .d1enc.e o~ awed Wurllil, been reached. ,______- . ------~------~------~------~---- " 'I'IIB DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY; AUG. 29. IMt-PAU FOll'JE, ...... ,:' . I Il'" l''' .,. '" r I Under -Observation • McBrid I Hall The DaI~ Iowan - ESTABLISHED 1868 World Cooperation 'on the Rise (aJighl Wi~~B!!~!~S Down ' SUNDAY. AUGUST 29, 1948 In the pro 'e . of accumulating hot weather tip on how to k~ hblbhed dally ex~ept Monday by Stu.. By SIGRID ARNE MDmER 01' TIm ABSOClATED PBE88 a honse cool dul'ing the. e un. ea~o11ably warm days 1 learned that "'nt l'ubUuUonl. lnc. Enlcrt!d ... ..,.,. WASHINGTON (.4') - Bit by _ eJus ~ matler a' lbe postoW.. The AUoclI\ed Prea b .DUUed esclu· cio 'ing all windows and l ow e rjr..~ all hades in an apartment WII at 1"",. Clly. low. und., \h. act 01 ___• alvely to the U", fcw repubUc.U"n oJ bit the non-Communisl world is _ of March S. 18'78. all lbe local nOWI printed In tht. new... uppo ed to 118"C a de it'abl effe t. I>8per ... well ... all AP n.wl d1op.dch.. . writing the sorl of peace the Uni­ ...... crlptlon r.t_B7 CUTler In 10'0'1 ted Nations was supposed to cre­ Wednesday morning I decided 10 gi"e it a try, When we left CIty JO ceo.. wecl.'Jy or $1 per lieu in United Pr.... Leased Wire Service Ulat morning the in ide of our abod was a dark and cool as a advance: alX months $3 85; three monUu ate. fl.to. By mall In low. 17.50 per year; A growing network or agree­ cistern . '['hat el'en ing whE'n we t'ctul'Ded from a day of slaving .~ L_1ba ~.eo. tMee monlhs $2. And Board or Trustees: Lalle O . Moeller. Mason Lodd. A . Crallf aolrd. Paul R­ over hot typewrit er, 10 and bf.'hold Apartment was jU3t as bot :och..- mall oubscrlpUon. sa ~ year: .t& ments outside UN now covers in _Iba three mOl.UtI $2.2:1. Oloo n . Lester Brool it srem!'j tha t one cI'isis after anotller 11a pIled up covery programs !but an over-all France turned down the offer, Ii. EI Salvador and Guatemala their "political. economical and • • • again. t U·. Bul. ill the first week of July, 1947, tbe nation (argu­ European program for the tour but now Churchill has nursed the have wiped oul visas. Their cultural" lives. The nations in­ years of the Marshall plan. The idea into a broader one. A Chicago shop, accO/'rTing to an agrnt, advcl'tises "Pa1lti& 01 ing UJ\fT) was tol(\ world aHait·s were at a cri is. citilens move back and forth as clude Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, the Week" sets in its windOW display. '; risis after l'I'i f> is ha s tllmblpd ILt OUI' feel sinec that lime, programs should be completed by At the Hague, Netherlancls, this though they were citizens of a Transjordan, Iraq, Saudi Arabla October. spring, in a meeting ot non-gov- single nation. and Yemen. 'l'he idea is to have seven pait·s of lacy u nderdrawers wi~ lea vinS the word " crisli-l" a scarce ly meaningful thing. "Monday " tlll'ough "Sunday" embr oidered on each. Ther\l The thing is done. 'Ph e :I1'JllNl JOI'ces, says OU1"' government, doe 11 't ,'eern to b any practical t'ea on for thi., although I au. must b made larger. 1[' !liz!' cannot be achieved by voluntary pect an enterprising uJldcrdrawer manufacturer is trying to es­ menns, thcn we (' 1111 pl'ovide t h program of cOllscri ption to mak ploit our womenfolk by peddliug his wares in lots of seven. up our arlllPrl pol rnl ia I. If s('cms t hnt somewhere the military Dixiecrats Shaping Up for ' November Fight Is nothing sacred 1 prognlln has fnil l'd ,,11(' 11 it r ('so rt ~ to 11 draft. Jf clIli!lITll l'ntR ;Jl'r slow alld quot a_ Ir ft ll11f'illr d, we do not he i. ATLANTA, GA. (UP) - The door to the Dixiecrats temporar­ cuit Judge W. C. Harris rUled slim hope of taking over , as Ute tat to UI'Art ll1('n to a ·~ t11 'e 0 111' na tion of gl'eat strl'ngth. Dixiecrats' drive to strip President ily. Time is running out and the their petition signed by 10.000 regular party and a wrangle , js p Truman of the Solid South's sup­ inIant party will have to hustle Jf DlcC\iRtioll And d ipl o111u ry brrak down that can mean only voters made their electors eligible due at the state Democra~c COIl­ port in November is undergoing between now and .November it it one thillg d rul with international The Dixiecrats, or S tat e s' State by state, the DixiOOJlets' probl illS bi- foro 1J 1Itl t (' r~ gr( to 1h e military , lined up behind the Dixiecrats, party by certifying their c/llldl­ Rights Jeffersonian Democrats to chances ·shape up 8li follows in creating an impasse in the state. dates, \ use their formal name, believe the heretofore regular Democratic A special session of the Jegisla- Arkansas-No errort yet II)~ south: 101. th.ey have three states in the bag. ture may be called to provide that to get the Dixiecrats 011 . the • Vigilance-High Cost Living They claim they have pretty Alabam_The state's 11 elec­ both Truman and Dixiecrat elec- lot since sfate laws provide. t much captured the regular Demo­ tors, all chosen in tile Democratic tor slates appear on the bllliot. a petition for recognition of.a _ Oqt JlIly 2,"}, 19 17. a blast ,~ h oo k fl south er'lt lllilldis coal field. cratic organizations in South primary on an anti-Truman Tennes~ne elec~or , of'res.