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• GOOD ·MORNING, CITY!

Out to dampen weekend prospects, the weather­ OWGJ11 man hauls out a prediction of partly cloudy and cooler today with local thundershowers. Eatabllahed 1868 Vol. 78, No. 239-AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa, Saturday, June 29-F1VE CENTS

~~------~I China Alone Faces jHouse Passes Compromise OPA Bill Wallace Urges Pol,itical, Famine, ~ys Hoover UNRRA BIIII Issue. Final Report Passed by Congress Declaring Starvation • Of World Prevented LQGuardials Threat By J . W, DAVIS To Resign Stops One W A HINOT N (AP)- on d tbt eompromi.. Economic, Racial Justice OTTAWA (AP)-Herbert Hoo­ P A bill ye terday and Che ter Bowl igIl d witb a fervent ver said last nlllht tbat mass star­ Restricting Amendment plea to Pr idenl Truman to veto it I c rtlin to leld to an in- vation in the world apparently flationary boom and a bu t. WASHINGTON (AP) - Th e has been prevented, except for The e vent occurr~ within thrl'e hectic hours: house insisted yesterday on a "Ire ]. 'J'he PA bill, xtending a mea ure of prict control for an· Speaks ~efore China, and the lap between avail­ press" provision il) an UNRRA ap­ other year but opening th wly for wide'>pr ad able cereal supplies and minimum propriation bill but yielded on pric increl pa d the enat , 47 to 23. needs has been closed. anoth r restriction when F H. La­ 2. Thl' Whitl' H ou I' made public 8 lett r from th national In a broadcast prepared at the Guardia threatened to r ien as SUI Audience, director-general. wag tabilizali n board d laring tll bill would in "ittbl, le.d invitation of the Canadian gov­ By 1\ roll-call vote of 228 to 85, to ,. uncontrolled inflation." erllment, the former the house clinched to the bill an 3, Th r. ignation of Bowl a stabilization dir ctor, ('fl~tive Meeling president made what he called am ndment by Rep. Dirks n (R., July 10, wa mnde public al the White H Olll' Written before AVe lli.) his "final report" upon his fam­ which prohibits the u e of the nat a ted. H urg d a " to of Ib bill on t1 e ground that "it ine mission for President Truman funds for relief in any country would only en·t to Il'll'aliz in­ whlch censors n ws ac..:ount~ of "Times ahead are too pressing in which he visted 38 natons. flation " and brin· on ultimate and uncertain for a democracy UNRRA activities. It Is aimed at ,; colJap. .. With "It is at least reassuring that Russia. Union Seaman Enter II pricl' COD­ which fiddles and fuddles at;ound," troLs du to xplr at midnight. declared Secretary of Commerce f we have continued coopera­ The house then pllssed the m a­ tive action of the various na­ sure by a voice vote snd sent it Sunday unl n xt nslon bjU i. Henry A. Wallace speaklng be­ New Labor Dilemma nacted, Bowl xpr ed the fore the Johnson county chapter lions, mass starvation will be to the senate. prevented, with one exception," LaGuardia told a news conftr­ hope that con,r '" would y t pr~ ot the American Veteran's com­ vide ·'Ih I gulallon wh ch is ea­ mittee last night. Hoover said. "That ~cepUon Is ence the Dirksen amendment Over Wage Increases China, where transportliltion to would result in withholding $367,- .ential 11 we are 10 main lain a AmErica must not rest content siabl economy." with merely being the finest the interior and Inadequate or­ 000,000 of medical suppli s slated ganization has rendered relief for Russian republics - "and It WASHINGTON (AP)-Oovern- 4. I\fr, Truman replled tI•• , democracy ot the big nations, the ment shippln, officials saw broad sI;cretary warned and urged the only partially successful" anyone clln take any joy In d - Bowl l' ~Uon "_­ building of a genuine economic • • • nying m dical supplies to anyone, Indications of a new m.arltime phalle an '~r to the fantat4Je and Ethnic democracy- a "three­ "In other' famine areal there well, that's their lookout" labor dilemma y studay In a chare of k n (or Ifiah pl;0nged" democracy established on will be lulferln,," be uld. "The overwhelmln~ majority of west coast agreem nt eivine AFL Inter t Ih t 00 Ui"ht ellien- political, economical and racial "Many of the old people and American peopl ," he add d, "are eom n a bigger pay raise than Ion of th I>rl ontrol bill In justil!e-devoted to the pursuit weaker chUdren will fall by not in agre ment with the us of CIO sailors won here lwo weeki ON r to I> r~luate YOII.tWIf In of peace and abundance without the wayside; neverthelellS tbe food as a political w apon or to ago. ornee." Ir. Trun n id "we loss of liberty. ,reat majority of the endan,eied make the delivery of tood condi­ The war ahlpping administra­ hall contInue the batU,. aplllA will be saved," tional." tion r ceived a COpy of a con· inflatIon with ever WeApoJI I' "The ,reat enemies of our • • • The amendment whkh promp­ lract negoUated at Son Francisco our d po!! I," but cUd not Ii... * * * Warning, however, that the ted his r signation thr ot, however, between Harry Lund beri, pr - wbeth~r h would or veto lleCurlty today ar~ war anel scarcity," Secretary Wallace "precariousness of the situation was One by Rep. Taber (R, N.Y.) Ident of the AFL Sallors Union tb bUI. said. "Scarclty leads to con­ is not over" and that his report which would have prevenled lhe of Ihe Pacific, and the .PaciHc • • • fUd of one kind or another and, dealt primarily with the Immed­ use of the funds for shipm<:nts to Am rican Ship Own ra assocla· iate crisis months until the 1946 be made alter Dec. 31 to Europe tion, providing for a $22.50 monUl­ At th Whit Hou e durin, the almost alwan, eventlllllIy to evenln, were JUstice Samuel I. war." harvest is in, the former presi­ and March 31 to the Far Ea. L. Pre­ ly wage incr ase for able-bodl d . ent urged that the new int!T­ sent law lixes next June liS the seamen. Rosenman, who often h~lps 'the prf!sid nt with I5pl'e hes, and J, Voll!el threaten our pface- ~eUon.1 emergency ~ood council d adllne tor UN RA in both cases. In the Wasbilliton * * * take .teps to (ive special aie'! to The house had adopted the Ta­ lions, which avert d a strike by Leonard R In ch, tli f"laent', voices persistently preaching the radio advl.or. There wa no an­ Imminence of a third world war 20,000,000 to 30,000,000 children ber amendln6nt Wedn sday on a the eIO-dominated committee and voices raising ungrounded In Europe and other millions in standing (non-record) vot of 125 for mariUme unity, Josepb Cur· noune menl Immediately, how­ fears. "Pear Is the father and Asia. to 105 but yesterday it r v rsed it­ ran's National Marltim union ver, of any plan tor II pr Idential mother ot war," he said and elim­ Hoover recallW that in March s It and knocked It out on a stand­ won a $17.50 monthly pay boo t broadea.t. ination of fear is an all important the gap between available world ing vot of 84 to 65. for able-bodi d seam n-or $5 Th I tt r from th waee sta­ point in the realiUltion of lasting cereal. supplies and minimum LaGuardia's r slgnation threat less lhan Lundeberg, blllzation board was signed by all peace. The commerce secretary needs was estimated at 11,000,000 was made in a I tler to Chairman WSA ofliciala said I members, T pr enUc pubUc, criticized all countries who use tons. Cannon (D., Mo.) ot the appro· they feared: labor and Industry. It urged Mr. their agencies of public opinion Gap Can Be CIClled priation committ e which the lat­ 1, U WSA or Ole I1IUonal W ..e Truman lo call In spokesmen for to create a maximum of fear and "It now ~eems assured thai ter read on th floor. Th UNRRA stabUi!auon board falls to ap­ Industry, labor and agriculture to distrust. "Peace must be made the tralic gap can now be closed," head wrote that the amendment prove the high r AFL contract, discuss th OPA bill', eUeeta be­ as exciting as war," he insisted he said. would waste some $300,000,000 Lundeberg's seamen may .trike for taking 1101'1 on H. and added a hope that it will Thls was made possible, he worth of food, supplies and equip­ in prot 5t. On promln nt congr ss mem­ be with us longer. said, by drastic curtailment of ment tor which d Iiveri s to 2. U Ole covel'JUDeJlt aDDrovq b r, who c nnot b named, laid War Unthinkable SECRETARY OF COMMERCE Henry A. Wallace is shown above as be addressed an audience of ap­ import programs by the tood de­ UNRRA cannot be made within Lundeberg's cOitract, Curran's lo­ he consld t d a v to "very prob­ War with Russia, Secretary proximately 2,500 last night 011 the Iowa Union campus. Speakinc on "Our Good Neighbor Policy," ficit <:ountrles, development 01. that lime." cal unions may enga,e in work able." How vcr, D mocratJc leader Wallace regards as "unthinkable" Secretary Wal\are de,clared that allY plan tor peace must ltave a trlancular foundation, based on ac­ new sources of supply, substitu­ stoppa,es in protest agalnst work­ Barkley of th nat and other and laments the fact that there cord between the Anglo-Saxon, Latin anti Slavic n:Ltion s. tions, self-denial In surplus pro­ Gives Air Force Order ing for lower wages than AFL congres lonal chieftains ureed Mr, are "apparently some people who ducing countries, reductions ot WASHINGTON (AP) - The mfn. TrumaJl to slell th m asure a. the want it." He does not esteem Latin American Import require­ army airforces announced yes­ Curran reportedly was attempt­ best that could be Obtained. a "get tough policy" as a means Byrnes Asks Decision ments during the criSis months, terday U1Ut as a result of the Ing to arrange conlerences with There were repor that Mr. Tru­ of avoiding war, branding it as Prof. Louis Pelzer 01 History expanded contributions by 'the May 20th crash of an army plane enst coast operators, headed by man wos prepilring a communica­ averse to human psychology and Latin American countries, de­ Inla the Bank of Manhatlnn Frank :T. Taylor, p id nt of the tion, perhoP3 8 message to con­ seea continued and simple pre­ On European Peace creased supplies in the "plpe- building unscheduled army air­ American Merchant Marine in­ gress, but whether it would be a sentation of the truth as the sur­ 11ne" to Britain, better distribu­ craft .had been ordered to keep stitute, to try to get the same veto message or an eltpJanation est way of establishing interna­ Faculty Dies of Hearl Attack tion In India, and an eaily har­ away from in $22.50 rate for NMU able-bodied that he felt compeUed ' 0 Ilgn, WII tional understanding. Conference Question vest In America, bad weather. seamen. not known. lie utterly condemns the "witch huntIn," and "red - branding" Prof. Louis Pelzer, m mber of Secretary of the Big Ten con- PARIS (AP) - Secretary of which now, as after the last war, lhe history department faculty ference in 1927-29, ProfeSsor Slate James P. Byrnes served no­ • hampers our diplomatic relations. since 1911 and edilor of the Mi:3- Pelzer was a member of the Iowa tice last night of a showdown to­ • • • Territorial Centennial commisSion day with Soviet Foreign Minister "TocJay, with the advent of slsslppi Valley Historical Review, in 1938. He was president of the v. M. Mololov on calling a gen­ Student He/d. Degnan Case the atomle bomb," tbe .ecre· died as a resull of a heart at- Mississippi VaUey HIstorical as­ eral European peace conference, tal')' relblnded IUa audience, "It tack at 8 p. Dl. yesterday in Uni- sociation ih 1936, and at the time fo llowing a heated exchange In .. lOt thnea more Important ·to verslly hospilal. of his death, was vice-president yesterday's foreign minislers' ses­ * * * make Peace excltln, and lut­ Prolessor Pelzel' be~ame iU and of the Ameri can Association of Sion, American informants said. Suspect's Fingerprints ina" than U wa. a year ,,0," was taken to the hospital yester- Universily Professors. A l the end 6f a lengthy argu­ • • • day morning. Professor Pelzer was a member ment with lhe Russian official, "Men and women of perception B01'0,.. 