RATION CALENDAR PROCESSED FOODS blue 8tam"" AS throu,lI K8 valid lndetJnlteb: MEAT red Io-polnl 8lam"" AI Ihroulh J8 vaUd Indefinitely; SUGAR Unsettled ,lamp 30, 31 (book 4) valid Indefinitely, ,lamp ~ lor cannin, a",ar upln. Feb, 2S, 1l14li ' SHOE .ump 18 (book 1) expires April 30. IOWA: Rain. Fresh to S~ airplane . tamp I (book 3) valid Indeflntely; GASOLINE A-II coupon expire. June 21 : )l'UEL OIL per, 4 and 5 COUPOIll expire Sept. 30 ; DAILY IOWAN WlndJl. TIRE INSPECTION deadline for A coupon hold.". March 31, for B coupon hold""", Jun.. 80, and for C coupon hold ..... May n. = Iowa City's Morning Newspaper fIVE CENTS TBA AISOC~TID p a lll IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1944 YBI ••IOCLlTED PaISI VOLUME XLIV NUMBER 167

Leaves Bank Post u.S. Forces At a Glance- " . AnemptMade R · A ' R - t Blast Targets raday's To Assassinate usslan rmy ecap ures Iowan In France ...... Avilo(amacho Graveyard Odessa Stalin'. troops capture Odessa. Drop Heaviest Load; MEXICO CITY (AP)- Presi------~----~~----~------. Germans flee Ukraine. dent Manuel AviLo Camacho es­ Seven Planes Lost Names of Stassen and MacAr­ caped injury yesterday when fired 26-Year-0Id- • Within 6Miles In Multiple Raids thur go before voters in Nebras­ upon by a uniformed officer of Hard Fighting ka and ILlinois primaries. his palace staff and it was offi­ LONDON (AP)-Div er~i ficd cially announced last night that American bombers and fighter Supreme court voids Florida the assailant, Li~ut. Jose Antonio Lama Rojas, was shot and wound­ For Kohima ' formations up to 1,500 strong law under constitutional ban on I s.. Of OYidiOpOI t l' along ed by soldiers when he attempted ~~~~ ~~~~~ ""~o:~ ~~,: ~ blasted a ge t s the "involun tary servitude." draft boards throughout the na- under 26. French·Belgian coast and in the to break from custody aiter his arrest. British, Indian Troops tion ktruggLed yesterday to com- The postponement order caught Fresh Red Army FrenchinteriOl' yesterday in AUJltralia claims she's "doing ply with a selective service order many older registrants at their operations which saw the n. S. The official bulletin on the at-· Hurl Back Strong delaying induction of men 26 or local draft boards prior to transfer Smashes Defenses her share." tempt said: older in essential jobs, but they to induction stations. While most Ninth ail' force's Marauder me­ "ThIs morning an indivdu.al ofI' Penetrating Attack Of Struggling Nazis dium bombers drop their great­ followed no set pattern In trying were given the opportunity to turn ON 'THE ADVICE of phYsicians, military appea~ance approached ---- to meet the order. back, many elected to go ahead est bomb load, more tl1an 1,000 President Avila Camacho when he NEW DELHI, (AP)-Hard fight­ 72-year-old Montarue C, Norman, WPB May Permit I In some states, an immediate rather than return to their lamilies LO DON, Tuesda y (AP)­ tons. descended [rom h is automobile in Ing was in progress yesterday for Gen. Rodion Y. laliuovsky's above, has resigned the governor­ halt was ordered in inductions of and repeat-poSSibly in a few days Il waR announced that ap­ the nation a ~ palace. He saluted IKohima, allied stronghold 35 miles older men. In others, the post- or weeks-their goodbyes again. third Ukraine army reconquered proximately 600 fi ghtel'-escol'l­ ship ()f the pOwerful Dank ot Enf­ Unlimited Importation land after serving 24 terms. Hts and then fIred ~ne sho~ which from the Bengal-Assam railroad ponement becomes effective Wed- Generally, boards were trying tll graveyanl city of Ode ' a Oll ed Mar.'aIHl el'~ d li vered a blow missed. The man In questIon was , . successor Is Daron Callo, a Scots­ disarmed arrested and sent to the in eastern India, after defendmg nesday or later this month. to push along the induction of men lhe Black !Sea y tel'uay and whi ch was "the greatest the Still other state boards bided under 26 but there seemed little man long prominent In the busl­ 01 3-Year-Old Rum military 'prison for investigation. British and Ind.ian troops hurled drove within ix mil s of th Ninth ever has thrown against the ness life of the British empire their time, awaiting reports on the likelihood that the drafting of azi e cap llatch at Ol'idopol, Several doc u men t s from Nazi back a strong Japanese atlack that supply of younger men, before those men would long delay in­ enemy in a day, dropping and the U. S. (International) while II Ir h R d army attack­ WASHINGTON (AP) - Two sources were found In his posses- penetrated the town's outer ring taking action. Some, as In Michl- duction of older registrants. Esti­ more than 1,000 tons of bombs." II million gallons of relief from the ing in the Crimea crashed 12 sion." 'I e<.! I ' t ' 0 f t or tI' C' Ica t'IOns, a lli e d h ea d quar- t gan, went ahead processing older mates ranged from a few days to Two bombers were lost. while es- N f M A h beverage alcohol drought was 01- A Uth Ol'lt es pass t 115 accoun men in anticipation of early ex- 90 days. miles through de! nses protect­ corting fighters destroyed five ames 0 ae rt ur fered yesterday in a war produc­ of the incident: ers announced. iug perhaps 100,000 isolated enemy planes. ' tion board decision to permit un­ Artillery Lieutenant Fifty dead Japanese were count- axis troops, Mos ow announced The principal target of the St G B 1 limited importation of rum three The man, in the uniform of an ed on the battlefield and others last night. Marauders was the Namur rall- assen 0 ore years or more old . 3 Legislation 'Musts' e artillery lieutenant, waited in the were taken prisoner. A communi­ The new Crimean offensive by war yards, 35 miles southeast of The deCiSion, confirmed by a "patio of honor" of lhe palace unlil qu said the enemy penetration Jap r~oops ~ Brussels. Returning pilots re- Voters in States WPB spokesman but not yet for­ the president arrived a little be- the re-emerging fourth army 1 Slated for Congress ported seeing strings of cars and mally announced, was taken in re­ fore 10 s. m. He saluted as the was "eliminated." Kohima, 60 under Gen. Feodor I. Tolbukhin abeds blasted and big fires sponse to arguments that to limit president's black, closed car en- miles north of the principal allied already has resulled in the killing s&arted. imports of such rum would not tered the patio and stopped. base of Imphal, has been under Quit Gasmata Outcome Will Have OPA, Lend Lease, of 5,500 Germans, the capture of Heavy U. S. Flying Fortresses help divert Bny alcohol to the syn­ As the president left his car, the assault since last Friday by an un­ and Liberators also took part in No Binding Influence 1,000 in two days, and put Soviet thetic rubber program or other assailant advanced and saluted estimated force of Japanese that I Veterans Benefits the day's widespread raids. the On Party's Final Choice war industries. The president, thinking he wanted Invaded trom the Burma border, Supply ' Come Before Recess shock troops inside the top of the thirll major operation by the Estimates of the amount of Base, peninsula sealed of! last tall. to speak to him, wliited until the 30 miles to the east. Americans in as many days. The three-year-old rum in the Carib­ By HOWARD FLIEGER man was near. The man drew a (The J apanese claimed they oc­ WASHINGTON CAP) - Three ]n Romania another Red army blows were coordinated closely Associated Press S taU Writer bean and Latin American countries .4.5 caliber automatic and tired one cupied Kohima April 6, and the was declared to have forced the with similar forays by British val·Y. but one WPB soul'ce said it ALL lED HEADQUARTERS, major pieces of war-related legis­ The nation gets another look shot. The bullet pierced the pres i- Berlin radio yesterday quoted a Southwest Pacilic, Tuesday (AP) lation, dealing with the homefront, Iret and ucea.va rivers In a bombers Sunday night. today at the presidential vote­ might to around 1,000,000 gal­ dent's coot and vest ot lhe level of Japanese government spokesman 65-mlle penetration of that wa­ Last night this latest phase or appeal of two Republicans in uni­ lons of 190-proof alcohol-or about his chest, bul did not louch him. as saying that the capture of Im- - By-passed Japancse troops have aid to the allies and veterans vering nation's territory. cap­ the aerial battle of Europe was form- Gen DOll glas MacArthur twice as much in the form of rum. A allant Disarmed phal would be only a matter of abandoned Gasmata, their air and Hbelnllelfeilsad'ewrseryeesdtOeCrkdeatyedonbYa EmaPulstt~: turin&, 180 town~ and villages contlnulnll'. ]n the late English and Lt. Com. Harold E. Stassen­ This would be about one-sev­ Before the man could fire again, days.) supply base on the so uth-central and smashing to within 15 mi les New Britain coast, 08 well as Cape list for clearance before congress duk two more stronll' bomber but the outcome will have no bind­ enth as much as the total cane the presid nl seized him and dis- Dispatches said the motor high­ I of the Campulung 011 fields in Hoskins on l he north-central can recess for the national politi­ formations were seeen 5weep- ing influence on the party's choice spirits to be shipped in from Cuba armed him. The president then way between Kohima and Dimapur the north and to within 160 1111 across Dover strait toward of a nominee. alone this year under the new im­ ordered the man brought to his on the Bengal-Assam railway slill coast, lind are in "full retreat" for cal conventions. a final stand ut badly-bombed Ra- The legislation, embracing issues miles of the rich Ploesti wells northern France, MacArthur is entered without port quota restricilions announced oCIlce and himself took him by an was firmly in allied possession and In the south. American Liberators and Fort­ his authorization in an lllinois by WPB on March 10. arm. Pl'esident Avila Camacho, his that sUl?plles were pourinl\ over it baul at th~ northwest tip of the certain to playa part ill this year's The rum to which unrestricted island, Gen. Douglas MacArthur political campaigns, would: The capture of his native city resses in yesterday's daylight op­ presidential preference primary doctor who came 10 lhe palace for the defenders of Konima. The of Odessa by General Malinovsky erations bombed those much­ against RHey Bender, Chicago real entry now is permitted will be witn him, guards and the prisoner road south from Kohima to Imphal announced today. 1. Prolong the lite of the war- high quality liquor, for the most No Resistance time price control and economJc avenged one of the bitterest Rus­ pounded "military objectives" in estale man. all rode the I vator together to I was cut by the Japanese over a part, a WPB spokesman said, hav­ Allied patrols have met no re- stabilization acts. The OPA law sian defeats of the war. It was a /be Pas de Calais lIrea; air~raft Nebraska Prlma.~y the presid nliol offices, week Pgo, however, and the Imphal surprisingly sud den triumph repair works at Evere and Vil­ Stassen is in the Nebraska pre!­ ing been produce<.! before the pres­ The presidenl questioned the garrison will be dependent upon sistance at Gnsmata 01' at Cape expires June 30, but a continuation vorde and the airfield at Mels­ erence primary without opposition. ent emphasis on volume sales and Hoskins, supply and refuelling is xpecled. Th congressional whkh found tl)e Oelmans fleeing man pbou t the ,. aSODS lor the at- airbvrne supplies and reinl~rc - along the coastal road 18 miles broek near Brussels; II pJane fac­ Wendell L. WilIkie's namt: is on the lighter gi'ude rum. 