- arate party, signed by be~WIf Twenty.sI.'1'clt miliCI'S 11'1'1'1' killl'd Ulle! Old BClI oal miners Carolina, Alabama and Missis­ pledge, have swung soljdly behind ton Parks, has announced he will 50 and 1,000 names, can be IIIIt mourncd lit e ril sl/ strl'. f1lill() i.~ OQ1' cnwT' Orren hurried to the sippi. the Dixiecrat tickets of Gov. J. in no case vote for Mr. Truman mitted only in the period, 60 to ., sane and rrpori rri /hlll all slat f1 mille· afety laws had bCM They are· trying to win over Strom Thurmond of South Caro­ and presumably will go along with days before the election. 1 t..{j·IJlPlird "'i/lI . several others by the same method lina tor president and Gov, Field­ the states' righters. Louisian_Dixiecraill are COli' \Ve weI'{' intf>I'P!'; trd 10 Hrr in 11 ~ tut e pHper OlP other da~' II Rhort and for that reason have hesitat­ ing Wright of Mississippl for vice­ - Petition signed by fident they can get I,OO~ . "~. story I' e lt'a~ !' d by thr illt('riot' c1 f' J)al'tmenL It said tbat in April it ed to plunge into the procedure president. The fight here is to get 1,000 voters for Dixiecrats to filialed" voters to sign peti.tl.cj! for getting on the November bal­ a Truman sla te of electors on the make the ballot. necessary for electors to ]lad wal'l1f'd 1!) ~ til t r s o f disnslel' hazal'ds that f'xist'd in 929 COll I 'Pil+4r lot with electors fOr a separate ballot and so far the Truman sup­ Tex_The Dixiecrats nurse a on ballot. mines in those sta tps. party. porters have had no luck. nov~rl1 () rs of fill' states w(' rl' warned. But at the nd of June, But the opposition is strong in MJSII1slppl - Nin~ Dildecrat annOIUl crd thl' inl pl'iol' dr [)artTllr nt, more than one·half of the some sta les and in at least one electors have been chosen and un­ Candidate Thurmond , Candidate Wrlgbt more than 27 thow;and saJ'l'ty coul' violations ,till were not COl" state-Georgi a- the local Demo­ der a 1948 state law their names WSUI PROGRAM CAlEND~R l' It!; are assured on the ballot. et d. lowil- " I' ll il ~ rII i Iloi!;-wa warn d. cratic factionalism has shut the nominees. The Truman "minor­ the Sept. 8 primary by tbe state M,nd.y 11 :00 a.m . News South Carolina. - The Demo­ 8:00 a.m. Morning Chapel /I :15 a.m Chamber Music cratic executive committee has ity" is expected to put out a sep­ executive committee. which may 8:15 a .m , News 11 :4. a.m. Rent Control arate ballot, since there is no state tell the electors to go Dixiecrat or 8:30 a .m . Music You Want 12:00 noon Rhythm RambiK endorsed the Thurmond-Wright 9:00 a.m . Holland Calling 12:30 p.m. News ticket and under party rules the law against it. may not. 0:15 a .m . Marcla's Melody Marl 12 :4:'> p.m. Sports Time 10:00 • . m . 'fhe :Sookshelr 1.00 p.m. Musical Chat. committee wilL choose electors Grorgla - The regular Demo­ Norlh Carolin_The Di){ecrats ID: 15 a .m. Alter Breaklul Calfee 2:00 p.m. News bound to support the Dixiecrat cratic electors WIU be chosen aIter won a half-way victory when cir~ IO:~5 a.m. Excurslons In Science 2:15 p.m. SIGN OFF 1------~------~~ tHESE DAYS- WMT Calendar WHO Calendu. "~ .. ~ ". ~ . rCBB Outlet) (NBC Ou&Iet) .,. " 6:00 p.m . Gen.. Autry 6:00 p.m . LeI's Talk HoUywood 6'30 p.m. Blondlo 6:J() p.m . PaL O'Brlen, Vlf'Itnllo . B,,* 7:00 p.m . S8m Spade 7:00 p.m. The Roberl. Sltl... CbII .... I Television and Politics , 7:J() p.m. Man Called " X " 7:30 p.m . RFD America ,1•• 8:00 p.m . Band Concert 8:00 p.m. Manbattan MeI1')"~ 8:J() p.m. Strike Jl Rich 8:30 p.m. Album of Famllilor 1'IiUak: Bf Gcerge E. 80kol9ky' (King Feature Syndicate) 9:00 p .m. Ronald Colm8D 0:00 p,m. Take It or Lea... It .• \ 9:J() p.m. Escape 9:30 p,m . Horace Held~ 'I''''''L '' ~ 10:00 p.m. News, Jackson 10 :00 p.m . Austin and Scoflelt • publican conventions on the tele- television record of the dull, 10:15 p.m. Preview or Tomorrow 10:30 p.m. The Billboard • , ., 10 :30 p.m . Revival Hour 10 :45 p.rn Guest St,lr The radio did a job for some visl'on screen and I't I' S a devasta' - 't kl I • palllS a ng prepara tons for a Il :at) p.m . Zl«~y Elman Orc heslra 11 :00 p.m . American United politicians: It made it possible for ing instrument for politicians. , their voices to carry conviction, Thai goes for all of them but spontaneous demonstration could , . friendliness, strength of purpOSe. Hoover. His simplicity, dignity destroy any publicity director's Other men sounded awful. The and sincerity stood out above them dream. Also, such an "American" public judged these men by their all. movement of Henry Wallace's OFFICIAL DAILY BULLElI~ might suffer when the "Ameri­ f. HI:f": "t voices. Some were smart enough "Television is dangerous (or cans" are seen by television. A to hire elocution teachers to beau- politicians. It seems to emphasize first-cla5a fistfight among labor P"""~ ~ ...... , ""w ... ~y <...... n ....u .. ~ tify their voices . and their man- the insincerity, hokum, and ora­ '" ~1 de.,," Olllc••• Old Clpltol. 