67 years ago in Gr wold, of the American fJistorical asso­ Byrnes declared he would insist Coincide With Those know it (establishment ot an ef­ Professor Pelzer was graduated ciation, Ihe Triangle club and the upon a decision at today's con­ fective peace) Is an urgent race from Iowa State Teac;hers' college Iown City Research club. rerence meeting on whether to Left on Ransom Note a,alnst tim .It in 1901. He received a Ph.B. de- He was author of "Augustus ca ll the 2l-nalion parley. Although condemning the "get gree at the University of Towa in Caesar Dodge," 1907; "Henry Byrnes looked squarely at Molo_ toueh policy" 83 a platform ot 1901 and a Ph.D. in 1909. Dodge," 1911; "Marches of tM tov and asserted he wanted a de­ CHICAGO (AP)-State's At- foreign diplomatic policy, Secre­ After teaching and serving as Tragoons in the Mississippi Val­ rision one way 'or another, Amer­ torney WilHam J . Tuohy asserted tary Wallace strongly recom­ principle of several Iowa high ley," 1917, and "Cattleman's Ican informants said. Molotov last night that prints on the Su­ mended it as a reliable tactic to schools, he was appoin ted to the man's Fronlier," 1936. lIlt:1l conceoed thal any cou ncll zanne Degnan kidnap-slaying ran­ be employed against congressmen university hislory sta!! as an as- Sillce 1941 Professor Pelzer member could speak.)O any topic some note "jibe with" finger I\nd who persistently vote against slstant professor in 1911. From has been editor of the Missis- at any time ot the "day or night." palm prints taken from William pollees, such II the OPA and 1917 to 1925, he was an associate sippi Valley Historical Review, the The exchange rounded off a Heirens, 17-year-old University ot rEPC, which are vl~l to the well­ professor, and since 1925, he has I ading historical journal of the review f outslanding issues. in Chicago student. being of our country and whIch been a full professor here. cou ntry. the Italian and Romanian treat­ Heirens, a 180-pound youth held Ire backed by the approvill of the ies which resulted in a shelving for questioning about a burglary, people. of th e key issue of Trieste when was questioned here about the "It 18 a narrow path," the com­ Baruch Urges U.N. Group to Act Speedily French jo'oreign Minister Georges brutal killing and dismemberment merce secretary said, "which lies Bidault asked fo r additional time ot the Dellnan girl as a man held between the maximum of Ilbetty NEW YORK (AP)-Bernard M. individuals by their respective to study the entire question of in Phoenix, Ariz., repudiated II the Italo-Yugoslav frontier. story he had told there that he Ind the maximum of social jus­ Baruch yesterday caled on the governments. lice." In order to realize the The council was deadlocked also was the kidnap slayer. United Nations alomic nergy com- il. The United States says there on th e question of an int/) rim ad­ Ideal democracy, he leels we must Tuohy said: mission to move with ulmosl must be no veto lo protect those minislration on Italian colonies, "Helrens' fingerprlnis or por­ d.velop II genuine feeling of dem­ ocrailc emotlon lind engender a speed sine "Ume presses and ach who viol!\te lheir solemn agree­ provision fo r arbitration tribun­ tlnos of flnlerprints or parts of ments not to develop or use ntomjc als, and compensation for Allied democratic philosophy which wll! day finds the world more lIlse- his Pailm jibe wHh seven points energy for destructive purposes, nationals' property losses in for­ 011 the Degnan ransom note." become an Inlegral part Clf our cure." ' Russia wants the veto, says the mer enemy states. He added that the note prints being. Baruch offered th commitlee a commiss ion Is an organ of the The Tlali an reparations Issue consist of some fingerprints and a "Like the liench, we mUlt learn chart showing areas of agreement Uniled Notions working under the and disposal of surplus units of portion of a palm print." that EQual1tYlUld Liberty must be and disagreement on various d il'eclion of the security council, the Italian navy also were shelved Captain Emmett Evans of the barmonized by Fraternity." points as expr ssed by delegates. which has the veto. when it developed there had been police bureau of identilication * * * Baruch's chart listed 20 items 3. On the malter of a treaty, no chonges in the various con­ said: In an earlier speech on the uni- lind showed only lhree yes-and-no the Uniled..Slates co ntends that it flicting positions. "We found seven points of sim­ vlrsity tampus, Secretary Wlil- clashes between pOsitions taken must go Beyond that stel> and British Foreign Secretary Ern­ ilarity between Heirens' prints and lace .dvocated free Intercha",e of by the United States and Ru·ssia. make cerlai n of compl ete safe­ est Bevi n opposed a proposal on 'tire print of the Degnan ransom Itudents tor better underltandilll They were: guards before disposing of the the Halian colonies issue to trans­ no'te. I am convinced that the two MLLlAAI HEIRENS, 1'1, hu hll bead patched .11 In ""'e""" ,...... alter ....Ice ...... lalla ~ween Anllo-Saxon, Latin I, The UnIted States wants the bombs, etc. Russia believes that tel' legal sovereignty from Italy prints were made by the 8ame theJ "ported he resisted arreat after lbeJ ....pped him .. a aorO. IIc1e allJlll'taeD\ hd ...... -= AM.rlcan and Slavic nationl. United Nations to prescribe "jnd i- atomic weapons should be de­ to the four powers represented on man." llueatJonhi.' about prowllnc, YesterdaJ State.. A'&onIe, William J. 'f1IeIaJ IIIerieiI ...... R"udllll the post-wllt 'lranll- vidual responslbUity and punish­ molished with the acceptance of the ministers' council, and urged "The similarities In this CBse 0' Helrens were Ole UJIle u those .o.nd .. &lie...... _Ie I. UIe 811U1Ule ne...a kNaa ...... _ tlon period In LaUn America, the ment on the internatlon\llly en­ a treaty by half the nations at continuing them under British are In the lines and loops," Cap­ cue. TIle DeJlWl cue mocked the aaHen wiUl Ih MId ...... ". 'DIe --'ear-.... '--t_ COMmerce secretary .ald the Unl· forced principles applied at Nuern- the world, Includina all the Unt­ administration pending final set­ tain Evans !laid. "In these seven frGlll her bed earlJ I. the IDOI'Illna of Jan, 1 aad a .... _ lei, ...... , $It ... ,....:. ~ ...... (S.. W AI.LACE Pile I) "-fl." RUllia ••k, punilhment ot ted NalloJ1J, tlement, American soure.. ~aid. ...:..:.. .1s..·PZGNAN Pal. I) poUce '01UUl ...... or her .1...... boU 18 ..., .... ~.... ~ dtJ, '(AP~"'" . ) ...! I PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA "CITY. IOWA SATURDAY, TUNE 29, 1948 • SATta OfFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN Sidewalk ...... UlfIYmIIITY ""LllfDA.' .,...... 1M ....' Readers ",'" f.I! r;;~ ".". OlnM, Olt O.plt.l . ..._ lor '10. OIHI~ MonOiI .. Bikini Tests 'Will Affect. Weather ...., ~ t.,"II.. .ltII III. ._pa••• fl., ., Tb. ".11, I.... .t .., M ,.1 ,~ ,...... la , •• lie" ,roy'''' for "".Ir '.,oolt II .11. .fII_ .. rM • II! \ • D.. , 10 •••. GIMAA.L I"OT'OIi mu' \Ie "I r •• D"', 10 ... II, Fe ' ~:. , ...... , ...... n ... ,lbU"""1 ••U~ HOI' M B, ANDREW It. BOONE * * * * * * Opinions .....1 •• 11, 1e•• Pb •••• aD' _ ••1 be Tyr.... y. ~ Written Especially for Forum ••• ~ ... IIONID ., a ,.."ullI...... , Central Press Saturday, June 29. llI41 DEN", YEAST. Repurter CHAOTIC WINDS will rage. Supports letter new atmosphere will be created JAOK SMUTZ, Photographer UNIVERSITY CALENDAI from moisture in the air, a mush­ On library Hours QUESTION: DO YOU THINK room shaped cap will rise into lOW A CrTY SlIOUI,.D INSTALL Saturday. June 29 8 p. m. Experimcntal plays: 14e stratosphere 12 miles above TO THE EDITOR: I?AY PARKING METERS? Second sum)1ler exhlblt of con­ Four origlnal one-act plays. Mac­ t~ sea. I hlghly approve of ;L. S.'s lEt- . ,Cl,harl\ls F. Smoyda. 24, stu­ bride auditorium. TI)e1e is a preview of the atomic temporary arb, art building and ter which appeared in The Daily Gient, 148 Hawkeye village: YES, Iowa Union. Wedqe!Jday. July a bom,b explosion al)ove ;Bikini atoll Iowan, Sunday, June 23, regard- ljIJey have th,em in Cleveland and Second summer exhl)Jlt of Con­ n~t July 1. Conterenc.e on Inter-American 'Inlu ing lib~ary .hours. I do not .hesi- they work fine. All day parking temporary art, art buUdilli and Whjch means the experts with A1!airs. senate chamber, Old Cap­ tate in saying that .the arl,icle is eliminated' this way a person itol. Iowa Union. Cite the fleet conducting this impor­ was timely and in place. The Ji- parks as long as nec essary, lets 4 p. m. Guided tours, main 181- tant test keep both eyes on the Conference on Speech and Hear­ OfN brary hours are quite vexing to other people have the space when ing Rehabilitation, house cham­ lcry, art building. weather both before and after the the student who has to utilize he's througb Thursday, July" explosion. , ber, Old Capitol. Latin A every possible momen t. It is dif­ Independence Day - Cla~es Information on winds in the Sunday. June 30 cause of , ficult ·for one to see wherein re­ susprnded. stratosphere is being sought now, Second summer exhibit ot con­ Friday, July 5 loose livir serv~ library should be closed at for conditions wlll prove favor­ temporary art, art building aru:! unpardon 5 p. m. on Friday when the gen­ Second summer exhibit of con­ able on only one day in four. Iowa Union. temporary art, Art building and lTaceful eral library is not. ~es.e ve li­ Variation in wind directions at 4 p. m. Guided tours, main gal­ Prof. O. D brary shOUld be open If no other Iowa Union. medium or low altitudes could lery, art building. religion j library is, since much of the re- 4 p. m. Conference on Speech scatter dangerous radioactive par­ ,r . Monday, July 1 terday. quired class work is to be done and Hearing Rehabilitation. sen­ ticles over both the target ships Second summer exhibit of con­ Speak in there. I do not suggest more ate Chamber, Old Capitol. and those of Vice Adm. W. H. P. temporary art, art buildi,pg and Inter-Am hours for the workers. but If ad­ 8 p. m. Summer session lecture: Blandy's distant fleet - joint Iowa Union. Foster sai ditional hel~ can not be secured "Courts and Liberties: Wh05e army-navy task force No. 1- 4 p. m. Lecture on summer ex­ titude to then a rotating system might be Liberties?". by Honorable Wiley perhaps visiting disaster upon the hibition contemporary art, art Rutledge. associate justice of the repea tedly: used. . building auditorium. his exle control ships and their crews. Another very conducive place Smoyda O'Brien Unlled States supreme court; west Giant Winds Foreseen S p. m. Experimental plays: American fOr study is the English reading M. C. O'Brien. sailor, 20, Ana­ approach to Old Capitol (Mac­ Winds blowing the same direc­ Four original one-act plays. Mac­ bride auditorium In case of rain). Dlstr tion up to 50,000 feet are de­ room which evidel\\lY haa ceased mosa : NO, the city is not large bride auditorium. to be opet;ated. ·hav.e seen no enough to support them. Numer­ Saturday. July 6 sirable for the first test, when r Tuesday. July 2 announcement to that eflect, but ous -park.ing lots wOl;lld be much Second summer exhibit ot con­ the bomb blows whlle yet in the on two occlasions I have found better, and handy to everyone. Second summer,exhibit of con­ temporary art, art building and ~ir. Therefore, the United States the door locked. There are im- L. R. Spencer. 