'base on th north coasts ot New fight will spin around proposed tempt. Laler the man was turned ments in the impending full-scale southwest to OvidopoJ, ferry ter­ tory at Bourges 115 miles south bullot but it lost ils meanihg when The action will alfect Cuba, over to military authorities Bnd oattle for its possession. Britain, since mid-March as the amendments. of Paris and an airfield at Orleans, he gave up pursuit of the presi­ Mexico, Jamaica and all other for­ Japanes tell back on badly- 2. Extend lend lease for another minus on the four-mlle-wide the president continued with his The Japanese, far across the Dnestr estuary opposi te lower 60 miles south of Pllris. dential nomination aIler I t\ S t eign countries where rum is pro­ list of appointments fol' the day. mountains and jungles from their bomb d Rabaul at the northeast year. duced except the French West In­ tip. 3. Establish a • GI bill rights" Bessarabia. For the first time In weeks week's Wisconsin defeat. The attempted assassination of a~vanoe bases i~ Burma, a~e laced ot In neither Illinois nor Nebraska dies, where polltica I problems In a continuation of bombing for benefits to veterans of this The Russians rolled on after' the Nazis threw their coastal President Avila CamachQ, who led With the neces ~lty o~ stormlllg Im­ will the result of the popular vote have hampered the reaching of an op rations allied bombers silenced war. them, hoping to crush a large seg­ firhter defenses Into action. Es­ his country inlo war against the phal ~nd Kohl'!la It. the~ are ~o be binding upon national convent­ agreement. 13 heavy guns at Hansa bay, New . Moreover, in the little more than ment of the army which did not eorUn &' Iilrhters sbot down sev­ axis, was lhe first of its kirid in consohdate their gams m In~la en. Some •• enemy planes were ion delegales from the two states. It does not affect such heavy Guinea. and heavily Wewak , two months before the Republi­ risk a last-ditch stand. Berlin said But backers of MacArthur and more than 12 years. Previously an before the monsoon s ason begl~ & Od ssa had be n wrecked before destroyed 011 the &,rou nd and rum-producing areas as Puerto almost exactly similar attempt in about five . weeks., Yesterday s to thl' north as CataHnas atlllck.ed can convention opens at Chicago, those sbot down by the bombers Stassen thump d for a big vote Rico and the Virgin Islands be­ Japanese shipping at Woleal atoll congress must grind out numer­ the axis evacuation. turnou t, each hopeful the result was mode against President Pas- a1lled com ~ulllq.ue SBld the ene~y The communique a.nnounced remained to be tabulated, cause the only controls to be put cual Ortiz Rubio when he returned was increasmg hiS pressure, especl- in the Caroline islands. ous appropriation biJls, and a American losses for the day would start a pre-convention boom into effect In United States terri­ A lotal of 131 tons of bombs stack of less important legislation the capture or Alexandro,Uf, rolling oul of the mid-west lor tories and possessions are on the from taking hi s oalh of office. As ally. sou th of Imphal. . , six miles from Ovldopol, as the were four fighters and three he left his car an assailant tired ~leut. Gen. Joseph W. StIlwell s were dl'opped on the Hansa bay if many senators and representa­ bombers. their choice. Stassen won four production of beverage cane spir­ area, scoring not only on gun po- lives are to attend the party meet­ Russians sought to annihilate delegates in lust week's Wisconsin one shot which wounded him in Chm~se troops, whose supply life- The U. S, Ninth air force an­ its, rather than their shipment. th h ek Ime 15 menaced by the Japanese sitions but also a fuel dump, stsrt- ing. the axis remnan ts pinned against nounced that its Marauder medi­ voting, and MacArthur got three. e c e . slashing toward the Bengal-Assam ing a towering lire. One American Speaker Rayburn (D-Tex.) and the coasi. um bombers completed their "big­ LI&'ht Vote railway in the Kohima region, con­ bomber was lost. House Republican leader Martin, Moscow's bulletin did not men­ Advance indications were for a Winchell File. Suit In Fuji Retreat 01 Massachusetts, returned y ster- tion Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's lIest day of operations" not oniy NEW YORK (AP)-Wa I te r Find WAC, Husband tinued to press down the Mogaung bombing mltitary objectives in light vote, however, in both states. valley in northern Burma, retain­ General MacArthur in report- day to prepare tor Wednesday's first army attacking along the Illinois expected a turnout of about Winchell, columnist and radio Dead in Hotel Room ing the Gasmata operation said reconvening of. congress alter an Czecho-Slovok border northwest northern France in 11 waves but commentator, yesterday flied suit ing contact with the Japanes half the four million registered forces . the Japanese are "in full retreat ll-day Easter recess. There ap­ of Konev's forc s. but Premler­ aiso two Belgian railway yards In federal court here for $250,000 DES MOINES (AP)- A private and the Cox dye, Belgium, airfield voters. Nebraska expected a vote from central New Britain to the peared considerable confidence Marshal Stalin sent a message to lighter than 1942's sub-normal damages against Rep. Clare E. in the women's I1rmy corps and her under tile cover of the Ninth's Gazelle peninsula ( at the north- that essential legislation can be Eduard Benes. president of the 219,356 ballots. Hoffman (R., Mich.). Thunderbolts and Mustangs and husband were found dead in a Donald Nelson Forms west tip) where he is preparing disposed of by June 15. provisional Czech government in In the absence of any important The suit was based on an article room at the Holel Kirkwood late tinal positions with Rabaul as his It seems unlikely now that leg- London, saying "I am sure the ReAF Spitfieres. Coxdye last was Democratic presidential contests purportedly signed by the con­ yesterday afternoon, and Coroner hit by Marauders Saturday. citadel. Islation to simplily income tax common struggle of out' peoples in the two stat ,politicians watch­ gresman and published In the A. E, Shnw said the man appal'- Advl·sory Comml·Hee "Installations at Cape Hoskins statutes will come on the firing agai nst OLlr common enemy will ed lor the total vote to see if it Marcellus (Mich.) News. ently shot his wife aitel' a dis- and Gasmata' hav~ been aban- line belore autumn. The house lead soon to the restoration of would give any indication of com­ The complaint, tiled by former agreement ovel' a divorce action _____ doned. Since the inception ot this ways and means committee has freedom and independence of the parative strength between Repub­ Representative Loring R. Black as and then shot himself. WASHINGTON (AP)-Chair- White House Reports campaign, which began. with our approved the principles 01 simpli­ Czecho-Slovok republic." lican and Democratic sentiment. attorney, declared that the article Shaw identified tile dead a8 man Donald Nelson has invited landings Ilt Arawe and Cape Glou- fication, which if made law would RepubUcans predicted they would held Winchell up to "public scorn, Roy M. Babcock, 53, ot Hamilton I eight to ten prominent civilians cester, the enemy has lost 232 pris- not be effective until 1945. Roosevelt Goes South get 60 per cent or the vote cast in hatred, /ridicule, contempt, shame City, Ca li f., and his wife, Byrl, 44, to serve on a new top advisory oners of wal' and abandoned 4,579 I11inois. and disgrace," of Biggs, Calif. committee within the war produc- dead. His losses :Crom wounds, 30 Persons Trapped tion board to advise the govern­ more than this figure." Supreme (ourl for Two-Week Rest ment on the return to civilian pro­ On 11,314-Ft. Summit YANK INFANTRYMEN PUSH THROUGH NEW GUINEA JUNGLES duction, it was learned yesterday. Highballs Into Rubber GEORGETOWN, Col. (AP)­ WASHINGTON (AP) -PreSI­ Nelson's action, disclosed eight WASHINGTON CA P) - The More than 30 people, including dent Roosevelt has gone south for weeks after the Baruch-Hancock synthetic rubber program is using lhJ'ee small children, were tJ'apped Voids, Law a much needed rest in the sun­ Ireport urged an immediate start up alcohol at the rate of 150,000,- yesterday on the summit o.f 11,3 14- Ihlne and White House announce­ i on ·postwar planning, was report­ 000 highballs a day. a war produc- toot Bethoud pass by snow ava­ WASHINGTON (AP)- The su­ ment of the fact yesterday appar- ed in some quarters to por\end a tion board expert calculated yes- lanches that blocked both the east­ pl'eme court yesterday ruled un­ ,;ently dispelled reports that the partial reorganization of WPB terday. Iern and western approaches to the constitutional a Florida Jaw mak­ chief executive was planning a around the new group, to be called The rough reckoning, performed pass across the CODtinenatal di­ ing it criminal fOI' a persoll to ob­ meeting with Prime Minister the "advisory committee on civ­ at request of a reporter. translates VIde, tain money by a Lraudulent prom­ Churchlll in the Immediate future. ilian pollcy ." the total usage of ' 190-proof in- A snowslide just west 01 the ise to perform labor. The burst of official publicity on dustrial alcphol in the rubber sumit Sunday night buried two In a 7-2 decision delivered by /be chief executive's trip, when plants into l ~ -oz . "jiggers" of 90- autos a.nd a highway snowplow Justice Jackson, the court declared Virtua lly every move he has made REGISTRATION MATERIALS proof drinking liqUor, and that's a and knocked a third car olf the the law violates the 13th amend­ in wartime has been guarded with Juniors and seniors In the bigger jigger than many taverns, road. Others were stalled on the men t (prohibiting involunt~y , utmost secrecy, occasioned more I college of liberals arts, com­ use these days. highway. servitude) and the federal anti­ COmment than did the trip itself. merce and education, and stu­ peonage statute. The journey has been expected. dents in the graduate college The case involved Emanuel Pol­ who plan on registering for the lock, oI Brevard county, Fla., Vice Admira! Ross T. McIntire, I Australian Minister Terms Criticism of Cut nav)' surgeon general and the summer semester may receive whom the cow·t described as an IlreIIdent's physician, told a news registration materials begin­ illiterate Negro. Pollock pleaded conference last Tuesday that the ning today at the registrar's of­ lin Army 'Misunderstan~ing' of·lolal EHoi'l guilty to a charge o.f obtainjng $5 )IresIdent's condition is good con­ fice. lrom J. V. D'Albora with a prom­ IIdering that he has suftered dur­ Registration 01 students of WASHINGTON (AP) - The ment was expressed yesterday by ise to work which he failed to the above classifications will ilia the winter from Influen,a'i Australian minister last night the committe's acting chairman. carry out. 'inu. Infections, bronchitis and a take place in Iowa Union Sat­ termed senatorial criticism of a Sir Owen said the decision _ad cold. urday from II a. m. to 2 p. m. projected 90,000-man . cut In his would mean about 30,000 special I Studenta may register for country's armed strength a "mis­ releases from the armed forces. Flynn Take, Count seven semester hours of work understanding" of the common­ The balance will come hom rou­ In One-Punch Fight Actress Calls Off as a maximum for term one, wealth's total war effort. tine discharges for battle wounds, which beilins April 24 and ends Pointing to growing allied de­ disability and men who have After Birthday Party Marriage to Skelton June 9. During term two, {rom mand an Australia's lood produc­ passed prime military age. The cut June 12 to Aug. 4, students may tion, Sir Owen Dixon declll'l'ed will not stop the steady intake ot HOLLYWOOD, (AP)- It was }fOLLYWOOD, (AP)- Exer~ carry eight semester hours of "the news means no more than younger men into the armed actor Errol Flynn versus Capt. eislnll a woman's prerogative ot work. that Australia is adapting her war forces, he said. Dan Topping in another of Holly­ cilanling hllr mind, blonde MUriel Freshmen, sophomores and economy to meet the new demands Austra1ia now has 12 percent of woo d 's celebrated one-punch said yesterday she had de­ ~orris unclaaaified students in the col­ in the war," her manpower in uniform, he ex­ fights Saturday night, it Was dis­ cided not to marry radio and film lege of liberal arts may obtain COmedian Richard (Red) Skelton Some members of the senate plained, the equivalent of a 16,- closed yesterday, registration mat e r I a 11 until military affairs committee had 000,000 United States army on the The abbreviated battle took place after all. April 21. "It was just a case of me chang­ called Australia's decision to trim basis of America', population, at actress Sonja Henle's home after Student Identification cards her military manpower "shock­ A sympathetic expression for a birthday party for the blonde Ina my mind," declared the actress. must be preaented at the time I"But I must admit there is also ing," "startling" and "almost un­ Australia's manpower pUgbt came ice-skatinl star, wife of Captain .,omeone else 'in my life." of application for realstratlon believable" when they linlt heard from Senator Thoma. (D-Utah) Topping. and Flynn, who took a materials, At hil studio Skelton was strictly I(JOVI'IlED BY THEIR BUDDIES at tbe maClblne .l1li ID torel'l'OllllCl. American infantrymen caaUIaIIJ the news. But sympathy for Aus­ lIeting chairman of the ..nate miI­ brief count, was inclined to mini­ 01\ the uneommunleltlve Ilde, wade aoI'OII a river ID 'be tIIItk New QulDea ...... wllere &bel .,. puabin. back the Japa. '':' ' io .. , tralia in her · manpow.. predlea- lt1ry cammi«ee, mize the inoldent. PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA . TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1944