110m. ro, I... otHtUL leaders mjght even be preferable r:; ,. , I'J ..... ,d b. d.p •• lled ..lib I ...."1 .11110 • • 1 r .. D~17 ...I~ ner of speaking, just as now the torieal tricks and that means its 1([1 I I .""oom In E ..l nail. GENERAL NOTICES m&lll ... III ".. to the sPeeclles-on televis~on. television technicians fix the photography at presenl is brutal 1'l\[aW'~'~ IoWan by 2 P ..... lb. b,. pr•• udID, 'Irol p.bll.. II .. , ...... faces of politicians as though they And so we progress. I some- \l -.,#!J NOT b. a ••• pl... b, 1.'.thODe•• Dd ....1 ... TYRU .0.. 1 ...... :.,;;:::""'"!Jl .... "r~1\\." WRITTEN In, SIGNED ,. I , ..p •• llbl. P .... _ ~ ••" were movie actors. Maybe this on beauty and ugliness alike. limes wonder what Daniel Web- will start a vogue of lipstick for "Sound broadcasting · leaves a ster, Abraham Lincoln and Wil- VOL. XXlV, No. 285 SUNDAY, AUGUST It. 1... males and every statesman will lot to the imagination and many liam Jenning~ Bryan, to SllY noth. , carry a compact. can get by ; but television is a ing of Demosthenes. did without Television. even with fixed cruel instrument to most perlorm- n ml'crophone . They made then-... ,- UNIVERSITY CALENDAR faces, is liable to become a cruel ers. selves felt; that we know by the instrument. The stutfed shirt will "Ot course, it will be perfected influence they exerci~ed. But Tluu:sday, September ~ Thursday. september 1. never be able to let his hair down, as it is further developed, but as ' could they btl heard without the Orientation Week belu.t. At fearing that television will get I see it, nalional conventions are picre of tin that is stuck up be­ Independent Study Unit closes. ThuncIa.7. 8t~ II him in his nat4-fal state. The pro- doomed if they allow lelevision to fore every speaker these days? 7;30 a. m. Opepin. ot 4- hibitlonist orator wJll not be able cover them. And I sometimes wonder iI the (For Information rtJardlnl' dates beyond till ...... :. '; '. , to drink beyond his capacity, for "They should be heard but not multitude would have elected so He reservailou. In the oftl~e of the PresideD&, QW ~~) although television cannot yet ,seen." homely and gaunt a figure as ;. • ~ec. .,. " transmit the bresth, it can catch Thi ~ holds not only for national Abraham Lincoln president had the lordly statesman telling that conv~ntions bul for all forms of they seen him on television in <:om­ GENERAL NOTICES one about Moe and Joe-which public endeavor. Let's not mention petition with, Jet us say, the gIOt·­ UNlVERsrrr GOLF COURSE puts a leer in the eye and a lech- names, but a fellow I liked very ious profile of John B a rrymor~. ment documents deparlmept, JIr. erous grin on the face, and the much used to make his most won- Perhaps in the near future, the GolIers wishing to avoid COIl­ ary annex, and educaUoo.~ voters will know him for what derful speeches when he was national committees will each gestion on the first tee of the uni­ phy-psychology Ubra.rY. ~i he is. drunkf.-but up to his eyeS. He have a department of cosmetics versity golI course shOUld arrange will be 8:30 a. m. tg ~ 1 Nor wUl it be passible for the knew how to manage, although on and candidates will be chosen be­ for stqrting time every afternoon 10 4:30 p. m. Monchiy., to-. statesman to read other men's one occasion, when I was present, cause they are photogenic just as and also Saturday and Sunday and 8:30 B. m. to Pooll 00 I elocution, with magnjJlcent elo- he nearly went down under the in 1940 Republicans were loolcing momJngs. The golI course will day...... ' - quence, with force and power, table. He was helped up and de- for a glamorous candida te. Or open at 6 a. m. Saturday and Sun­ Schedules for other d~ , while all the time he does not be- livered one of the most graceful maybe we shall turn the whole day and at 7 a. m. other days. Call ta t libraries will be. PCIItI!l -f'I* , lieve a wDrq he Is saylnJ. It will addresses I tt'a(i eve!' heard. I re~ business over to the husksters and extension 2311 tor startilll time. doors of each libra..,. 1,_. take a wonderful actor to sPeak call the grace I!ut not what he nominate the tobacco auctioneer All libraries wilL be c1011d'" with such perfect objectivity. Most said. who makes all that meaningless UNIVERSITY LIBRARY HOURS day, Sept. 6, Labor Day. men's faces and maMers and ges- Television will kill that kind of noise on the raello. tures will aive them away. A oratory and that kind of exuber- Progress sure is exciting- but LIM8ry schedule from Aug. a to FALLTDIt man wbo has spent his lile In the I ance. Maybe the perfecting of the it does make it hard for states­ Sept 22 tor the reading room, Freshman orientatWil;i theater writes me: d.evice will be its elimination or men. There is too mueh to keep Macbride hall; reserve and perio­ for the tall term IIt.rt ' "I saw th~ Democratic &nd He- the elimination of hi-jlnks. Aup willi. dical- reading rooms and govern· 16. Claa8et!! be,ln ~~ _.. _.. - - ~ ...... '" ~ ... •

