l!4S MEATS, FATS, red la mp, Q' lh,o.,h U aD" A! Ih ••• ,b D~. ,aOCESSIlD FOODS, .... la mp. X5 Snow Ib ••• ,b ZG a nd A~ lh ..., . 111 2. SUOA. st. .. P. lit ... M. 8HO E, al.plaae alampa I, 2 and 3 tD "00 " IOWA: Clo1ld7 with occu100al u.ret, ,ood fadd' alle' )'. F UEL OIL, m ld "wHi, pe,rJ• • • U.ht SDOW or fr'eesIq clrtDle. 4 aad 0 become "00" Feb. O. GA80LlNE. A e"p", DAILY IOW"AN 1'l •• 14 f • • 4 , al •. • ad•• a" " Ib ..., b M... . II. lIS. THE rIsiDc~ 84. C;1 aad C6 eoupool ' . r ~ ,a 1.1 .•• eh now v&lId . Iowa City's Morning ~~ewspaper - - NUMBER III SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1945 VOLUME XLV t1VECENTS IOWA CITY. IOWA Nazis Report Russians First Drives · . 10 Miles Closest u.s. Forces 18 Attac k Ku.st(l11 Fortress Into Germany • War Department Announc,s- Third Army Forces Air Miles From Mani"la Berlin Says Widen H~d in Reich To Nine Miles . 737,342 Casualties ESCAPED FROM BEHIND NAZI LINES IN YUGOSLAVIA Oder Crossed PARI ' (AP)-'l'hc nitcd WASHINGTON (AP)-Ameri-. son's report that the anny had Two Columns • 'tates First army probed 10 100 Localities Taken can battle casualties have zoomed Ireached the bottom oC the barrel miles into Germany souUlellst of to 737,342 since Pearl Harbor, in drawing urgently needed in­ Aacbcn y. terday in a three­ By Red Army rapidly nearing the toll-of the Civil fantry replacements from the di­ war, heretofore the natlon's cost- visions in the Uniled States. mile drive that broke through Race for Prize In East Prussia liest conQict. Patterson said that the domestic the first of th • icgfried line '8 --- two main d fen' belts at their LONDON (AP)-'l'h Soviet The great bulk of dead, units had been lapped for 500,000 widest part. Thi~ point is 33 First Cavalry Units high co mDl llnd IIn noul1ccd last wounded, missing or captured by replacements and that 10,000 men the enemy was reported by the overseas are being shifted every mil . from the vital communica­ night tbat Russian tI'OOP~ in a Dash 32 Miles army. Announcement also was month from non-combatant units tions cenler of Bonn 00 the 15.mile smash til I'ough strong made that 5,100,000 of the 8,100,- to the infantry. Rhine. In First Day of Action enemy defenses had rolled 000 in the army now arc abroad. The 500,000 included, among 'i'h niled tates Third within 51 mi les of' Bedin, but GE NE RAL MacARTHUR'S Acting Secretary of War Patter- others, 50,000 culled from the army along til southet'll Rector the Gel'mllns said the Hed army son to ld his news conference that army specialized training pro­ H EADQUARTER , Lu z on, of tllll 40-mile front lik wi" was aturday (AP)-Two Yank was attacking t bp fortress of army casualties, including those gram; 80,000 shilled from the air beating at the Rhineland's western forces are racing t oward Manila, Ku.stri n, only 40 Iniles nO l'theast during most of the fighting In De- and service rorces and 90,000 who defense , widening its foothold in­ of the Reich capi ta1. cembel', have reached 650,420. The had volunteered to transfer into side the Reich to nine miles and one only 18 air miles away, Berl in 811;0 indicated that navy reported 86,922. the infantry from other branches. seizing a village only five and a down fine highways against in­ some Russian units had cl'Ossed Including deaths from disease Of the troops now In this coun- half miles from the fortress of effective Japanese resistance. the OdeI' river 38 miles east of and other cause, total casualties try, the army reported 1,000,000 Prum. "It i definitely a race be­ the barricaded R icll tapital, of both sides in the war between are being trained as Infantry re­ Far to the southeast, Frem,;h and tween forward elements of the partly afl ame from two quick RAF the states have been estimated placements for overseas units; American troops battered against first cavalry (dismou n ted ) and blows. at anywhere from 800,000 to I,- ! 1,000,000 are in training with tac- buckling resistance into the center 37 th division to see who enters The Soviet communique an­ 000,000 in that conflict in which I tical units which also will be sent of Colmar, famed os the birth­ .M:anila f irst," A ociated Press nounced the capture of All Limm­ some 13,000 less than have been overseas and 1,000,000 are in 50- place of the sculptor of the Statue kiUed in this war. called housekeeping units com- Correspondent Richard B erg­ ritz 10 miles east of Kustrin, and I ot Liberty. (The Pal'is radio said holz reported In a field dispatch Drossen, a seven-way highway Disclosure that the army troops posed of limited servicemen and Colmar had been captured.) today. junction only 14 miles northeast remaining at home had dwindled I those who have returned from The west bank of the Rhine was Maj. Gen. Verne Mudge's first ot Frankfurt Ilrc the last major to 3,000,000 came with Patter- , overseas. cleared of the enemy tor more cavalry, veterans of the Leyte strongholds before Berlin. than 30 miles south of Strasbourg, campaign, entered the Usls with a Gains In Pomerania more than 25 French towns had U. . AtRFORCE COMBAT CREWMEN, who escaped from behind Nasi lines In YUl'oslavla, are shown sensational 32-mlle drive which at At a Glance- been liberated, the Germans' only a they arrived safelY at a United tales airfield In Italy on their way to a replacement center. The men last reports had carried to within With the faU of Sold in, another Allied Bombers Raid !thine railway bridge was ham­ im portant stronghold 57 miles are L1eut. Carl U . Vos of P hiladelphia, Ser,.t Harold Sykes of SteUon , N. J., and Serl1. Fred A. Dod,e or 24 miles of Manila and still WBfI mered by artillery, and troops in West Point, Pa. They are wearing blankets , Iven them by the YUl'ostavs. gOing strong. northeast of Berlin and 15 miles flight were scourged by swarm­ northeast of Kustrin, other Soviet Berlin, Nazis Report ------~------No Interference ing warplanes. ("Strange liS U seems every­ units raced to within 36 miles of To doy's While these drives rolled ahcad, thing points to the fact that we Steilin, Baltic port, in their eilort . Mosquitoes Make General Eisenhower held a confer­ Big Three to Decide On Weltern Front- Limited Service Bill should get to Manila in just the to Seal off all German troops in Largest Attack of War ence at an undisclosed point with space of time it takes us to move Pomerania. Iowan Lieut. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, on Passes Senate Group the men and equipment on the The Russians overran more than On German Capital "current operatlons" possibly pre­ Fate of Germany road," Arthur Feldman, Blue net­ 150 German localities in the bulge ...... saging renewed aUied blows timed ,Making work war correspondent, said in a pointed toward Berlin, despite Two Yanks armies. race down with the great Russian oUensive Byrnes Would Have LONDON (AP)-Air raid sirens Meeting Believed broadcast from Luzon.) thousands of German reinforce­ central plains ot Luzon toward from the cast. Supreme headquar­ Gen. Douglas MacArthur an­ ments hurled into the desperate shrilled through refugee-filled Manila. Complete Control Berlin last night as the German ters declined to amplify a bare Underway 'Somewhere nounced the gathering drive In a battle along the Oder and despite Under New Measure radio l'eported allied bombers ap­ announccment. East of London' Mittens· communique today which aJlIO re­ 8 thaw which hampercd mechan­ Nazis report Soviet forces bat­ proaching the German capital. ported all main roads connectin, ized operations. tling for fortress of Kustrin. (Thus lllr there has been no W ASHlNGTON (AP)-A lIm­ This would make the eighth attack formal announcement of the re­ LONDON, (AP)-There was WITH THE+ U.* S.* SEVENTH ited national service bill materially Japanelles forces on north and The Russians also captured 100 on the metropolis in seven days. Iowa cagers to meet turn ot Bra.dley to command of every indication yesterday th1lt ARMY (AP)-The "45th division different from the one the house south Luzon now are cut and localilies In East Prussia, and Yanks have pushed six miles Thursday night Mosquitoes made in return engagement tonight in the entire Unill.'d Stales First, the Cate oC Germany was being de­ {ront line mitten manufacturing passed was readied yesterday by reached the middle Oder river on across the base of Bataan penin­ their biggest raid of the war on Iowa fieldhouse. Third and Ninth armies, Marshal cided by the big three somewhere company" is a going concern the senate miUtary committee for a new seven-mile front 100 miles Berlin, hitting the city several Montgomery took over the parts ellst ot London at ar hour when a bos cd by a former Brooklyn dress a vote today. sula. southeast of Bel'lin, Moscow said. hours beCore midnight and again of these forces north of the Arden­ British government offici III . aid the company owner who was com­ Glvlng only lukewarm' backing Three Japanese destroyers were B4ckout Around BerJul before day-break. nes during the batlle of the bulge.) enemy's people had "reached the mandeered from the infantry for to any sort of coercive manpower spotted otf the northwest coast of The Nazi high command imposed Other packs of speedy, twin­ The United States Seventh arm), depths of despair" and "anything the purpose. controls, Chairman Thomas (D., Luzon Wednesday-the firs~ ap.­ a security blackout on the critical engined planes roamed within 80 Indian Troops Land with French units along the Rhine might happen." The mitten "rirm" under the di­ Utah) called the measure "a mor­ pearance of enemy warships since sector around Berlin. miles of the capital last night to were shoving the enemy back 15 It was believed ~hat President rection ot Pfc. SIdney Noak, 596 ale builder" rather than a material the Invaslon-and one was sunk Russian troops also penetrated attack troop movements to the miles north Of Strasbourg, and Roosevelt, Prime Minister Chur­ Snedeker avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y., aid to war production. and two severely damaged in a On Sagu Kyun Island two-day running battle with at two points into the encircled east and otherwise participate in American forces had driven back chill and Premier Marshal Stalin is turning out more than 200 pairs In three hours yesterday, and American medium bombers. German for tress town of Schneide­ the massive hammering of Ger­ north across the Moder river both were planning the final blows and of hand warmers dailY for men without pubUc hearings, the com­ muhl, 95 miles northeast of Kust­ many's over-burdened railway Off Burma Coast east and west of Haguenau, allied the means of controlling the dis­ in the snowbound front lines, mittee worked over the May bill Sixth Nears MalolOl rin, the German's said. system. anchor on that front. organized German homeland once A sudden cold wave the di­ passed Thursday by the house. Sixth army troops of the 37th division, covering the last miles Cannon-firing Mosquitoes struck KANDY, Ceylon (AP)-Troops Eight miles to the south, the victory is won. vision area and its men needed Under the major committee The Nazi garrison in encircled of the push they began J an. 9, at Konigsberg, East Prussian capital, at seven freight yards, shot up of the 15th Indian corps made 82nd airborne division struck both The urgency of the fast-changing more gioves in a hurry. Lieut. change JameS F. Byrnes' oUice of and bombed 13 trains, 540 rail­ savage resistance ond artiUery fire Lingayen gulf, neared the key was reported r unning short of new and unopposed landings oU military and political map brought Col. Walter Schlotzhauer of war mobilization and reconversion cars, 65 motor vehicles. as it fought into Udenbreth, a mill' under consideration, it was be­ Douglas, Ariz., supply officer, would be given overall control of road and rail center of Malolos In ammunition. the Burma coast on the small ;Bulacan pr ovince--the closest The RAF also dispatched two and a half inside Germany, where lieved, detailed plans for sup­ noted Noak's civilian background the manpower placement machin­ approach to Manila. forces of Lancasters to the rail island of Sagu Kyun about 110 it seized key heights dominating pressing Germany's aggressive and called him from his infantry ery. The house bill gives local hubs of Ludwigshafen on the miles soutneast of Akyab and all Siegfried positions in that sec­ powers forever. job to supervise the chore of mak­ draft boarsd the say whether a Eighth anny Yanks of the 38th Winter, Traftit -Snarls and 24th divisions who landed Rhine and Siegen, 45 miles east troops of the 14th army have tor. A reliable source said Churchill ing mittens. man stays on his present job or Monday in Zambales province, of Colognc, and a force of Hali­ made more progress in the drive was operating on basis of reports Maj. O. W. Cam pbell of 6257 becomes subject to transfer 0 a northwest Manila, and quickly force Curtailment faJCes to Mainz, another Rhi ne toward Sagaing, just west of Man­ from inside Germany that much Girvin drive, Oakland, Co Itt., the war plant. ot secured Subic bay are nearing a transportation hub-bringing the dalay, the southeast Asia command of the political machinery there division's civil atrairs oUicer, in Under either plan, if a man be­ juncture across the base 01 Ba­ Of total of British bombers against announced yesterday. Iwo Jima Hit already has broken down and the an hour 'Uned up 20 willing Alsa­ tween the ages of 18 and 45 left Use of Coal Germany during the night to taan peninSUla with Sixth artn7 The 11th East African divisIon process of decay had been ac­ lian women as Noa k's helpers. an essential job, or refused essen­ nearly 1,500. celerated further by Russian, Bri­ units forking southwest (rom San WASHlNGTON (AP)- Winter moved forward 1I10ng the Irra­ They cut salvaged blankets into tial employment, he would be sub­ tish and American blows from east Conditions and l'all traffic snarls, waddy river toward Segaing, cap­ elbOW-long mittens, sewing them ject immediate induction into Fernanlto. and west. to already cutting i n t 0 industry Jap Casualties on Leyte luring Le tkapin. YWllthitgy on the By iLiberalors to patterns designed by Noak. the armed forces, or to imprison­ through coa l shortages, combined nolhern bank also was penetJ'ated, He was expected 10 ask immedi.