THE DAILY IOWAN Published eVer7 mornl.nl ex­ News Behind die News OfffCIAl DAilY BUllEffN" cept Monday by Student PubUca­ WasltinQfoR \iOns Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa Facts Acquired From Survey avenue, Iowa Clt;r, Iowa. Of 261 Papers In Wartime Board of Trustees: Wilbur L. . More Surprises Schramm, A. Craig Baird, Kirk H . By PAUL MALLON Porter, Paul E. Olson, Jack WASHINGTON-If you think ,R's" and for public questioning of In Coming Elections Tllellday, April 11, l~ Moyers, Jeanne Franklin, Sarah the educational trust sponsorIng the educational author of a report .Than in Civil War Bailey, Donald Ottilie, Charles the undisciplined easy way of on San Francisco teaching methods Swisher. schooling still easily occupies its who pleaded: UNIVERSITY CALENDAR By JACK STINNETT Fred M. Pownall, Publllber mighty seat of fear-dominance, TneSCIay. A]lril 11 "The Economic Reconstruction II Marilyn Carpenter, read these following facts: (this "All students in the elementary WASHINGTON - There prob­ column is publisbed by 261 daily grades should be promoted witb­ ably are going to be more SUrprises 12 M. Professional Women's the Post-war World." AdVertising Luncheon, University club. 8 p. m. IIlustrateJ lecture 'II) Shirley McKim, Editor paying newspapers with a certified out examination or test anci should in the coming elections than at circulation of 10,210,585, plus sev- ultimately be graduated from the any time since the past-Civil War 6:30 p. m. Picnic supper, Tri­ Dr. L. R. Ll1ndon, "Exploratlq. angle club of the Arctic," under a uspl~el ~ Entered as aecond claa man era! hundred weeklies of undeter- elementary schools whether they period. The reason: shifts in matter at the postofflce at Iowa mined circulation, and the facts possess the requisite knowledge or population. 8 p. m. University play: "Mr. the Iowa Mountaineers, ChemlJ.. Plrn Passes By," University thea­ City. Iowa, under the act 01 COD- were aCQuired t h r 0 ugh these not, otherwise their characters In this space I can't make any try auditorium. ter. ere- 01 March 2, 1879. sources.) will suffer." Idetailed report, state by state, but Sunday. April 16 PI The national progressive edu- The Atlanta Journal front-page I can take one which might prove Wednesday, April 12 3-5 p. m. Open bouse 'for gradu­ WI Subscription rate!r-B,. man. $S cation association ('iI sort of philosopher ''Piney Woods Pete" typical- the state of Washington. 8 p. m. University play, "Mr. ating class, President's Home, IOZ per year; b,. carrier. 111 een1l , chamber of commerce of progres- sums up: In 1940, apprOXimately three­ Pim Passes By." University thea­ Church street. . In weekly. $5 per year, sive SChools) closed and went out "Most children won't study if quarters of a million votes 'Were ter. Tuesday, April 18 The Associated Prell 11 exclu- of business within the past 30 they ain't made to. And this ain't cast in Washington. A little more 8 p. m. Concert by University 7:30 p. m. Iowa MountaJn~rs, Symphony orchestra, Iowa Union. lively entitled to use for republl- days. being done-at school or at home." than 400,000 went to the Demo­ 223 engineering building; movln, I crats; a little less than 350,000 to Thursday, Apr[) 13 pictures: "Ellster in the Holr cation of all news dispatchetl cred- The national parent teacher The Journal performed a su- 10 a, m. Hospital library (pot­ Ited to It or not otherwise ered- magazine. says in the F'ebruary perior job of reporting circum­ lhe Republicans. The state has Land," "Wild Elephant Roundup,· luck luncheon), University club. fled in this paper lind also the issue: stances in some outlying county three Democratic representatives "Four Barriers," "Call of t ~, local news published herem. "Mr. Mallon's keen observations schools where the pupils teach the and three RepubUcans. It has two 2 p. m. Kensington. University W;ilderness," "Father Hubbat~,· on juvenile delinquency anti his' teachers by the discussion method Democratic senators and a Repub­ club. "Advehtures Among Glaciers." TELEPHONES approach to the whole llroblem (in which the 'teacher is not al- lican governor, but it can't be con­ 8 p. m. University play: "Mr. 7:30 p. m. White Elephant brldn Editorial OWce ______1192 bring to mind several atticles that lowed to have an opinion.) sidered a stale solidly in any Plm Passes By," University the­ party, University club, ater. Society Editor 4193 hav!! appeared recently in this But clear-headed, com m 0 n- po Ii tical bloc. Thursday, APril U Business Ollice .(1111 magaZine. Whether or not they sense Mayor W. B. Hartsfield has In the last few years, Washing­ Friday, April 14 9 p. m. Spring formal, Triangl, agree with all Mr. Mallon says, little of that in Atlanta where the ton h as become one of the grea t 4 p. m. Phi Beta Kappa, senalc club. TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1944 I parents alld teachers will surely high schools are of the pest. war industrial states. Workers chamber, Old Capitol. Friday, A-prll 21 agree that tbe home is still the The Glen Falls, N. Y. Post-Star have flocked in by the thousands. 4:15 p. m. The Reading !lour, 3-5:30 p. m. Red Cross Tea lind cradle of our culture and that dis- says: A visiting Washington state politi­ Unlversity Theater lounge. Kensington, University c I u b; cipUne should be re-estabJished " Lea~ning is not 'Play. It is co told me recently there will be 8 p. m. UniversilY play: "Mr. "Further Adventures of a Travel. ANecessary Evil Hollywood Sights and Sounds 500,000 more qualified voters in Pim Passes By," University the- ing Sculptor." by Mrs. E. F. Mason there on modern psychiatric lines." work. Fine. mature, lasting per- The essential level-headed- The (name omitted) sChool text- sonal goo d n e s s-at-something is Washingtop this year than in 1940. ater. Saturda.y, April 22 ness of retail diatributors on the book publishing company has sent not achieved without work, work, Although they can't be typed 8 p. m. UniversIty Film society 12 M. Second semester closes Iji Boy Fights to Prove politically, it's almost a certainty estion of wartime controls is a confidential memo to its organi- work. This truth the education movie (in French) "Escape from colleges of commerce, educatiOll, qu zation to capitalize on the new systems must tell the young Brother's Ability their vote will tilt the balance of Yesterday," Art auditorium (Ad- engineering, graduate, law, liberal clearly revealed in the preval- trend, 8aylng: people. And if the young will not power in November. mission by season ticket only) arts and pharmacy. ent expressions from merchants "The great difficulty of the past listen, then education should taKe By ROBBIN COONS If this figure is only half cor- Saturday, April 15 Sunda.y, April 23 I HOLLYWOOD-Gregory Peck's is only now being previewed, and reet, imagine what that will mean 12:15 p. m. American Associa- 1:45 p. m. University Convoca. in favor of extending the life ten years has peen that schools them by the collars, slam them 12-year-old brother. Peck hears, his second film, "Keys of the in a state that never has swung of OP A, whose powers are have sadiy neglected the teaching down In their seats, and say: tion of University Women, Unl- tion, ~owa Union, has been having trouble convinc- Kingdom," is barely under way, more than a hundred thousand versity club rooms; address by "Monday, April 24 due to expire June 30, unless re- of fundamentals. Isn't it high time " 'Young ones, we know what is ing his schoolmates that Peck is a may be shooting far into the sum- votes either way. d b S k that pupils were properly taught best for you. Now work.''' Professor C. Addison Hickman, on 8 a. m. Summer semester open. newe y congress. . pea ing to read, write. spell. figure cor- The Raleigh News ana Observer real movie star. The latest argu- mer. Washington also has its particu­ --- ment on the subject ended in Tamara Toumanova, his co-star lar political problem:;;. There's a (For lIdormatlon regardlnl' a~te8 beyond 'Ills schelule. ,ee for food distributors. Chain rectly, and a thorough knowledge counseled the state education asso­ retervatlons In £he office of the President, Old Cal'ltol.) Siore Age declares: "Grocers of geography and bistory, which ciation convention: swinging fists and bloody noses in in "Days of Glory," llkewise is as rumor here that Sen. Homer T. 8 San Diego schoolyard, where the yet a personality unheralded by Bone may duck running again to don't like price control or ra- are tUndamentals of a soUnd "Paul Mallon and his serious tellows' incredulity was too much the public. except for those ba1- accept a federal judgeship. If he be tioning any more than our boys elementary education?" charges shoutd not dismisSeO for a loyal kid brother to bear. let followers who recognize the does. his logica 1 Democratic suc- GENERAL NOTICES at the front like fighting for their A new member of the San Fran- by a denunciation. Rathel' an who It's the picture-makers' fault. former ballerina. Tamara, doing <;:essor ",ouid be Rep. Wal"ren G. era lives. But they know these cisco board· of education, Garret are interested In public educatioh, IOWA lJNlON fee for non-members. B holding up their films so long. her own shopping in Beverly Hills Magnuson, one o[ the brightest things are necessary if we are McEnerney, II, has called for the citadel of democracy, should Peck. the current hottest bet in stores, had made the acquaintance young men in the house. MUSIC ROOM SCHEDULE S. J . EBUT ball to lick inflation on the home "greater emphasis on the three ask themselves: the Hollywood, still hMn't been seen of a number of clerks. One day a There's also the stOry that Re- Monday-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. PresldeDl front, as well as our enemies "Are our schools measuring ·up on the screen. His "Days of Glory" (See HOLLYWOOD, page 5) (See WASHINGTON, page 5) rea to their duty and opportunity; are Tuesday-ll to 2 and 4 to 8. ------~--- STATIONERY FOR gle on the fighting fronts," 0 . . the children being required to be Wednesday-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. ORIENTATION LEADERS hel When a nation is faced with pinIOn as thorough as they should in tbeir Thursday-U to 2 and 4 to 8, Freshman orientation leodel1 acr spending hundreds of billions studies? FridaY-ll to 3 and 4 to 8. and assistants should obtain ~heir wh of dollars to meet military de- "If no t, then the duty of all offi- Saturday-ll to 3. stationery at the U. W. A. de~k In ne monds, or suller extinction, the On and Off Campus cials and teachers is first to make SundaY-ll to 6 and 7 to 8. Old Capitol immediately.