Barbaro Martin, John Burbank WeJ Barbara Martin -- A S b \A I dd e Becomes the Bride nnounce eptem er y .ye • .ngs Society Of John Burbank ]n a 7:30 p. m. candlelight cere­ Mercedes Ann Horan Weds mony Friday at St. Paul's Luth­ , eran church, Barbara Martin, Io­ wa City, exchanged wedding vows with John Burbank, Springfield, 111.. the Rev. N. S. Tjemagel of­ ficil:lting. Mrs. Burbank Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Martin, Waukon, and 'Mr. Burbank is the 50n of the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Burbank. Alice Scott, Westlawn, rved Mrs. Burbank iiIS maid of honor and Mr. Burbank was attended by his brother, Dick, also of Spring­ field, Ill. U. hers were Roger Mar .. Un, Waukon, brother of the bride, and Warner Martin, Waukon, a cousin of the bride. Following the ceremony a reception was held In the church parlors. Mrs. Burbank was graduated from Waukon high 5chool and the Mr, and Mrs, John Burbank University of Iowa eollege of lib­ eral arts and &Chool of nursing. Sbe has been employed as a reg­ THE MARRJAGE OF LILA JEAN BECKMAN to C. HEDER, Livonia, Professional Best Man Says _ . hilered nune at University hospi­ John C. Murph, ",ill be solullllized at , p.m., ep­ Mo. , announce the ena-vement and approachlnl[ IIlaITlaa-e of lhetr dalla-hter, Jean, to L. Dun Paar­ tals. tember 26 a& the Methodist clwrch. M Beekm n, A graduate of Dalton high mann, the n of Mr. and Mn. t.. F. Planoann, the daua-hter of Mr, aDd Mn. Chari A, Beckman, S("hopl, Dalton, Mass., Mr. Bur­ Davenport. Mis Heeler was ..,.aduated from lhe bank is a student at the Concordia 5t1 Eo Collen lnet, wa &"raduated from Iowa UnIversity of 11)11'& In February. 1948 ",hne e Brides Are All Alike City hla-b school and attended Mommouth collea-e, wa a member of Alpha Xi Della oelal ororlty. Theological seminllry, Springfield, Mrs, Joseph Geryk MOlD IQVU tJ\ , III .. for two nan. he was &"raduated he ls now employed at. UnlvenUy hospltaJ . Her . I B RUTH ON TAD lI1. from the UnJverslb of Iowa In Au.-ust of this ,ear, fiance III a JunJor La lhe university collere of com­ NEW ~' ORK (l-P) "hridr i'i npitIH'!' ·wrrl nor drmure but Following a wedding trip, the Mr. Murphy, the IC.'n of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. merce and Is affiliated with Ddta. nu Delta 10- * * * * * * couple will make their home In A impering '0111111 1'01' "hutandlo; III til' altar ~mirkinlt lik & cat Murphy. Route 5, i. also a ..,.aduate of Iowa Il.y dal fratemli,. The ceremony wUJ be performed at Mercedes Horan Weds Joseph R. Geryk Springfield. II'ho a tt' R ('flll nn'. hl.-b bool and I now en .....ed In farmlna-. 4 P,III.. eptembu 11 at the Pre b lerlan churc:h. The wedding of Mercedes Ann Sisler, Mrs. Robert Dull. Fol- If you think ;ltht'I'wi,' j till .iu I dOll't kllnw 11I1~ thin .... llbout HonD , daughter of Owen J. Ho- lowing the reception, the couple bride said Rob Hdllt!I?. ",Ito think~ hl' knows !'v(,~· thiug til rc "got so nervous and upset he he I the only ( SUE 3 MARRIAGE LICEN E Don Henyan Waives passed out. The bride tapped her man In exist- I 'I'IIn, Lakewood. Ohio, and the late leIt on a two-week wedding trip is to know 111>oul Ihrlll till ;I\'~ lint or hi. bpi,,!! a up,,1 mall by pro· Marrlale lie os were Issued • toot jmpatiently t the altar wblle be koo there at the ,Johnson county clerk's of- HearIng on OMVI Count Mary C . Horan, to Joseph Ri chard to Canada. fe sibn. JTr h K stood "tljllrl'nl I '. -- her frantic father, trying to ave _I brldetllhllids Geryk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- A graduate of the University of to l~Ol"e I.hall lOO I.dh·~'l'dly find a be I man," he said. "And the catch for his girl, threw cold lice ye terday to Thomas H. Hlrt Don Henyan, Manche , walv­ 1IOrt, z;eph Geryk, Northampton. Mass., [owa, the bride attended the Un i- blu. lnng brld . when thcy find one the glowing water in the victim's lace. Noth­ Anyhow, he. id, h I n't recom­ of Hills and Phyllill Penney of ed preliminary hearing on charges 100k place at a high mass at 9 versity of Michigan graduate "And 1hey're all alike," sold groom usually Ups well. I ing happened. mending the work. Iowa City, Jametl W. Sweeney of of operalina: a moior vehicl while I. m. yesterday in St. Mary's eha- school. She is affiliated with Kap- Schultz, who is 25 years old. "The ,I WOUldn't toke R ~ee, you under­ "1 finally had to use ar1ificial "One of th major chore Is Mar halltown and Betty J . Roh- intoxicated, in lown City police thia pel at Ann Arbor. Michigan. pa Kappa Gamma social sorority. helpless remale sex: my eye. They stond, but [ permit my elt to ac- respiration which brought him to, klsslna: the bride," he said, shud­ rbacher of Iowa City. and Harold· court yesterday. Mr. Geryk Is a student at the ' cept R gratuity." and so we proceeded with the derlna:. "Ugh! Those simpering D. Keiser or Muscatine and Phyl- He was bound over to the grand , Mrs. RIobert L. Dull, Ann Arbor, where he just hunt and hound those poor Ills weddJnl' aUendanc~ In the ceremony." PU$SCs." lis A. Munson of MuS("atlne. jury. Bcnd was II t at $500. Mich., lister of the bride, was ma- is a member o~ Alpha Tau Omega guYS right down to the altar" t II~,- d tron of honor and bridesmaids' . past year, ehul z ..... e, social fraternity. He knows brides so well, he ex- netted him some $l,OOO-all 01 were Elaine Horan, another sis- The couple will reside in Ann plained jauntily, that he's a bache- which helped Jlut him Ulroll&'h ter of the bride, and Mrs. Robert Arbor. lor and will stay one. No female ew York unlvusfi . Andrews, Defiance, Ohio. Janice . ______..., IS. gOing. t 0 push h'1m over. N 0, But one must be fully equipped Daily Iowan Want Ads Get Results Holmes and Carol Tolles, both of " Ir., H'e s seen thelf· t ec h DIques. to do' hiS job properly. A best Ann Arbor, were flower girls and Correctl'on and he's ;~~une U'U" • man must (A) ('aim the nervous Robert Colby, Whi1more Lake, SALESMAN WANTED tOAHB HELP WANTED Love Pa.YS Ort a:room; (8) make pleasantries was ringbearer. The marriage of Ruth McGill d CLASSIFIED RATE CARD Love Is not to be taken seriously with the brid ~mRi ; (C) carT)' TOP Sf:LLJNG CAREER: We I$$$$$$$$$$$$ loaned on camer ... W ANTED: Plumbers lind plurnb­ Mr. Geryk was ,attended by and MirhaelH. Cryder will take by Cupid's II sistant.. It's merely the rlOg, llnd (D) know how to .CASH RATE have a tine openina tor a lull guns, clotbina, Jewelry, elc. en' helpers. Larew Co. John Gutcbe, Huntington Woods, place Sunday, Sept. 5 at the the way lie Iound 10 earn money administer artificial respiration. 1 or 2 Days-20c per line per lime, energetic man for sales Reliable Loan. 109 E. BurllnJrton Mich. Ushers were Myron Gray, First Methodist church in Mus- to pay his way throu h college. Take the lime, chullz said, day. EFFICIENT lady for general office work in your territory Po Ilion is INSTRUCTION work. Must have shorthand. T -keWlOOd Ohl'o and Robert Dull catine instead of Sept. 7 as pre', h 3 Consecutive dayS-15c per ...... '" "I stand up wHh bridcil"ooms when he ad an extra-nervous permanent with no investment. [f U. S. ClVIL SERVICE JOBS. Ann Arbor viously announced in The Daily b h'l I i tr brl'dcgroom line per day. Good alary. Write Box 3H-I, . ecause w I e coup es n a anie . you are agllTcsslve and want to Congress ups pay $330 - $450. Daily JowQn. A reception was held from 2 to Iowan. city can usually find n clera:yman Orf)nm ol1ap eel B Consecutive days-lOc per iet ahead we will train you and Men - Worn n. Secure poSitions. 4 p. m. at the home of the bride'li to marry them, they eldom can "The groom," he recounted, line per day. teach you our buslness. We will QualiCy Now. FREE 40 page book, MAN or lady (or part time .ales Figure 5-word average per line pay you durinll trainin~. Our men detall~. Write Box 88 - I, Dally work. Appro:

Let Us Keep Your Clothes looking like New C. O. D. Cleaners FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY SERVICE OIAL 4433 106 S. CAPITOL

Try Our Alterations and Repairs Dept. I c ..-._. __ ._. ._. ___ <- I. THE DAILY IOWAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1948-PAGE SIX Old Capitol Face Lifters Reach Top Hancher Speaks at She's Ihe 'Sweelheart' of Sigma Chi French UN Observer, Pilot • U. S. Suggests Utah Commencement Shot Down in Plane, Killed Gives 2-Fold Ro'le Joint Control School. Must Fill JERU ALEM, PALE TIXE ({""F)-The <-hit' f 1"1'l'n<:1\ Pnited Nations observer in Palestine was kill'u and Iii pilot WIIS wound­ The role 01 universities and col­ ed fatally by machin :'un fire yesterday whilt' thl'Y w('re cl'uiing leges today is two-fold, Pres. Vir­ Of Antarctica in a plainly marked t\ pLane over Al"alJ-h('ld tprI'itllry nrar gil M. Hancher of the University WASHINGTON (UP) - The Gaza. of Towa said last night at the sum­ United States with an eye to fu­ Lt. Col. J oseph Quei'll, a. i tanl chipf Qr starr or lrnitt'tl Xa­ mer commencement of the Un­ ture hemispheric defense bas pro­ posed inter'national control of the tions field operation ill Pal­ iversity of Utah at Salt Lake City. estine, was killed instantl), by vast Antarctic continent, the state the hail of bullets. Capt. P. Jean­ To Hold Funeral "On the one hand they must