57, store owner, temporary art, art building anel Iowa Union. navy hopes to touch off the blast porlant books in the English read- 1030 Bowery: NO, I \lon't believe Iowa Union. 10 a. m. Conference on Speecl: when northeast trade winds per­ ing ~oom wliich are not to be they will be used. The students 12:00 m. LUncheon and program, and Hearing Rehabilitation, senate sist to a level of 10 miles or found in the generallibr.aI:Y. How cause most of the congestiod, Univers\ty club. chamber, Old Capitol. higher. How the results will be can the stuqent obtain a maxi- they will merely park in free measured represents a highly in­ mum amount of knov;ledge on a ' spots. teresting technique, perfected sub~Ei:f w\thout \he use of li­ after long and careful planning. brary facHities to suit his con­ Special aircraft have been de­ venience? GENERAL NOTICES described veloped by specialists of the air . . LAURE;t'T A~aOWN authority block material command at Wright field. (Miss Brown v;i\l be nappy to Ph.D. ;FRENCU READING EXAM pers, supper and a social hour and Similar developments in navy irreparable I know that adjustments have been The Ph.D. French reading ex­ will be held. Supper will be in Hellcats were worked out by made in libTl\ry hours. The new charge of the Westminster Mr. borliness." naval engineers. amination will be given Saturday, vey of 20 schedule aJ,JPears in \he General and Mrs. clUb. All Presbyterian Four B-17s, t:mpty of personnel July 27, from 8 a. m. to 10 a. m. Notice$ c01i\mn of today's nailY students and friends are tries was and controlled by radio, will b,l! in room 314, Schaeffer hall. espec­ Iowan-.The Editor). ially invited to attend. but the authorlty flown through the immediate areiT Please make application to take this examination by signing your meeting is open to the general ities, insul of the bomb blast. They will be name to the list posted outside public. verse purp controlled from "mother" planes, room 307, Schaeffer hall. No When b one for each "drone," or pilotless James O. White's Spencer Rickey applications will be accepted after NEW LIBRARY CHEDULE aircraft, and will carry a variety Thursday. July 25. The next ex­ of equipment and instruments re­ Lois A. Rickey, 45, social ser­ Schedule of university library amination will be given early in quired to obtain data on the bomb vi<;e worker, - St*e Sanitoriu"", hours June 30-July 3; July 5-Aug. October. test and its effects. lnte. rpreting Oakdale: YES, it would relieve 7. In addition to cameras and tele­ the trouble of finding a parking Reading Room, J.\lacbrtde Han CANTERBURY CLUB vision equipment the "drones" will T '~e News ... place. We had them in DetrOit, Monday through Friday, 7:50 and the people were perfectly Canterbury club will picnic at a. m.- lO p. m. be equipped with specially de- Three small nations-Siam, )IJ­ willing to pay for the use of a Lietle's barn this Sunday. Mret Saturday, 7:50 a. m.-5 p. m. signed bags to obtain air sam- THE ATOM BLA T-SuperimPQscd on photocraph of an atomic blast a:e several B 17s such 30)1 will bania and outer ~l'ngo1ia-seek Will an I handy place to park. at the parish house at 2 p. m. pIes from the blast area. Thes register res~ts of Bi~lli bomb test. "Drone" pla~s will be pHoUe~ Inset is ,Photo of Admiral Blandy. admission to the United Nations. Sunday, 2- 5 p. m. the sena Vincent Staples, 24, student, 702 Those who want to ride can make (Only limited service available bags will be opened and closeO I As both Siam and Alba.nia were commlttee. by radio control from the "mo- equipped to study the effects of for example. 'n, mperatures at sea, not obtainable within a har- members of the oLd League of Felkner: NO, I can't afford to arrangements with the Country on Sunday). club riding stables and join the Latin A ther" plane. radio activity on aU types of film various distances from the explo- bor. This bomb will descend in Nations, it is o'r\ter Mongolia pay 5c every time I want to Pilrk Reserve Readln, Room, Llbrarr and run into a store. I think a iI'OUp at the barn for a picnlc to be unde One or more "drones" may be and to test camera operahon and sion's center radio-activity un- a special bathysphere. Means which is coming up in the world. Annex to meet u person should be allowed to park supper. Cost will be 25 cents. Monday through Thursday. 7:50 sent into and through the huge equipment. derwater p;essures and 'wave are now be~g sought to keep Until recently it was not even downtown without having to pay said. The pillar of smoke from the explo- T~e B-29s a,lso wi.1I carry elec- heights. the ships in position until the recognized as a state, being \e­ a. m.-lO:OO p. m. Our energie for it. CANDIDATES FOR ADVANCED Friday and Saturday. 7:50 a. m. sion tp seek the answer to many tromc and radIO equIpment to ob- The usual orthodox instruments bomb goes off. 'gallY ''' part of China but politi­ DEGREES AT TOE A,UGU T turned 10 l - 5 p. m . questions as to the nature, phys- taln data for analysis of the ef- will record th-e data. Radio con- Why such tests? Some intor - cal,ly very close to Soviet Russia. CONVOCATION or "distrus kal properties and effects of the fect on radar detection and to trolled cameras mounted on tow- mation has been gl'eaned from The obvious in,terpretation of (Reserve books may be with­ i'ollowing is a list of require­ throughout blast and its smoke column. determine the degree of opera- ers on the islands and radio- the explosions at Hiroshima and outer MonlloIla's ,bid to enter the drawn tor overnight ue one hour Since the "drones" will be flown tional limitations due to radio ac- controlled planes flying close to Nagasaki. But ships are con- United NatIons is that it would ments to be met: belore closing time. 1. Check your record at the of­ TODAY by sight contact from the "mo- tivity. . the pillar of smoJ(e and gases will, structed differently from build- give SoviEt Russia one more vote Periodical Readlnr Room, Library fice of the registrar and in your Secretary ther" ship, radio control may be Douglas C-54s Will be employed H,ith other secret devices catch ings. in the assembly, but its political Annex A. Wallace temporarily lost in the smoke col- to obtain an over-al~ photographic. both pIctures aDd records ' of re- Scientists do not know exactly effect ·can be much broader. major department to assure your­ Monday through Friday, 8 8. m. self that you can qualify at the 10 p . m. table dlsc umn. I record of t?e. .atomlc bomb ~rop sultmg damage. the effects of such tremendous Here is a small asiatic race lean aftalr The "drone," however, will con- and all activItIes and operations Television cameras will carry pressures upon them- how much which has no oth~r power to August Convocation. Saturday, 8 a. m.-5 p. m. the senate tlnue to fly on automatic pilot of the spccially equippe~ planes to SCI·eens aboard distant ships pressure will be transmitted from thank except the Soviet Union 2. Fill out a formal application Government Doe\lJ1lenls Dept,. Capitol In at the "mother" plane regains partiCipating before and af\er the the full story of what happcns In the air burst through the water, for whatever p,rog1ess it ~as made. \ for graduation at the oUice of the Library Annex Inter-Amer sight of it and is able to re,sume detonation. that blasted lagoon. nor the height and duration or Actually there ~robably are registrar. Monday throui:b Friday, 8 a. m. radio control. What Will They See? The navy is interested in learn- resulting waves. more Mongols in Chinese-dom- 3. Secure from the graduate of­ -6 p.m. ence. This briel loss of control has . Data ob~ained ~rom the opera- ing what would happen to men Admiral Blandy offers certain ina ted inner Mongolia, Manchuria Staples Hansen fice the instructions for typinll Saturday, 8 a. m.-5 p. m. The 10: a thesis. Capitol wi! been considered by aircraft en- tlOn that I~ conslder~ pertn1ent in vat·ious parts of the ships. Anl- ("nnsolations. He is certain the and Sinkiang than ln outer Mon­ Sybil Ann Hansen, 23, secre­ Educalion Library, "EN' ltaD 4. If you are a candidate fOl" a by Kennel glneers. Television equipment in- to future al~craft deslg~ and em- mal life will take the place of hu- blasts will nat kill half the fish golia, where there are something tary, 80-1 Iowa avenue: No, I be­ Hours will remain the same. Ph.D. degree, deliver copy for dlreetor of stalled in the "drone" and 10- ployment Will be .apphed to the mans. "While we all regret this III the sea, and poison the rest less than a million. Although the lieve city taxes are high enough Schedules of hours for depart- cused on flight control instru- development program of the army necessity " Admiral Blandy has so they will kill all who eat fish Chinese have realized these peo­ your examination program to the mallon an to tak~ care of the parkin! fa­ men till libraries are pasted on fue state d ments will relay the instrument airforces. s aid"o~r greatest concern must thereafter; nor will the blasts pie needed help. they have been cilities without making people graduate office by July 6. dool·, of each library. readings to receiving apparatus What will witnesses observe? be ror the safety of the next gen- start chain reactions in the Wll- busy fighting off aggression from pay. Some other method such 5. Submit your thesis to tne is ''The ~ graduate college for checking be­ NEWMAN CLUll Good Nel&" in the "mother" plane. With this In Hirosh.ima and Nagasaki sur- eraLion rather than fOr the ani- ter, conve rting all to gas. They the outside. as parking lots should be utilized. television record radio control vivors said they saw a brilliant mals of thi one." will not blow a hole in the bot- So the Mongol under Chinese Prof. GoldwIn Smith, 35, in­ fore July 23. If you are a can­ Regular meeting Tue day eve­ may be re--established. light, then a blackout, mostly from A second test will be under- tom of the sea, cause tidal waves rule still is dominated by a cor- structor, 1301 Pickard: YES. peo­ didate for a doctoratc, also sub­ ning, at 7:30 p. m. at the Catholic Citing co mit your abstract and pay the $25 In addition to the extensive in- . dust. They lelt a rushing wind, tak~ in late July or August. For or destroy gravity. rur-t. disease-ridden Lama prlest- ple could come down town de­ Student cent r. A social hour will Americans e slrumentation required for radio and a great blast of heat. this one the bomb ·will be ex- The navy seeks to prove or hood, living a primitive life lIt­ posit their coin and park as long publication deposit. roHow the g neral dlsou!