· • I people are left with no altema- a critical examination and take ti M h I the necessary steps." . .. NURSING APPLICATION SANXAY l>RIZE ve. oney as no va ue com- QUESTION: WHAT ARE YOUR A hundred school boards, higher Women students interested in The Sanxay prIze of $500 Is ,to . pared to national survival. We P LAN S FOR THE SUMMER educators, principals, preachers ~su)( entering the school of nursing will. be awarded soon to the student are spending today for the VACATION? and PTA's have asked and been 910 ON YOUQ RADIO DIAL. the class which begins June 12. o[ the senior class who gtves t~e l' sak~ of survival, 01 a rate that Mary Beatty, A3 of Atkins: "I granted the privilege to reprint 1944. should call at the office ot highest promise of achievement would have been thought im- wUl be doing office work because my 12 articles so far. You can see the registrar immediately to se­ for graduate work for tbe year possible before the war, Bo{- I am not doing much to help the them in newspaper tiles, dated cure an application blank. Com­ 1945-46. For information clill a~ rowed money is flooding the war effort here in school so I think IDecember 31. January 14, 17, 25, TODAY'S InGl1L1GHTS pleted applications should be re­ the graduate dffice or see t h I¥ country. Ret ail distributors I should be doing something use- February 3, 14, 22, 29, March 7. turned to the registrar's oHice as graduate college catalog, Page 2'4 1m th wf I t Ii· 1 f ful during vacation." 20, 21, April 4. FOR DISTINGUISHED as possible. CARL E. SEASHOR); ow e a u po en a 0 RIchard Elfin, Al of Centerville: The above is just the broth of a SER'VICE- DABRY C. BARNES Dean too much money. Consequent- "I'm going to work in the retail ton of evidence which heralds the Registrar ly, they would be the last to business because my father oper- first turn of the tide. In all, if A. dramatization about Lieul. COMMENC~MENi' .. , ~I wish for removal of regulations ates two clothing stores and I want marks the beginning of the end of Edwin G. Kocher of Humboldt, DEGREE CANDmATES who has received an air medal, INVITATIONS . designed to maintain ~tability. to learn the buSiness," the easy way. Such foolishness All students who expect to re­ three Oak Leaf clusters and the Candidates for degrees at ~ They raise their voices in criti. Marian Crews, AI of For' Doda"e: could not stand In the light of 1n­ ceive a degrej! or certificate at April 23 convocation who ha cism, not against the basic pur- "I'm going to stay horne and keep quiring Interest or common sense Silver Star for actions over Sicily, the April 23 convocation "hould will be broadcast tonight at 8 placed orders 10r invitations rna se of price and rationing house lor the rest of the family, discussion. both of which are be­ make formal application at once recei ve them now by presenti po o'clock in another of the WSUI at the office of the registrar. roem measures, but agmn .. t defecta They are gOing away for the sum- ginning on a national scale. series, For Distinguished Service. their receipts at the Alumni offt -.... mer. I'll apply myself to getting These d eve lop men t s mean 1. Universi ty hall. in Old eapito 1. in those measures, They like- a sun tan!" teachers need no longer to fear for 'BARRY G. BARNiS VEDONNA M, KNUTSON ' wise vehemently protest the Betty Bachmann, A2 or Cedar their lives. Indeed that it has be- TREASURY SALUTE- Registrar to Chairman r use of these necessary controls Raplcls: "I'm going to Kllnsas City come popular to speak out and A salute the "American Drug­ Senior Invitations eommH~ as an excuse to impose social and work for TWA. I wOllld like seek corrections and improvements gist" will be given on Treasury Sa­ ARCTIC EXPLORATION changes upon the nation-such to be an airline hostess, but I'm to re-establish dis c I p 1 i n e in lute this morning at 9:15 by station Dr. L. R. Laudon, chairman of SWAlNE SCHOLARSmP as the destructive production- afraid I'll have to work in the per- scholarshlp and conduct in schools, WSUI. Songs to be heard will in­ geology at Kansas university will present an illustrated lecture Sat­ The Swaine scholarship 'for for-use theory, They oppose sonnel department." homes, and churcbes. It will be- clude "Has Anybody Here Seen year of graduate study at Ha&a ' gs because they un- Joan Wheeler, At of Lakewood, come increasLngly popular. Kelly?" "I Wonder Who's Kissing urday, April 15 at 8 p. m. in the these thm Ohio: "I'm plllnning to return Her Now," "Pony Boy" and "I Chemistry audilorium. Dr. Lau­ will be awarded soon by the gr~d B dermine the legitimate aim of home at the close of this school Love My Wife But Oh You Kid." don was in charge of an cxploring uate council. Students interest A should apply to the heads of tllel price fixing and rationing-in. term and take a posttion as as- You're T'A1Hng party for the Canol Oil project H flation control. aistant in the National Carbon I i 1:1 Me'• LITTLE-KNOWN RELIGIOUS and took many color motion pic­ departments. Further inlormatio D tures and kodachrome slides of the can be obtained at the gradua It does not require an eco- company in Cleveland. This will GROUPS- oUice. W nomic expert to realiz& that prove valuable training in chemi- • "The Nat:arene Church" wlU Arctic-Yukon region. His talk, * * * • Bob HaWk, radio comedian, gets the blrdl The noted Quizmaster DEAN CARL E, SEASHO J A laws which ~ top merchanta sky to me, hecause I am going A commentator predicts the be the tOPic tor discussion this "Exploring for Oil in lIle Arctic," Sl of "ThankS to the Yanks" looked In the mirror and Instead of a is non-lechnical. The program is from selling low.cost wearing into nursing." complete collapse of all our Axis morning e.t 11 o'clock when "Bob hawk, he saw a hawk. The illcture was taken on the 1st of April. JOURNALISM 1I0NOR D.\Y H I 1.._ Mary Alice Dorr, A3 of Los enemies by Christmas, Wonderlul WSUI p/:,esen£S Little-Known sponsored by the IO'va Mountain­ G appare are a t.ueat to orderly AnceIeB: "I will stay (or both Idea-but isn't that asking Santa Religious GroupS, a cl,RrOOIll eers. There will be an admission The annual journalism honQ day will be Friday. April 14. I P distribution and the living summer school sessions because I Claus for too much at the same broadcast conducted by Dr. Mar- 9:30- Muslc* Magic* * ll- News • • • 'l'h program win be in the newsroo I /llandards of consumers. Nor feel H's important in these time.> time? CUI Bach of the school of re- 9:45-Keep 'Em Eating 1l:15-A Little Night MUsic at 4:10 p. m. Dean Harry K. does it take an expert to figure of war to get through with one's I ! I IIglo(1 each Tuesday aJ¥1 Thors- New 9:50- Treasury Song for Today 11:30-Roy Shield burn of the college of liberal ii oul thqt price fixing which elim. education as soon as possible and Korean women use their bas- day. The Rev. Paul Sommer. 9:55-News, The Dally Iowan 1l:55-Treasury Song for Today Navv Brothers and out-ot-town guests will pre inates all profit, drives retail. start out in some type of work ket:s for hets. A preview of the ville of the Nazarene church in 10-Week in the Bookshop 12-News sent awards and prizes. J ers out of business and t h u s actually aiding the United States newest miUinery suggests that Iowa City will be a luest on the Leroy Recruits Duane; 10 :15-Ycsterday's Musical Fa- PROF. WILBuR SeIIR j • war eUort." our gals might be reversing the prorram. t infl tj vorites Blue Joins Himself promo es a on. Jane Leland, A1 Wichita, )[an- process. 10 :30-BooksheU KSO (1460) ; WENR (ll9O) Yes, retail merchants know sas: "I am going to begin the ! ! ! SINFONIETTA- TIIETA SIGMA PHI .t I 11- Little - K now n Religious Theta Sigma Phi will bold inl why we have the OPA as weU Thursday after vacation teaching New York Is in a dither over Beethoven's "Symphony No.2" 6-Let Yourself Go The Iowa N a v y Pre-Fligbt Groups tiatlon Friday, April 14. at 7 p. as they understand its short· dancing · and expression in the the 5-cent fan, This slll'prlses the will be guest-conducted by Frieder 6:30-Mctropolitan Opera, USA school has a new na vy brother 11 :50-Farm Flashes DOROTHY KtEIN' comings. Therefore. they will school of fine arts at the Univer- rest of the COUDtry wblqh dldn·t Weissman on the Sinforuetta con­ angle. 12- Rhylbm Rambles 7- Walch the World Go By President continue to support it while slty of Wichita." knO)'" yon could still buy lIome- cert tonlgl)t at 10:30 over station 7:15-Lum and Abner Aviation Cadet L roy Utne, of WGN. 12130-News, The Dally Iowan Summit, S. D., was a yeoman ilt seeking conection of its inex. Marlon Stout, A4 of Caspar, tbW for a nickel. l2:45-From Our ,BOYS in Sc,v- 7:30-DuHy's Tavern plicable rulings. Wyo.: "Although I'm graduating ! ! ! the Minneapolis flight selection PlU BETA KAPPA ice ' 8-FaJPous JUl·y Trials I intend to remain in Iowa City A 1I11&'111st claims to under- CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS- 8,3P-Spotlight Bands board before being picked for Phi Beta Kappa initiatioJ1. ser for my vacation. I am filling the siand 26 for ell' n 1&II«1III'es, An eye-witness account of the I- Musical Chats aviatIon cadet training. In that ices will be held at 5 p. m. Frld.., 2-Campus News 8:55-Coronet Story Teller position as chemist in the biO-1 Zsdok Dumkopr wonders If this sham war being conducted by the I 9-;RaymQnd Gram Swing capacity he "recruited" his young­ April 14, in the senate Ohambl~ chemical laboratories at university Includes 'he patois IIJIOken by men of Camp Polk,La .• to test 2: 10-0l·gan Melodies er brother Duane into lhe V.5 of Old Capitol. It No Higher Tribute 2:30-Boysj Town 9:J5-Chester :Bowles No higher tribute could be hospital." fans at a baseball pme. comhat problems will be relayed 9:30-Creeps py Night naval uviation training program. "ETHYL E, MARTIN· 3-Fiction Parade Duane bcgan his training and President paid to an industry than that I ! ! to listeners on Arthur Hale's Con- 3:30-News, The Dally Iowan JO-News 'I received by the airlines of the sia, and north Africa, and in. The most permanently em- fi dentiaUy Yours over WGN to- 10:15- Ray :flenle a few weeks later Leroy, who had II 3:35-Iowa Union Radio Hour Y. M. C. A. Uniled States from the Truman deed everywhere that combat ployed Germans are those ship night at 7 o'clock. 10:30-Gay Claridge sold him on the i.dea of becoming 4-Elementary French a navy flyer, himself entered the Movies will be shown at • _._- 1 repairers who no sooner get the ' 4:30-Tea Time Melodies 10:55-War News committee in the course 0 f its h as t...... ,n p ace. Some high Tirpitz in order when 'the R. A. ~OB HOPE- ll-Teddy Powell program. Since then Leroy has lasi meeting of the Y. M , C. I investigation of thlt national de- Chinese officials have stated F. bombs her again. Sonlstress Ella Logan will be 5-Children's Hour followed Duane through the vari­ Wednesday, April 12, at 8 p, !ID. 5;30-Musical Moods 1l:30-Pat Trantani ' fense program. In a detailed that without the aid of cargo I ! I Bob Hope's guesl when he 1l:55-.News ous stages of V-5 tl·aining about the "Y" rooms of Iowa Union. 5:45-News. The Dally IOWan three months behind his'younger RICHARD WOO report on the present status of and transport planes, China The BerUner duck In&' Allied bro~casts for saIlors at Ter- 6-Dinner Hour Music United States air power, the could not have continued an bombs probably bas come to the minal Island, San l'edro, CaUC., CBS brother. 