department disclosed yesterday. nel, the pllot, suffered fatal head understand and teach the nature The unprecedented propclll\ wounds, but managed to land the and characteristics of social chan­ was offered as a means of resolv­ plane intact. He died at an Egyp­ Here for Former ge; and on the other they must un­ ing conmcting claims to territor)' tian military hospital. derstand and teach those funda­ of the grea t frozen continent A spokesman for UN truce mental values and aspirations that which spreads out irom-the south , headquarters at Haifa said exten­ Iowa City Doctor pole. give meaning and purpose to the sive investigations will be made to Funeral services lor Dr. Ernesl The U. S. suggestion was ad­ establish the identity of the at­ life of man even in the midst of J . Anthony, 65, former physican vanced formally this week in DOts tackers. A commisswn of UN ob­ change," Hancher said. to Argentina, Australia, Chile, servers rusheq to the scene late. in Iowa City who died last Fri­ day night at Black Moutain, N.C., He stated that there will be no France, New Zealand, Norway, and The two-seated plane left Hai­ return to "normalcy" and the good the United Kingdom, Rusw, will be held at the Beckman Iun­ in fa, on the northern Palestine eral home Tue~day at J 1 a.m. The old days and that no university which has made no for mal cIJima coast, this morning. It was paint­ to Rev. Robert R. Sanks of the Fir.;t will help solve the problems of on Antartica, was not informed of ed white and had large UN mar­ Methodist church will oWciate. the U. S. plan. kines, officials said. our swiftly movine age it it at­ The body will arrive at Beck­ The United 'States suggested The only available report at temps to run history back upon it­ that the seven other nations fl· man's late tomorrow evening. self. Haifa truce headquarters on the Servjces will be held at 2 p.m. change views with this govern· plane mishap was furnished by today in Black Mountain at the "Change is the order of the ment on "some form at internation. Set. Noble Brown, an American Methodist church. day," he said. "It has been our alization" of the Antarctic which fHeht engineer who landed at heritage and it wiU be our future." CAP Wlrophol.) would make possible large-scale Dr. Anthony was born Aug. I, Gua airfield in a C-47 SItl me 10 LOOKING EVERY BIT A FAVORITE GIRL, Barbara Tanoer, 20 scientific investigation and re­ 1883 on the family farm near Tif­ These rapid changes have come minutes after the UN plane came primarily from 'business, industry, of Mlehl.-an State collele was cb.OIen "sweetheart" of Sigma CbJ search there. There has been spe­ fin. Death was caused by a cere­ down. at the fraternity's national cODvention in SeattIe, Wash., Friday culation that Antartica may 1lOII­ bral hemorage. (0,,11, Iowan Photo by J.t" Orrl.) and finance, Hancher continued, Brown said he saw J eannel the very groups which consider night. She was picked from amo.... six contestants. tain valuable minerals-possible EVEN THE CHIMNEY GETS A ·ONCE·OVER.' Yesterday work­ brineing the plane in at 7:12 a.m. He gradUated from the State themselves defenders of stability, including uranium, fro m which University of Towa college of men, who for the past tew days ha.ve been repainting old Capitol, rather than colleges and universit­ atomic bombs are made. and that it was fired upon while gave the chimney some retAlUchlnl. The men have been placing new approaching Haifa. He said he ex­ medicine in 1909 and practiced ies. Bishop To Participate Until now, the UDI ted States Iw medicine at Strawberry Point for ce ment In the bulldhll'll masoory. Judge Gaffney Sels amined the plane and that there Rapid strides in transportation In CR Medical Meeting stood aloof from Antarctic dia­ were bullet holes in the fuselage 18 years. He came to Iowa City in are the foremost cause of the cha­ putes, despite extensive American 1927. and windscreen. Brown added that Fine New Yorker nges in recent years, he pointed Sepl. 21 for Hearing David Bishop, instructor of exploration. This government has Queru, 50 was shot through the While in Iowa City he was as­ Army 'Now Offering out. "What academic person ever zoology, will participate in the made no claims for Antarctic ter· chest and Jeannel, 28 was hit in sociated with Dr. W.R. Whiteis. [n revolutionized the life of America program of the Linn couty med- ritory. Nor has it ever recogniud 1942 Dr. Anthony moved to Black Koofla Eviction Suit the right temple. On OMVI Charge in the way it was revolutloned ical meeting Sept. 1, at the Hotel claims of any oth er nations. Mountain. European Service by Henry Ford?" Hancher asked. William Joseph Leason, 51, A hearing on an eviction suit Montrose In Cedar Rapids. 