>Slon. iog in that control UDder all anticipat~ con- Ve;tical walls of some buildin!ls, ploded o~ tho ~ ur(acr .. amid ~ t Ih~ disprove nothing. The tests throw tie better than his ancestors did as they wish. They can aHord 6. Arrange with your depart­ worth of th ditJ?ns, th~ "drones': Will be as w~Jl as trees. and po~es, dJr- target ships. In addition to the strong light on needed changes in the bronze age. to pay j.o park ina decent spot. ment for the oral examinations, W LEY FOUNDATION consln said, eqUIpped ..... Ith other lnstruments ectly unde: the bomb, III some blast and heat generated, thIS in design of ships and aircraft, aut since outer Mongolia came July 25 to Aug. 3, inclusive. Dr. M. L. H her will lelld a all their ba particularly selected for record- cases remame.d standmg. but t~e one is expecled to produce heavy in ground weapons, in naval tac- under Soviet influence a decade 7. Leave the original and fir t cUscu 'ion on "Probing the Baaes their jng desired data during and after roofs were dished or broken tn, underwater prEssures and shock tics and strategy. The kind of ago it has acquired roads, some copy of your thesis at the Grad­ of Morality" al the We ~y 1he explosion. and the branches of trees were to the hulls of the ships and very navy We have in the [uture well small factories, an army and air- uate office at lea.;t twenty-four foundation student ye per forum Camera and television equip- torn off downwa.l"d: A little 1ar- high wFes. ' may be predicated upon what is force, and an "autonomous gov- hours before Convocation. and picnic Sunday nl ht. StutieqJs ment will record the detonatIons ther out, all buIldmgs and trees Third Bontb Next Year learned from these tests. ernment." Its peopl-e have been and othen; of college aic should lind reactions for later analysis. wel'e knocked down except for Howcver that i not to be the taught to read and write their WESTMINSTER FELLOW Hll' m et at the student center at 6 Permanent instrument re~dings an occasional .reinforced concrete end. So~e time next yEar. a Don't judge an egg by the color own language along wIth Russian VESPER p . m. if they wish to attend. Sup­ wiH be recorded automatICally. structure. Still farther dIstant, third bomb wIll b unleashed-'" of its shell which is no- indica- and th\!' Lama priests have been Wesiminster tellowship vespers per i 35 cents. Cameras installed in the buildings and trees wue leaning this ohe at a depth in the open tion of the yolk color. ..(See INTER:PRETING, Page 5) .. "mother" plane will be trained away [rom the point oC the burst. ______'______-'--- ______will be held Sunday at 4:30 p. m. veIt." Prof on the televised image of instru- Only actual experience will re­ with Mrs. Martin Maarbjerg of WOMEN IN EDUCATION cl,recl. ments on the "drone" to proviele veal whether ships behavo like Copenhagen, Denmark as guest Theta chapter ot Pi Lambda In the nrte PlaHer Chatter speaker. Immediately aCter ves- (See BULLETIN. Page 5) a permanent recording on film of buildings in the face of this awe~ "Understandl Smith instrument readings for futUre some blas t. Dischords: By Bill Ruxlow Oak tion" gener study and analysIs. MQny FQmous Sh ~s II. Uoward Oak, 36, district reached by t This equipment has been de- • conservationist, 430 N. Gilbert: RADIO CALENDAR to avoid em tic and colo signi!9 to supplement the experts' Mc;lrked for Destruction LtONEL HAMPT N QUAR.TET with !l piano solo, this sIde ac­ YES. I believe it would help salvo WSUI (910) WHO (1040) WMT (600) KXiL (541) e)le-witness accounts of the atoOl APPROX,IMATELY 100 ~ hips the parking problem. I've seen American co bomb explosion, at)d to aid in re- await histOI·Y'S greatest blast. (Decca 1&830) centuates t~e roythm department. merchants como out and move ••. m. II : KO Il. m. W IT M Idowbrk WHO B~rn Donee and place m ducing the variance in eye-wit- Some time on the first day of Hamp's Salty Blues-If you A clarinet solo . by Buddy de WSUl Morn. ChapelWSUI S'ashlon WIIO II. Round. A:IO p. WI. economic and their cars aIter the police check WMT News WMT Courtty Fllr KXEI.. Do bill WMT Cel,btl\,)" O. ness accounts. • July, an atomic bomb will. ex- like Hilmp, listen lo this side as Frllnco, of "Qpus No. 1" f~e, and among Amerl them. I believe this would let WHO Sonl(ellow. WHO Serenade 8 .. 4~ p. III. "" ..... In addition to the "drones," thQ plode in the air Boove BIkini aton he keeps the spotlight on him­ a combination of open and muted people get docent parking places KX!!L Wake Up lo ... air mateviel command has de- in the IVIarshall islands. Some of trumpet sOJos, give this side a downtown. WSUI Mu •. Mlnlat. WSUI Mu•. Inter. WRUI M. I. 01 Mu. KXEL 1hl101t On. university veloped spe<;ial planes for phoio- the target fleet, many famous self throughout. Contains some nod of approvement. Helen Zimmerman, 22, student, WMT Mary Mil"" - Farm Fl. II WMT R~ord Shop A:ta p • •• m.ent defen graRhic usc. 'lJhese ships, known namCs in American naval exploits, of Billy MakiIl's ' guitar plus a BUNK JOHNSON and his WHO Mel. Madh. WIIO Konn.v 1381

---.-.--- ~ -- -- - . - --..-.,.~ ... -..... ~-""._ ...... ~~.6' .. £'. ' __M _ • .4. _-' ~ ...... ' ...... ,...... -._ _ t..~ ... ' .,..", ...... , • • ...... _ .... " II, 1948 SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1948 THE DAlLY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE THREE 10 University of Iowa Graduates, Students (ounly GOP Foster Tells Latins Distrust Announce Recent Weddings, Engagements Announcements have been re­ EblaleJ'-BJre Members Hold ceived of the following Weddings Mr$. W. E. EbInger of it. Madi- How to Keep Cool During Meat Shortage and engagemenls of University of BI ., M , on has announced the engage- (ails Motives Iowa alumni and student: me~t of her daughter, MardeU, to lennla • ee Johnston-Bolden James W. Eyre, son of Mr. and\ At a ceremony June 16 in We t Mrs. J. R. Eyre of ·MI. Vernon. Imperialistic Union Eal'leyne Johnston, dauah­ The wedd1ng will take place in Nearly 80 Johnson county Re­ ter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. John­ Iowa City publican m t t th Communlty ston of West Union, became the Miss Ebinzer Is a lIl'aduate of building t 10 o'clock y t.erday 'Inlulting Behavior' bride of Carl Jo eph Holden, son Ft. lifed!SOn hilh school and re- morning tor th biennal con­ of C. S. Holden of Detroit. The ctived her B.s. derree and gradu- vention. Cited as Conception wedding was performed at the ale nurses' certificate from the William F. Morrison..,a Damed Of North Americanl Bethal Presbyterian church by the chool of nursing at the Univusity chairman of the conVfntion Whleb Rev. G. H. Ukena. of Iowa June 8. re-elected aU central committee The bride was graduated from Latin America distrusts us be­ members. cause of our "insulting behavior, lhe West Union high school lind MarUll-- beo .....er I Holding oUice for the second loose living, superiority complex, attended LindenwoOd ~ollege at In a double Tlnl ceremony two-year term re: Fred V. unpardonable vulgarity and dis­ St. Charles, Mo., and the Univer­ Maranda Martin daugtber of Mr. Johnson, chairm n; Mrs. Geor,e lTaceful ignorance," declared sity ot Iowa where she was af­ and Mrs. Ralph E. Martin of Hunter, vice chairman; rs. Ed­ Prof. O. D. Foster of the school of filiated with Gamma Phi oror­ Washington, Iowa, bee me the ward J . Murphy, cr tary; and religion In an address here yes­ ity. bride 01 ~orman P. Schoonover, Wilbur J Tt", Ir a urer. terday. The bride-groom Is a graduate Bon at Mr. and Mrs. H. J . Schoon- Herb rt J. Rtls was elected Speaking at the Conference on KENNETH HOLLAND of the at Ohio Wesleyan and Michigan over of Wa blngton, at the Meth- IJm di. tTlct conlll' Jonal com­ Inter-American affairs, Professor state department will address the State college and belonged to the odlst church there June 16. mille m n. Del gat s were elec- Poster said that he found this at­ Inter-American rufalrs confer­ Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He Mrs. Schoonover was graduated ted tor th Itat cony nlion, July titude toward the United States ence In the senate chamber of served five years and eight from Washington hiBh chool and 26. t te j u die I I co~v~­ repeatedly in interviews during Old Capitol today at 10:30 a. m. months in the United Stales navy. has completed one year at the tlon, . Au(USt 3, and the dls1nct his extensive travels in Latin University ot Iowa. Judi lal cony ntlon, July 16. American countries. Schultz-Hoonr Mr. Schoonover Is 8 graduate of The t nus of E. Earl Thomu Distrust of "Yankees" stems Washington high &Chool n d and W. L. Snid r, candieat for from "economic aud Imperialis­ SUI Dramatic Arts In II double rIng ceremony June 14 in Waterloo, Ruth Schultz Wa hington jUnlor college and is the 1947 and 1948 t rms of county tic motives of Yankee Protest­ now enrolled as I junior In th auperv or, \ re r \' ned. Snl­ ant missions" to Latin America, of Iowa City became the bride of Department Plans WH1LE CmCAGO 8WELTERED In 90-derree heat and meat supplies vanl bed. butchers In tbls Robert J. Hoover. son of Mr. and coli ge a! pharmacy at the lrnl- d r was nominated to th poIt Professor Foster expla ined, versity for 19~7, and Thomas for 1948. quotlJ.J' from hts Latin Ameri­ wholesaler's cold-room take both bardshlps In stride with a sociable rame of card •• There's nothlnr Mrs. E. L. Hoover a! Waterloo.' In the cooler, or on the choppln&, blOCk-card table to take th,tr minds off the ume. . An Iowa I w code t hnlea\lty ~an notebook. These motives, he The bride and brid groom are Production of Plays Bua-huul- teltlU m de the change n ry. ~ontlnued, are tIle grealest attendmg the University a! Jowa Mr. and M . Philip St liz r. in M king th cony nlion' key­ slorle barrier arainst cordlat, Forthcoming production of a this summer. not addr , Dr. Jacob A. series of original one-act experi­ their summer home al Lake Oko­ Crustlul relaUo ns /b e t wee n boji, announ d the approachln, Swish r laud d the R pubJiean North and South America. mental plays written by students Skills Conference Knla-ht-Lundqulst marrlale ot their daughter, P - eanGidal star th Novemb r elec­ on the campus has been an­ Ends Here The midwest, Foster said, was The ngag ment and approach­ trlcla Ann B rgtund, to Walford tions and lold th n lIy of described by a Latin American nounced by the dramatic arts de­ Ing marrage of their daughter, coordln ted Uort and local co­ partment. Problems in communication Martin Rierson Jr., IOn of Mr. and authority as "a wheat and meat Ruth, to Rob rt D. LllDdqulst has Mrs. W. M. Ri r on of Boone. The opera tion in th pOlitical race. block and a lobby" that has done The first production of the skills are like a mattress, you can Summer Enrollment OJ'. L. L. Dunnlnlton delivered grasp it any place, but the dif­ Convention Delegates been announ ed by Dr. and Mrs. wedding will be a mld- umm r irreparable harm to "good neigh­ summer series, consisting of four B. L. Knight ot Cedar Rapids. Mr. the convention Invocation. one-act plays, will open for two ficulty is to get the right grip, Hits 47.Year High event to take place at Ih lake. borliness." A United States sur­ Lundquist is the son of Mr. Ilnd Miss Berglund all nded the vey of 20 Latin American coun­ performances, T u e s day and declared Prof. Paul Bagwell ot With 4,609 at SUI Named De~ocrats Michigan State college communi­ by Mrs. Edwin W. Lundquist of University or Iowa Cor three years tries was described by the same Wednesday at 8 p. m. in Mac­ Cedar Rapids. bride audiloruim. cation skills department at the More than half of the 4,609 stu­ where she is affiliated with Delta 14 Former Students authority as filled wilh "absurd­ Miss Knight is a grnduate of the Gamma sorority. Mr. Rierson was ities, insu Its, ignorance and per­ To enable the theater group to last session of the communication dents enrolled in the summer ses­ J, E. Meade Reelected, skills conference here yesterday. University ot Iowa and the Mercy recently discharBed aeter two verse purposes." gauge a broader and more gen­ sion are veterans of World War ho pital school of medical tech­ In History Department eral audience reaction and to give