'President 7- United Slates in the 20th WMT (600) ; WBBM (780) Their training schedUle brought committee had the following to eHective resiatance of the en- conclusion that the COlt of war torilght at 9 o'clock on slatlons Century say of the worldwide air cargo emy. • . wouldn', be 10 bad U It weren't WIIO ani WMAQ. them together at the pre-flJght PANHfllJlA:NIC MEE!illNG 7:30- SportsUme school here for -three weeks. Th rushing report will be service which the airlines were "Thousands of wounded men f. tire lWeI'II..r. 7:45- Evening Musicale 6-1 Loye a Mystery A :.1 ! ! ! WORDS AT WAR- 6~15-Passing Parade ~unior brother bas departed from lo rushing ehllirme.n and P instrwne~tal in developing: ha,ve been evacuated by air to Organized baseball includes "WlId River," a novel of Rus- 8-For Distinguished S~rvice ·Iowa City for flight training, but lenlc delegates in a meeUng T 8:15-Wesleyan Chapel Hour 6:30-American Melody Hour "Hundreds of thousands 01 tons pomts of safety where they ....."lass AA, A and B l .....___n.es ~ but Sla· n Ilf· e and the n neiper dam, Leroy hopes to catch up with him day, Aprll U, at 4 p. m. in tl 8:45-l\Jews, 'the Dally Iow,an 7-Big Town of supplies have been movea could obtain adequaje medical to the man at the next desk they }ViII be the Words at War drama 7:3O-Judy Conova aKain when he too leaves Iowa house ohamber of Otd Capitol. 1 by air to sustain military oper· attention. Maqy of them owe all look suspiciously alike- tonight at 10:30 over stations '7:55-~ews P.re-Flight for the primary pha~e : ations, which would otherwiae their lives to u....,pJcmea. " . strictly 4-F. WMAQ and WHO. Network Highlights 8- Burns and Allen CAMPUS CAMERA OIJUB n have been abeoluJely impoa- "TheM are contribution. to ! ! ! 8 :3 0-Repo~t to the Nation ELECT ,NEW OFFIOERS The Campus Camera olub VI sible. Without these plan... we the wianing of the war Of the Armed torces of the United LET YOURSELF GO- D-Lighted Lantern Newly-elected officers of the meet at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday could not have tak:en or held very highest order and all who States, Great Britain and RUllllia 'Screen actor 'Rolund Young :.ro (1040); WMAQ (67D) 9:30-Congress Speaks junior class in the college of med-I ro.om 314 of the chemtstO' bulf! Guadalcanal; we could not have participated in building will occupy Berlin after the war, it brings along an unreleased inhi­ 9:45-Con1iifentlally Yours icine are: James Tittotson. ·M2 oJ: ing. Urlng prints for the pritt have sent thouaands of Ameri. and operating these pl~"'" is reported. Thus, Germany's ex- bition or two when he visits Mil­ 6-.Jim Blade IP-~e'\VS West Liberty, president; Bruce exhibition...... capital will become the most care- ton Berle's Let Yourself Go pro­ 6:15-News of the World 10:J5-FultOn Lewis McCloskeY", M2 of Newton, vice- CHARLES CRIS'l'.1 can and Australian troops over and prOviding the nec88lary fully ~arded junk heap in history. gram tonight at 6 o'clock over 6:30-Supper Intedude 1O . 30 ~Mu s ic You Love president, and John Elston. M2 of President ., the Owen·Stanley mountainll airfields and equipment to I ! I 1{SO and WENR. 6:45- Kaltenborn Edits tile News . ll- News Audubon, secretary-treasurer. ,. . . In short. we could not maintain them may well be Comes the baseball season and 7-Ginny Simms 1l:15-Jan Garber UNIVERSITY FfUl h a ve prosecuted the cam. proud. . . we'll have the problem of whO TODAY'S PROGRAMS 7:30-Date With Judy 11 :3O-Jimmy Hilliard A "FrenCh tllm, "Escape paigns which con.lituJed our "This was .accoaaplWled,.GDCf will carry the betboy's bet now 8- Mystery Tqeater 12-Press News Yesterday," will be shown to firat great oHaDaiV81 agaiDat could haq been acoompliahed Uurt be's p.laylllg aecbnd bue. B-Morning Chapel 8:30-Fibber McGee and Molly general pullllc in the art the Japanese. only throuCJh the Iplendld c:o- I I ! 8:15-Musical Miniatures 9-Bob "Hope torium Thursday, April 13. "Similarly, cargo and trcm. operation of the private air- Sprm, traininl in -the north 'IJt.-News, 'I'be nalJy Iowan 9:30-Red Skelton p. m. by fhe University port planes were of tremendous lin.. , which pou"=;..:11 the n8C- has one advanta,. tor the big 8:45-Program Calendar lO-Fred Waring ciety. Admission wlll be 40 al ..u leaIue clubl. They can conaerve 8:lIl1-Servlce Reports iO:15-News 7:S0-Pick and 'Pat The film wJll be nrl!lierMi v ~ in supplying military op- euary nu~ua of .on and ex- on horaehide by ua1Iri anowballa '9-Service Unlimited 10;3()-The Ron a I d Colman 8:30-Ame't-ican Forum of the Thursday niaDt at 8 tor eration. in Burma. China. liut- perience," _ . .. _ _ _ : !or bat~ ~tige, ____ @:l~l~·lithl"_ ..... __ ~lIo.Yl ___. _. .. 8 __ ~ ___...... of .aeaaoA ij~ ~Dl¥. SDAY, APRn. 11, 1944 - ' THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE THREE Mr. Pim Passes By" Will Open Tonight cit 8 P.M. TRAFFIC AWARD FOR IOWA CITY Altrusa Club to Observe IY to Run founders' Anniversary A I t r usa club will hold Its Founders' Anniversary din n e r ur Nights Thursday at 6 p. m. in the Uni­ tarian church parlors. Commit­ VIRGINIA MISS tee in charge wJll be Helen Wil­ rof. Gladys Lynch SCHRECKEN­ HERMAN liams, Pearl B. Broxam. Lola Hughes and Helen Focht. '111 Direct Comedy GOST ENGAGED Theme for the dinner will be I University Theater ENGAGED "Things Altrusan." Altrusa songs will be led by Marian Andrews. [r. Pim Passes By," a three­ Subjects that will be discussed will be "Founding and History" ~medy by A. A. Milne, will by Dr. Lois Boulware; "Altrusa's at the University theater to­ Objectives" by Mary Strub; "The I at B o·clock. Key to Altrusa" by Miss Hughes; e play, an extra production "Altr~a AccomplishmentS" by It community series. will be Jessie Gordon; "A distinguished mted four nights only, the Membership" by Dr. Genevieve III performance being Friclay I Stearns, and "Altrusa and Myself" t, acoording to Prof. Gladys , by Addie Shaff. lb, who is directing the pres­ Uon. Ie cast is as tollows: Robert TRAFFIC SAFETY In Iowa City In 1943 was recognized In De. MONTH INTENSIVE ley. A2 of Council Bluffs. 14 Moines last week when O. A. White, Iowa City police chief. was pre­ SeCIWfOI'laI Cou,... for 1e Marden; Dale Hankins. A3 sented with an award by W. Earl lIali. past president of the slate r.tertown. S. D .• OUvia; Mar- safety council. Iowa City was Judged second place willner III the 1943 COLLEGE STUDENTS ..J GIADUAm t Rowland. AS of Dayton, All-Iowa traffic safety contest In the 10.000 to 25.000 population '1\ lhoro~lh. ioltoli..... cretarial I Dinah ; Shirley Rich. A4 of MR. AND MRS. GEORGE W. SCHRECKENGOST of Des Moines MRS. H. HERMAN of South Bend, Ind., announces the engagement couu. - .tanlo. February. Jill,. group. Preselltation of the award was made at a. banquet In the Ft. October. 1l•• i.tr.noD DOW o~ mWB, Lady Marden; Richard Des Moines hotel In Des Moines Friday evening. announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daugh- of her daughter. Jimi. to Ens. Elliott Mandl. son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee rld,e. A2 of Iowa City. Brian tel'. Virginia Ann. to Rodney E. Courtney, U. S. N. R., son or Mrs. Ida Mandl of Hillside. N. J. No date has been set for the wedding. Miss ...... d.., n.olD, ICbooi ~e; Julien Benjamin. A4 of &At Herman. a graduate of Galesburg, Ill.. high school. Is now a sophomore darou.bout dI. , ..... CllldD" Innati. Ohio. Carraway Plm. IN THE KITCHEN-WITH MRS. A. B. GRAHAM Courtney of Dows. Miss Schreckengost was graduated from North A JCHOOl 0I1W1'- Alice Walling. A3 of Chicago, high school in Des Moines and is now a senior in the speech depart­ in the college of liberal arts at the University of Iowa. Ensign Mandl ,.... ID 'f COWOlIIIIH AI/!) WOMM !. ment at the University of Iowa. Mr. Courtney is a gmduate of the was graduated from Hillside high school and attended Montclair State IMI GRI.. COLU. e story revolves around a Dows high school and attended the University of Iowa before his Teachers college in Montclair, N. J . He received his commission from ".oIdNl. JollA ..b.rt 0'•••• I.CA Irk which Mr. Pim, a rather enlistment in the navy. He is in the motor torpedo boat squadrons. the midshipman's school at Notre Dame, Ind., and at present is sta­ DIr.ctw.'" M ••• It. M.A. e, ,entle character, lets drop The wedding will be an event of the middle of June. tioned in Seattle. Wash. .1...... t...,.... sra .. 1111 -. Is In the play. Although inno­ y uttered. the remark serves rouse considerable disturb­ GOOD NEWS FROM THE PRODUCTION FRONT In the Marden household but luaJly brings about closer rstandlng among the play's Icters. I the orl~lnal cast at the , 'l'heater In London In 1921, I Blouclcault had the part It. Plm and Leslie Howard In the role of Brian Stran~e. lra Hope Crewes as Olivia. !y Digges as George. and I Westley as Lady Marden !d in the production when is given at the Garrick the­ In London in 1921. OJI (}mcmlKoI()r.t .INJlINr AcltiJilies tty dialogue is dominant ghout the play. as is the case most of Milne's works. The A. B. * Physical volume of war materials produced was more than- double that of 1942. Irlght is noted for his abil­ AS SHE WAITS for her guests to arrive, Mrs. Graham, 413 Gil­ l see into the character lof bert street, re-arranges the colorful centerpiece of red roses adorning * Total value of 1943 war production more than 3 billion, 500 million dollars. 'ent types of people and to her dinner table. The Grahams' attractive dining room is delicately :ler them humorously rather colored and blended in rosy tones and neutral beige. The learose color * Average total employment 448,848, an all-time high. critically. Because of his of the carpet complements the beige wall paper with its deeper beige 'raus dialogue and his in­ figures. The pale flowered-print drapes are predominantly beige. with * Total payrolls more than 1 billion, 300 million dollars-up-54%. __ Milne is often referred to as accents of maroon. In one corner of the large room is a knick-knack * Materials and services purchased from others approximately 1 billion, 900 million dollar -up 88%) 'English Barrie," his works shelf decorated with tiny figures of unimals and various antiques. IbJlng in these respects the * Net income after taxes [rom manufacturinji! operations-3:!1o cents per dollar of sales. liS of the famous author 01 * r .Pan" and other plays. Mrs. Graham* *does * a great dea: 6 or 8 marShmallows* * of entertaining in spite of the fact ! scene. the morning room Strain can of dessert cubed GENERAL MOTORS 1943 deliveries of war material rose to- a- total value eM Delive,l.. of W.r Mllerlale Irden house in Bucklngham- that ration points must now be pineapple. Melt butter. add flour considered. Chicken has always of more than 3}1 billion dollars, or about 87% more than in 1942. The increase by CIaMeo of Producil Is used throughout th~ play. provided good dinner party meat and stir to smooth paste. Add the in physical volume was even greater, since unit prices were reduced during the ,ne takes place a morning in milk. pineapple juice and cheese. act two occurs the same day and this recipe for Escalloped year. Deliveries of service parts and other authorized civilian material Chicken is a little variation of th e and heat until it begins to thicken. luncheon, and act three old favorite. Then add two well beaten eggs amounted to $250,000,000, a decrease of about 30% from 1942. place 30 seconds later. ESCALLOPED CH1CKEN gradually and add to the pine­ . ~ ~htln~ Is In Ilhar~e of Prof. Cut up one fat hen. salt well apple in buttered casserole and At the time of Pearl Harbor, G.M. deliveries of war products were at a rate . ton D. Sellman of the dra­ and cover with cold waleI' and boil top with marshmallows. of two million dollars' worth a day. By the end of 1943 the daily rate was Ie art department and Gary The advertisements warn us not until very lender. When just cool above twelve million dollars. The 2,300 separate items placed in production ler of 'he speech depart­ enough to handle, cut in large to be "orie dressing women." Here t. Prof. 