­ G E N E R A L MacARTHUR,S ate big three approval of plans Lot ment up to five years, or to a fine yesterday to cool gas-fired war but the Japanese are resisting HEADUARTERS, Luzon, Sutur­ U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD­ ruling the Reich. not exceeding $5,000. Nip Troops BaHle furnaces and force drastic curtail­ da y, (AP)-J a pa n e s e 'cas­ stubbornly there. QUARTERS, :Forward Area, Sat­ Nazi propagandists rejected in Snow in Style Again The committee adopted a series Inent of the use of that fuel. ualties in the futile fight to hold The Japanese east of the orig­ urday ' (AP)-Army Liberators adva ncp any possible big three of amendments, recommended by Leyte, first major Philippine island inal landings at Akyab still were -Groundhog Retires In Suichwan Suburbs · Tbe war production board an­ bombed Iwo J ima in the Volcano surrender demand. I Byrnes' office and concurred in by to be liberated, no,,", total more attempting to regain control of .- nounced that some 200 vilal war islands 750 miles south of J apan The snows came. .th e war and navy departments than 131 ,000, Gen, Douglas Mac­ their escape road to the south from Wednesday and Thursday, setting CHUNGKING (AP)- Relniorced plants already have suffered cuts A total of 3.4 inches 01 the stuff which would centralize full au­ Arthur announced Yl'sterday. Myohaung and NJ nbya. All the at ­ large fires in aircraft installations, 16 Miners Killed J apanese troops have fought into of 10 tQ 90 percent in gas delivery. covered the tattie-tale gray laod­ thority in the war mobilization of­ Th is figure included 929 ad­ tacks were repulsed, the com­ Admiral Chester W. Nimitz an­ TIMMINS, Ont. (AP)-A steel the suburbs of Suichwan, site of a WPB ordered use of natural and mine-shaft cage became a twisted scape yesterday. For the Iirst lime fice. "mixed" gas cut off completely in ditional Nipponese killed. munique said. nounced today. key United States 14th alrlorce Iwo, from which J apanese ai r­ tomb yesterday for 16 miners at in days one could unbutton the top ______-:, base which American forces had to amusement places in seven states button of his overcoat. The low craft have hit the Tokyo-rai ding the P aymaster gold mln1 near PAPER SALVAGE destroy and abandon. the Chinese and Washington, D. C., at 6 p. m ., IRVING BERLIN ON TOUR OF SWPA here when it plunged 1,500 feet to yesterday was 10 above at 4:30 central war time, last nigh t. It ac· Superiort base at Saip!l n, has been Women oC the physical edu- high command said yesterday. the bottom of the 2,~O O -foot shaf~. a. m. The mercury shot up to 2(1 on an a lmost da ily bombing cation department will collect The Japanese have poured heav1 Companied the order with a pleR A 25-man resC ue crew worked degrees by 4:30 p. m., and it was chedule. waste pa per today. Citizens are r einforcements into their drive to householde rs, schools and insti­ hard to cut their way into the still 20 at 9:30. tutions to conser ve the fuel. Rocket-tiring Mllchell medium urged to have paper bundled against allied airbases east of Ja­ bombers flown by marine pilol3 mass ot twisted steel and bring Today's weather was forecast as The order is elfcti ve until 6 p. cloudy with rising temPeratures and ready for collection by 9 pan' corridor between China and have damaged 12 ships and p rob­ out the 16 victims. All but one Indo China, and the high command m., central war time, Monday or ably destroyed one other in nightly were dead when reached and he and light snow or a freezing a. m. described the battle In Sulchwan "until further natice." ha rassing attacks on Japanese died before reaching a hospital. drizzle. as raging wi th "Incressed ferocity." The order is not of itself a m~ s ­ shipping around the Volcano and Abandonment of the 14th air­ ure to save coal, which a lready is Bonin islands since Dec. 6, Nimitz To Prevent World War 111- force base at Suichwan Jan. 24 under close home delivery control disclosed. was announced by American bead­ in the affected area. Marine lighters bombed harbor quarters yesterday. Affected are New YOl'k, Penn­ installations at Yap in the We3 t­ Japanese troops nor t h war d sylvania, Ohio, West Virgina, Ken­ ern Carolines and targets in the along the Canton-Hankow raU· tucky, parts of Maryland and Vir­ Palau group both Wednesday and Long Occupation of Germany road pressed north past Kukong, Cinia. and the i Dstrict of Colum­ Thursday. ,aUen. provisional capital of bia. By lohn M. W.-htower • Advocates of the latter course the war will end with Europe's Kwangtung 125 miles north of WASHINGTON (AP)-Propos- say that the greatest opposit.!on to most highly industrialized nation Canton. Rifles, Ammunition als for long-term ocupation of Ger- it will come from those who object The Chinese high command in a state of incredible disorgani­ U, S, Army Patrols Dumped by Troops, many by allied armies, including to assigning American troops clai.med to have repelled Japan... Meet Resistance a token force of American troops, abroad. To this they are prepared zation. The best guess is that the driving southward from Chaltng, Canadian Charges are developing considerable sup- to answer that after the m st one German armies will surrender 150 Dilles north of Kukon,. South of Bologna OWEN SOUND, Onto (AP)- port among some officials at the or two years 01 :full-scale military piecemeal as they retreat into the • John Bracken, national leader of war and state departments. control the American forces couid center 01 the country and, 110 far ROME, (AP)- American Filth Segregation of Ames the opposition Progressive con- There are different ideas here be trimmed down to a few thou~ as possible, toward' the southern patrols feeling out German army servative party, declared yester- on how prevent Germaoy from sand and rota ted frequently. mountains, where Hitler and his J!OIltions In the mountains south to Students to End Feb. 8 day night that Canadian troops starting another war. One is to sub- The question of how to control gaIli appear to have planned a of Bologna lire encountering furi­ desperate last stand, like Ameri­ OUs enemy artillery and small arms had dumped rifles lind ammunition stantially wreck German industry Ge rman aggression was touched AMES, (AP)-The Seireptioll overboard trom transports car- during a limited period of occupa- upon yesterday by. Harry L. Hop­ can gangsters shooting it out with of navy V-12 studellts and clvt. fire, while long-range enemy guns the cops. are blasting at the principa I sup­ fying them to Eu rope. tion and then tUrn the country k ins in an article in the American lIan students o~ Iowa state col· pl, blghway between Bologna and Defense Minister Gen. A.GL. over to native leaders who would magazine urging peacetime con­ This means that the allies must lege will end next Tburadl)', It Florence, allied headquarters an­ McNaughton, campaignlng for a be expected to rebUild the nation scription in the United States. He pro v Ide whatever government no new cases appear haviDI nounced yesterday. seat from this district in an elee- for a peaceful role. 'said the oniy way to keep Ger­ German,y Is to have at the outlet mnptoma of poliomyelltla, ~ •. Heavy bombers of the 15th air­ tion in which the government's Another Idea is that the allies many and Japan from rearmine The United States, Britain and le,e and navy authorltiea annou­ force Pounded the Moosblerbaun compromise conscripti on policy has can only make sure of their future is to impose milital1 force on them Rus.ia a,reed months a,o that this need ),Nterda)'. oil refinery 22 miles northwest been made the main issue, declared security by keeping Germany permanently, but he did not say ,overnment would be a mlUtary TIle segreption wu o1'der*l Of Vienna and a ttacked rail yards FAMOUS SONG WRITER OF TWO WARS. Irvinr Berlin pia,. one yesterday the charges were invest- "permanently" occupied - which whether he actually favored IUch commlsaion established in' Berlin, Wednelda, after one V-il atu­ It Gru and Klageniurt. Some 50 or his tunes a& the WAC mell hall In Bonandl&. Dn&e~ New Gulne •• ligated and there was not confir- actually means indefinite occupa- permanent occupation. that the country would' be 'Pllt dent', iJIrIaI wu diapoled U • . Otnnan fighters were seen, but The popular melod)' mao Ia on ieIII' 01 &be Soa&bwea& Paelllc area. mation that such an incident had Uon that might lallt 20 or 50 years, Many officials familiar with lor occupation pUCJ1C111e8 prto Ulree lllh\ form of polio (fbfantUe 'JIq did not attack. ThD Is • UnUed SIa&ell • ....., llpal COI'PI pbo'-. occurred. or .. lona as deemed neces&Bl'Y. Germany now confidentl)' beUeve area~ dlv1a1ona. paral1lil) , SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1945 I -======r======PAGE TWO THE D AIL Y lOW A N. lOW A CIT Y, lOW A == THE DAII;Y IOWAN Opinion on and oH the Campus- EDITION NOW GOING TO PRESS'"' OFF1CIAL DAllY BOLLfTIN .. Publlahed evert momtq ucept Mondat b, Student PubUeatlaal Would Reduction of Tariffs IDcorporated at 124-13v Iowl IVllloe, Iowa ctt7. Iowa. U. S. Aid Peacet Board ot Trustees: Wilbur Schramm, Kirk H. Porter, A. Crai, Lyle Gibson, ,eomphy Instrtae-fbe abolished. Since Otis Is hard­ 8atrd. Paul R. Olson, Donald Ottilie, Mar1 Jane Nevllle. Mar1 Beth tor In the college 01 commerce: Iy probable, however, the next '~ PIlmer. Karalyn Keller. Jack M01en. "Modified reductlon on certaIn best thing would be [ow tarIffs .. products might ease ecOnomic with a working reciprocal trade Saturday, February 1,1145 Fred M. Pownall. PubUaher strain on some other countrIes agreement. This would help eUm­ n l)orothJ Klein, Editor Dick Baxter, Adv. Mar. ------such as England and other Europ- inate economic competition and ·.UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Entered u second clan mall Subacription ntH-B, mall is ean cour! ies." get rid ot one of the biggest causes of war." Pc ..tW" at the postoftlce at Iowa per ,.ear; b7 c~. 111 cent.t Saturda" Feb. 3 .1s LabOr?" by Arthur Poe. CJItT, low., under the act of COD- weel:b', ,II per ,.Hr. Paul l. Olsdd. economics In­ 8 p . m. Basketball: Mlclllran vs. 8:30 p. m. DInner, Unlverslir ~ at Ma.rcb J, 187.. Tbe Assoc1ated Prest II uclu- structor In the college 01 com­ EunIce McLauchlin. At of low~ Iowa, fieldhouse. club. Jllerce: "Yes. You won't achieve City: "It definitely would. If tar­ Tuesday. Feb. 6 Monday, Feb. J! TELEPHONES .tveJy entltled to WI8 tor republl- world peace simply by tarill re­ iUs were reduced. other countries cation at all new. dJspatche. 12 m. Professional Women's 4 p. m. Lecture by Prof.r duction. but such a reduction would be able to trade with us. luncheon. Urliversity Club. J ohrl T. Frederick. serla te chim­ J:dltorlal OIJ1ce 4192 credJted to it or not otherwise would be an aid. A tariff is a lJodety Otlfce 41.3 credJteark. III.: "I think tariffs should people of the world over." tone stands over Clinton. who ap- she once shot a finger off the ber-soled J&m shoes. Or stol have rpore information. I will t; now in progress and tbe fate 01 supply depots in Pomerania that pat'eoLly was Emma's favorite. Hi s hand 01 a contestant in a property E. G. SCHROEDER he in t ,lad to hltve yoll come to my df· Berlin is hanging in the balance. there is any rea I threa t to ' epitaph reads: suit). Mrs. Van Sickle is said to and It means also that the Russian Zhukov's communications from "Clinty. my heo rt clings to lhee, have declared. "I hope I live long fice In the Y.M.C.A. of IowQ Union sity s~ BADMINTON from 4 .to 5:30 p. m. or call exten· commander of the main cutting that direction. ~ Love enough to make it an even dozen filll wedge ot the forward sweep from Liquor Sales Gain for Third Month J The Badminton clilb will \neet sion 551. nit) South of the Warthe, Russian' In Heaven I hope to meet above in my cemetery." Tuesday and Friday from" to 5:30 MARGARET EMS the Vistual. Marshal Zhukov, has lines run along or at points be­ You who was ever kind and The recent reports of the elderly whi saUsHed himselt that his northern Liquor stores• •for the• third con- were 35 % in sales over the m3rlt p. m. and Saturd!ly hom 1 to 3 boo yond the Oder all the way to its * * * true to me west coast Romeo caused long­ p.m. Ilnnk stands In no grave danger rl e in the Moravi an gap sector. secutive l'IIonth and for the ifth of December. 1943. So was I to you, Emma G. V." time residents here to recall the Pre time in 1944 topped all other Iowa GaIns in December over Novem­ MARILYN MILLER MUSEUM OF .NATURAL of a NaZi counter thrust irt force There is no danger point there to Mrs. Von Sickle, believed to story of Emma Van Si ckle, who mSTORY trom Pomerania which could pen­ invite a German coUnterattack un­ business lines In p erc~ ntage or ber included men's clothing nnd have come from a family of Penn- herself has been dead 40 years. Cha.irman gain in December. 1944. as com­ furnishings. fi(th to thIrd; general In order to save coal and c;p­ etrate the Wa rthe (Warta) cor­ less It could be mounted in Iar operate in the "browl1out" the eve ridor deeply enough to cut or greater force than the Nazi com­ pared with December. 1943. stores. tenth to sixth; jeWelry iliE This was reported Friday by the stores. 16th to lOth ; and family OUTING CLUB museUm will be closed SUlJday jeopardize his main communica­ mand has available for offensive untH 1 o'clock until further notice. can UniversitY of Iowa bureau of bual­ cloth ing stores. 17th {o 1 lih. Any serviceman, student or fac­ tion lines. purposes. ulty membm4rr may call tor and H will be open from 1 o'clock until whE So far as It can be traced, the Thus there is a conVIction that ness research. Liquor stores gained This is the tabulation: liquor The States Plan for Peac~Billion favi 39% in sales over those of the stores. 29 ; shoe stores. 35 ; men's obtain sklls at the ... 'omen·s gym. 5 o'clock and the custodIan wilt right flank of the Flrst White Rus­ if there hos been a slowing ot the Twelve pllir of harnessed ski is and be there to show Visitors the ex­ is c sian army penetration wedge to Russian pace, it is due more to ef­ previous December. clothing and furnishings. 21 1 fur­ Mill It is unusual for one line to niture, 20 ; women's ready-ta-wear; Plus Earmarked for Pbst .. War Building poles are available and a few pllir htlJ its. the vicinity 01 the Oder Is the forts to bring up the forces neces­ of ski boots also may be had. They H. ft. Dt\oL R only real danger point. The indi­ sary lor the final thrust than to lead for three successive months. J9 : general stores (with foods), !.--,.;....