II, according to figures released Committees Chosen years In the United States nlJvy. When he approached a UnJted Professor Bagwell said that the notogy. Mr. Lundquist Is al 0 a more persons an opportpnity to He wUl enter (he unlverllty n xt States £enator on the subject of communications skills program by Regi strar Paul J. Blommers At Meeting Yelterday graduate of the university and is see the experiemnetal plays; a fall and Miss Berglund will return Accept New Positions LaUn American affairs recently, here and at Michigan State col­ yesterday. a senior in the school dent! try. new policy, expanding the limited at to complete her nlor year. Profe or Foster said, the sena­ lege are very similiar although The total enrollment Is the larg­ The w ddlng will tak place audience, is being introduceCl this Johnson co u n t y 0 mocrats Fourl en mor form r stud nu, tor conlessed, "You 'might as there was no collaboration be­ est in the 47-year history of the Aug. 24. season. tween the two schools. "I think university's summer sessions. Of named delegates to three conven­ WI~belln-Hull who rived Ph.D. or M.A. d - well be tatklne Greek to me for Marion WI b n J', daughter of gr from lh un Iv r Ity history Invi tations to the productions the University of Iowa has made the total, 2,784 are veterans, about tions, passed a set of resoiutions I don't know anything about and re-elected James E. Meade Llr1Jttoot-Ben on Mrs. Lou Wiebener of Dav nport, department, h VI' .. ntly are being sent out by the drama~ic more progress towards solVing the 44 percent of whom are married. .c­ t b 0 s e problems.,' Professor Mr. nnd MI's. Harry N. Liaht­ was united In mllrrlole with Her- c pted n w po, iUons 01' advance. arts department to Iowa City problems of the department than Men outnumber women aimost congressional committeeman from l Fosler added that the senator this district, at their convention fool of Ft. Madison have on­ bert B. Hull, son of Mr. nd Mrs. In rank, Prof Winfred T. Root, was an Important member of merchants and their employees Michigan State college," he added. three to one, the announcement nounced the npproaching mar­ and to several members of the shOWed. The largest enrollment is in the Joh nson cou nty courthouse Blair Hull of De Moln s, Satur- htad of th hl.ltoq d partmenl, the senate foreign relations More Staff Meetin&,s ringe of their daughter, Patricia, day at the Trinity Episcopol cath- said y t ruay. University building and grounds According to Professor BagwelJ, in the College at liberal arts, with yesterday. comm.lttee. • to Paul Edward Benson, son of edral at Davenport. Th Rev Elm I' Elli., Ph.D. 1930, Is dean lorce. the instructors need more "in­ 2,008. The graduate college Is At a meeting of the central Latin Americans are "hungry" committee immediately following Mr. Dnd P. N. Benson of Burling­ V rnon L. ShotUu k Jon s oftlci- of the coJI g of Hberal arts, UnJ­ to be understood and are willing Admission is also open to all :service training because few know second with 1,484, and engineering the convention Attorney William ton. ated a t the double ring c r many. v ralty of Ml ·ourl. to meet us haJ!way, Professor members of the First Nighter's how to teach students to listen or third with 307. A graduate of Ft. Madison high club holders of 1945-46 season Jackson was re-elected commit­ Mrs. Hull was tradllated from Gov rnm~nt peclallli said. The difficulty lies with 1.15. read. Too many of them are ]n other units, the enrollment school, Miss Lightfoot attended tickets to the university theater. tee chairman; Mrs. Charles W. the Durant high school and the Howard R. Anderlon, Ph.D. Our energies, he declared, must be trained with emphasis on written is nursing, 262; commerce and the University of Iowa, wh re she American In tilute of Commerc . 11130. dlr ctor or education omell Plays included in this first pro­ or spoken English." he said. The law, each 224, and pharmacy, 35. Lacina, vice-chairman; Attorney turned to the service of nations Cora tJnash secretary, and James nffillated with 0 Ito DeltD Delta Mr. Hull was graduated from Dur- univer Ity, has b en &ranted a duction group are "Cured," a play problem is being elminated at Special enrollments in such 'Work sorority. or "distrust, fear and hatred ll. Meade treasurer. ant high schol ond the junior col- lcav of ob nee ID a ume a posl­ throughout the earth" will ensue. dealing with life on the tobacco Michigan by numerous staft meet­ as field geology Lakeside labora­ Mr. Benson was graduated (rom plantations in Virginia; "Tanks at lege of Wentworth MilJlury acad- Uon In the United States otrlce ot ings where efforts are made to tory, summer management, en­ The central committee Is the Burlington high school and Iowa emy, Lexington, Mo. He is now education as a "sp lall.it" in the Mortain," which concerns itself bring the group of instructors to gineering for army officers and official organization of the Demo­ TODA V'S PROGRAM Stnte coli ge at Ames, wh re he n junior in the college of denlls- social selenc and aoearaphy dl­ Llbral'1 with the experiences of a tank a more common level. audiometry total 65 students . . cratic party In JohnSon county. was a member of Deltn Chi fra­ try at the University or Iowa, vision. Secretary of Commerce Henry crew in the war; "In Good Time," 34 One of the most difficlllt prob­ The names of delegates to t rnity. wh re he is affiliated with th Philip D. Jordon, Ph D. 1935, re- A. Wallace will lead a round a farce-fantasy, and "Naked in the 8 a. m. lems encountered by the commu­ attend the Democratic slate con­ Psi Omega dental fmternlly. siened from Miami univ rslty to table dlscussion on Inter-Amer­ Wind," a psychological play. Di­ nication department at Michigan vention in Des MOines, July 16, accept an a ocl te pro! ssor hip Ican aftalrs at 9 P. m. today In rection 01 the plays will be han­ mith-Dobson State college is making the co urse Dr. Silverman Tells were approved. In Ih Unlv r Ily of Minnesota. the senate cbamber ot Old dled by experienced theater per­ Neva Jeane Smith, daughter at 8a,ert-FlLwceU flexible enough so that the In­ An equal number of delegates Paul H. Gidd ns, Ph.D. 1930, Capitol In the second day of the sonnel. wiU represent Johnson county Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Smith ot Joan Ev lyn ayers, daulhter Inter-Americau aUairs confer­ structors, wi thout too much regi­ Hearing-Aid Progress Ft. Madison, was married June of Mr. and Mrs. Hugart A. Sayers was granted a 1 v ot ab nce 8 a. m. mentation, can obtain the desired July 22 at the state judicial con­ ence. vention in the state capital. 18 to Donald L. Dobson, son o! of Aurora. Mo., and Harry B. rrom Aile h ny colleg to accept. The 10:30 session In Old results and still conform to the Dr. S. Richard Silverman' of the Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Dobson, at 8 Fawcett, SOn of Mrs. Harry B. Guggenh im fellow,hip and to w· Fair IExhibit to Show department's standards, Professor July 18, 18 delegates will be Capitol will feature an address Central Institute for the Deaf in present at the 8th district judicial ceremony in the Pirst Baptist Fawcett of Burlington, wer prepare a volume on the hJ.tory 01 Han Bagwell explained. chllrch of Burlington llnlted In marrlag June 23 in th the pelrol um Industry. me. by Kenneth 110lland, assistant St. Louis, Mo., predicted yester­ convention In the Johnson county director of International Inlor­ Paintings of Faculty SUI Test System day that in from five to ten years courthouse. The bride attended the Ft. Mad- F'iTs t Presbyterian church at Education Dean mati on and cullural alraus of hearing aid performances will be Resolutions approved by the Ison high school and the Unlver- Aurora. Eugene R . .f 'a ir, Ph.D. 1938, haa Works of 12 Universiy of Iowa Robert Ebel, director of the sHy or Iowo. The groom attended Mrs. Fawcet eraduated [rom been appointed dean of the college the &tate deJl3,rtmellt. His topic University examination depart­ so standardized that hearing aid convention included endorsement Is ''The Bases for a Permanent faculty members will be shown clinics will be unnecessary. the Ft. Madiso n high school. Coe Gulf Park college in Gullport of education at Southern Illinois in a special exhibi t at the Iowa ment, explained the six-test sys­ of the Truman administration ond college in Cedar Rapids and Miss., and the University o! Iown. Good Netchbor Polley." Speaking in the second weekly the state and county Democratic Normal, Carbondale, III. state fair Aug. 21 to 30. The ex­ tem used here in lhe commllnica­ served three years in the United She was a member 01 Kappa lecture in the summer conference ticket. John H. Pow II, Ph,D. 1938, left hibit will be an additional feature tion skills deportment. States army until his discharge Alpha Theta ororlty. Mr. Faw­ the Univer ity or Delaware to al­ Citing complaints in Chile that Ebel demonstrated how the series on Speech and Hearing Re­ A three-fold amendment to the of the state fair art sa lon which habilitation, Dr. Silverman based last December. cell has resumed hIs studl In sume the po t of librarian In Americans exploited copper min­ will sponsor a $675 prize art com­ theme section of the tests was r'esolutions moved by James E. his prediction on the advances Meade, and passed by the con­ The couple will live in F'ort l the school of journalism at the charge oC r s arch in th free ll· ing in that country, Prot Ells­ petition. graded or rated by passing Ollt Madison, where Mr. Dobson Is an university aller serving two and a made during the war by govern­ vention recommended fi nancial brary Philadelphia, Pa. worth o! the University of Wis­ Paul Parker of Des Moines, writing examination book:s which orchestra leader, halt years In the Army air corps. Myron L. Koenli Ph.D. 11138, consin said, "Nuts, they'd be 11at are acutually used during the ex­ ment agencies set up to aid deaf­ aid to the public school system, widely known Iowa painter who ened service men. particularly the rural schools; formerly ot Coe college, is dean on their back if we didn't buy will head the Edmundson Me­ aminations. The grading sys­ of lhe junior colJeee and aasoclate their copper and trade with tem includes purpose, content, or­ In an effort to evaluate per­ recommended backing of the state SUI Sets August 7 morial museum, has been named formances of hearing aids then on profe sor at Georie Washington them." organization 'and presentation. housing appropriation, and advo­ Adelaide E. McKnight director of the contest. the market, the national defense As Summer Session university. Milch or the 111 feellna- In cated more liberal treatment ot The contest, which will be re­ All the themes are read by two research committee experimented the state educational institutions MiLlard W. Han n, Ph.D. 11139, L"Un. American resulted from Commencement Day stricted to Iowa artists, will be instructors. When their ratings with methods of measuring the financially. Services Arranged resigned from the Teachers col­ the "muddle-headed, selfish and marked by a new basis ot com­ di ffer too much a third reader lege, Ab rd en, S. D. to accept an effectiveness of the aid actually Speakers at the convention The University of Iowa's mid­ Inconlliderate policies a-overn­ petition designed to give artists reads the theme and a medium is provided by the devices. The assitant professorship al< the Uni­ ment durlnr the admlnlstra"on were Prof. Clara Daley of the his­ Funeral services for