'Arnold GIIJeUe of cubes. Use a large, shallow baking is a new one for your new spring ranged from small and delicate parts to airplane engines, complete airplanes, dramatic art department is salads. The Craham's call it the dish. butter and put in a layer of tanks, and powerful Diesel enginesJor_submarines and landing craft. har~e of settlni's. Costum­ Slightly crushed crackers about 'h Snapl'Y Salad Dressing. Is heine directed by Aline inch thick and cover wilh a layer SNAPPY SALAD DRESSING ~n of the dramatic art de­ of chicken, using all meat. Dot Y.o cup sugar AVERAGE EMPLOYMENT i~ General Motors in 1943 was 448,848, an Dlent. well with butter. season and lop 1 ~ lsp. mustard Employ_ol ud P.yrolla ,ria Brown. A2 or Cleveland, with 11 few crushed crackers. Add Salt all-time high. The figure stood at 503,749 in December. In 1942, the yearly '" Genuel Molora Is stage manager and Wyatt 1 cup vinegar 2 cups of chicken broth. thicken to average was and the December figure was Thus the increase Ipson. A3 of Goldfield, is a thin gravy and pour it through 1 ~ cups salad oil 314,144, 391,975. lolder. the ingredients in the baking dish. 1 can tomato soup in yearly average was 43%. At the same time, payrolls rose 54%, and reached mbers of the building crew Insert a fork to allow gravy to 1 tsp. grated onion a total of about 1~ billion dollars. 'hyllis Blackman. A3 of Iowa penetrate to bottom of the dish. Dash of garlic salt Gloria Brown; Helen Caro, Bake for 20 minutes in oven 350 Dash of WOl'cestershire sauce I Highland Park. Ill.; Gloria degrees F. Beat the mixture well and keep More than 200,000 new G.M. employes were trained for war work in 1943. 'in, A2 of Newark, N. J.; The Graham's have two sons; in a cool place until ready to use. Enrollment in courses for supervisors and executives totaled 21,500. nary Goldfein, A2 of Chi­ one is an ensign and the other a Lois Hatfield. A3 of Colum­ lieutenant in the ski troops, who The percentage of working time lost because of accidents was less in 1943 runction; Doroth), Keller. A2 both like a good chocolate cake. than ever before. ~ - - - )avenport, and W i I ann e This is Mrs. Graham's Quick Choc· Marine Ralph Houser ne Ide r. AI of Cleveland olllte Cake recipe. which is the Its, Ohio. boys' favorite. !lert Maurer; Alice Walling, QUICK CHOCOLOTE CAKE Wins Commendation TOTAL NET INCOME after taxes in 1943 f,.;;m war output and other 'f Chicago; Robert Keahey. 1 Y.o cups sugar sources was $149,780,088, compared to $163,651,588 in 1942 and $201,652,508 Olive Dornfield. G of Iowa 2 rounding tbls. shortening Marine Lieut. Col. Ralph L. in 1941. Net income after taxes from manufacturing in 1943 was only 3~o B.re members of the paint 2 whole eggs (beaten together Houser. son of Prof. and Mrs. G. cen ts per dollar of total net sales. well) L. Houser. 430 Iowa avenue. has charge of properties are Le- I \2 cup hot coffee been commended by secretary of 93% of all war material delivered to the end of 1943 was manufactured Neumann. A2 of Aurora. Ill.; , 2 squares of bitter melled the navy Frank Knox, for ex­ under fixed-price contracts. General Motors early adopted the policy of reduc­ t Thompson, Louise Smith, chocolate tinguishing a fire and reorganiz­ ing prices to the government as lower costs were achieved through greater 'f Wushlngton. D. C.. and 1 cup of sour milk ing his gun crews in time to play I havoc with the Japs during the experience. The government benefited many millions of dollars by these reduc­ Ild Baldridge. 2 Y.. cups sifted flour tions in 1943. Taxes in 1943 totaled $308,068,000, of which federal taxes were .1 level tsp. soda dissolved in a battle of the Coral sea, it was an­ 10 Sippel. G of Rock Island, $254,783,000; social security and unemployment insurance taxes, $39,263,000, • In charie of lighting con­ little hot water nounced yesterday. aDd the light crew consists Vanilla to suit Lieutenant Colonel (then Cap­ and state and local taxes, $14,022,000. Common stock dividends were $2 per ranees Bridge, A4 of Sioux Cream the sugar and shortening tain) Houser was commanding a share in ~943. They were also S2 in 1942,$3.75 in 1941 and 1940,$3.50 in 1939. Eloise Davis. A4 of Birm- and mix with other ingredients. gun battery on the U. S. S. Lex­ ington May 7. 1942. when his bat­ 1m, Ala.; Jacqueline Giles. A4 Beat well aDd bake in a layer The year 1943 was one of great effort and sound achieve­ final victory. When this is accomplished, 'there will be 'm a h a. Neb.; Elsie Rein­ shallow pan. tery suffered a direct hit by a IeIt, A3 of Tripp. S. D.. and This cuke may be frosted with bomb. The marine officer rallied ment in General Motors. The job is not yet done. the task of preparing for the requirements of ·peace. I TerraJl. A2 of Long Beach, any of your favorite frostings, but his men. put out the blaze and All are determined to contribute to the utmost toward \ But until that time "Vtc/ory is OU1' Business!" this Fluffy Fros1ln~ has proved as began an efficient anti-aircraft the costume crew are Olive tasty as the cake itself. defense. In his letter. Secretary Knox IN 1943 GENERAL MOTORS LET'S ALL lACK TH E A IT ACK lIeld; Kathryn Eggers. A3 of FLUFFY FROSTING NEARLY 16,000 a.M. MEN AND stated that "Lieutenant Colonel inl, Ind.; Ruth Joyce Neu­ 1 cup sugar FACTORY EMPLOYES .ubmitted WOMEN HAVI ENTERED THE 4 tbis. cold water Houser's courage. leadership and A3 of Brooklyn. N. Y.; Shlr­ .. ARMED FORCES Stand by the men on the beachhead.1 Uch; Vlrilnla Schreckengost. Whites of 2 eggs devotion to duty were an Inspir­ 123,000 writtflll ""gge,tion. for im­ Pinch of cream of tartar and ing example to his men." ., IfIt ..... of 1943 _,. ""'" The better their equlpmenl the stronger ~ Des Moines. and Hugo Sip- proving production or working condi­ 10,000 ...... hod ".." II' .... salt ."'plo, .... 1>1' G. M. N ..rIy half their power and the greater their Cook over rapidly boiling water len Benjamin is handling tion •. 25,400 ideo. we,.. accepted. of ffttIa ...... allplo,.. wloo hod protection. -up. in double boiler. Beat constantly a.- 011 ••/10", ...... f aa..-, Ca.h value of war bond and .tamp IfIt .-",., hod ..._ ".fo,. mission will be by season tor about 7 minutes or until frost­ wo"'eeI fo, G. M. ; coupon or one dollar. Stu­ ing holds a peak. Then add va­ awards for lOme, $955,000. IUY ~ORE WAR IONDI · may receive free tickets by nilla. ' I ~ .• at room 8-A. Schaeffer It you are tired of serving your and presenting identification family sandwiches every Sunday night. you will welcome this de­ licious sugiestion for a Sunday night supper, Pineapple-Cheese GENERAL, MOTORS Licensed to Wed Souffle. NelJ80n Miller. clerk of dis­ PINEAPPLE-CHEESE SOUFFLE • NIW .1 ...... , •• 1.11, •• , Coif.,. G.",,.,,I M.,.,., ."il, ,,,,,,,_11 i" II" "'",. _//.rl: court, Issued three marriage 1 can of dessert cubed pine­ Women begin Jul, 10 ,nd $eph"'IIor •• CHEVROLET, PONTIAC. OLDSMOBILE. BUICK I CADILLAC. FISHER BODY, FRICWAIRE • CKC TRUCK. COACH res yesterday to Bargo O. apple (or' cubes of fresh Early enrollment ••h 'I Nd. AC 8par'" Plu, • A.eroproducr. • Alu.oa • Cle.,laad DI_I • Delco A...... Delco I'roducr. • DtIco-Il_, • DelrOlr DI-a • iaaltra Aln:raII • 1I",_Morb, • Placomont .... I... In ••• h .I\r .... all Guide ....mp • "faU • New Departure. Browa·Llpe-Cbapln • Delco Ila4Io • Detrolt ...... 1oD • DI_ .....p_ar • llatrlsoo Radlalor • 10...... Morela• tlllen, 21. pI West Branch and pineapple) Product•• Packard I!lectrlc • Pro.loll Cround • R-.reb Lebon tad... Iloeb.. ter I'roducta • Sa...... M.II..... 1.00 • S.,lnow Steerlnll G.... Tomltedt lrel H. Poulsen, 20, ot Iowa Small piece of butler .lu",nOl. Au.,.tI...... nt _ .... "'.. daUon, .v.lI.bl• • Fo •••t.10I .n. othW \lallid "olar. Senk•• 0 .... 0.__ O.,....UODI • C ...... Moton Pur. • ~ Moton "'''"11' • G ...... Moton 01 CeAade.. Ltd • • Mc~ 1!"'lIItrtee. Ltd. · Robert Sm,tters, 20. and 1 tbls. flour IIt... t"re, .dd.... CoII_ eo,,_ Dean. ~ PateI'll, 19, both o.f Iowa 1 cup milk NEW YORK 17 .•.•• 2311 ,.,k A".. and Hurry L. Fountain, 27, I cup pineapple juice BOlTON II • • . . 10 M...... h ... 4'f/lcIOr!l is Our Business/" !(athl')'n Haman, 23. also 01 3 tbls. diced cheese . ..,.:~~ :' : 1 . CHICA 1 720 North MI. .,- . . " :,:::.:," -_.- .~-- City. 2 well beaten elliS -,:"\ ...... ~ . ~_ ...... -.to ... ,fI, It '~' t> , ~ . - .~ ." ~ . : . ' to. " - -~ .... _--_.. .. - .. .PAGE .rOUR 1 .--:- THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, APFUL 11,181( E_ = ...... ~ Iowa Nine M"ts~· 0 in READY TO 00 By Jack Sords 'FHE DAILY, IOWAN $ports for Weekend 1)ouble Bill; Trail • • • Heartened by ~b· sPORrs • By WHITNEY MUTm , - I Sergt. Joe Smith, 1'h With twin wins ovC'r Chican-o nnder their bt'lts the Iowa Somewhere, I grSn Hawkeye baseballern will tral'el to Madison this week 10 do battle U. S. Army, mon1 with the Wi con. in Badgers Friday ariel, atUl·day. Dear Joe: They are sti11 talk~ Inercllsinl!' can fidence j n their abi Ii I)' seems t a be the cu mulati \'e ano about you in the papers. At le

J(117"'9 • In ''THE RIGHT MAN" TALLUlAH BANKHlAD

I ..-- ___ - - -- TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1944 T·H E D A I L Y l OW AN, lOW A CIT Y , l O W A PAGE FIVE :::: Farm Owners to See Thomas Mitchell, playing the Studio-made magazine covers, thing to watch, but the chance!! HOLLYWOOD- role of Tumulty in "Wilson," is designed for "Cover Girl' use, will are the determining factor woul~ Slides Tonight at 8 Today Orchestra hoping to get away to hi:> Oregon appear on the newsstands in be the worker vote which has I. (. Council 2) (Continued from page dairy farm for a rest. Mitchell come into the state in the last two Persons in Iowa City owning e Organi%otio", months to come. Submitted to the girl asked her what she did for a tells it on Johnny Brennan, his respective magazines, II of the 15 or three yel\l's. farms will be given an opportunity Plan to M~t business manager, who knows the living, and Tamara replied, "I designs have been accepted for This doesn't apply only to Wash­ Gives Permits, tonight to see slides and hear a Win &i,e lingo of Broadway and show busi­ use.... work in pidures." The girl was ington. Oregon and California on discussion on soil management, Crdt------~ ,uUd-Annex of women's ness but is a stranger to cows. unimpressed until some weeks Looking over Mitchell's aUairs, the west coast; Texas, Oklahoma, contouring and terracing fo r spring gymnasium, 1:30 p. m. later, when Tamara walked in to Brennan discovered that 50 of the WASHINGTON- Missouri, Michigan and III inois in , - Hears Reports farming. Iowa City Woman's club, Lltera- final (~ced greeted effusively: "Oh, Mis> cows were at the moment not pro­ the middle west; and aimost aU ot ram The soil management meeting ture department - Community Toumanova, I just saw your pic­ ducing. They were dry. (Continued from page 2) the eastern seaboard states from will be held in the Iowa-Illinois building, 2: 30 p. m. The lirst performance 01 two ture in a fan magazine. I never "Those girls," he threatened, Massachusetts to Florida, have ex­ The clty ,council last night "are going to be at liberty righ publlcans in Washington may draft Gas and Electric assembly room Mollem Mixers-Home dreamed you were a star!" t perienced tremendous 'BhHls in granted six beer permits, heard of Agnes movements .from an orchestral after lunch." . . . Eric A. Johnston, brilliant young at 8 o'clock. Slides on contouring Monaehan, 3 3 1 S. • • • population. monthly reports from the police and terracing will be shown, and Dlf buque suite by Herbert F ranklin Mells, Turn-about: B 0 r is K a rIo f f • • • president oC the U. S. Chamber of still ta l ~1. Commerce, to run for senator if At and fire departments, engineer's instruction regarding the need tor street. 