'SILENT' STAR DIES Dr. Anthony served tor 12 years T N E I' I Schenectady, N. Y., yesterday was The polmcal life and thought by Mr. and Mrs. William J. Krol- He will conduct a discussion HOLLYWOOD (JP) - GladdeJJ on the Iowa City park boat'd and · 0 IS fined $300 'in the Johnson county City IEngineer Issues ew n ees of our times is not being altered ta will be held at 9 a. m. Sept. 21, period after Dr. George W . Cor­ James, 56, who played in many si. was chairman of that group for district co~rt On a charge of oper­ radically by university profess­ several years. The U. S. Army is now accept­ ner 01 Baltimore, Md. presents lent films, died yesterday of leuk­ ating a motor vehicle while intoxi­ ors, he stated. Professors do not in the Johnson county district a paper on multiple births. emia. ,4 Building Permits He is survived by his wile, Mrs. ing men, with or without previous cated. desire to indoctrinate, and in most court. Myrtle Franklin Anthony, one Judge James P. Gaffney also re­ Among the four building pellr service, for assignment to the Eu­ cases, they could not indoctrinate Judge James P. Gaffney sch­ son, Verne of Pasadena, Calif., one ropean command, M-Sgt. O. A. voked Leason's driving license if they wanted to. eduled the hearing yesterday after mits issued recently by the cjty daughter', Mrs. Manley Roose of for 60 days. ~~porary engineer was one to J oh n Stevens Hancher, who waS a Chicago the Kroftas Iiled an eviction suit T Injunction Granled by Gaffney J ackson Ala., a brother, Roy of McClunll of the Iowa City recruit­ Leason pleaded guilty to the to build a $12,000 residence on corporation lawyer before coming against Kenneth W. and Del9ris Tiffin and one sister, Adoie of ing ortice announced yesterday. county attorney's information. He Carlyle Jones, 604 Bowery street, Hons" of the plaintiff and his wifl Court street. L. Draker will be to SUI, deplored the fact that bus­ A. Smith who leased property Tiffin and three grandchildren. Formerly men without previous was arrested Aug. 26 on Highway yesterday received a temporary and has alienated her affections. the contractor for the proposed inessmen, industralists and 'in­ owned by the plainti1fs in Ox­ 6 .west of Iowa City. injunction against Steven Parrott, building. • Dr. Anthony was a member of service were not consigned for the anciers on the one hand, and tea­ ford. These acts, Jones said, "are re­ the Johnson county Medical soc­ restraining Parrott from associat­ W. W. Andrlik, 519 N. Governor European command, according to cher and sc)entists on the other According to the petition, the ing with Jones' wife, Marietta pugnant to Christian morality and iety and American Medical Ass­ McClung. Enlistment must be tor are not better acquainted. defendants leased the premises for established public ?o\iCY in )hilI street was granted a permit to ocialion. Jones. build a $750 garage. He will do three, four, live or six years. It Three Cars, Truck Men in both fields are of great five y.ears in July, 1947. Pending litiga tio'n ot the oase, they tend to break up a mao and his own contracting. ------the a(>plicant is a former service­ intellectual ability and moral in­ The KroUa petition claimed fhe Judge James P. Gaffney granted wile and disrupt family relation­ Permits tor making additions to EXPAND AIR PO T man he may enlist at a vade up Damaged in lccident tegrity, he observed, but they work lease had been violated by alter­ the temporary injunction after ship." their present residences were is­ WASHINGTON (JP)-Air parcel to and including his former grade, on different problems with diff­ ing the premises without permjs­ Jones filed a· petition for perm~ Mrs. Jones liled suit for divor~ sued to Henry H. and Emma Hol­ posl will be started Sept. 4 from depel'lding on hIs qualifications. An accident on Burlington erent mea!)s and they tend to re­ sion of the owners, Jailing to make nent injunction. here Aug. H. scher, 413 Garden and Ray H. the U.S., its territories and pos­ McClung said that the enlist­ street near the Madison street gard with suspicion what the ot­ needed repairs and underletting Jones claimed that Parrott has Messer, Hamilton and Cahill and Tompkins, 409 Third avenue. The sessions, to 20 countries in Latin m nts are on a quota basis and ad­ intersection io which three autos her is doing. part of the premises. "interfered with the marital rela- Bartley are attorney~ for Jones. H<>lscher addition will cost $300 America and the Caribbean area, vised any interested men to .sign and a pick up truck were dam· and Tompkins estimated his costs the post office deportment an­ up ear:ly because of the small quo­ aged was reported yesterday to at $1,800. Both listed themselves nouced yesterday. tus. [owa City police. Accordjng to the report cars • The Jefferson. Hotel take pleasure in ant;louncing d r i v e n by I. B. Brenneman, Kalona, and Robert D. Strub, 12.17 ,. Beginning To Look like a Swimming Pool E. Burlington street collided. The Strub car then sideswiped a cllr owned by Cornelius A. Vander­ the RE·OPENING TOMORROW Aug. 30 laan, University hospital, Bnd a tI'uck owned by Frank Cihlan, route 6, both parked at tbe curb. 