Mrs. Ade­ summer Commencement Is scluKl­ "greater freedom." Entries will be taken from the three results for agency then took into account the tory department, Attorney Jack versity of Chicogo. of President Theodore Roose­ laide E. Daniels McKnight, 77, uled for AUK. 7 the closing date classified and prizes awarded on the final grade. appreciable differences Which they C. White, Attorney William Hart, Harold Briggs, Ph.D. 1929, ac­ velt:' Professor Ellsworth de­ the basis of mediums used, rather will be held at the I.O.O.F. ceme­ ot the summer session. cepted a position as head of the A demonstration of films used found in recommending specific member of the state Democratic tery at Marengo today at 3 p. m. A {our-week special session for clared. than subjects. to speed reading skill of students makes of hearing aids to meet the central committee, and Frank J . history department at Southern In the afternoon symposium on Fac ulty members whose works with R.ev. P . H. Pollock o!1iciat­ veterans of World War II and a illinois Normal unlv rslty. here was given by Prof. James particular need of each service Krall, Democratic candidate tor ing. "Understanding Th rough Educa­ will be included in the exhibit three-week independent study Penll.,lvlUl" Archlvt. B. Stroud of the speech depart­ man. state legislature. unit for graduate students wlll tion" general agreement was are James Lechay, Maurice Las­ ment. The films can be shown at Mrs. McKnight died at 7 a. m. Leonidas Dodson, Ph.D. 11127, Dr. Silverman beJieves that the yesterday in University hospital fill the interim preceding the reached by the group on the necd ansky, Hubbert Albrizio, Stuart a rapid or slow speed, depending manufacturers will so profit by factulty member of the University to avoid emphasis ot the roman­ Edie, Joseph Cox, David Durst, where she had been a patient openlntl of the first semester of of Pennsylvania, has been ap­ on the student's ability to read. this research that within a few Graduate to Publish for three months. 19'41-47, Sept. 23. tic and colorful aspects of Latin Virginia Banks, Mary Holmes, As his ability in reading increases, years the type hearing aid selected pointed archivist of the university American cou ntries in education Shirley Throckmorton, Maxil The family rEquests no flow­ Prior to the forma I openlne of and, has charge o! writing the uni­ the speed of the film is increased will become a matter of personal literary Work in July the semester one week will be de­ and place more slress upon the Ballinger, Ernest Freed and Byron correspondingly. Slides showing preference, as in the case of auto­ ers. Friends may call at Beck­ versity's history in World War n. economic and social relationships Burford. man's until noon today. voted to orientation and registra­ Willi3m C. Lang, Ph.D. 1941, is reading progress averaging 90 mobiles now. Martin Yoseloft, who received a tion. among American countries. Five graduate assistants In the words for a semester accompanied Tomorrow morning from 10 to B.A. degree in English here in Mrs. McKnight, who has been now dean at Yankton college. Prof. R. G. Bowman of the art department, Jean HarriS, Mal­ the Iilm. 12 o'clock, Dr. Silverman will con­ 11141, has written a book, "No Jiving with her daughter, Mrs. S. D. university reoa-raphy depart­ colm Myers, Enid Ellison Cutler, duct a round table discussion in Greener .Meadows," to be pub­ Jacob Van del' Zee, 130 Ferson Ralph Turner, M.A., Is now ment defended American cap­ Jane Wilson and Helen Kae Car­ the senate chamber of Old Capitol llshed July 8. avenue, was born April 14, 1869, Worl~ Affairs Forum professor o( hi tory at Yale uni­ Ital"tlc Interests In La tin ter will also contribute works to orl "Speciol. Problems in Selection His publisher, Bernard Acker­ at Weybridge, Vt. versity. America on the rroundS' that the the exhibit. Mary Holmes to Talk and Use 'Of Hearing Aids." Mem­ man, Inc., New York, described She was a member of the Pres­ Edward Alexander, M.A., rl!­ American companies are devel- bers of ~he stalf of the speech the book as "a fine literary work" byterian church, the Eastern To Produce Program signed as superintendent of tho opine the land re!lOurces which WALLACE­ clinic and the otolaryngology de­ in a recent announcement of the Star, and of the past matron's Wisconsin Historical society to ac- would not otherwise be de- On 'Insanity in Art' partment will participate. ronting publication. clubs of both Marengo and Iowa The World Affairs forum a stu- cept a post as director or Colonial veloped and provldlne jobtl and City. dent ofltaniution dedlcated to a Williamsburl, Inc., Va. eeonomlc betterment for native (Continued from page 1) better understanding of world The second lecture of the series She is survived by one daugh­ ",orkers for the companles.1 ter, one twin brother, a daugh­ events and Thl! part of students in In the clOSing minutes of the ted States has greatly curtailed presel,lted in conjunction with the Driyers' Te.ts Date Camping Fraternity Phi Delta Phi Initiates ter-in-law, two lIl'anddaughters, those happenln.. , will take over discussion C Lso Carponell of its purchase of huge quantities of second annual summer exhibition the Wl'it.ing and direction of the Names Five Scouts of contemporary art will be deliv­ Shifted to Tuesday two grandsons and three «real Panama ~ow studying In the col- strategic materials from La tin speech department's weekly IS­ ered by Mary Holmes ot the art grandchildren. Charter Members lege ot' engineering here, raised America wit~ the re~ult that the 15 at Banquet Tuesday Drivers' tests will be given from minute radio show "It Happened the question of what gain the woges of ,Labn American workers department at 4 p. m. Monday In 8:30' a. m. to .. p. m. each Tues- Last Week," starUnl Monday. Pive boy scouts, selected from people of Latin American coun- have dropped. • the art building auditorium. Phi Delta Phi, lepl fraternity, day instead of Wednesday, be­ Chamber to Discuss Also beginninl next week, the the Iowa River Valley council, tries received toward ral lng their "'while it Is , true that every et­ In her lecture Miss Holmes will held a banquet at 4 p. m. and an ilnhfng next week, at the John­ forum's other program, "Review will 10 to Camp Mlnneyata. near ltandard of living by contributi ng for~ has bee~ mode to ~ushion .the examine the hypothesis and com­ iniUation for 15 at 8:80 p. m. at son county courthouse. Double Parking CaM of Nations," formerly beard over Davenport, today to become chu­ 10 heavily to the war trort at the Lalln American countries agamst mon statement frequently raised the Jefferson hotel Tuesday. Patrolman Rube Warner, who ....SUI every Tueaday at 8 p. m., ter members of the Order of the United States the eUects of the transition, many by critics antagonistic to contem­ With Chief of Police . Latin Americans cannot escape the Judge Harold D. Evans of Iowa has elven the tesla to cOllDty res­ will be rescheduled for Wednes- Arrow, honorary camPinJ Ira. porary art that "modern art is In­ City and Benjamih P. Butler of idents for nine years has been 48)' ni,hts at the same Ume. ternlty. feeling that, though the United sane." Centennial Mass Waterloo were guests. replaced by Patrolman Lester The p€tJUon of local &rocert " It Happened Last Week" I;i a The scouts selected are Dick States no longer exemplifies ..im­ Miss Holmes will construct her The Rt. Rev. Magr Carl H. perialism, Its policy frequently The initiates, all freshman law Nieland of Marengo. Warner has for more lenient double parkin, commentary on the news of the Williams, Jack Cooper ad Melnberg of St. Mary's chllrch. smacks ot opportunism," he said. lecture on two questions desiBned students, were Georee R. Bowden been transferred to Jones county. restrictions was temporarily past week, with special emphaais Chauncy Schmidt, all of Iowa hal announced that he will ob­ Secretary Wallace predicted that to clarify the general altitude of of Davenport, Peter A. Selp of shelved by Chamber of Commerce on world affairs. The program City; Dave Hender of Kalona, IJId "rve the State Centennial cele­ the fulure ot Latin America would the crltic_"What Is this conbep­ Waterloo, Jesale R. Pettet of board ot directors pendinl a meet­ will now be under exclusive su- Jim Freeu of MarenlO. bration In the Sunday mass On undoubtedly be very bright. He tlon Insanity In art?" and "How Logan, Lyman C. Bybee of Knox­ fillld, Wallace W. Butler of Wa- ing with Police Chief O. A. White. P6Vlslon of memberl of the Leaving this afternoon at & p. June 30. sa id the flowering of tlte Spanish far Is art Insane, if 11 is insane?" ville, John J. Williams of Des terloo, .Tohn D. Donnell of Water- At a meeting yesterday noon, forum who ",111 endeavor to dig m. with Andy Zimmerman, chair­ This day was recommended by genius, which never came to full lIlustrated slides reproducing Moines, Wl\.lter A. Newport of 100, Roy E. Clough of Mason City, the board a,reed to meet with betw~n the llnes to find and re- man of camping and actiYiI7 the ArchbIshop Chancery o! Du­ import In the Iberian penln~ula, certain ot the works currently Davenport, Frank D. HllJoon of R. John Swanson of Red Oak, White Monday to discuss the lit­ port what " rea1J.r ,olng on in committee of thI.I coundl, the buque al the day to speak (If would take place in Latin America showing In the exhibit will be em­ Dubuque. Robert J . Thornton of Waterloo uation. Following the discussion the world today, accordJng to scouts 11'111 ,0 throuab the ordeal the history of the state and the when the bonds of illiteracy and ployed by Miss Holmes during her Edwin A. Hicklin, of Waterloo, and Cbulel G. Rbeling of Daven- action on the petition will be Char... MebI, AI of Dany ..., CaL, and ceremon1al tomorrow and re­ ~atbolic church in Iowa, mllltal'1 domination are removed. lecture, __-JA.-J ... _... ,L-o. __ Robert K. HotchJWa of Bloom- ~rt, cOlllid~ ___. _'_ ____ fGnull JllIIDbet, turD tomorrow aItemGaD...... -.... PAGE FOUR , ~HE DAHY IOWAN. IOWA CITY. IOWA _ SATURDAY. JUNE 29. 1948 Zaharias; 8erg Wins Managers Rate a Cheer -, Faulty Puller Proves Downfall Ellsworth Vines Sets f_lkenburg To Babe's Bid for lftird lt11e In Ga~~:~~ 'O:d In Nel finals MONTREAL (AP) - Ellsworth EVANSTON, Ill. (AP)- Gllrd- DES MOINES (AP)-A rebounding "Georgia Peach," 22-year­ old Louise Suggs near Atlanta, blasted the bid of musc'ular Babe Vines, the Cormer tennis star from nEr Larned, undefeated southern of Chicago, blistered the back nine conference singles star from WU­ Didrikson Zaharias for a third straight title with a brilliant 1 up of the Beaconsfield Golf club lIam and Mary college in Vii'­ victory yesterday in the semi-finals of the Women's Western Open course yesterday with a seven- ginia, and B9b Falkenburg of golf tournament. ' under-pa I' 29 for a 65 and a new Southern California ye;;terday Patty Be'I'g of Minneapolis, who had shared medal honors with course record. won the semi-finals of the N. C. Miss Suggs. survived the other semi-final clash, also in an IS-hole flut at the end of the day's A. A. tennis championships. finish battle as she outlasted Dot Kirby of AUanta, 1 up. play, he could claim only a tie for They will play for the national Patty, winnel' of the event in 1941 lind 1943. apd Miss SUllgs second lllace after the first 36 title this afternoon at Northwest­ will square off in a 36-hole championship tussle toqay (9:30 a. m. holes of the Canadian Open golf ern university. CST). champiOllshlp. Leader at the half- Larned, who has never lost a Although Mrs. Zaharias could iced on the 17th, a 117-yard pitch· way ml\rk was the lean former set in college play, defeated !