7:30 p. m. G of Langston, Okla., wiU be pre­ started his movie career more than Marjorie We a v e r, Kentucky i"" beauty who leCt films when she not something more. Johnston has ~ office, sexton, weighmaster and farming to soil will be ·given TrinJty Ep\seopal cbu~h , 1l e a S4:nted tom o~rQw ,! ight at 8 ~'clock 20 years ago, playing extra in a film starring Wfruam Desmond. married Lt. (j.g.) DOn J . Briggs, said emphatically that he'd "rather Administratrix Named ~ n ihe mayor's quarterly report. by C. H. Van Vlack, extension en­ Cross .- Parish house, 10 a. m. by the University Symphony or­ The other day 'Karlo[f, a star in is back. She's playing in the live 01L Main street than at either Mrs. Elizabeth Schmuckeer was last time I, Class C beer permits were gineer of Iowa State college in until 4, p. m. chestl"a under the direction of "The Climax," noticed another serial, "The Great Alaska .Mys­ end ot Pennsylvania avenue," but appOinted administratrix with a one. Tbcr, granted to David Braverman, 401 Ames. UDlvenl~ c1ab - Clubrooms 01 Prof. Philip G. Clapp. actor walking through a scene in tery." Calls berself a "duration there are times when personal $500 bond in district court yester­ in Italy,'; S. Gilbert street; Louis Helmer, Iowa 'tinfon, 12 M. day by J udge Harold D. Evans to The two excerpts which will be the background. It was Desmond, actress"-Cilling in the time until wishes don't count too much. the !it 502 N. Dodge street, and B. Hilde- Wqme.'s )leI1,l eo~ommun­ her husband gets home from the A race between Johnston and the estate of her husband, Edward ity building, 12:3b p. m. playing the minor role 01 a stage­ brand, 421 E. Washington street. Mayor WJ Teeters played In the tinaI concert of the hand ..•• wars ...• Magnuson or Bone would be some- J. Schmuckeer. Club permits were granted to the I I West Lucas Womu's c1ab-.As­ current season, "An Orchestral sembly rooms of Iq""a-lllInois Moose lodge and the Eagles lodge. !P I I Cit Wid The petition for . ~ permit for the roc ilmS ' I y- e Gas and Electric campa ny, 2 Veterans of Foreign Wars was p. m . turned over to a committee of the I pl~l"nt ~ Chltlt Conservation cbiIJ - H qm~ council for investigation with the Clean ,11 - Up •W , "'~... of Mrs. Owen B. Thiel, U6 new commander of the organiza- I Brookland Park drive, 2:15 p. m. tion, Elmer Olney. "Clean-up and paint-up" is the Mayor Wilber J. Teeters gave slogan for Iowa Citians this week a statement in reference t.o his in accordance with a' p'roclama­ veto of lhe Henry Musack beer tlon made by Mayor Wilber J. permit requested at the last coun­ Teeters. He said: cil meeting. In compliance with "We should all be anxious tor the law the mayor must make a our city to create a fa vorable im­ statement giving his reasons for pression upon all of our many vis­ veto action. The mayor said the itors. We should all take a well­ matter was now closed because earned pride in seeing to it that Musack had withdrawn his appli­ our 'city be well kept, attractive cation and has been refunded $228 and have an air of prosperity. which he had previously paid. "We can improve our 'homes The annual report of the treas­ and city by a clean-up. paint-up, urer was submitted and placed on fix-up and plant-up-now pro- Fourteen students have been file, and the report of the United gram. I, therefore, designate the approved by the Student Board Airlines was given. week of April 10 as the tLme tor of Publications as candidates for The $161 bid of Blanch Cowgill Iowa City to put the accent on a the election to be held tomorrow for the cemetery pasture land near cleaner, healthier, more beautiful from 8 until 5 o'clock In the lobby Oakland was accepted, and two city. 01 Iowa Untan. Annulll election other bids were rejected. "We hope that by seUltII' for representatives 0 Student A committee com p r i sed of aside a specified week that our lJmon· b oardill w b e a t th e same Interlude" and "Shout," we r e LeRoy Spencer, H. S. Ivle and entire population can be made time. , written here at the university. V. W. BaLes was appointed to conscious of the advanta«es of a Three students will be elected Mells, head of the 'music depart- meet with Chief of Police Ollie city-wide coopera'•ive s u ~~c essl ul to the Publications board and men t at Langst on university, is White to determine the amount of campaign." anyone registered in the unlver- paint to be purchased for street The week's program, sponsored sit>: is eligible to vote. Only those now on leave 01 absence for grad- palnting. by the local Junior Chamber of. registered In the college of liberal, uate study In composition. Three Some discussion on business Commerce, is sanctioned by Fire arts may vote for representatives; additional movements of the suite district parking law enforcement Chief J. J. Clark. He urges every to Union Board. are nearing completion. was held with no definite deci­ family to take advantage of the The two candidates for Student The concert wlll also include sions made, but announcements warm days ahead to clean up at- Board of Publications receiving "Coriolan Overture" (Beethoven); in regard to parking will be made tics, basements, storage places, .the most votes will serve fo~ a "Concerto in B minor, op. 104" later. garages and places most frequent- term ~f two years. The third hillh- for vioLoncello and orchestra with ly cluttered with tire hazards. est Will be elected 10~ one year .. Prof. Hans Koclbel of the music "Protect the health and safety Candidates are LOUise MaCldy" department as soloist. and "Pre- o! your family by getting Iid of A3 of Great Be~d, Kal!'; Karalyn lude, Scherzo and f'assacaIlLi~" Mew YWCA Cabinet waste materials, and help the Kelle.r, A2 of SlO~x Clt~; Jeanne (Wendell Otey) with a piano ob­

war effort by donating paper, Gaskms, A2 of SIOUX Cdy; Mary !iggato by Norma Cross, gradu­ /'- ~, rubber and other needed mater- Bet~ Pilm~r, A2 of Des ~olnes; ate a,sslstant in the music depart- ~ ,,..,,, Will Be Chosen al4 ,~,/, ials to salvage," he said. LOUise Smith, A3 of Washmgton, ment. ,,; ,~,;' Chief Clark advised hou e- D. C.; Jean .Trowbridge, A2 of 'Free tickets for the concert may ',." , , '/ " Tomorrowin Union holders to make aU repairs thai Stuart; Phyllts Jean H\lrmon, C3 be obtalneti at the main desk in 'I' '" " are needed to k eep homes safe of Northwood. Iowa Union AI- __. ____ _ A new Y. W. C. A. cabinet will from fire. This Includes track- Mary Louise Smith, A3 of be chosen by sophomore, junior ing down frayed electric cords gona; Jean Ferguson, A3 of Cedar .and senior members at a meeting and defective appliances, chlm- Falls; Marilyn Fontaine, A2 o~ M J 0" hi V' 't in the conference room in Iowa ney and flue Inspection, and re- Marion; Marilyn Jean Gri~fin, A3 , rs, . Ie lSI S . Union at 4 o'clock tomorrow af­ p~lrl ng detective heailn, eQUW - of Stuart; Mary Jane NeVille, ,A3t ternoon. A fun meefing will fol­ meM - furnaces, stoves and ' of Emmetsbl\rg; 001'0 hY Wlrds, In Mars,Lalltown low the election. heaters. He reminded familY A2 of Iowa Falls, and .Barba~a l ill Jean Hardie, A3 of Freeport, heads to check on home 'ltre- Jane Wright, A3 of West Union. IIl., has been chosen president of fighting eQuipment. Students must present stullent Mrs. John Diehl, 648 S. Lueas the organization. Candidates to "You may not need an exting- Identification cartls in ordE)r to streel, is viSiting her brother, 'Dr. be voted upon for additional of­ uis~er for more than two minutlls vote. C. H. Niswander of MaI1ll1alltown, fices are Freda Mikulasek, A2 out of 20 years," he commented, and will return the enp of the of Newton, and Patricia Paul, A3 "but during those two minutes week. of Sioux City, historian; Phyllis you really. want it to work." .lee Ca:lony Weds · · · . Hedges, A2 of Iowa City, and ExtingUlshers should be re- UI . Guests In Kinney Home BlICK: BllADFORD CLARENCE GRII.t Jayne Deardorff, A2 of Hubbard, charged, he said, with materials/ M J:dith Br'A..L Dr. aod Mx·s. Clay Burkhardt contact chairman. supplied by the manufacturer, and) rSI ~ ~" and son, RQYlIl, of Montezuma and -AND NOT T~IS THRONE' THE THRONE BElONGS NOT - BREKK, rH E SOLD ONE Helen Kuttler, A2 or Daven­ the process is sir;nple enough tol' Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Kinney of I AM BUT AN HUM8LE TO ME, BUT TO I-li M WHO BUT • W~AT 8 Rt NG5 YO U port, and Lucy Remley, A2 of be done "right in your own 'back ~ HI r ....roll !III I Eedar Rapids and son, Lieut. Joe CITIZEN AND •. WILL RETURN TO CLAI M IT - TO SAM AR ? ,. Anamosa, social chairman; Jean yard." VI 1\,11(: , ml Ainncy of Major Fiold, Tex., were Krabbenhoft, A2 or Davenport, The c;hief also said, "Why notl th.e guests of Mr. ana ..Mrs. Frank and Jane HoUand, A2 o[ Milton, do a thorough job and plean lIpl In a si'lgl-e rll)g ceremow per-! Kroney, 740 Kirkwoop avenue, pub Li cit y chairman; Eliza- some of those dan ge~'ou5 habits! formed Saturday at " ~. m. In the Sund!1,Y. ••• r beth Pennlngroth, A3 of Ti pton, that cause so many- llres? Care-i 'Metho~list ohurch parlmn~e, Mrs.1 , and Mary Elizabeth Bell, A2 of less smokWg is the nation's NO'1 l:dith Brock of Mt. Cl\rro1!, ·)ll., Visits ~ Grundy Cenu;r CoUax, activities chairman. 1 fire-breeder. Using flammable and formetIy of GrinneD becllme Dena ~e.nohs, 508 N. Dubuque cleaning liq,uids. polishes an dl the bride ot Lee Colony 308 .~e l -' street, VIStted hill' lather, Jphn insectides is another. Pon'.t forget, r9Se avenue. tl1 he Rev. L. L. Dun-I Ferlohs of Grundy Center, over laO lb•• 0' was le that children make up the lru'g- nlngton officiated. I the we~kend. p.per will m ake JH eM/alners lor est class of fire victims. Wa.ml ~s. Colony chose for l'\er bridal I * * I blood plasma. So them against J?laying with :lire .... costume a navy blue suit w i t h Dinner GUetits .t\ ...v ln, now. Clean-u,p W.eek will conC'4de' accessories of soldier blue. On herl Mr. ~nd Mrs. H. V. Pantel ot II "III help save a l ",,'~ \\leI with a Boy Scout waste paper shoulder she wore an orchlp. I Muscatine: and daughter, Marlon, pick-up Saturday. 1 ed· t Iy ·,t th of Ip\\Ia City, were S~nday liinner ___~...:-.~..,;"",.=====-...:.:..-_.:...... ___:...______mm la ~ '" er .\e ceremonyI guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. .. a b,ridal dtnner was S?TVed \n J(laUenbach, 226 River street. me -I 1 I the h9 01 ,the bTl~g roo m ' l .• • • I FriendS and relatives of \H-e COU- j Visits In Dysart ., I31 Y DWan pie were received Il;t an open Ruth tnsminger, 508 N. Du- , house. SundaY .trom 2 unt~ .4 p. m" 1 buque Iltreet, was the guest of her "======:.:: I also. In the bridegroom s home'l aultt, Mlll1larllt Theisen Of OySI',rt H' &( I 'LUC ille Co~on.y and ~~s. :Hattle :Iast weekend. CLASsn'IED lIEIJ' WA'NTED ltom~n , nlec~s of Nt,. COlony" • • * WANTED _ Janitor full time. served. Co ...le tes Villit ADVERTISING Permanent. Write Box L-21 The bride was g r l\ dua ~ from, .Mr. and Mrs. 1. L. Hedges, 331 RATE CARD c/o Dan,Y rowan: the Univ e.r si~ oJ. Iowa ~tf pas, N. Van BljJ'!:n street, hav,e h ad "'as been a member of (he facUlty or l theIr recent guest Mrs. Hedge's CASH RATE tosT AND PotJRD ' ]1ran ces Shimer college in !it.. a unt, Mrs. Mary Reynolds of Los ______Carroll for the last two years. The Angeles, who has completed a , lor Z da1l- tOe per line per da1 LOST - Rust purse co n t a I n s bridegroom, who attended the week's visit. , OOIIaecutive dan- change, pixie glasses, fountain University of Iowa, is president .. .. • 7e per line per d~ pen. Dial 4208. Reward. of Northwestern Mutual Insur­ Via" In Oxford ' ,consecutlve day_ ance association and is actively Mr. and Mrs. Frank. T. Sponar, Ie per line t>er da1 INSTRUCTION interested in farming and live­ 1510 MUl\CaUne avenue, werl! the month- stock business. weekend guests of thelr son-in­ Ie per 1me pe.r da:r DANCING LESSONS - ballroom, Mrs. Colony will return to Mt. law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. OLD HOME 'lOWN BY S'fANLEf -Figure Ii word. to Une­ ballet tap. Dial 71148. MlnU Carroll to resume her duties at RusaelJ 'Sherlock of Oxford. BOOM .AND BOABD BY GENt; AHEBB MInImum Ad~ Un .. Youde Wuriu. Frances Shimer until May 1 at • • • Brown'. Commerce CoUep which time the couple wl 11 be at 8wulay GIHlII&s THE EARL OF SHANKHAA CLASsn1ED DISPLAY Iowa City', Acertditeil home at 308 Melrose avenue. ..