'Brennaman reported $250 ri9ma~e to his car, Strub reported $50 dam­ age and Vanderlaan reportea 01 the $350 damage. Cihlan did not esti­ HUB.·BUB mate damage done to his truck. Mcilrath To Siudy under new manageme,n" AI Oak Ridge, Tenn. • , Wayne J . McIlrath, instructor of botany, tomorrow will begin a four-weeks course at Oak Ridge, Tenn., in the technique of using For a really good time, you'll wanllo visit radioisotopes in. research. The course is the third to be conducted this summer by the Oak the HUB-BUB. Completely new decora'~ons Ridge institute of nu(.>iear studies. The instHuie is comprised of nine­ teen southern universities and Bnd new furnishings make the HUB-BUB even / conducts a broad program of re­ search and trail'ling in the nuclear sciences through a contract with more pleasant than before. It's always cool, the atomic energy commission. Services Tomorrow too. For Mary B. Hayes Whether you're all alone, or wilh that besl Funeral services for Mrs. Mary B. Hayes, 82, who died Thursday (Dally Iowan Pholo by Herb Nlp,on) in Cambridge, Ma ss., will be held dafe. make 'lit the HUB·BUB, towa City's smarl- RAPIDLY TAKING SHAPE, the Il)wa City swimming- pool Ite appeared deserted yesterday - alar at 10:3D a. m. tomorrow at the - I' el')' from what It will be next year at this time. Construction started in mid-June and thls past week U nitjl.rian church in Iowa City. u~ tbe pourlnl' of concrete for the sides of the shallow end (foreground). AccordJng to tbe encineers, Mrs. Hayes was the widow of est fun spot. .. pereent of the pool will be five feet or less deep. Shortages ot steel and other materials have ~ Iowed the late P rof. Samuel Hayes, an tb.e construelion 80mewhd but earlier statements by officials Indicated lhat the pool will be ready lor . instructor in the university col­ Iwlmming next spring. lege of law prior to his death in 1926. Mrs. Hayes moved from Iowa City eight years ago. interest" among the residents of * lE II 0'11 J'I d The body arrived at the Hohen­ * * ~~~v~e;:!ron~aused them to ~ake I Z vere al e schuh mortuary last night. The ARe-modeled and re-furnished! Announce New Dale family requested that no flowers Sin,ce Aug. 18, only $10 Ifa~ b.een contrrbuted to the fund, Willram On Conlempt Charge be sent. , . For Benefit Dance Grandrath, publicity chairman, The Rev. Evans Worthley will • said yesterday. A breakdown of Everett Diltz of Iowa City yes­ officiate at the services. Burial .. the $10,761.79 tolal into various terday was being held in the will be in Oakland cemetery. Hours: In Pool Fund Drive phases of the drive shows $4,175.- Johnson county jail after he re­ Honorary pallbearers at the J Cused to answer questions in the funeral will include PrQt. F . C. En­ The, benefit dance for the swim- 91 from the business district, $2,­ district court. ming pool fund will be held Thur- 891 from the residential area, $3,­ sign, Prof. Stephen Bush , Dean C. Daily 3:00 p. m. to 11:45 p. m. IIday night from 9 to mjdnight, the 405 from the lodges and organiza­ Diltz, subpoenaed in a court A. Phillips, Dean C. E. Seashore, Commlmity Dads said yesterday. tions, $209 from surrounding case, took Ihe witness stand and Prof. Percy Bordwell, Prof. B. J. The diJllce had previously been towns and $80.88 Crom miscellane- refused to answer the questirJns Lambert, Prot. F. D. Horack, and Saturday: 11:00 p. m. to 11:45 p.m. Icheduled for Friday night. ous sources. of the court. Prol. W. L. Bywater. The Community Dads also an- Keith' Parizek and his orchestra nounced they have cancelled p1ans will don.ate their services for the lor a Labor day celebration which Tomorrow's The Dayl , . dance at the Community building. was to be held at ' city park. The Admission charge will be 50 cents reasons given included the Dads , After a successful buying per person. concentration on the swimming trip, we're back, ready to This will be the last big event pool drive and, because of this, -, of the swimming pool drive which a lack of time to arrange a Labor serve you. DROP IN for our atarted June 22. The drive will day program. close officially on Saturday, Sept. The Dads, however, are still OPENING Tomorrow, August 30 HOPE WE SEE YOU ALL 4. attempting to schedule a game be- he B The decision to end the drive tween the "Old Timers" and some ;.$1,738.21 short of the $12,500 goal local baseball team. Charles Smith, Lower lobby at the JeH.rson Hotel ;Il0l1. reached Thursday evening at president of the club, said the game The Airliner I Community Dads meeting. At wUI probably not be played untll ACROSS FROM THE CAMPUS U,lat time the Dads said "lal:k Qt after Sept. 19. • ...------.. I t-~-~~IJJ!IIi~---... --~-~-~~-!i'_~IJirIrJ... -~~~... ~---..... ~------...;:.-;..,