-larry blame much of her downfall on a and-putt affair, where the Sabe sergeant from Little Rock, Ark .• Likas of San Francisco univer- pathetic putter-she had three tnree-putted-missing one from E. J. (Dutch) Harrison. sHy, 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. ' three-putt greens-in the lind it four ;feet. Harrison posted a 69, three Larned beat Likas by playing was the courageous play of 115- Louise tapped two putts .lor a l,lnder standard figures, yesterday the same type of game fhe coast pound Miss Suggs which ended par three and tpe hole, lind then afternoon to add to his initial 68 star used Thursday to eliminate her two-year open reign. took the match on the .18th when for a score of 137 that put him Tom Falkenburg-ste<,ldy place­ The little southern gal with the Babe mi~ed ' a four-footer t9 halve one shot ahead of Vines, winner ments which kept Likas constantly PATTY BERG, 01 Minneapolis, Minn., tees all as Dorthy Kirby. of heavyweight tee punch had the the hole with fours. . of the Massachusetts open this off blliance. SYMBOL'lZING THEJR team's rlsc to sixth place alter a 10nK soJourQ Atlanta, Ga., watches. Patty advanced Into the Iinals when she won Babe three down at the turn with Babe, coming back with a hot week, and two other professionals Falkenbu.rg employed straight In the National Lealrue cellar, Herb pClJllock (leIt), BU!lllle 5 manlier, their match one up yesterday In the seu.J-flnals 01 the Women's Wes· 36, had a medal of even par 77, a one-under-par 38 and then ap­ -George Fazio of Los Angeles power to drop Sam Match of Rice and Ben Che.pman, ma.nllrer of the PhJladelphla. Phlllles, come up bIlt tern Open golf tourJley. while Miss Suggs took 38 ' and 40 Jlilrently folded under a typical and Gordon Brydson of Toronto, Institllte, 2_6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. the SUllShlne to the cheers of the fans. JUbliation I repOrted pqualillal (AP WIREPHOTO) for a 78. t'aharias rally which gave the low-scoring Canadian in an event Likas momentarily took com­ accorded championship contenders. champ the next three holes and Miss Berg was two a head of whicl1 has been dominated by mand in the second set when he (INTERNATIONAL SOU DPHOTO) squared the match going into the Miss Kirby atter only four holes, United States players for 10 years took a 3-0 lead in games, but 13th. but Dot won eight and nine and or more. Brydson got his 138 on Larned hacked away at that lead, Iowa Seventh in NCAA Golf; When Louise picked up her ball they swung into the final nine the strength of a second-round 67 , won six straight games, and then . after six strokes and conceded the deadlocked. . while Fazio had a 68 . stepped out at the start at the 12th it looked like curtains fQl' the Miss Kirby bagged the 10th By his consistent par-busting, third set. He kept Ukas on the Talent Peak Assured Dixie damsel but she banged a when Patty had a penalty stroke Harrison took over the lead from defensive thereafter. Three Hawks in ·final Round birdie four on tbe 13th to go one for addressing the ball. Vic Ghezzi of Knoxville, Tenn. Falkenburg, moving up to the up again. Babe copped the 14th By WHlTNEY MARTIN Dennis or Miami in the Kansas· Patty won the next two holes, The . latter's 66 in the opening net on his smaller Rice opponent, NEW YORK (AP)-Minor de­ Oklahoma-Missouri loop. While he PRINCETON, N. J. (AP)-Three University of Iowa golfers with a par three and it was even but the match was evened wlien round was the course record for kept Match crowded in back quajificd for the final 36 holes of the National Collegiate A. A. golf again. tails (as recorded by I"ee Adding­ was engaged in a heated, and we she dropped the 13th, missing a less than 24 hours-until Vines court and harried him with strong ton, secretary of the Na.tiona.l As­ mean heated, urgument wlih um· tournament yesterday with 36-hole scores of 160 or better. Mrs. Zaharias, beaming confi­ six-footer. The 15th went to Miss came in-but he faded badly yes- backhands and smashes. Among the lenders was John Jacobs with a 75-78-153. Other sociation of Professional Basel)(ul pire George Carney at lola, Kags, dence and showing far less fatigue Berg with a par five when Dot's terday to a two·over-par 74 for Larned and partner Bernard clubs) : . park' began to frly from Dennis' qualifiers were Bob Graham 79-79-158, and Leo Gaulocher" 80- from the "mountain goat" re­ third bounded into the rough. 79-159. . 140. Bartzen adVanced into the dou- From Famine to Feast: during che. t protector. It burst into quirements of HllIy Wakonda, Patty was sand-trapped on the Another shot back was a United bles finals with a 6-1, 6-1, 6·1 the late war year ' minor league flame, as he threw it off. A care· Iowans failing to qualify were John Burgess 89-87-176, Charles went into the lead [or the first 17th, which went to Miss Kirby Updegraff 81-83- 164 and Charles Honnold 84-86-170. States threesome consisting of decision over Clarence Mabry clubs, it they could operate at all, les Iy to ed cigarette got the blame. time on the 15th with a birdie with a par three. amateur Frank Stranahan of To- and Ed Chew, southwest conter­ had to practically scrape the floors Ralph Hooper has witched Lrom: Iowa's learn score was 634 for seventh place. Dot blew wide open on the Stanford's pay as you play golfers, participating in the National four as she banged her only good ledo, Ohio, who went from 68 to ence champions from Texas. of the dugouts to see it there were "You're undel' arrest, podner," 10 18th, hitting the trees three times putt-an l8-footer. 73; Harry Todd of DaUas, who They were joined in the finals any players who might have been "yer out:' The ~herirr or Hum· Collegiate A. A. gall tournament and taking a seven. Patty took a for the first time since 1942, Agaio Miss Suggs stHfened and had a 71, and Ed F'urgol of Pon- bracket by the Falkenburg bro· trllmpled in the boards during the phreys county, Tenn., resigned 10 came in between thundershowers out-gamed Babe on the par five one-over-par five for the hole and tiac Mich., who also went up five thers, Bob and Tom, who came lush days and who could be sal­ take an umpiring job in the f.jsl yesterday to win the te,m champ­ AAU Men £xpecfed 16th where Mrs. Zaharias blew a match. strokes from his first-round 68. from behind Match and Ken Me­ vaged to fill out a roster. Texa. league. three-footer and Louise won the Miss )3eqr card€? an 83 , six over ionship with an aggregate score Lloyd Mangrum, United States earthy of Rice, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, Recently a checkup wa made of Manager Ca. ey Stengel ot Oak. hole with a birdie. The match was par, while Miss Kirby had an 85. of 619 . To ·Smash Records Open champion who now plays 6-3. players who ha ve been listed on land I' te . Joe Etautt oC the Holly. Mcanwhile Charles Lind, Den~ out of Chicago, reversed in the A championship today in ~ither the Texas league roster this year. wood Star as the b~ t young pit· vel' university's sole r epresent­ other direction, lopping eight the singles or doubles would give It showed a total of 287. The high cher he has . een in years. The ative, took the lead in the in­ In Track and Field BASEBALL SCOREBOARD strokes off his first-day card with Southern California the team for an entire eason tOr the league Cincinnati . Reds .have an opt(on dividual contest at the halfway a 67 that gave him 142 and ninth title. The Trojans lead William was 300 in 1928, 0 a new man i· on the kid, so hands off. Jim Ploof, SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)­ place. and Mary seven points to six, certain to be set the first year after ofticial 'scorer of the home games 1 mark of the 72-hole medal play NATIONAL LEAGUE AMEltlCAN LEAGUE test with 143, one stroke ahead The nation's mightiest men of W L Pel. OB. W L Pel. G.B. with Rice third with four lloints. the end of hostilities. of th Bremerton Blue Jacket& in of Oklahoma's Charles Coe. track and field take steady aim Brooklyn ...... 41 23 .641 Boston ...... 48 18 .727 Dizzy Doings: A guy stole second the We.tern International, look at the recQl'd book of the senior New york ...... 42 26 .618 1 Lind shot an even pal' 72 St. Louis ...... 37 26 .587 3'h DetroIt ...... 34 30 .531 13 Yankees Break Tie base at Memorial park in Lynn, O\CI' cecund ba~e when the club yesterday to add to Thursday's AAU today to wind up a week­ Chicago ...... 33 27 .550 6 Wash\n8ton ...... 32 31 .508 14 \1.z Mass.. and the caps went after was short hanrled, and was the St. Louis ...... 31 34 .477 16 \1.z Miller's Home Run Boston ...... 31 34 .411 101> 71. The steady-shooting Coe end of running, jumping, throw­ Cleveland ...... 29 37 . 439 19 him. It was no joke. either. Some team': leaciing hitter hi~ first wee~ . Clnclnna tl ...... 28 31 .475 101> turned In his second even par ing and walking the likeS of Ch Icago ...... ,,25 37 .403 On Keller's Homer; light-fingered gent actuuJly walked Muybe he stilI was doing tile !COr' Phlladelphia ...... 27 31 .466 1I PhUadel"hla ...... 18 46 .28l t\ card. which Texas never saw before. New york ...... 26 38 .406 15 FrIday', a.,ulto Beats Cubs in Tenth off with the base, The Anniston ing. Joe Wl'lIs, outhll8W Pikhcr The Stanford aggregation Un· Last night athletes who had Pittsburgh ...... 24 37 .393 15\1.z New York ~. Philadelphia 1 Rams of the Southeastel'n league wIth Rome of the Canadian·Amer­ "~ rlda)"1 Ruults Boston 12, Wash lngton 1 B,eat Athletics, 4~1 ished with a five-stroke margin not won championships previously St. Louls 5. Pltt,burgh 1 Cleveland 7, Chicago 2 CINCINNATI (AP)- A home can't be bothered by a little mUd . ican League, . tudied for the dip, Philadelphia 7. Ncw York 5 St. Loul. 9. Detroit 0 The outfield was so gooey after lomatic service wh I Ie attendina over Michigan. Ohio State, the in AAU or collegiate competition Brook lyn 3. Boston I ToCt.ytA PUohefl NEW YORK (AP) - Charley run by shortstop Eddie Miller in defending chamPion, was third put on the first of a double-bar­ Clnclnnatl 4, Chlclljlo 3 W.sbl.rtoD at BOlton-RuIner (~·4) Keller belted his 17th home run the bottom of the tenth inning a ra in the Gardeners took ofl Georgetown Univl'rsity. It was as· reled shcw-the junior champ­ Today'. Pilchers vs. Hughson \7-4) of the year with one on in the last night gave the Cincinnati their shoes to do their sliping and sumed that instead o( calling an with 625, followed by Prince­ BOI,on A, Brooklyn-Wright \6-4) VS. Clevetand a, Cblcar_Feller (12·5) v•. ton, 628, State, 629, ·ionships-but today's track and Hlgbe (7·01 Grove (3-3) eighth inning last night to break Reds a 4-3 decision over the Chi­ skidding in stockinged comlort. umpire a blind ~o-aod-so, he uses New York al Phlladdphla - VolscUe Pbllad.lpblo al Ne .. York-Chrls!opher rliplomacy. He calls him a blind and Notre Dame 631. fi eld catnival will be the blue (5-6) vs. Stanceu (1-11 or Hughes (1-5) (3·4) va. Ru\flnc (5- 0) or Marshall \2.2) a 1-1 tie and spark the New cago Cubs before 23,746 fans. That might be called putting a Frank McCann, only holdover rIbbon event since it not only (Only games sc heduled) (Only games scheduled) York Yankees to a 4-1 -victory Miller was the first Redleg to sock in the game. J. Walter ~1Ilrri", thi -and-that. from the 1942 Cardinal team, led includes the juniors but the vet­ over the Philadelphia Athletics face relief pitcher Hank Wyse in president of the Evangeline leAgue, the way with 150 for 36 holes, erans, some of whom are re­ before 20,077 fans. tbe extrq. inning. It was hi~ knows the line points of hi job, Iowa Preflight Wins np­ OTTT,JMWA (A!?)