-r. a nd Mrs. Charles Heidt, 711 IRIl:!D ON MY OLD J6"T1I E. Davenport street, had as their CEi'l'TU'F-Y ARMOP.. HELMET IIOc coL mcb Business School AIoIO N.OW HE CAIoIT GET Or fIS.OO per mbntb Ilatablished 1921 dinner euesta Sunday 'heir daugh­ ter, Mrs. RaymondRarey and IT OFF, •••. 1.'5 CAuGH'T£ DII7 School Nlllht SchOOl Judith Worlon Wins FMT UN.DER HIS CHIN·.~·" dauihter, oDoJlllll ;Rae, 1176 Hotz AU Want Adll Cash in Advanc GREAT SCOTT, uNCLE ''Open 1h~Y:a~ 1JlowId" 'Bryan Prize for Paper Mr, iblfl at DaUy Iowan Busl­ avenue, and and Mrs. J . C. ~EItT'. WHAT v.o.JLD office daily unW II p.m. Moyer, 8' 3 L!e&rborn street. 'IOU SUGGEST ! JU1:Uth Worton, A4 of Iowa City, • • • HCII... IaIt1on, must be c:alled AD has been awarded the Bryan prl~e Jle&u.... lIome belore 6 p.D\. jn ~litical. science f or l1er 'terf Patricia Kinney, daughter of IIIPoIwble tor one lriCOrrect MAHER BROS. TRANSfER p alll! r, 'National Nominating ..Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kinney, 740 laIerUon onl7. For lIlff1e1ent I'urnJture MovIDI Committees." Kirkwood avenue, retlJIned home AH Abou,t Our W I Iii am Jenningl BrJ'JIJ 40 from Des Moines, where she spent WABDROX SERVlCI yean !li0 left the department a the weekend with friends. t und providing for an annual • • • DIAL 4194 DIAL - 9696 - DIAL award of $10 10 the undergraduate Easter Gu.. - ' , , writing the ~st paper on somel Spending Easter 'Sullday with PROFESSIONAL DIHBC'l'OR~ lIu!:Ueet relati ng 'to government, Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Livlneston, * * * wrCtten in the reeu/ar courses of 109 S. Johnson street. were Mr ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii1 ' 1 the depaftlt\l!nt. and Mrs. 'Robert 'Llvlr\lston . WANTED* * * ALWCHT & KNOX Chunn by 'a faculty committee Anamosa. I I Which lnc~uded 'Prof. John Srills, ... • • shirts 9c. Attame,... I-Ltt,,, . I !Prof. Georp "R6bei1on and Prof. Guesta Dla13782. '(limo" Phone 'H' I "rank Horak,Mils WOl'ton's1l8~er Gue!i18 'In the home of 218 8. Dabu~ae leW!! CI~, Was a part of her Work In t he :po- NIrs. Otto M~y e i', 521 t. W.llIhlltill._1I L!!!~~~~~=====~J' 'j1lttcal parties clan eonducte6 ' by ton street, Ilre Mr. and'Mrs. 1V. l'rof. Kirk. Potter. . - . Lobdell of Rockford, I1I, PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN , IOWA CITY , IOWA TUESDAY, APRIL 11. 19.. Iowa City-- Created In• 1839 by Burlington * * * * * '* * * * * * * ...... 'More Than 100 Men [Student of 1880 = Settled ;n Community Describes SUI Life U. By DOROTHY HERRICK "Commissioners shall proceed to the word "gentlemen" the words Literary exercises, fossil hunt- rtbe two sororities, "but these well Do layout a town, to be called Iowa "and the stove." ing and oratorical contests com- quite modest in their mode or Occasionally some of the pio­ City." Thus was a village born on prised entertainment for Univer- living." neer lawmakers introduced mo­ paper in a law passed in Burling­ ~Ity of Iowa students In the elght- Mast students boarded in clubs tions a! a more Puritanical spirit les, according 10 Roger B. Galer, ' lon, capital of the Territory at than the everyday type of legisla­ Pli at Mt. Pleasant, a stUd ent here voluntary groups operated on a Iowa, J an. 21, 1839. tion. A law a! 1843 bore the title, agout 1880. cooperative plan. Only the wealth· Although the village at Iowa "A law to prevent immoral prac­ At that time, almost the only ier students engaged regular board . 2,1 City did not offer the opportuni­ Uces." Among other things this buildings on the campus were Old in private families. Board during ties of mines" shipping faciUties, law provided a fine of $5 for any Capitol, NOrth Hall, which still Galer's three ye~rs al Ihe univer. MI factories, I' ail I' a ads or travel one over 14 years of age who per­ stands between University hall routes, over a hundred men, many formed "common labor" on Sun­ and Macbride hall ; old South hall, slty cost from $1.75 to $2.25 PEr Dc with families, settled in the small day. Grocery stores were liable to formerly located In the oval be- week, and room rent amounted to village which had been started as the same fine If they sold liquor tween the Physics building and about fifty or $eventy-five cents La: a camp by John Gilbert, agent for except for medical purposes. An­ Shuefler hall; Medical hall, which per week, on condHion that a -u.: Ihe American fur company, in other of the provisions declared stood south of old South hall, and er ja 1836. that anyone who "profanely the nrmopy, down the hili {rom the roommnte, fuel and I, ghts were aircra Under pressure from the Incom­ cursed, damned or swore within present location of the . Physics supplied. 126 N Ing tide at farmers, county roads hearing of any religious hearing building. "Our clothing was modest. I had terda) were built, and at almost every was liable to a fine 01 $1 to 25 In Galer's "Recollections of Busy one every-day :suit for sc hool wear SlId 11 session of the county commission­ cents for each offense. Years," he explains some of the and one for Sunday," he said. phases of university We of a liberal mO t ~ ers, petitions for new roads were Normal life in frontier Iowa arts s tudent. The university, even Room, board. tuition and other cans presented. Iowa City was linked City went on, schools were built, with that small number of bUlld- expenses totaled ' about $250 PEr blow B wlth the Mississl ppl river ports by churches estabIlshed, prisoners ings, greatly impressed small town school year fOI' Galer, and "a few The four territorial roads in 1840, ac­ hanged, weddings and funerals Iowans. The college course was at the students spent as much as reeted cording to John B. Newhall, pi­ occurred-years slipped by. Iowa "not only highly desirable but pro- $400 Or $500, depending on the OscheJ onerr publicity man. In addition City becoming larger and more foundly formidable, and the pro- at ind to the roads, ferries up and down settled. Finally, in 1857, legislators fessors exceedingly wise and state of pater's pocketbook." and A the and across the Iowa river invited chose Iowa City as home of the learned." Literary Exercises S(ettin, but immigration. state university and State Histori­ About 800 Students Although living was on 'a frugal Spe On a clear sprlnl' afternoon, cal SOCiety, and Des Moines site ------~------' Total number of students at that scale, "we had plenty of pleasure," nearly wa May I, 1839, Chauncey Swan of the new state captial. time was only six or seven ers. hundred, including the professional he said. On Friday nights when the and 10hn Ronalds, territorial • • • Tbe -Sltelcb •• by ANITA LEOPOI, D ~~--~--~~* * *~----~~ lerlslators, viewed from the ele­ •. r------.•. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT schools of law, medicine al}d denti- literary exercises were held, stu­ ~otJ~' dteds va1.10n where Old Capitol now * * * stry. There was no thought then dents "relaxed and gave the eve- so .tands the future seat of rovern­ 70 Years Ago Aid in gathering facts pertln- of the scores of special courses and ning over to entertainment inter­ lie a~ n ment ot the Territory 01 Iowa. ent 10 Iowa City history came departments, or various more or Ispersed with singing and dancing every Picture of a City, from Prof. Louis D. Pelzel' of less "practical" courses which have among those so inclined. On Sal. le~ n was on the fourth day of May. to wa the university history depart- been si nce added. urdays we played ball or rowed on CU I 1839, thai the commisslonen of­ A University lI!aebi ficially located the permanent ment; Benjamin Shambaugh's "Instruction was of a h I g h the river or roamed the hills for erl "Old Stone Capilol Remem- order," said Galer. "There was an botanical specimens." SomeUmes Amerl E seat 01 rovemment "placlnr a The stagecoach line 011 Ihe old bel'S" ; Jncob Swisher's "Iowa eager, intellectual activity on the they took hammers to the quarry ball stake In the center of the pro­ Dew" Mtlit:lI'y road, ~ITival of steam- in Times of War," and the part of the students. College had on the west side of the river to the posed site," plaeln, It where Asa l boaLs on lhe Iowa River, nnd the [owa State Historical society. not yet become fOUl' years of look fOr fossils. rea Old Capitol now stands. was thE gle Chauncey Swan, proneunced selection of Iowa Cily as site of pastime or a joy ride or social "The way was long, and full 01 the Slate University of Iowa are diversion. All athletes were a side- extreme labor and hardships. feted t hel acting county commissioner, was thrce of the outstanding cventJ in when tile state capital was moved show and occupied little time ~r Looking back over a period 01 lour ur ac authorlzec;l to layout the village the history or town Cily ::Ind sur- Jt'om Iowa City lo Des Moines, but attention." • fifty years, the eilort has seemed during wh and the capitol sites. In the sum­ rounding territory. (.'ompensation caused as much ex- As todlty, the university admi- worthwliile," Roger B. Galer, sault 01 ne mer of 1839 lots were advertised Thc bronze plaque on the City cilement when il was announced Ini stration was housed in Old Cnpi- graduate of over lifty years con­ for sale in eastern newspapers, hall, commemorating the stage I that Iowa City was to be the site tol, in addition to which various cluded about his hard-earned 80 plan da hundreds of maps of the village line into Iowa Cily from Dubuque of the state university and the classes were held in this historic education at S. U. I. than th Bi were distributed, and the actual leils thc dates and details of this Stale Historical society. structure. J lighters fil creation a! a city was begun. Col. hi storic transportation system. The university in 1870, as is 3 Fraternities, 2 SororitieS' In Thomas Cox, "portly and digni­ The steamboat landings, directly pictured here, was vastly different Galer goes on to explain that Nine fied," was chief surveyor. Swan down the hill from where Old than it appears today. The oldest on account o[ the poverty of most Old-Time Soldiers in yeste complained that the "luxuriant Capitol nuw stunds, were used by remnining. building on campus, students the prevailing tone of known vegetation and heavy dews made pel'h:lps a dozen ste3lTlboal~ be- outside of Old Capitol. is old living was one of economy. Nearest Ings in . work early in the forenoon im­ tween the years 1840 and 1844. ' North Hall, now used as storage approach to luxurious groups were Ate Buffalo Meat, . brawl possible without exposure to ill­ Disappointment ran high in IB57tt'ooms for the university. the three men's fraternities and across t ness and death." 011 "Lean Back Hall," a rudely­ •• ¥ * * * • * •.* Bread for Breakfast down, constructed b u I I din g provided 1ll00U[ with liquors In front and sleeping Over ' a hundred years agQ, en FOr11'e1 q uarters in the back, was chosen route to farther wester explora­ 5! feU as the site for the sale of the tlrst lion, men of the United States Nits, army mar c h e d and camped town lots. The sale collected over " the $17 ,000. A utumn of that year through Iowa. A commanding of­ ferees brought the commencement of ficer at a detachment in that era lIe