------. weI Novembel' !lgures were 32% above 13 ; ,roceries (without fresh CHICAGO-The slQte gov!!rN-.hospitals. airports, irrigation and will be available between 4 an<1 blreetbi cated line lies for miles from the intensified and heavily reinforced 4:30 p. m. on week days and be­ alw those of November, 1943, and Oc­ meats). 13; combination stores rnents have earmarit('d $1025758 _ parks. But the prime favorite is of t western side 01 the Danzig corri­ German I'esistance east or the tw~en 1 and 2 p. m I)n Saturtlay tober marks was 22% over on the (grdcerles and meats), 11; dty . • • • highway construction- in which ROLLER SKATING hlgl dor along the Vistual at no great t·iv.er. The Nazis hold too narrow 000 for post-war proJects. and have states will match federal funds. and Sunday. All skils must be re­ month-to-month com P II I' I s on. goods arid gerleral merchandise. There will be roHer skaVl'Ig . at lain • t distance not th at the Warthe river and restricted a. bridgehead east odditional plans under considero- Some states will draw on savings turned by 6 p. m. Liquor stores also were No. 1 in 1I; jewerly. 11; family clothing. the Women's ~.Ythnas1um after the T • valley through which run matn of the river in the Frankrurt­ tion to increase the tola] outlay to to}',lay ott bonded debts or to cush­ BETTIE LEW SCHMIDT Kustrin sector tor more thon de­ the stale in January and Au­ 5; filling stations, 5: drugs, 3; basketball game Saturday, Feb. !. ope Russian communications. Assum­ gust, 194t $2,000.000.000 Ilr more. ion the fiscal letdown when th e President ing that the Germans had concen- laying action. motor vehicle dealers. 3; hardware, froni 9:15 till 11:15 tJ. m. dan December's second-place line 2; lumber-building mat e ria I s A survey by The Associated fignting ceases. ,--- DOTTD! BOJ'IIN son. was shoe stores. the same position dealers, -1; and eating and drink­ P ress. Gonducted with 42 legisla- New York has $163,000 .000 salted WOMEN;S RECREATIONAL Cha held in November. Shoe stares ing places. -2. (Ures ill session. showed that the away. and aims to put an expected ~WIM:M"ING STUDENT. OWt)S'l'IAN Mar Saying Goodbye Isn't Simple- lawmakers are devoting cons!del'- $150,000.000 treasury surplus in 4-5:30 p. m. Monday. Tuesday, and mother of marine Sergt. Milton A. ab1e thought 10 proposals to con- the same reconstruction kitty. COtJNCIL Thursday and Friday. The Student Christian council dorl Nation Cheers Englin, when she was revived after strlict bUildings, roads and airports. J?ennsylvania has a surplus of 10 If. m.-12 M. Saturday By KENNETH L. nIXON will meet Sunday, Feb. 4, ~ 3 Rescue of ~riloners she collapsed. She never laId her to aid war veterans, and to help $170. 958.000- of which $48.870.0ao Recrelitional swimming periods IN FRANCE. Jan. 28 (Delayed) And It was impossible not to won­ the jobles! during the post-war re- is tagged lor the liqUidation of p. m. In the Y. W. C. A. rooms. (AP)-For three days he tried to der as he shook hands with each son his father had died. are open to all women stUdents. HELEN fiT! A TIlE 'SSOCIATED PRESS rT-- h til "So it d conversion period. J)onded debt and th e balance for faculty, faculty Wives, wives of write what it felt like to be going one and said "keep your head Br ~ Villa a, .- exc e we Secrew, thel graduate s tuden~.s and administra­ home. He had always figured it down" If maybe this would be one NEW YORK-Joy and exclle- couldn.t eat breakfast... Mr. and Most of the states are in good 'Post-war work. California figures • wiU of those who would not be around th h h Mrs. John Glow. parenti of Fi'"st financial shape. Revenue is now- on a peace construction fund at tive staff members. Students ther would be simple-just one big out­ ment swep t roug omes across , 1 $ 39 73 00 b 0 h Should present their identification pouring 01 delight. much longer. h . Th d h ,"' Sergt. George Glow. The sergeant's ing in, and tbe big normal outlefr- I • 5. 0 Y June 3 • and as IOWA MOUNTAINEERS tlon t e natIon urs ay on t e ro:celpt new pubUc structures and high- an untouched $25.000,000 "war cards to the matron for admittance. The hike scheduled for Sunday sen But it was more than that. An those days he remained su­ of names of men reScued fTOm a ~ather is blind. "We're going to ways-is constricted by labor and catas"... op he'' cache. lllinOIS' h as a M. GLADYS SCOTT He got the neWs while working perstitious about Writing home Japanese prison camp in the Phil- have everybody in the county in material shortages. $116.000.000 melon, and it's grow- afternoon. Feb. 4, has been lIos1· can and saying he was coming. And ippines for a celebration," added Mrs. . 2 0 0 paned. Announ~ent will ,be the along the front. One thing that . Glow. State sur})luses and reServe I~g $ .00 .00 a month. mGHLANDERS PRACTICE dulled its edge was the realization so he became tongae-tied and did made for a Jater date. probably phs "My prayers have been an- funds now aggregate $1.134.023.- But state budgets in the main SCHEDULE February 18. cbal he would have to gd 'back there a not write at all. swered." "Ml'ghty .. a".... y ... "'l'''.ank Thayer Neb "Oh I've prayed h t d d f JI .... JI ,.- , 000, and further accumulations are on t e upward ten • an a ew Tuesday -1-5:30 p. m. Pipers --. , NORMAN tJ. MtIll few times more. Suddenly now. he Happiness stayed a slrong emo­ Gdd" were expressions of home- daily. my biggest hope is Just to of $331.000.000, will pile up in the are at record high leyels. reflecting Wednesday 4-5:30 p. m. Drummers "J.1 found himsel f flinching :from or­ tion. but it wasn't pure any more. follt when advised relntiv s were have him home." Mrs. MaTtin neal' future. With $1.025.758.000 higher costs. wage hikes and. in Thursday 4-5 :30 p. m . Everyone are dinary sounds-triendly artillery. A lot of it had been swapped lor among the rescued. Ahlschwede, mother of Pfc. Wil- already set aside for post-war some instances, larger social secur- PI~ ¥aJor COSMOPOLItAN CLUB tor instance. sadness from Tunisia to Ardennes. Pensacola. Fla.-"I'm not going ~am C. Ahlschwede. spending, governors and planning ityobligations. WILLIAM ~DAMSbN Jll'he meeti'ng of the C'ostnoi>Ol1- ( He kept goIng until the job was A lot more had been swapped for to cry. I'm not going to cry/' re- Mineral Point. Wis.-'I'It·s tile ..roups have recommended J;lro- Many legislators are pondering ~ fan club for Sunday Feb. 4. ha's done but he had to drive himself. humility at San Pietro, tor hope­ peated Mrs. Etta Alford, mother of best news we've had In years," .grams involving $7118,200.000 more, plans to assist the men who are GRADUAtE FELLOWSHIPS been cancelled. - Heini alive was much more 1m­ lessness at Anzio, for a terrible, Pvt. John S. Allard. Then she Troy Lawton, father of Sergt. Dale and non-blueprinted ideas for baUling for victory. There probably will be 12 LydIa MAltGAltI:T EMs portant than dotng hls work. Being 1m channeled. helpless wrath at wept with jOy. E. Lawton. ~/lrious undertakings approximate There is talk of sbldier bonuses C. 1to~erts graduate fel~owshlps Aft.,. = every cemetery all along the way. IlVatlable tor the year 1945-46 to - allve was everything now. Seattle. Wash.-"It's been three Onawa-"So excited we can ;J4,OOO,000.000. in several states. A bill pending 1n graduates of an Iowa col1ege or :.:...- ae telt tl1e expected surge of And always this mixed emotion long years 01 waiting and twb ot hardly talk." Mr. and Mrs. George PlItl)bses for which the definitely Mas:sachusetts would grant $300 LEc:rbltE wa's shot through with that crazy, univerSity [(II' study At Colull1bia Gapt, Harold Cooper Wl1 ~~ik ~ delight all right but once back up them have been without bIs H. Blair. parents o'f Mason 818it. COmmitted capital Will be used in- to veterans with overseas service university. Applicattons shoUld be inexplicable wonder as to why he EnllitJ. tb'e hlluse cbam~er, Otd Ca"it~l , aloog the line he was ashamed. fat1ler," said Mrs; MatlJda 33. clude office and SChool buildings, and lesser sums to others. made before Feb. 15 at the otfice iii -Mr. Anybody-had any better Wedtles~ay . afterr'!oQn, Feb. J at - Thete was bitter flgbting in the ------~--~------~--~------~~~_r of tbe qean of the c'oUege ot lib­ 7,. right to be alive tban all those 3 o'clock. His subjec~ will be "Et­ •Ardennes forest then wIth snoW ERNIE PyLE AND WAR. TER eral arts, or direct to Philip M. several feet deep and zeto Winds who were dead. He wondered it perlences ot a ~rltlSh Colonl91 these things would straighten out, Hayden. secretary, ColumbIa uni­ 9fflt!er In Ja'p Occ\lpl-ed Terri­ stabbIng like icy bayonets tllrough versity. New York City. th'e heaViest clothes. become more simple. when he got tory." home or If it would get more com­ These fellowships are awarded _ Belore gOing back up there he plicated. Faintly he feared what annually to persons of the Cau­ . _had been chattering. wildly happy, he millht find there-if people casian race. of either sex, borb U.S. ~ND YOU . "", .. but now he was silent. You can't there would be able to understand, in the state of Iowa. who have Prof. H. W. Saunders will sptaJe _ . remind men in hell there still is a or if they lived in a different been IJraduated frotn Ii college or at the U. S. and You meeting:l'~­ heaven somewhere. world altogether-if he would feel . university located II) Iowa. pnil day, Feb. 6. at 4 p. m. In tli'e Y. =. He told a few of his old friends out of place. or if it would really selected because of their scholar­ W. · t:. A. conference room. His _ ·and took their wives' and mothers' seem like home again. ship. serioushess of purpose. moral subject will be "Why Does \be - .and sweethearts' phone numbers. Then suddenly he thought that character aftd need ot financial Nearo Constitute a Problem In t~ 0'1. • They didn't resent his going, al­ probably the average soldier coing assistance. Incumbents are eli.- U. S.?" -·though they knew their right and home lelt much the same mixed 1I)le tor reapPOintment. No RQb­ JIAN COLLUi : .need was much greater than his. up way. with happiness and hu­ erts fellows may pursue, as ma­ chat J'IIIflIl But they couldn't g~yet at mility, pride and fear and futility jors, t~e studies of law, l!Iedfcll1e, 'lj!ast-and he could. and that was all stirred up to,ether. dentistry. vete"("inilr), medlcll'le or HiLtBL FommAtit)1'f • tbat. But still he fell silent. And so even if ii still dId fIOt fheology. Each fellowship pro­ The Hillel foundation will !'told • ' . He tried reminding himself he vides an annUal stipend cit $1,100 . Bftm to make s~nSe, he fholI~t its weekly Drts and crafts meetin' .. had been over much Ionier than he miaht as well write it that way. In acceptlnlJ the ward. the hOlder at 7;45 Monday evenlbll. .., most of them but then he passed (Editor's note-Dixon is coming must state his pu~pose to return to the state of Iowa fQr a period LOUISE ZL.()n1KT the bodies of a few who would stay 110m! on leave.) C~1hDaa • • 'forever and that didn't help either. of at least two years 101l0wln, the Sometimes he would just let c'ompletion of hls studIes at Co. himsell think a little about knock­ Coal Diverted lumbia unlv'ers'itY. . TAU GA~A ing on the front door at hotn4! and WASHINGtoN (AP) - Quan­ HARty It. NshtJaN, De •• Tau Gamma members "and then happiness would well tip so ti tieR of «>al orlliilally cOnJill'lett Oollett 01 Liberal )i~ pledges meet at· the Mad Jlatters strong and thick he could scarcely to Canadian railroads and indus­ Tea room at '1 o'clock Morida' contain it. trial plants are beinl diverted to nallT SnE8T~a baArll8 evening. This is the formal dlMer _ But then the terrific, murderous IcebouNi northern an'd northea!lt­ Grlides tal" the first s~rtJeBter initiation. - biunder at the whole Belgian em United States areas. the solid 11144-411. jar students In th'e col'­ MJ:BLil'L~ break.throulh would reassert itsell fuels administration said yester­ lege of Liberal Arts and Commerce Pub\klll, Chan-.i

and the old bitterness would ~~­ day. a'nd the Graduate college are now oj .,. tum. It seemed wrong and actually The flow of coBl. to Canade for available at the office 6f the ft~,­ CANTERBURY CLUB unholy to be happy in the midst railroad purpoees hAs beeh stopped , istrar upon p'resentatfoD . at the Canterbury club will meet SIm· '\. of it. and shipments for industrial pur­ . . '. stUdent identification card. day at 4 o'clock at the parish hOlllt n ~ . Just saying gOQdby wasn't sim­ po!Ift hive been "practically" FAMED FOR HIS ~d.nm -Io-earUl" rtlJlOrUIlr .f. lI'Jb1. aeU.vUiea near la lrom Clevelin~, Ohio. Ai rl.. lat, Wal&er LIPpmann' (Ill Ucht laekel), Proleuional college ara'del will to s~ movies. Supper . will be -, ::.ple. It went wi thout saying that hllted as Plrt of the etnerlency tile Iront in Africa ulli Ea..-,e. Bnd~ r,le. *be .GI'. f.V"&e . coIo,aan~ ano&her wcU.k·nown Anierleair Il&waPalNlr col1lllmtat, cUlelllllel GilJera­ be distrJbutl!d as Iinn6\1nced by the served at 5 p. tn. for 25 cefItB • many of the men he w'ould never program during the weather-in­ Is&. embarks 011 a _11-: 01 Uae PBtClflcp'e.&er or war., witll ....e nat)- Ifv­ UOns 'on Uae weate""· rl'Gll\ . ~ B.uro"., wfth Lieu&. Gen. OlDJar N. -.a­ dean 01 the 'collele. plate'. see aldln even it he returned to duced coal Ihortale in this coun­ .... hla • b" send-Off. .,He II ..d ..... at teI~ at a na~.1 IIr .tAon In Ie),. These are official Unl&etl 8&a1ea n&1()' afnl sianal ero... P.... - IIAIl&Y G, BUNIS ~ this outfit after his home ·leave. try. Ronol." with Capt. David 8: ....n., USNB, eOlllllllJndiDl"orrteer. 'w1!o· .....ph .. '·· Berlltnlt SATURPAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1945 THE D A It Y lOW A N. lOW A CITY, lOW A PAGE THREE University Grants Women 1:30 Privileges for Party Feb. 16 ~------~------~~------,~------~----~~~----~----~------'Masters' Magic' U. S. DIPLOMATS SHAPING WAR, PEACE STAND 1115 Theme of University SS7i;nd FeaNturee W ' Ame r,e can L k' Student Senale Party in Iowa Union' • e-r-y- a-re-t-w-.,-d-i-st-l-n-ct-ty-pe-S-.