-Iowa Navy firing a par-equaling 72 yester­ turning to competition after sev­ Big Floyd Bevens limited the sixth homer of the season. or the point at which a fine I,' Walker Hits Twice proprlate. He 60cked him5elf 25 Preflight banged across .two runs day. Bob Rosburg came in with eral years in the service. Sox Spurt; Mackmen to seven scattered hits Southpaw Johnny Vander Meer Five AAU records d.cifinitely for his seventh triumph and third went all the way for CinCinnati, for being too lenient in his tining in the tenth inning today 10 wid a second-ro\lnd 74 for 152, John a 6-5 baseball game (rpm the wer:e expected to fall but the To Defeat Braves straight over the A's. giving up six hits as he marked of players. Shuler had 158 and Bob Card­ Hutchin. on, Ka s., Naval Air sta· inal 159. surest shot for a No. 1 mark­ Phil Rizzuto singled home Joe up his third win. He has lost The hottest player in the game five. was undoubledy catchC'r Dave tion. Dave Barclay, third in the in­ a world standard - was Bob Trounce Nals BROOKLYN (AP) - Veteran Gordon with the Yanks' first run = Fitch, Minnesota giant, who has in the fifth. The A's tied the The Cubs scored a run in the dividual slanding with a 72 yes­ BOSTON (AP)-After runl1ing Dixie Walk,r continued his clutch second on doubles by Ed Waitkus terday for a 147 aggregate, was been able to throw the discus up his bases on balls total to hitting yesterday to lead the pace- count in t.he next round. Indians Spurt in 5th beyond the record distance any and Clyde McCullough, got IID­ the big gun on Michigan's sec­ 74, Ted Williams bashed out his setting Brooklyn Dodgers to a With one down in the eighth, time he wants to. starter Phil Marchildon walked other in the fourth when Frilnk To Beat White Sox sllion ond-place team. Ed Schalon had 20th homer ot the season yester- 3-1 victory over the Boston Secory hit a home rUt! over the A couple of ebony greyhounds Tommy Henrich to set the stage 157 and Bill Courtright 158 and day as the Red Sox celebrated BqlVes in a contest that' was left field fence, and Stan Hack's Roger Kessler 162. at the cinders-Harrison Dillard for Keller's decisive blow. A CHICAGO (AP)-The Cleve­ their return to chummy Fenway single, an error, a sacrifice and land rndians unloosed a live-run Last Times Today The weather was a big factor of Baldwjn-Wallaee and Herb Park with a 12-1 victory over haHed for 38 mlnptes at the end pallS to Joe DiMaggio and hit ~ Phil Cavarrctta's long fly pro· MeRenley of Illinois- are likely the Wastlington Nats for lefty of the inmll8 by Bill Johnson and Lindell gave bla t in the fifth laning ln~t nilfht in 'yesterday's scoring and led to ~fth b~cause ot duced the third marker ill the to beat the Chicago White Sox, Air Conditioned . a flock of withdrawals of play­ to contribute not only AAU rec­ Mickey Harris. rain and darkness. the Bombers their final tally. sixth. 7 to ;! before a crowd or 34,390. ers who were out of the running ords but new marks for the world It was that southpaw's 11th The 3\1-year-Qld ouUielder bllt- The Reds got their first run in when lhe rains came. However, to shoot at. Dillard in the 200- decision agllillSt two deiellts and tE:d in two runs on a doul;lle , a/ld Iowan CQrriers Win The Indians knocked Ralph the fifth fls Dain Glay doubled Hamner ,out of the box 'IuI'ing it didn't account for the poor meter low hurdles and MeK;enley it boosted him to the top of Joe a single a~ lit~le Vic LomQal'~i Tbe' Daily Iowan carriers td· and scored on CraOy Hation's their (inh-inning splurg of sin. showing of the fil'st"Tound leader, in the 400-meter da sh. Defend­ Cronin's mound corps as far as sc~ttered six hits to post' his umphed over the Benton St. nine, single. They chased stllrter Hank gles by Steve Gromek lind Gcmge BJllekie Dahlberg of Texas. ing champion Arky Erwin -ot percentages are (;onccroed. Har- eighth triumllh of the sea~on, 10-9, ye~terday in the second meet­ Borowy to the showers in the Army and Navy hospital, Hot ris coasted along easily until the Walker drove \II Coo\(ie Lava- iog of the two teams. Sinnet pit· Case, a double by Bill Flemin" After firing a 69 on his l':ist seventh as they tied UP \J1e ball and a bad throw by Bob Kennedy. round, Dahlberg ran Into all Springs, Ark., is considered a i'ec­ £ighth, when he wilted a blt un- .getto, who \.1\1~ wallted 811d ad- ched and White cflught for the same with two runs on five hits, kinds of trDuble yesterday, ord possibility in the 400-meter del' the terri1ic heat and tossed vanc~ to second on a pass¢. Carriers, with Westfall pitching all singles. taking four strokes to &'et out hurdles. Stan Spence his lOth home run ball, with the Dod,gers' initial and Frame catching for the lo~ers. AlIIE.\CAN ~8S0CI"'TION of a trap on one oecas.on, and • De(ending champions in events ball of the year. tally in the lirst ~nniQg by dou- 'l UJI,E F.'.[ aESULTS St. Paul 7. Kans.s Clt~ 0 finished with an 8

theta pordlally invites all women UNI'UD STUDENT Shaw Aircraft Co. ",. In education to attend a tea in FELLOWSHIP Dial 7831 "The Comlng Independence of INTERPR,ETING- the University club rooms at (Continued From Page 2) Iowa City Municipal AIrport Jowa Union from' 3 to 5 p. m. the Philippines," will be the sub- on Sunday. ject of a lecture'.. and forum to be expeII e d f rom power. cond~cted thiS commg S~nday No Qoubt the outer Mongol ANNOUNCEMENtS DEGREE (JANDJDATES eveDlng at the regular meetmg .of knows he is part of the SovIet =:===:::=~:::==== All candldat~ [or dcgl'ces to be the. Y".tted Student fellowship. political system; but he considers - conferred at the Au g. 7 Com­ ThiS IS ~ c~lebra.u0n of the com- his own past and looks at his Albert's Shoe Repair Shop flencement must rill out (orl11al 109 Philipp me lDdep~n!ience on Asiatic neighbors it may well be EXPERT WORKMANSHIP ippllcation lor degree cards at July 4th, The .Rev. Fernando A. doubt~d if he regrets it. To him Under New Manallement of the oUice of the Registrar. The Lax amllna , a Filipino, Will be ~he it probably looks good on the E. Black deadUne for the filing of appli~ speaker. Sutdents representmg basis of what he knows. . 228 E. WashlD.ltoD qatlons Is July 6. other countries will also take part. China has recognized his little The audience will be given. a state as independent, and he ap­ ABSBNCE .PJNALTY chance to ask questions and d18- proaches the United Nations as Underllraduate students In the cuss the topic. The general pub- a Mongol not the subject of some­ RADIO TROUBLE? colleges of liberal arts, commerce lic is invited. Student activity one else.' Nothing like this has You Get Full, and engJneering are reminded of will start at 5 p. m. with a sport happened to a Mongol for sev­ Guaranteed Work At \he regulailon that ono semester progJ."am. This will be followed eral centuries, and the Mongol, 1I0ur of credit will be added to I & lC RADIO SHOP with a fellowship supper at 6 if he is grateful, can be grateful 11 E. WaahJqtoa 'he graduation requlremeqt for p. m. Reservations for the supper only to Soviet Russia. Phone 3595 tach unexcused class absence dur­ (25 cents) should be made by Depending upon their political­ !Pi the twenty-tour hour period caJUng 4301 not later than noon economiC! .status and prospects. Immediately preceding and the today. At 7 p. m. there will be a his neighbors may also be im- IN oua MODERN 110m. twenty-four hour period ImmeQ­ devotion in the "Little Chapel." pressed. OLINIO lately following the July 4th hoti­ we operate dally on all an. day. SUMMER SESSION SYMPHONY One Stop Service with Men, (JONCERT DEGNAN- Methods and Merchandile. FOUR-WEBK SPECIAL TlJe summer session symphony (Continued from page 1) HOME On. co. 11I/STaUC~I~ PlalOP orchelltra will give a com;ert Tues­ Iowa Ave. Dial 331111. ReglslraUon for the four-week day evening. Pro!. Hans Koelbel likenesses, the lines end or con­ ,peclal instruction period will be will be the soloist of the evening. nect exactly as they do on the ~eld July 22 to 27th inclusive. Free tickets to the concert will be ransom note print." FINE BAKJm GOODS While the schedule and ~egiltra­ available at Iowa Union desk be­ The matching prints, Evans said, Pies CU. Bread lion mat'!rlais wlll not be 8vall­ ginning Monday. aer those in the little left fingers. Rolls PutrieI I\ble before that time, informa­ Police said that sometimes four SPECIAL ORDERS tion on courses offered Is posted IOWA MOUNTAINEBRS places of similarities, technically City Bakery in the liberal arts advisory office, Iowa Mountaineers wUl hold a, c_IJed "po~tI," are sutticient to ';2 Eo Waahm,toD biaI Hoe room 4, Old Capitol. swimming outing at the pool in l' matching prints, alth04gh West Liberty this SWlda:r after- eleven .are usualI.r pr~erred and EXPERIMENT PLAYS noon. Meet at the engineering sl.mllanties may 80met1l1les run as You are alWllll welcome, The university theater 1111- building promptly at 1:15 p. m. hIgh 115 22. and PIUCES are low at the nounces II program of four orlg- Members 01 !.he elub and stu------­ Inal one-act plays to be presented dents and townspeople who are p. m. and and 6:30 p. rn. Please In Macbride auditorium, Tuesday Interested In JoJnlng the ouUIlI AAyl~ If IOu can provide trans­ and Wednesday at 8 p. m. Admls- Rhould register before Friday eve­ 'pQr(tRtlo".ParticIPllnbl aff' MkM DRUG SHOP aion by invitation olily. Accord- ning, by calling Eugene Burmeis~ to bring their lunch for a picnic IdwardS.R~ 1011 to the policy of First Nlaht.- ter, 2495, between 12 and 12 :30 to tollow the swim. . , . =U=GE=S~======T=H=E =D =AI=LY=I=O =W =AN=.=IO=W=A=C=IT=Y=.I=O =W =A ======9r=~======S=Aro=R=DA~YI ~rum~~I~

; i f I I r

, Join Ihe Festivities - -- Calendar 01 Events June 2', oH~~ql openlng-

Str.et Dan~I.,Sf In ."enlng featuring 1I0ld Tim," music , , Rides, Games, ~ancina in' the June 30! ~i~' and concessions open at City Park. . July 1, Pq'''~i''l to music of Bill Meardon's It,nd at Streets, Parades, Fireworks, , pavillion In Cjty park. 1 ' July 2, Dane'"" rid.s and game•.

. \ July'3, Rid.s, baseball at City park, games, dancing

Floats, and .(onlesls. July 4, lig 4th of July parade, horsemanship exhibi- tion, whisker contest, firework •.

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O' •• I , - .. . Prompt, dependable Fountain Service Cleaning Servke Smokers' Supplies We', Ihe merchants 01 Iowa (ily, are proud ~ .. , , f , r Racine's' ~ , Paris (leaners I .. to be a part of Iowa's firsl centennial cele- I on the Corner I • . , " . , .j r

i t · . bration and pledge ourselves 1o Ihe reali- Air· Conditioned . .. .' "- . You'll like our I , , I l { Comfortable Dry Cleaning • 1\ . zati,on QI agrealer Iowa in the years 10 come. " ~

. " I • Smith's Restaurant - Brown's (Ieanen ( I . ~~--~~----~~~--~--~--~------11 So. Dubuque 216 E. College

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. Phone 8961 Above Bremer. (ity Bakery Portraits of Call 3111 222 E. Washington for a .' "I' ma ,Distinction ~ .. 1etd Phone 6605 prove I J . , 1OIl,~e .. The Serving the University WlllI,n II Wong Studio i.bId .Varsil, -Hawkeye Cib hI fill 120!t1 E. ' Washington the (II lntiUl1 Tuob 0II1he thUs III 11111tl PIQIII(I I.I\J ItI" hi' UIt prl 1~ ;w \1 1II!i' I tJiII ~ p&~ ~U