-T-h-e-U-s-e-i-t,- loo-,-as- a-n- o-u-n-u-.o-u-a-I -a-c-ce- n- t (om milIee By BOBBIE SHIELDS Coeds find themselves fortunate first is a simple, smooth hat to for a plain fabric handbag. H d N d Frankie Masters' this coming season, for spring carry out the simplicity of tail- Purse Preview ea same Entertaining Troupe trends are the answer to a prayer ored worsted and flannel suits. And speaking of handbags. this iSOr for youthful, flattering styles. Important among these is the season's models will not be merely 1m. To Play at 8 P. M. Leading clothiers are forecasting ~ ' sissy sailor," a tiny-brimmed, a receptacle for compact and lip­ "The American Look," tea turing high crowned sailor to be worn stick, but an integral part of your Chairmen have been appointed "Master's Magic" has been cho· softened sophistication, gay sim­ either at the eye-line or on the appearance! Patent and smooth to head the foreign policy commit­ rri· sen at the Iheme for the all-uni­ plicity, and freedom of design. No back of the head. The cloche has leathers will be used, but many tees of the student senate on for­ versity informal party featuring longer will collegians be dupli­ added .a higher crown {or its fabric and soft-skin bailS will fea­ eign policy, modeled on the Iity rrankie Masters and his orchestra, cates of ultra-sophisticated modeis spring appearance, and little-girl ture lucite and plastic trimming to United States senate, which will who will play from 8:30 p. m. to sailors with streamers wlU be put them definitely in the decora­ meet March 16-17 on the Univer­ -their clothes will be for tbe sity of Iowa campus. Chairmen 12:30 8. m. Feb. 16 in the main young modern. among the season's favorites. tive class. Choose your purse as Iter loUnge of Iowa Union. It will be a For less tailored outfits, how- carefully as a~y part of your cos­ are already planning a series of "1:30 night" for all university The "American Look" ever, hats are real hatsl Designed tume, for it cao easily prove too meetings of thir committees to pre­ women students. Suits are always high-score for to give the costume touch to your much for the unclultered look so pare the main issues and gather lon, The 500 tickets available to uni­ spring, and they will represent suit, they feature flowers, feathers, important for ·spring. material on the subject. versity students will go on sale the slim new "American Look" at bows, or veiling in quantity. Many Here, then Iowa coeds, are the Pro!. A. Craig Baird of the late Wednesday, Feb. 7, at the Union. its best. The basic silhouette is are of the quaint type-to add to trends for spring. Try to follow speech department announces the following chairmen of committees: desk. T-shaped-broad shoulders. nip­ your more feminine appearance. them all and you'll look like a cir­ ped-in waistline, tight hipline Group I, "What should be the Magician Tbeme Early in the season, models of cus pony, but choose wisely and ~on· and narrow skirt. With streamline more-hatless-brim will predomin- you'll achieve the "American oollcy o[ the United States con· lIoJ. A sUver top hat wilh various design, tall girls will achieve a ate, but larger brimmed models of Look" - softened sophistication, cerning the post· war control of b. magician's tricks tumbling out will casual, graceful look, and tinies straw and summer felt will be youngness, and a charm and flair Germany?" Velma Martin, A4 of be on a backdrop of black vel vet. will gain bandbox smartness. popular as summer draws near. that comes from neatness and Laurens. and the programs will be similar Cardigan necklines will empha­ careful discrimination. Group 2, "What should be the to the backdrop in a silver and Heirloom Jewelry policy of the United States con­ black color scheme. size the broad shoulderJine and skirts will continue their pencil Jewelry for your wardrobe this cerning the post-war control of Fran~ie Masters, who, it has slim lines by the use of kick. spring would hardly be called J apan?" Horace Hedges. A3 ot been estimated, helped sell nearly Harry Hoplcln., top, • '" lrelldenl laaHvelt Edward I . Stettlnlu., tep, "costume" for leading designers Sorority to Climax Cedar Rapids. three millio/.1 dollars worth of war pleats close to the hemline, per­ and Judge ROHnman I .IId JalMl F. Iyme. haps at either side seam. Peplums are advocating one good piece to Group 3, "What should be the bonds during his recent army '" ../ be worn with everything and as­ policy of the United States to­ camp tour of the nlllion, vocalizes HELPING SHAPE AMEllCAN FOIEIGN POLICY eolne1dent With the aeheduled meeting of President ROOM- will still be good, centering their Initiation With Annual rses fullness in froni and back to main­ sociated with you. If you have an ward the liberated countries?" l in 16 do his fea tured vcralists Phyllis velt with Prime Mlruster Winston Churchlll and Marshal Joliet Stalin, the diplomats pictured with Mr. heirloom piece, rate yourself Mary Kirby, A3 of Sioux Falls, Myles and Eddie Williams. Roosevelt are now revealed to be abroad although their movement. are cloaked In secrecy. Harry Ho~ tain a smooth hipline. I, ~, among the very luck few; if not, Winter Formal Tonight S. D. ,uld AU· Around Outfit kina, the presldent'a personal and confldenUaI asalatant, baa been reported In London, Pari. and Rome. That recurring fa vorite, the choose a piece that will reflect The Masters band is one of lhe Judge Samuel I. Rosenman, Mr. Rooaevelt'a legal advllor, has been &aIIIgned to a tour of the low coun· cape, wlll be big news. Square­ Group 4, "What should be the your personality and suit your An initia tion ot pledges will be poUcy of the United States toward few organizations in the business tries. Secretary of State Edward R. StettinlUi I. expected to take part In the parley and War Moblliza· shouldered, waist-length, and wardrobe. Then. make the most held this morning by Tau chapter today which is equaily at home on tIon Director James F. Byrnes alBo Is reported abroad. (lntllrn.tion.l) flared in back, the la test model China and the Open Door?" Edna. of it! A large pin will emphasize ot Delta Gamma sorority and the Herbst, A3 ot Newton. the bandstand of a ballroom, be­ w!1l be worn with suits of school· a distinctive shoulder line or add days' activities wlll be climaxed hind the footlights on the stage, ot' girl simplicity . Group 5. "What should be the flair as a fob at your waistline. Ii by the annual winter formal to~ policy of the United States con­ playing on an improvised band­ Color are "Lush" you prefer a small, quaint-looking •oup stand in army outposts. Masters' night in the River room of Iowa cerning the good neighbor pro­ ,is WSUI to Air Iowa-Michigan Game Tonight- Colors for spring are in the pin of colored slones, try wearing Union. gram?" Ma rilyn Nesper, A4 of own personality and showmanship English Named, it over a small string of pearls to ne· Is in a large part responsible for WSUI (9 rO ) CB8-WBBM (1MI 1 :00 Musical Chats "lush" class. Shades are definitely To be initiated are Virginia Toledo, Ohio. JUS, NBC-WHO ( 111401 IIID8-WON (12.) muted, coming as a relief from play up a simple round neckline. Gray, A3 of Des Moines; Sally Group 6. " Wh at should be the this phase Of te b.lnds' success. C&8-WMT «(J4lt1 Broe-XXIL ( 1040) 2:00 Behind the War News ex· Both swing and sweet music have ---- 2:15 Drum Parade the hard cerises, deep purples, Zuercher, AI of Cedar Rapids; policy of th United States con­ 1 of equal fooling in Masters' presenta­ A play-by-play d scription of 2:30 Science News On,Journalism and bright lines ot the winter sea­ Lois Fahrner, A2 of Davenport; cerning international trade and all tion. the basketball game between the 2:45 Light Opera Airs son. Scoring high on the spring Reba Crowder, AS of Grinnell; finance?" Peggy Banks, A4 of New are The Ma:;lers musical success University of Iowa and the Uni­ 3:00 Iowa City Teachers' Club color card are Ilmelight, a more Club Studies- Ann Shaw, A3 of Des Moines; Su­ York, N. Y. i to story goes bacle to his early days versity of Michigan will be broad­ 3:15 The Bookman subtle shade of lime; victorian =anne Witt, Al of New Canaan, Group 7, "What should be the be in his home town of Robinson, Ill., cast over WSUI tonight beginning 3:30 News, The Dally Iowan Nati~nal Group whites, mellow in-betweens of Conn.; Lois Billings, A2 of Red pOlicy of the United States toward d/. and hi!, college days at the Univer­ at 7:55. The broadcast will come 3:35 Afternoon Melodies wbite and ivory, and a host of new Oak; Barbara Manbeck, A2 of Des international governments?" Dor­ 16n sily of lneiana, whcre he was af- dircet from the fieldhouse in Iowa 4:00 Voice of the Army • pinks. The pinks are definitely World Moines; Janice Larson, Al of Dav­ olhy Kottemann, A2 of BlIrlin&~on. elt· 1\\\lIted witt; DeUa Upsilon frater­ City and Dick Yoakam, wsut 4:15 Women Today Prof. Earl F. English of the Uni- in the shocking pink range, but enport, and Margaret Leopold, A3 Group 8, "What should be the policy of the United States towal'd nlty. He organlzed a college band sports editor will do the announc­ -1.:30 Tea Time Melodies versity of Iowa school of journal~ softened to carry out the COming of Burll ngton. Russia in the war and post-war 'IIhkh did so well that it was ing. 5:00 Children'S Hour ism has been appointed to memo season's more feminine look. The dance this evening will fea­ booked through the Orient on the Army Nurse Drama Ar; . periods?" Comad Posz, G of Plain­ 5:30 Forward March bership on the National Council Fabrics will combine durability ture the music of Bob Horne and view, Minn. President Madison. The War department's urgent 5:45 News, The Dally Iowan in Journalism for a four-year and distinction. Because of its his AvaJon orchestra. The commit­ TItle Jugglers 6:00 Dinner Hour Music term. Group 9, "What should be the need for 10,000 more Army nurses year-round practibility, gabardine The art of* foreign * 11countries and tee is headed by Virginia Gray, policy of the United States to­ "There are title-i ugglers on is dramatically depicted in the 6:55 The will be present In quantity and ~o· News, Dally Iowan The council is an eight-member the United Stales has been studied assisted by Sally Zuercher and in­ ward England in the wat' and post­ every dance floor and sometimes "Voice of the Army" presentation quality. Newcomers among fab­ the 7:00 Iowa Ed.itors body affiliated with the American by the Art circle since its fj~t cludes Connie Greeer, A1 of Sioux war period?" Sally Birdsall, A3 of lay it is all the boys in the band and t of "Between Trains," which will 7:15 Reminiscing TIme Association of Schools and Depart- rics will be honest-to-goodness City; LOis Fahrner; Reba Crowder can do to keep our faces straigh\ meeting in 1901, and this year the Waterloo. ice. be heard over WSUI this afternoon 7:30 Treasury ~alute ments of Journalism. One new men's materials, flannels and group has Investigated and dis­ and Barbara LiVingston, Al of Ft. Group 10, "What should be the It It when 'they make a request. Our at 4 o'clock. "Between Trains" tellS 7:45 College Airs . , member is selected each year tor worsteds predominating. You'll cussed Oriental art, particularly Dodge. favorite indoor sport these days policy of the United States con­ ~i11 the immeasurable payment an 7:55 BasketbaLl, Iowa-MIchIgan. a .four-year term and Professor find them in neat checks, pencil­ emphnshizing thnt of China. is collecling mispronounced titles," army nurse receives for her tough, cerning international communica­ ~x- English is the 1945-1949 choice. stripes, or soft shadow-plaids, and Eigbt women met in the home tions including radio and air trans­ Masters declares. exacting assignment. The Voice of NETWO.RK lllGHLlGHTi Prof. Ra ph Nafziger of Minnesota used for tailored suits to be worn Requests for sambas, rhumbas, of Mrs. Ellen Rich, March 6, 1901, portallon?" Ca rol Raymond, AS of the Army is a regular weekly War 6:00 is chairman. under the new cape. Smooth fab­ Cleveland Heights, Ohio. waltzes and swing numbers can department feature produced by and organized the Art circle. None YMCA Elects Mayor of the Town (WMT) Chief 1945 project of the coun­ rics will also be used extensively, of these charter members are still always be fulfilled and this is one the recruiting publicity bureau. Cliff Carl and Co. (WHO) relying for their chic on the addi· of the main reasons for the band's cil is the publication of a book on in the group, but Mrs. Homer Methodists to Have Christian Science Church research methods in journalism. tion of shi~ silk braid reminis· Johnson and Mrs. Gilbert Hauser high rating as an all-around enter­ TODAY'S PROGRAMS (KXEL) cent of grandmother's day. ai tainment group. to which contributions are being have belonged to the club longer New Officers Open House Tonight 8:00 Morning Chapel 6:15 Ille The Union cafeteria will be 8:15 Musical Miniatures made by members as well as jour­ Despite the extreme simplicity than any other of the 24 member3. 3, open for the affair. Included on the 8:30 News, The Dally Iowan Mayor of the Town (WMT) nalism educators outside the coun~ of design, clothes this spring will Mrs. Johnson bas been a member An alter-game open house will Music of Romanr.e (WHO) cil. SpeCialty of Professor Eng­ be far from nondescript. Rather, for 31 years. Y. M. C. A. officers who will be held at the Mcthodist Student dance commitlee are Lenke Isac­ 8:45 Program Calendar serve for the remainder of this son, A2 !of Omaha, Neb., chairman; 8:55 Service Reports H. R. Gross and the News lish is experimental methods of a smooth, uncluttered-costume Each woman in the society is re­ center, 120 N. Dubuque street im­ (KXEL) research. The council also pub. look will be achieved with import­ semester and for next year were mediately tollowing the l owa­ Charlotte Fuerst, A3 of Clarinda; 9:00 Iowa Oouncil for Beitel' sponsible fOr preparing the pro­ selected Thursday evening at a Martha Burney. A2 of Iowa City, Education 6:30 lishes monographs on journalism ant accessory notes. No longer gram for one meeting a year. As Michigan game tonight. America in the Air (WMT) research. will lhe good lines of a costume be meeting of the cabinet. All students and their friends and John Syverud, A3 of Betten­ 9:30 America Sings leader of the discussion, she usu­ Jack Fickel. MI of Henderson, dorf. 9:45 Keep 'Em Eating News, Olay Rusk (WHO) Otber univel'sities represented hidden by an overdose of decora­ ally presents a paper on one phase may attend. New students and Leland Stowe (KXEL) tion, but rather spot-lighted by will replace Richard Wooters, M1 cadets of battalion 1A will be the 9:50 Musical Interlude on the group include Minnesota of art of the country being stUdied. of Des MOines, as president. Dave 9:55 NewlI, The Daily Iowan 6:45 at Minneapolis, Missouri at Co­ just the right accent in hat, jew­ Mrs. Johnson stated that since its special guests of honor. s. Lutherans to Meet America in the Air (WMT) Widder, A3 of Kansas City, Kan., After the game tonight all Lu­ 10:00 What's Happening in lumbia, Stanford at Palo Alto, elry, or perhaps a clever purse. organization, the circle has studied Refreshments will be followed Barn Dance Carnival (WHO) Headline Hats will take over the vice-president by mixers, bridge, pinoch le, crib­ theran students and their guests Hollywood Calit., Northwestern at Evanston, American art lor more than 20 post formerly held by Henry Ruff, 10:1 5 Yesterday's Musical Favor­ Eye-Witness News (KXEL) bage, checkers, chess, ping pong wlU meet at the First EngJlsh Lu­ Ill., Louisiana State at Baton In the sprinj/ show in!! of millin· years. D4 of South Amana. Carrol ites. 7:00 Rouge, Rutgers at New Brunswick, The Art circle is one of the few and shuffleboard. There will be theran church. Betty Garton, na­ Danny Kaye Show (WMT) Schneider, E2 of West Amana, will tional secretary of the student 10:30 Famous Short Slory N. J .• and Washington and Lee. Iowa City clubs which meets in dancing to the juke box. 11 :00 The Reporter's Scrapbook Gaslight Gayeties (WHO) serve as secretary-treasurer, re­ Arrangements are undel' the di­ la,y service department of the Ameri­ the morning. It convenes from 10 placing Tom McCracken of New 11:15 Hasten the Day Early American Dunce Music Students in Hospital t to 11 a. m. on alternate Wednes­ rection of Irene Baldwin, social sl­ can Lutheran conference, will be Hampton, who is now in the ~erv­ 11 :30 Fashion Features (KXEL) County Medical Group days in the public library. Mrs. chairman. oe the special geust. Wayne West­ 7:15 ice. )Iy 11 :45 On the Home Front Charles Leedham, Al of Spring­ Lloyd Howell is president, and phal, A3 of Maquoketa, wiJ] be in To Follow Dinner ville-Ward C24 At the meeting plans were made charge of refreshments. l1:pO Farm Flashes Danny Kaye Show (WMT) Gertrude Dennis secretal·Y. Charlemagnols empire, fought 12:00 Rhythm Rambles Gaslight Gayeties (WHO) With Clinical Study . Joanne Dingsley, N3 of Rowley tor the visit of Clarence Elliott, over by his grandsons, was di­ 'Most varieties of hal'd cheese 12:30 News, The Dally Iowan Early American Dance Music - Second West Private national student secretary of thc vided by a tl'(~ aty at Verdun. are made from whole milk. 12 :45 Beyond Victory-What? (KXEL) The Johnson County Medical Martha Huddleston, N3 of Boone north central area ot Y. M. C. A. The visit is scheduled lor Feb. 28------~------7:30 society will have a dinner meeting -Second West Private Little Chapel ;1 - The FBI in Peace and War at 6 p. m. at the Hotel Jefferson Bessie Jennings, Nl of Arling­ The Little Chapel at Clinton March 3. Ilia GRANDMOTHERS TAKE TO THE AIR (WMT) Wednesday. ton-Second West Private and Jefferson streets is open Truth or Consequences (WHO) After the business meeting a Davida T roch ten berg, G of daily to all faith for meditation Phi Delta Theta The Boston Symphony (KXEL) clinical and pathological confer­ Anita-Isolation and prayer. Stop in, offer a 7:45 ence will be carried out by Dr. A. Doris Owen, N4 of North Eng· prayer for a loved one in serv­ Pledges Three The FBI in Peace and Wa r L. 'Sahs of the neurology depart~ Iish-Isolation ice. •Enter his name in the altar (WMT) book with his address and he Iowa Beta chapter of Phi Delta ment, and Dr. W. S. Pheteplace, Vlsltlll&' Hount 50.000 WATTS Ilk Truth or Consequences (WHO) Dr. J . L. Carter and Dr. H. P. Private Patlents-10 a. m. to 8 will receive a leiter to remind Theta social fraternity announces 01, The Boston Symphony (.KXEL) Smith, all of the pathology depart­ p. m. him that someone was in the the pledging of Neil Puckett, Ll at 8:00 ment. Ward Patlents-2-4p. m. and Little Chapel to remember him of Sterling, Ill.; Gordon Christen­ l. Hit Parade (WMT) 7-8 p. m. in prayer. sen, L1 of Iowa City, and Joe National Barn Dance (WHO) ial The leaf butterfly is so like a No visitors in isolation ward. Bush, Al of Ancona, Miss. WAR BONDS rl· Boston Symphony (KXEL) 8:15 leaf when its wihgs are folded that Hit Parade (WMT) it is impossible to distinguish it at BULLDOZER PULLS JEEPS ACROSS TARLAC RIVER .,ulh1#Jtti National Barn Dance (WHO) iirst glance. Boston SY'mphony (KXEL) 8:30 News, Clay RUsk ,(WHO) Hit Parade (WMT) H. R. Gross and the News Iowa Barn Dance (WHO) 10:30 Spotlight Bands (KXEL) Behind the Scenes at CBS 8:45 (WMT) Freedom of Opporlunity Judy Canova Show (WHO) (WMT) Meet Your Navy (KXEL) Iowa Barn Dance (WHO) 10:45 Spotlight Bands (KXEL) Les Bro\vn's Orchestra (WMT) 8:55 Judy Canova Show (WHO) Coronet Quick Quiz (KXEL) Meet Your Navy (KXEL~ 9:00 11:00 Freedom of Opportunity News (WMT) (WMT) News, Music (WHO) Barn Dance Party (WHO) Dance Orchestra (KXEL) Andy Russell Show (KXEL) 11:15 9:15 Off Ihe Record (WMT) Al Pearce Show (WMT) Thomas peluso's Orchestra Barn Dance Jubilee (WHO) (WHO) Andy Russell Show (KXEL) Reverend Pietsch's Hour 9:30 (KXEL) AI Pearce Show (WMT) 11:30 Barn Dance Jubilee (WHO) Hal McIntyre's Orchestra A Man Called X (KXEL) (WMT) 9:45 Garry Lenhart News (WHO) Frank Singiaer News (WMT) Reverend Pietsch's HoUr Barn Dance Time (WHO) (.KXEL) I GRANDMOTHERS HAVI LEARNID t~ fly betore. but when a grand. A Man Called X (KXEL) 11:45 Sl,DaI Co,,. P."~ mother, teaches a grandmother to fly, newa II tn the maktng. MrI. 10:00 Charlie Agnew's Band (WMT) Fla g secreted in hill. from J aps Greenwood Cocanougher. right, whoae hUiband \a an Anny otllcn In Doug Grant News (WMT) Music, New. (WHO) raised over town hall on Le)'te P'rBllCe and whose IOn la an Air Force pUol tn the PaeUle, II pic. Emil Vanda'. Orchestra (KXEL) Island, P . I., by Judge Domlnado Sunset Corner Prolic (WHO) Velso and Mayor PablG Tio wben tured above showing Mrs. Barbara Ray, another grandmother. how H. R. Gross and the News 11:00 American. take over. Buy War the c:ont.,ols ot an Aeronlca ChIef work. Mrs. Ray hal four children (KXEL) Press News (WMT) ON LUZON ISLAND In the Philipptnel the Tarlac river olrered a p'roblem tp thue jeep. unW a bull· Bonds to keep the troQpa advancing and three grandchildren. Grandma Coeanourher also Instructs Army 10:15 I Sustain the Wines (WHO) in the PaclAc. !"d.!'.a"!,. fI~era near Owenaboro. Ky.!. - ..{[lItftllltioll&l) Parade of Features (WMT) Sign-Off (KXEL) I dozer caDIt! to their aid ~ p'ulIed ~em acrou. (1IItrrD.ti!'..D.1 SoumlpllotC1~ U. S. T"... ~ D.,.",...". r ' PAQEFd~ . nTtntbAv. FEBRUAlly 3, Id4s - SJ! ~-- Return

s. ell M b S Whitney Says- 1'IIe 1 Iowa Feeis Wolverines 9:30 lor aU 10:3 ,...---ay. ~m" 0 Ring S~oul8 Ke"ep Point System worsh Confidenl -"1'he Hall Badgers Wishes By WmTNEY MARTIN It's the over-a 11 picture of the rounds by 7 to, 5 margins, his Jon" NEW YORK (AP)-It's Im­ knockout. pOint total would be 50. His Op­ ,nee ~ Harrison Says Hawks Keith contest that shoulO be considered ponent would be credited with 70 7:30 polite to point, but we Ilke that Look Better Than By 50 10 39 Hardtr and not, except In the case o( a pOints, Ilnd be the winner, He high ! sy~tem of scoring prize fights. knockout in boxing, what hap­ could get a couple at nice steaks byleri That is, we prefer the poInt sys­ Ever in Practiees Tale of pened in anY particular inning. for h is black eyes wi th those Harder Leads Way tem over to the round-by-'round Bad Decisions points. Probable !&utin,. IIneu .. FuUllty system now in eJfect in New York, We'll admit there can be just Anyway, as long as boxing is taw. Pos. MJIlhlt'an With Thirteen Points; although It is admitted that no as bad decisions under the point the game it is. with no definite Ives ...... F ...... Geahan ... system that could be deVised system as under the round sys­ way of figuring the :score such as Pastels _...... F ...... Mullaney Michigan Evens Record By BOB KRAUSE would be fool prool because all tem, as personal opinion is the runS or touchdow.ns or basketa, 11:30 C. WUkinson .. C\...... Lund Dally Iowan Sports Editor systems have one common basic governing factor in both cases, but there will be difCerences of opln­ un ivet Spencer ...... G ...... Kell ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)­ WE HA VE more or less "stolen" a ingredIent-personal opinion. there would not be liable to be as ibn. All of us have s~n fights pnd Y H. Wilkinson ... G ...... Lindquist Michigan, leadin~ all the way ex­ rather interesting ond he a r t­ Theoretically, at least, boxing is many. thlit we thought were judged b7 The take cept for a moment in the first worming little item from Eric Wil­ similar to any other contest that F'or example, in a 10-round bout men sitting down In the furnace to the Iowa tieldholJSe court to­ son's daily news bulleti n. It says is divided into periods of action, one fighter wins six rounds by room somewhere, the dedslons, in night In an attempt to revenge half, hung up its second straight in effect ihat certain servicemen and to determine the Winner by very slight margins, being a pow­ our opinions, being that ,ridkuloUJ, the two-point setback they took Big Ten basketball victory last the number of rounds In which he der-puff sort oC Fancy Dan. The Every Man at the hands of the Hawkeyes at "from the European theater to night, beating Wisconsin, 50 to 39. Hawaii" have sent for information had the advantage would be the other man wins the other four , But It's every man for himsellin Ann Arbor, Jan. 19. The Old rounds by overwhelming margins, GOlders won in the last minute, The Wolverines, boosting their and pictures at this year's Hawk­ same as determininl the winner of watching a flgh t. and where you a baseball game by counting the 29 fo 2?L on a basket by little conference record to four wins in eye ):>asketbaJi team. scoring knockdowns in every sit. your possibly unintentiohal Ca­ Murray wier. eight starts and hanging up their These [ighUng men say that they innings credileo to ~~ch team. round. vorlng of one man or the other, No~ the Ph.lIs The contest will mark the half 11th Victory of the season, jumped often h~ar or read the scores of On the round system of judging and the fendency to ror~~i earUer way perIod in the Iowa schedule, in front and stayed there for the Iowa games and that they are anx­ You can't iptagine the Phils the powder-pufr lIuy takes the rounds when one man makes a the Hawks having played five first 10 minutes until Des Smith, ious to get a glimpse of what this being considered the winner over verdict by virtue of his edge in the stirring finish all tend t'o influence conference games up until to­ Wisconsin forward from Milwau­ season's players look like, possibly the Cards because the Phlls six rounds. the opinion. night, wlnnihg tour and losing one, kee, bonged a field goa I from the on the supposition that men from scored one run in each of lour in­ On Points So whether the poin, System Is Iowa are better looking than-ah while the Wolverines have played KEITH HARDER, pictured above, side to give the Blldgrs a 12 to 1 t nings while the Cords scored in Were the bout judged on points used or the bout is judged by the elltht games, winning four and los­ IOWA WILL race a. compe&ely edge. - supermen of Germany and only two innings, but scored 10 with, say, 12 points allowed to a number of times one or the fight- ls a. reserve forward on the Wolv­ Japan. i"g four. healthy DON LUND, here shown, erine squad, alth01ll'h he has seen Then Michigan whipped in 10 runs. For that matter, you can't ers blinks, the system is not in­ More Pleasant round, and the powder-puff guy fallible. About the only way to Arrive ToDtl'hl tonJeht. The husky Wolverine plenty of actlon this season. straight points in the next five Imagine the Phlls . beating the To tnake things more pleasant jt The WOlverine quintet arrives pivot was hampered by an Injury Harder formerly went to sehool minutes to make it easy the rest Cards, but that's neither there nor lost the four rounds by a margin avoid on argument is to arrange in Iowa City on the 5:30 Rocket In the tlrst con test. liere In Iowa. City. of the way. The Wolverines led, would seem that all requests ate here. of 10 points to 2, and won h is six for the bout to end in a cleah being filled if it is at aU possible, after entertaining Wisconsin at 30 to 20, al half time. ------~------Ann Arbor IIIst night. The Badg­ The Badgers played on virtually whic Is oertainly as it should be. ers took it on the nose, 50 to 39, even terms with the Wolverines Possibly 11 is a far too romantic giving somewhat or a hint of what in the second half, chiefly because attitude but would we be way off Blue HawksDow n' Navy Wresflers the course if we wondered if per­ to expect from the W01 verines to­ River Kings of Smith's five baskets, which nc­ Iowa Loses " night against the improvIng counted lor 10 of Wisconsin's 19 ~aps; the Hawks would exert even Hawkeyes. points in the last half. greater efforts in the l'emaining West Branch, 43·41, Close Season Michigan holds an amazing rec­ Smith, hitting ill rapId fire order games if they knew that others be­ ord ot wins and defeats. Ohio Overcome from almost any position, got the sides fans' in this country were be­ ToLe ad Conference Af Wrestling Against Wisconsin Stale shaded them In the opener, Ih'st th .. e Wisconsin lield goals hind them? Obviously, we don't t, to mean that they aren't giving ev­ 44 41, but it took on overtime after the intermission to cut Mich­ By JERRY BLOOM By BILL SHACKELFORD U ndeLea ted in six meets, the period for the Bucks to do it. In igan's lead to eight pOints, bUL et'ythlng right now. Dally Iowan Sports Writer Dally Idwan Sports Wrl&er Seahawk. wrestling team will close the second meeting of the two (ily High Wolverine center Don Lund and Nah, too dramatic. Just wonder­ The UniverSity high Blue A more experienced Minnesota its season today against Wiscon­ teams, the Buckeyes won going guard Don LundqUist paced n ing. We always were a cynic. sin at Madison. (Iway, 61 to 47. spurt thai brought Michigan a 46 • • • Hawks downed the West Branch wrestling team look five out of Iowa City'S Little Hawks Bears, 43-41, last night on the eight bouts last night to tum back The Badger grapplers were Only Team stumbled on their road to the Mis­ to 27 mal'gin with about nine min­ KEITH IIARDER, who, allhough downed by the Cadet team, 32-0, utes to play. he will probably not start for U-high court in a wild and wooly a fighting Iowa squad, 21-9. The Michigan five holds the sissippi Valley championship last contest before 1111 enthusiastic at an earlier meeting here last dlslll1cltoh ot being the only team night and fell victim to a revenge­ Michigan, will probably see plenty Dick Nelson, IS5-pounder, led month. Although ihe ~eahawks ot action, is a former Iowa City overflow crowd to gain undisputed the Victors, throwing Lynn Frink to whip the II lilli , the Same outfit ful Clinton high quintet, 41 to 40, Wlsconsln (39) FO FT PI<' TP Iil'st place in thl! Eastern Iowa have not been beaten this year, tHat handed the Hawks their lone on the Clinton floor. boy who attended school here. of Iowa in one minute and 41 they were held io a tie by the Min­ 4, conference. It defeat. In two contests with the The Hawklets, playing without Smith, r ...... · 7 0 14 Harder's fathel' was awarded his seconds. was Nelson's fifth win nesota matmen last Saturday at It/uiOis team, Michigan won the Mathews, r ...... 0 0 1 0 Ph,D. in elementary education here From the slart ot the game it this :season against no losses. the services or their star center, developed into a ding-dbng tiat­ Minneapolis. opener, 43 to 38, but were snowed Don Sehr, got off to a bad start Patterson, c ...... 4 3 2 1\ at Iowa and now holds an imporl­ In the 12-pound class, Don Wisconsin will be fBeing an en­ Under in the second encounter, Johnson, g ...... 4 1 2 9 ant post with the United Slates tie, with the Bears holding a 17 Togami oC the Gophers decisioned tirely revised lineup. F'our Cadet and trailed 14 to 4 at the end or to 10 advantage at the end of the 55 to 37. the first quartet·. So effective was Grim, g 0 0 1 0 civil service commission. Bill Chapman of towa in one of rellulars gmduated from Pre­ They a1so spiit their series with Bachman, r ..•... · 0 1 2 I Tral1Sfer tudeni first tjuarter, due mainly to the the more thrilling bouts of the Flight school and were transferred the River Kings' defense that the Rummells twins, Warren and Indiana, wlnnlhg the first battle by Goering, I .... · 2 0 0 ~ Harder, himself, is a tTnnsfer evening. Togami racked up enough to primary training bases last Red and White failed to collect a Wayne, and Reinbrecht. The sec­ a one-point margin, 54 to 53, and field goat during the iirst period. Bunke, c ...... 0 0 0 0 from Virginia U. where he WtlS pOints in the opening minutes to week. dropping the second, 4'1 to 43. Sulivan, g ...... 0 0 0 0 the loading scorer in the slnt . ond frame was a dltferent story, win the match, but narrowly es­ With Jimmy Van Deusen lead­ however, as thl! Rivermen put on Two members or the squad 10- Second In Series ing the way, the Hawklets put on Zorn, g ...... - 0 0 0 0 • • • caped being pinned by Chapman day will be competing for the As ttlnight's contest Is the second IN ON~ OF TilE MOST titanic a Curious spurt to scorl! 17 points as time ran out. a scoring burst thal cal'ried them while the visitors garnered two. second time. Jean Lieske at 136 In tWo gaml! series with Iowa, and 'I'otals ...... 17 5 t2 39 baskelba,ij gumes of allliTl)e Wau­ 145 out in front 19 to 16 with three The halftime score was 27 to 19. Captain Rometo Macias of the pounds and Tom Ireland at should the Wolverines coritlnue in kegan, ilL, high school defeated made theil' first appearance minutes remaining in the hair. !\lIclilgl1n (50) PG Ft PF TP The tIde turned again in the Hawks easily deeisioned Curtis their pattern br wlh and lose, It Clinton come back on baskets by Evanston, Ill ., high school last Fritz of Minnesota, but the wily against the Ottumwa naval air sla­ night by a score ot 5 to 3. Yes, third period as the BellI'S moved would appear thallhe Hawks wilt Burridge and Watts to lead at the Harder, r 6 1 4 13 Gopher played it smart, re(tr3ing tion at on exhibition meet here. 3 ,. that's right, und they weren't play­ up to a tie at 38 to 83 on a shot come out on the short end of the intermission, 22 to 21. Geahan, ! . .. 0 1 0 {rom the side by Reiribrecht as to give the Hawk on opening, and Robert Blackwood, competing in score. illig wllh bee-bee guns either. the 175-pound diviSio n, will be In a wild last halC thai saw Mullapey, c ... ~ ... I 3 4 S the whistle blew ending the quar­ Macias was unable to throw him. However, if It were in the cards three City high players leave the Lindquist, g ...... 5 J 2 11 ter. The Rivermen moved out in George Eastllng of Minnesota representing the cadets for the tor Michigan to win from the game via the foul route, the Red KelJ, g ...... I J 3 3 !ront again in the last frome, b·ut, won by a faU in the IS6-pound first time. The only navy man to Hawkeyes this year, they certainly and White grabbed the lead sev­ Berce, f I 0 0 2 Purdue Trounees in the closil1g stagC!! ot the game, class, throwlng Gerald RoUsch of rel

ing of the adult class of instruc­ asaJatant PUtor in the parish house. tion. 6:30 a. m. Low mass. 7:30 p. m. The Inquirer's class WASSELL'S ,. SON JOINS NAVY 8 a. m. Low mass. in the parish house. 'elerans' Dau~hfers st. Paul's Lutheran UnlvenHy 10 a. m. High mass. Saturday, Feb. 10: (For Tomorrow and Next Week) Cburch Dally mas es at 7 and 7:30 a. m. l Oa. m. Children's conJirmat Ion To Serfe Family Jett~ aDel GUberi streets Saturday confessions from 3 to class In parish house. The Rev. L. C. Wuerffel, pasior 7 p. m. and 7:30 to 8:30 p. m. 5 p. m. Junior choir. tirsi Baptist Church for all grades. High school-I. P. 9:30 a. m. Sunday school with Dinner Monday Night 8. Clinton and Burlington street . E. Bible eta for all. SL. M..,.,'s Cbureh Method'" Clwrch 1\t l ev. Elmer E. Dierks, pastor ]0:30 B. m. HOllr of morning ]0:30 a. m. Divine worship in Jeffenoa and Dubuque IItnets A potluck dinner will be served 9:308. m. Church school. Classes worship. Sermon by the pastor, which the pastor wUl speak on the 222 E. Jetret'liOa .treet at the Community building Mon­ tor all ages. Rt. Rev, MBIT. Carl B. MeiDbera, Dr. ,1... L ~uDIIln a1on and. "Small Enemies of Usefulness." question: "Who Is That Son ot The Rev. V. V. Gorf, mlnlstelll day at 6:15 p. m. for Daughters 01 10:30 o. m. Service of' church 4:30 p. m. Bible vesper hour for Man?" IIUter Union Veterans and their families. 9:15 a. m. Church school. Don worship and sermon by the l>astQr. students and townspeople. Prot. 11:30 a. m. The Lutheran hour The Rev. J. W. ~luaklt , A short memorial service will Seavy, superintendent. Each de­ -, "The Meaning of Our Commun­ David Shipley will speak on "The over WMT and again at I p. m. assistant putor be held for Mrs. M. E. Maher. Is Ion" will be the subject. Observ­ Gospel According to St. Matth~w over KXEL. Sunday masses: 6, 7:30, 9, 10:15 partment meets in separate ses­ Mrs. Charles Beckman, presi­ sion. The Bungalow class will ,- shce of the Lord's supper. and the Teaching of Jesus." 2 p. m. Special communion serv- and 11 :30 B. m. dent, will be In charlte of the busi­ o 7:30 p. m. Ulliversity of Life for 5:30 p. m. Social time 101' Con- . ice tor servicemen. Dally masses: 6:30 and 7:30 a. m. have as guest speaker Dr. Marcus ne meeting. :e high school students at the Pres­ gregation - Christian, Evangelical 5:30 p. m. LURcheon hour {or Saturday conCessions from 2:30 Bach of the school of religion. :.! byterian church. and Reformed groups. all students and friends in the to :;:30 p.m. and from 7 to 8:30 9:30 a. m. The student Bible Ie 6 p. m. Supper. recreation rooms of the chapel. p. m. class with Prof. David C. Shipley Rundell club 0:45 p. m. Student vespers. Jullanne F'reund and Darlene Ross as teacher. This class meets at the A meeting ot J,he Rund 11 club Rogel' Williams lJouse , will be held Mof'lday at 2;30 p. m. 7 p. m. Program will feature are in charge. parsonage. Baptist Student Center PatrIck's ChUreh in the home of Mrs. Frl\nk Lorenz, Prof. George Schulz-Behrend who 6:30 p. m. Discussion hour in t. 10:30 a. m. Morning wOl'llhip 230 N. Clinton street 224 E. Court street with sermon, "The Perfect Weak­ .35 Grant street. Assistant host­ 9:30 a. m. Bible study class for wiU speak on "Europe." Post pro- which Lieut. Eugene Walters, a ess will be Mr . T. Dell Kelley. gram "Ember Hour" lor those who dentist at the Navy Pre-Flight Rt. Rev. l\fscr. Patrick 0 '8 eUl)" miss," by Dr. Dunnington. university students, military men J)aSior 4:30 p. m. Student vesper-forum ohtl women and working young seek deeper meanings. school, will speak to th~ group on Wednesday, 1 p. m. Plymouth "A Dentist in the Navy." ' In­ The Rev. Georre Snell, it;! Fellowship hall The Rev. Pan-Hellenic ry people. The subject of study is a8Siatant pasCoI' EvaJ'ls A. Worthley will speak on circle will meet for luncheon at formal fellowship will follow: A meeting of Pan-HelleniC will ~ ~ "The Li fe III Our Lord." 7 a. m. Low mass. . l I, the church. Mrs. Gerald Buxton, Tuesday, 8 p. m. Sl. Paul':s "The Revolutions ot Our Times." be Tuesday at 4 p. m. in the hQuse n 5 p. m. Vesper meeting of the 8:30 a. m. High mass . Supper and the social hour will lAMIS ,WlNCHESTEI WASSW, 19, eon of Uie herore Dr. Cotyclon hostess, will be assisted by Mrs. council will meet In the chapel. chamber of Old Capitol ~ary hown In tral,tllng at recruit at s. Roger Williams fellowship. "Peace 9:45 a. m, Low ma$s. follow at the center. WaaieU, I•• a navll the U. S. Navu Time Conscription, a Problem for Roy Bartholomew, Mrs. W. V. Friday, 7 p. m. Teachers' meet- Ann Mueller will preside and Mar­ Training .qenter. Great' Lake.. Young Wa~1J hu a brother with Pearson, Mrs. Olive Bauer and ing in the chapel. 11 :45 o. m. Low mass. Ilyn Nesper will read a report from America," will be tI'le subject of DailY masses at 8 a. m. the Navy MedIcal COrps 0Jl Tlnlan. ~ka, newapapers and mo Ira Mrs. w. R. Horrabin. Saturday, ]:30 p. m. Choir re- the JUdiCiary committee. ha've told Ole .tory theIr famoUi tatb~r, de.cHlllhr how he reo diBcussion by a student panel. Sup­ Saturday mass at 7:30 a. m. DIRECT APPROACH ot per and int9rmal fellowsh.ip will Thursday, 7:30 p. m. ChUrch hearsal in the chapel. Lds ANGELES, Calif. (AP)­ maln~d on J"ava with hla tledtut caruattlea wben the Jap. overran be after the discussion. school council wiJl meet at the A well dressed YOUng man walked Unlvendty club t~ .~etHerladda Jt8lt lndlta.-. . (1 ,;t ~rn' t ;on a l) chui:ch. The FJrsi Enr Ush Lu&herlll TrInHy Episcopal Chorelt Into a bank in the heart ot the bean Allen W. Dakin will ad­ . . a United Gospel Church Cburolt Zl2 S. SobMon Itne~ financial district, removed his dress the University club at the chai~mBn; Mrs. Louis Z'opf, Mrs. Some inseetS. such as the :e 818 E" Fairchild street b ubuque and Market streets The In. F~ W. Pulliam. r~ coat and strolled over to a counter, February luncheon Tues4a), at 12 A. B. Myrr,s, Mrs. Ned T. Ashton, aphi~s, ha~ t~e ability to com-. ' The Xev. Malt Weir, pastor First Christian Church The Rev. Ralph M. Krufl,er. $exagesima Sunday. where he helped himself to $10,- m. in the University clubrooms of Mrs. ,Everett Hall, and M'rS. Paul plete a generation in a week or is 9:45 a. m, Bible school. 217 JOWl\. avenue pastor 8 o. m. Holy comtnunfon. Cor­ 000. Everyone thought he was a Iowa Union. He will speak on Benedict. less, Ie II a. m. Morning worship. The The Rev. Donovan Grant Hart, 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. porate commun10n of the Altl'lr visiting auditor. The shortage was "'the Turkish Revolution." Reservlltions will be accepted 1- pastor will s~llk on "What Tran­ mini ter 10:45 a. m. Morning worship. gulld. discovered a !tel' the bank closed The committee in charge of ar­ util 9 o'clock Sunday evening at The octopus always triesto 'dev­ ,- s/)ires in He:iven Between the 7 a. m. The Christian church 6:30 p. m. Luthel' league. 9:30 a. m. Upper church school. for the day. rangement;; includes Nell Harris, the Iowa Union desk. our itselC when captured. , I 10 Rlpture and the Coming of hour over WMT. The Lutheran student aSSOCia­ 10 a. m. High school class. r~ ChI·is!." 9:30 a. m. Bible school for all tion will meet at First Lutheran 10:45 a. m. Holy Eucharlst. Ih 7:30 p. m. Evangelistic service. departments nnd ages. church. Lower church school In parish The postor will hegin a series of 10:30 a. m. Morning wOI'ship Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. The monthly house. messages on lhe book of Romans. and communion with the message, meeting of the church councll will 4 p. m . Canterbury club meeting Tuesday, 2:30 p. m. Women's "YOUI' Bible and You," by the be held at the home of Mr. and in llllrish house. Movie, "A Chal­ Bible class. minister. Mrs. Elmer Hakanson, 1211 E. lenge for bemocracy." Supper, 25 Tuesday, 7:45' p. m. Men's Bible 3:30 p. m. Motion picture at Burlington street. cent a plate. study meeting. Junior Volunteers' meeting. Monday, Feb. 5: Thursday, 7:45 p. m. Prayer 5:30 p. m. Young people's meet- . Catholic tuc)ent Center 7:30 p. m. Ve~tl'Y meellnr in meeting. ing with motion pictUJ'e. St. Thomas More Chapel ):jDl'ish house. 7:30 p. m. University of Lire at 108 Mcl,ean street 12 m. Altar guild luncheon In Mennon. Gospel Mission Presbyterian church. The Rev. Leonard J. Brugman the rectory. . Norman Hobbs, superintendent Tuesday, 6:30 p. m. Sara Hart The Rev. J. Walter McEleJley Tuesday, Feb. 6: 10 a. m. Sunday school. Cinsses guild .meets at the home of Doris The Rev. J. Ryan Belser 1 :30-4 :30 p. In. Rector's , confer­ lor nil. Lake. Assistant hostesses will be Sunday masses: 5:<45, 8:30 anet ence hours [or students in the par. ish house. Helen Gay ond Vernell Norton. 10 a. m. 1I a. m. Sel'~on hour. Medita­ 7:30 p. m. Explorer Scout meet- tion in the book of Corinthians. Mrs. Carrie Graham will be pro- Weekday masses: 7 and 8 iI. m. gram leader. Holy day mosses: 5:45, 7 and 8 inr. 7 p. m. Young people's program. Wednesday, Feb. 7: (Confidence of Faith). Children's Wednesday, 2:30 p. m. Pearre a. m. and 12:]5 p. m. First Friday masses: 5:45, 7 and 7 and 10 a. m. Holy communion, :8 meeting in the basement. Missiottary society will meet at 8 J p. m. St. Katherine's guild. r, 8 p. m. Evangelistic sermon, lhe home of Mrs. W. ·F. Miller, a. m. . 1027 Walnut street. I . Donavan ConfeSSIons: 3:30 to 5 p. m. and auxiliary luncheon meeting. ,- Hebrew 10-35. Mrs 7 p. m. Senior choir. Hart will lead the discussion, "1m-I 7 to 8:30 p. m. Satul'days, d~~s Il Wednesday, 7 p. m. Boys' class 7:45 p. m. Organization meeting portant Asiatic Lands." Mrs. Louis before holy days and F~r st Frl­ In craftsmanship will meel at 803 pf business and profeSsional wom­ I­ Roosevelt street. F. Jaggard will use as her theme days. en's group in the parish house. ~ t Thursday, 7:45 p. m. Cottage for devotional service, "From 8 p. m. Talk by ~ather Kit". meeting at the home of AllJh:J Everlasting Unto Everlasting Thou St. Wenceslaus Ch urch gaws on Japanese-American relo­ d King, 1025 Walnut stl'eet. AI·t God," 630 E. DavenllOr& /itree~ calion. it Friday, 7 p. rn. Choir r hearsal The Rev. Edward Neuzil, pastor Thursday, Fleb. 8: First Presbyterlal\ Church althe church, The Rev. J. B. Conrath, 10 a. m. Red Cross sewing groul> 2G E. Market street e Dr. ilion T . .Jones, pastor 8 9:30 a. m. Church school. All de­ Unitarian Qhurch parnnenll> meet at the same hour. Iowa avenue ilml Gilbert street Robert C. Wilson, superintendent. The Rev. Evans Alvah Worthley, 9:30 n, m. Princetonian class minister Daily Iowan Want Ads taught by P~of. H. J. Thornton. 10:45 n. tn. Regular morning ~ 9:30 a. m. Couples' class taught service. The minister will speak e FOR SAL! by M. E, Steele. on the topic, "We Are Religious CLASSIFIED e 10:30 a. m. Service of wOI·ship. When. , ." Following the service I Tuxedo. DOUble Qreasted o Sermon, "The American Passion there will be a congregational RATECARI good condition. Size ' 39. ~ for Servic'e," by nr. Jones. dinner for members and friends of 9578. 4:30 p. m. Westminster fellow­ the church. Students do not need CASH RATE ship vespers. Douglas Bradshaw, to make reservations, There will l or 2 dayl- w n student leader. "Question Box" by be no vesper or Fireside meeting lOc per line per da, !. this week. • consecutive days- For genuine, h6~se-drawn bQb­ Dr. Jones. sled parttes with lots of sleigh 6 p. m, Westminster rellowship 7c per line per da1 bells. Call 64~0 . It supper how'. Jean Mathers, sup­ .. consecutive day&- II lic per Une per .,., per chairman. Zion Lutheran Church 1 month- ROOMS FOR nENT .- 7:30 p, m. University of LiCe for Johnson and Bloomington f c per Une per da)' all high scMol students. streets -F~re Ii word. Une­ ROOM FOR MEN-Close in. 115 Wednesday, 1 p. m. The Wom­ The Rev. A, C. "roehl, pastor to Minimum. Ad-2 Una N. Clinton. Dial 6330. en's association will have a co­ 9:15 a. m. Sunday school. :: o,Peratlve IUrlcheon in the church, 9:30 a, m. Bible class. the regular monthly meeting will 10:1 0 a. m. Preparatory service CLASSIFIED DISPLAY JNSmucno'N 50c col. inch [J be held. for communicants. Or 15.00 per month Dancing Le~sons-b a l1room, bal­ 10:30 a. m. Divine service in let, tap. Dial 7248. MImi Youde , Flntt Church of Christ, Scientist I which the pastor will speak on All Want Ads Cash In Advance Wuriu. .11 122 E. College street "Strength Through Weakness." ! 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. Payable at Daily l owan BUII­ Holy communion will be cele­ ness offIce dally until 5 p.m. II a. m. "Love" will be the sub­ brated. ject bf the lesson-sermon. 2 p. m. CommuniQn serviCe! for CancellatlC'1l8 must be ealled III Wednesday, 8 p. m. Testimonial servicemen and women. You are alway. wet eOlile, nleeting. before 5 p. m. The Lutheran Student associa­ Responsible Inr one incorrect A reading r\lom at the same ad­ tion will meet at First English insertion 0017. dress is ope,. to the public between Lutheran church. Tbe noon and the hours ot;l hnd 5 o'clock every social hour is at 5:30 p. m., and the afternoon eX~,Pt Sunday and legal discussion hour is at 6:30 p. m. 6ftiisHOP h'oli days. Betty Garten, secretary of the DIAL 4191 American Lutheran conference CongrentJoual Churc'h service commiSSion, will be the . Jefferson and, Clinton streets guest of honor and will address ., the Rev. laOles E. Waery, minister the group. 9:30 a. m. Church. school. CI:Jsses Friday, 7:45 p. m. Weekly meet- WMC Regulations ... ,..,1 • t Adnrtlsementa for _Ie or . ­ lenllal female worken are ear­ ._, i CHI~D REPORTED BORN TO ERROL FLYNN rled In these " Help Wanted" .. . columns with the uildelllta:D4. In&' dlat blrln&' proeedura shan conform te War MaJl)JOWer CablDllsalcua BepIaUO.... FURNITURE MO~G LOST AND t'OUND ,. Lost: Silver identification bracelet MAHER 1105. TtANS~. with gold army wings. Reward. For EffIcient rJi-nttUre. 1iOv1Dt A4. .A~ut pur P hone 4767. WARDROBt ,StRVIOE ...... Found: car keys. Owner may DtAl - 9696 - DIAl. claim same by paying lor this ...... f'~ ad. " iHE DAILY IOWAN WANT ADS Do You Want to Renf . Tha~ 'fxlra' ROOM' let Us Find The Right Teriant For You , , . A ~8 Al'(GEL,S PHOTO by DalJinrer ot Errol FIYlln and Nora Ed­ Call'llthe ~n 8i pln,. wlne at a recent party. Nora's father saId she was lIarrIed to ihe actor and she flied a birth certlflcate In Mexico Cliy ror a bali)' ;daur hter born to her there. The lather of the baby Is JIst'" Business Office ~semenf East "all ..tLtlJil. Errol,Flynn.

'( : PAGE SIX THE D A I L Y lOW A N. lOW A CIT Y. lOW A . • SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 3, 1945

Colonial Officer Youth Invents- TROOPS DIRECTED FROM RADIO 'PEEP To Discuss Experience Intricate Dial 'Telephone In Jap-Held Territory -Baffles Experts Capt. Harold Cooper • • A 16-year-old boy in Iowa City And lf the mechanic thought = To Speak Wednesday recently solved· · the· problem of rhis "guests"· were· slumped· when At 3 in Old Capitol paying a monlhly telephone bill they saw the mechanism, he could by constructing his own dial be sure they were dazed when he Capt. Harold Cooper, informa­ phone. told them the purvose of a re- tion officer for the Fiji Islands Using a prophylactic comb, a wiring job. and the western Pacific high com­ roller from a window shade, a Telltale Rewtrlnr mission, will speak in the house bicycle pump, copper wire, a A few days before he was dis­ chamber of Old capitol Wednesday German telephone of the 1900 covered, he rewired the instru­ afternoon at 3 o'clock. He will dis­ variety and a part of a radio, he ment In an attempt to devise some cuss "Experiences of a British contrived a dial phone-and it system whereby it would be un­ Colonial Officer in Jap Occupied worked. necessary to bold the receiver Territory." The lad, who lives in an apart­ while tilklng a message. Evidently Captain Cooper is combining of­ ment here was "found out" when he "slipped up" on the rewiring ficial business with a few weeks' friends of his neighbors had diU!­ job because he claims no one leave in the United States. At cully calling Into the apartment would have known had he not 36, he has had 10 years' experi­ house. The hand made phone, tap­ made an 8rror. ped to the neighbors' phone, could ence in colonial administration, six Mech'anics and telephone of­ years of which he spent in Africa. be used not only for calling out­ but for incoming calls. ficials from Iowa City as well as He Is also a captain in the Fiji from out of town admit that even military forces and has been tJgh t­ After neighbors reported sus­ picions, an Iowa City poUceman they cannot understand the work­ ing in the Solomon Islands. ings of the Intricate mechanism. EII&'IIsb InstnJctor at SUI and a representative of the Iowa City Bell Telephone company B\lt, they aren't the only ones nOM HIS STATION In a radio "peep," Lt. Col. Theodore Bilbo. Jr., After graduating from Cam­ THE "SOMETHING NEW" which has been added to life at the Iowa Navy Pre-FUrht school are these "called on" the boy. Equipped to ask questions. The young fel­ left, of Jackson. Miss .• directs the movements of his armored talk bridge university, he studied in 13 amlllnl C. P. 0.'5 (chief petty officers), all recenUy returned to the United Slates from active over­ low, who lives alone in Iowa City, force, which at the time this photo was taken, was driving on the this country as a Henry P. Davison with a search warrant they ar­ seas duty. Resplendent with service ribbons and decorations, the men are dven their choIce of remain­ queried them. "How did you know town ot Houtfallze. Belrtum. J (lnttrnatiollal) scholar at Yale, and later as a rived at the youth's apartment. inr student aviation pilots and relalninr their present ratlnrs with correspondlnr pay envelopes, or be­ The lad ignored their search war­ about the phone?" visiting tellow from Cambridge to corolnl naval aviation cadets. They are. left to rllht: rear row, Jack StaIr, U. S. N.; Ralph T. Williams, Princton University. Cooper was rant and invited them to exam­ When a friend of the youth's U. S. N.; Ellis D. Lewis, U. S. N.; John D. Pr\ltt, U. S. N.; Theodore C. West, U. S. N. Front row, ine the mechanism. neighbors tried to phone them he responsible for the introduction of Thomas Duda, U. S. N.; James M. Smith, U. S. N.; Jean M. Lieske, U. S. N. R.: Robert E. SmIth, U. S. N.; Fraternity- Chili Supper to Honor L British Rugby football to both col­ 1'ne young genius, who also could hear no sound to Indicate Rlohard T. Woodsen, U. S. N.; WlJliam J. COQulllette, U. S. N. R. KneelJDJ' behInd the camera in the pic­ claims to know something about that a telephone was ringing. In­ leges. For two years he was an ture Is Chauncey Antoine Prade, U. S. N. R. Instructor in the English depart­ criminology, will be heard in stead, he heard faint bits of con­ Weekend Guests ' ment at the University of Iowa. juvenile court soon. Although the versation and a clock striking. Palty ----.,.-- In 1937 he received the corona­ New Pre-Flight Battalion- telephone company does not plan Clock Clue Mr. and Mrs. Ira L. Orris, 513 tion medal. to file charges, police have asked Knowing that a clock in his Grant street, will entertain: Mr. him to appear for a juvenlle hear- apartment house was in the habit and Mrs. Sherman Watson and After a -post-graduate year at of striking loudly on the hour, the Mrs. Russell Davison of-Washing. Queen's college, Oxford, he went ing. \ Line ton, at a chili supper tonight after to A&hanli as assistant district Receives Calls friend finally contacted his party Relurns From Active Sea Duly For more than a week Qi!fore and asked them If they had been ~ of. ..,. the game. commissioner for a year and a police were In10rmed of the boy's using their phone. They replied Pledles of Delta. Sl&'ma. Delta, Mrs. Davison is tn~ weeke!\d halt. A few months later, in July, dental fraternity, will give an in­ • By PAT MOORHEAD Demonstrating his photograph ic after his graduation. In August, activities, he made calls by dial­ "No," and the situation was im­ guest of Mr. and Mrs. Watson, 1104 1936, he became assistant colonial 1941, he was transferred to a VS formal party in the chapter house Marcy avenue. secretary of the Gold Coast, and Dally Iowan Staff Writer technique in the picture above is ing out and received calls from mediately investigated. unit, and head adfor the Pacific at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. In 1939 he was appointed infor­ They've really sailed the seven Prade, who was sUltloned In the friends. How he received calls has With the help of the telephone • • • A leutians for a IHlie over a year aboard the Hornet. six long distance mesages went company and the police the tapped Bob Getman, Dl of Davenport, Month's Visit '. mation officer lor the Gold Coast. seas, these 13 members or Iowa Ray Kunz, D3 of Mason Oity, and He left there a yea r later to ta ke Navy Pre-Flight's newest baltal­ engaged in aerial photography Serving on the Hornet when has not been explained. Five or wiring was discovered. Mrs. Vernon A. Suydam, ·Sum· for the navy. He hails from Cali­ Doolittle and his men made the through to Cedar Rapids. Iowa City police now have the Dwight Newman, D3 of Edgewood, mit apartments, has left for a \lp d\lties as administrative of[lcer ion, ONE-ABLE. Seen around thc are in charge of the aUair. in Fiji and has held his present base during a day of duty wear­ fornia, but attended Baylor uni­ Tokyo raid, he was forced to take Not enclosed In a neat IitUe home made teleI?hone in their mon th's visit with her daughter, post since 1942. ing the regulation V-5 program versity in Waco, Tex., :for a year to the Enterprise when the Japs black box, the mechanical portion custody. Eleanor, and her brother, Emery and one-half, 1938-30. Graduating sunk the Hornet while his unit SIIma. Phi Epsilon fra~rnity DaviS, in Albuquerque, N. Mex. Wins Poetry Prize working uniform, the C. P. O.'s of the instrument must be oper­ from the naval school of photo­ was engaged in attacking the Jap­ ated with two hands. When the will hold an Old English Tavern • • • At Yale, Captain Cooper won step ou t on liberty in their regu­ party at the chapter house from 9 lar bluejacket gear, much decor­ graphy at Pensacola, Fla., in 1942, anese fleet. young mechanic removes the re­ lieut. D. A. White Guesl of Veseleys the Albert Sanburrough Cook he was in charge of photography He received the Silver Star and ceiver from the old style phone, o'clock to 12 tomorrow night. The Visiting MI'. and MrS. Roy R. poetry prize for his poem "The ated with service ribbons and bat­ at Dutch Harbor, Attu and Aadak Purple Heart for his action in the he pulls -up on the bicycle pump, committee in charge includes Vesely, 1131 E. Washington streel, White Waistcoast." Three tle stars. Robert Keppler, Al of Dubuque, at his while serving In the Aleutians. battle of Santa Cruz when he ac­ turning It toward a window shade this weekend are Mrs. Donald poems are in an anthology of Yale Representative ot the recenl his­ Dies in Plane Crash chairman; Dick Kent, A2 of De­ "Salty" is the way the navy counted for two enemy planes as railer. The pump is held to the Miles of Boca Raton, Fla., and ail· verse, and another one is inCluded tory of these men are the records Witt, Pat Brown, EZ of Waterloo; Sprindrift describes its new con­ a gunner on an SBD. Struck by lie Boyle of Cedar Falls. in ll'le "Princeton Verse Between of J ack Stair and J ohn D. Pruitt, roller with a clamp. Prof. Dorrance S. Wbite of the and Ralph Brown, Al of Dubuque. tingent 01 sea-going men; and per­ a 20 mm. shell during that bat­ Comb DIal Corp. Donald Miles left earlier Two Wars," an anthology edited both chief pharmacist mates, and haps the "saltiest" of them ail, Attached to the pump Is part c I ass i cal language department Chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. in the week to report to Harvard, by All n Tate. At Iowa Cooper C. A. Prade, chief photographer's tle, he was returned to the United David Armbruster, Mrs. H. C. not to mention the most highly de­ of a prophylactic comb with ten has received word that his cousin Neb. publlshed " Westward: A Sonnet mate. States and was confined to the Miller, Dr. and Mrs. K. Codel', corated, is Richara T. Woodson, naval hospital in San Diego for six teeth; the pump is lowered so that and name-sake, Lieut. Dorrance • • • Sequence" which William Lyon "I've served all over the Atlan­ chief aviation radioman, now un­ and Mr. and Mrs. Richard F . months. a tiny metal knob wired to the A. White of Holliston, was killed Saturday Guesis Phelps listed among the "Hundred tic!" grinned Stair, who entered dergoing student pilot tTaining Nazette. Visiting Gretchen Trumpp, 931 Books of the Year." With Paul the navy in September, 1939. Two Arter his release from tbe hos­ roller contacts these teeth which July 8 In a combat missl9n over at the pre-flight base. are equivalent to numbers on an S. Van BW'en street, for the day Engle, Cooper edited "West of the years of this time was spent in Holder of the Silver Star, Air pital, he was assigned to duty Phi Rho Sigma medical frater­ ordinary dial phone. the Adriatic sea. He was a navi­ are Margaret Neal and Helen Mc· Great Water," an anthology of Bermuda as pharmacist mate medal, Purple Heart and two aboard the Block island, Guadal­ nity will have a party at the chap­ For example, to dial long dis­ gator on a Liberator bomber. Farland, both of Cedar Rapids. Iowa verse. with mobile hospital No.1. Fol­ commendations, the 24 year-old canal and Wake island carriers ter house tonight at 8 o'clock. The 16-yea~-0Id Lieut. White received his Early journalistic experience he lowing this he went aboard a PC, navy man has seen action against in the Atlantic and was promoted tance, the turns the wings committee in charge of the aHair Committee chairmen are June pump Into position so that the se­ acquired as editor of "The a small naval craft used for sub­ both the Nazis and the Japs in his to chief petty officer Nov. 1, 1943, as a navlgator at )i:llington field, includeS Ed Jacobs, Ml of Sioux Bailin, A4 of Spearfish, S.C . r;)­ Granta," the famous Cambridge chasing and convoy work, with five plus years in the navy. His while with that outfit. cond tooth Is directly above the Texas, March 18 and was assigned City; Jim Odell, M2 of Ames; Han­ ception; Shirley Jean Cave, Al ot small knob. When the pump is University journal, and the "Nune­ which he served for eight months. father being a navy man, Wood­ The Air medal and a star 10 lieu to a B-24 Liberator bomber. After ley Jenkins, Ml of Boone; Hoyt Baltimore, Md. and Charlotte aton Chronicle and Midland Farm­ In March, 1944, he attended a son has participated in the crip­ of a second commendation medal released, the knob jags two teeth. a short leave home he was sent to Allen, M2 of Perry; Bill Hamil­ Vannice, A2 of West Liberty, pub· ers' Gazette." deep-sea diving school ill Wash­ pling of one sub and the sinking were awarded him for his part in This is comparable to dialing Italy. ton, M2 of Panora; Jack Rutledge, Iicity; Marjorie Morley, A3 of "one" since the first tooth is ington, D. C., and in September of another, and is credited with the crippling and sinking of two His B-24 failed to return from a M3 of Emmetsburg and Ed Upde­ Quincy, Ill., music; Betty Schmidt, equivalent to on an ordinary of that year entered the navy aca­ two Nip planes destroyed and German U-boats while serving "a" Ijayllght bombing mission over graff, M3 of Boone. Chaperones A2 of Keokuk, and Doris Jean phone. demic refresher unit at Wooster three "probables." with the TBF crew. Maresdorg airdrome, Austria. will be members of the hospital Stutzman, A3 of Hanover, IiI., To dial 110, the small knpb first Music Recital college in Wooster, Ohio, in pre­ Enlisting Jan. 3, 1940, Wood­ His father, Russell M. Wood­ Dorrance's plane collided with faculty stall. tables and flowers; Doris Lun· paration for his entrance in the son attended the aviation radio­ son, is a warrant officer radio ja!:s two teeth; again It jags two another bomber over the Adriatic deen, A2 of Marion, cleaning; Nor· electrician at the navy base in teeth and then it contacts number navy aviation program. He is mar­ man service schol at North Island, sea while units were enroute to Pledges of Pbl Epsilon PI social man Walcher, A3 or Davenport, ried, and his wife and two child­ San Diego, Calif., and was assig­ Del Monte, Calif. "one"or the top tooth. the target. Flying in a formation fraternity will hold a radio party food, and Phil Taub, A3 of Mapel· To Be Monday ren are in Iowa City with him. ned first to a destroyer and then of 1,000 planes, the two outside for their actives and guests to­ wood. N.J., "K.P.". Three years with the marines to a VP squad in the canal zone motors of his four motor plane night in the chapter house follow­ began Pruitt's life in the navy. He Boy Scout Administration in Iowa City Feb. 10 stopped and slowed the speed. Ing the basketball game. Special Eight stUdents wlll be presented enlisted in February, 1940, and White's plane ahd the plane entertainment has been planned in a recital Monday afternoon at after his boot training went over­ following c19se behind In the for­ and refreshments will be served KELLEY 4:10 in the north music hall by the seas with tbe Leathernecks, serv­ To Coincide With 35th Scouling Anniversary mation crashed. Both planes burst during the evening. CLEANERS music department. This is the 16th ing In Cuba Pearl Harbor and the Barzun Describes into flame. Chaperones will be Rabbi and recital or the 1044-45 series. l Oflers Expert south .PacifiC. In January, 1944, When Iowa City Boy Scouts conquered countries were over­ Only one of the flyers was able Mrs. Gilbert Klaperman, Mrs. The program includes: "Verli to parachute to safety. Workmanship he rcturned to this country, and Underground Work take over the city government run, any scout activity was for­ Dora Chapman and Mr. and Mrs. Prati" (Handel), Jeanette Grim­ was stationed at the naval hos­ Lieutenant White entered the Ira Glassman. At Saturday, Feb. 10, during Scoul bidden, and the Axis dictators mer, Al of Winfield, mezzo so­ pital at Memphis, Tenn., where made its members the target for service Oct. 13, 1942. He was the prano; "Nocturne" (Chopin), Es­ he worked in the X-ray depart­ Of French Masons week, they also will observe the special persecution. Scouting rep­ son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold L . Clinton Place will hold an open ther Jensen, A2 of Cedar Falls, ment and acted as chief-master­ 35th anniversary of scouting in resented democracy to the dicta­ White. house for cadets tomorrow after­ plano; "Alma del Core" (Caldara), Prof. Henri Barzun of the at-arms. He also took the na val America. Almost 2,000,000 fellow tors. noon from 3 to 5:30. Helen Zim­ Doris Bennett, Al of Iowa City, refresher course at Wooster col­ French department, in his speech merman, A2 of Waterloo, and scouts and leaders throughout the Boy Scouts in the conquered 124 S. contralto; "My Mother Bids Me lege before coming to Iowa Navy at the Masonic lodge yesterday countries refused to see their Merilyn Miller, A3 of Cedar Rap­ 218 E. Washington Bind My Hair" (Haydn), Dell Pre-Flight. A native of Gaines­ noon, gave the Masons of Iowa country will recognize the found- City High to Give ids, SOCial chairmen, arc in charge. 109 from Feb. 8 to 14. movement wiped out. They went Jiackson, A 1 of Mechanicsvillel viUe, Ga., the chief pharmacists City a vivid account of the work underground and risked their lives ,soprano; matc is unmarried. of the Prench Masonry in under­ On Citizens' day in Iowa City fighting the Axis forces secret.ly. Valentine Dance "Legende" (Weiniawski), CeUa ground activities after the capitu­ the Boy Scout administration will Here in America boys are aware Eckey, A2 of Newton, violin; "0 lation of j·rance. step in to ru Ie the town for 24 of what their fellow scouts in war­ City high school's annual Val­ Mia Babbino Caro" (Puccini) Joy said hours. Nominees on the two District Court Term "The Masons of France," torn countries have suffered. In entine dance, sponsored by the Rankin, Al of Tracy, soprano; party ticket have been chosen by Barzun, "did not walt two or three line with the theme of world junior class, will be given Satur­ "Reflets dans L'eau" (Debussy), To Begin Monday months after the tall of France to the scouts. brotherhood this year, they have day, Feb. 10. Mildred Young, A2 of Hillsdale, start their underground work, but, Monday, Feb. 5, the youthful BASKETBALL established the World Priendsblp Committee for the party Include N. J., plano; "Sonata in G major" The February term of the John­ instead, they began the very day voters cast their ballots at the fund to restore scouting in Uber­ Anne Wachs, junior class adviser; (Brevo]), Constance Relghter, Al son county district court will open after f'rance capitulated to the community building from 6:30 to ated countries. Betty Crow, publicity, and Duane of Iowa City, cello. Monday, Feb. 5, when the grand enemy." 8 o'clock. jury meets at 2 o'clock in the aft­ A song by composer Irving Ber­ Smith, Tom Dunnington and Jim Barzun, who told of the part Another feature of Boy Scout TONIGHT E. M. Delafield is the pseudonym ernoon. lin will help re-build Boy Scouting Waery; Bob Devine and Margaret played by Masons at France from week in Iowa City will be a court of the English novel!st Mrs. Edmee Judge James P. Gaffney will in tbe Philippine islands when Goodnow, music; Martha Hiscock, the time of capitulation up to and of honor, also scheduled for Mon­ Dashwood. preside over the February term. including the day of liberation, they are freed. All proceeds from entertainment chairman, and Mat­ day at the community building. Berlin's song "God Bless Amer­ said when the crisis came in tie Albrecht, Mary Dvorsky, Don­ The Sea Scouts are hosts for the Ica" are tu rned over to the scouts France about July, 1940, the ald Kreig and Jack Nelson; Diane February lrd ceremony. SOVIET PRESIDENT GREETS ENVOY. Masonry knew It would have to for that purpose. Dedicated to Horrabin, chaperone chairman, the memory of the late Brig. Gen. begin underground resistance. Scouts and their leaders will at­ and Betty Nolan; Gwen Pudgil, When the Vichy police arrived, tend church in uniform on Boy Theodore Roosevelt, the fund now re(reshment chalnnan, and Shir­ is $10,000. the Masons already had vacated Scout Sunday, Feb. 11. Address­ ley DeReu, Mary Relmers and Vir­ their lodges. The men were busily ing their sermons to the scouts, Individually, American Scout ginia Wheeler; Sally Barnes and engaged in underground activities. ministers will speak on "World troops are planning to adopt for­ Pete Baldwin, programs; Bonnie MICHIGAN Cabinet members of the Vichy Brotherhood." eign troops to encourage and help Wanamaker, program chairman, government often found warnings With "World Brotherhood" as them in re-building. and Maragaret Patty, Pete Bald­ Before the war, scouts from all win, Jackie Kelly, Nancy Blakes­ on their desks, which Ba~zun cited their theme, Boy Scouts a\l over VS. as an. example of the work of the America will try to put into action over the world met and made last­ ley nad Mary Hunter. underground in France. "The Ma­ this year the slogan for Scout week ing Intunational friendships at sonry," said Barzun, "played a "Scouts of the World-Brothers Boy Scout jamborees, held every Lutheran Secretary necessary part in the war." Together." lour years. Filty thousand boys gathered at the last jamboree in During the Ileat of batlle in This theme was selected because To Address Students IOWA North Africa, after contacts had as more and more countries are Holland. Good will and brother­ hood are not new to the scout been established with Masons freed by the allied powers, scout­ Belly Garton, 'national secretary creed. there, they were sen~ rrom France ing will be re-born in tbese liber­ of the student service department During this war, scouts have to Algjers to carryon th under­ ated nations. The 1,600,000 scouts of the American LuUteran coun~ IOWA FIELDHOUSE shouldered responsibility by sell­ ground work. in America have planned a defi­ cll with headquarters In Chicago, Further explaining the Masons' nite program to belp restore the war bonds, collecting scrap will be the guest speaker at the part in the underground move­ scouting In the conquered coun­ paper-120,OOO tons of it-distrib­ Lutheran Stu den t association uting posters for the OWl and m~nt, Barzun told how labor and tries and to cement international luncheon and devotional meeting bearing dispatches. These are only . 8p. m. the trade unions joined the wor.k friendship with brother scouts. tomorrow evening at 5:30 at the of the underground. Entrenched in a few of their wartime duties. Pirst Enllis\l Lutheran church. Before the war there were more Among those who have praised Lois' Rutherford, A3 of Fort underground activities they co­ than 3,000,000 Boy Scouts in the operated with the Masons to do a scouts for resourcefulness and IleU­ Dodge, and Shirley Slme, Al of GENERAL world representing 73 nationalities. reliance are Admiral Chester Duncombe, will be the team cap­ complete job. About half of that number were Enumerating the needs of l'ijmitz, General H. H. Arnold and tains for the meeting. The LSA American boys. Since the found­ Admiral Ernest J. K11\i. quartet, Including Wayne West­ ADMISSION Prance now, Barzun said that in, of the organization in 1910, prestige must be returned to In a congratulatory message to phal, A3 of Maquokato, Herb 12,000,000 boys have been Boy the Boy Scouts on their anniver­ Jones, D2 of Independence, Bob France. "This prestage Is not to Scouts. 1·8Qok Coupon No. 13 be confused with pride," he added. sary, Admiral Nimitz said, "In the Elliot, PI of Btakesburg, and Rolt _r~in~ltes of Also France should be re.tored Germans never bave had a Pacific Ocean area partic\llarIy, Kruse, ·A2 at Rockford, Willi pre­ t enemy defl!nse to her lull power as a great na­ scouting program. Young boys those Who have had the benefit of lent lleveral selections. BOr.: Ch1lcIren, 30c barnae of tallies to ha tion, and should be a prominent are organized In youth societies. Boy Seout tralnil\i in pioneering Lunch wlll be served at 5:30 Rapids one of its more member of the new allied council In Japan the scouts were mili­ and flelderdt... are better with Loretta Gerda, A2 ot Monti­ Peleata this' year, at liberated nations. tarized and MU880Unl abol.i&hed ~ulpped to win out over the cello In charge, and the devotional the organizatin 17 years ago. When enelIl)' and the elementl." meetinl wUl begin at 8:80.