Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1941-03-23

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Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1941-03-23

1941 = ed l.1:lssis. :eview :ity or 19 edi. zer of lr the led. he reo r Mer • • celved • here , Mon~

I.frican list al.· als for :Panish ! issue. les reo te~sion art.erly section o book lel'iean nd ex. lIes. Uon o(

,Iorical be the cal de.

Con· lm all

lles 10 01 the ~rs, to II pub.

as for. teserve

rtg 'ade nd nnd I bugle 'mobile streets . City'S

:ed on I 1941 I auto.

floals d b~sl.

Ired by retail

lmobile .s are

open­vindow Idise.

ces are jgetary " ntedat· in the

St. Mary's

aiII Colder Tod(,y

Advances 1'0 saale Ca,e Finals.

Soe Story on Pace 8.

lOW - Clov.cb. 4lr1ul~ or li~bt In northeast. somewhat colder iD e t and soutb POI't1oDS today.

11 I!:::::===:::c::===-=.:.=. 10 If' a City', II ornin. Nelf',paper

=-rIVE CENTS IOWA CITY, IOWA SUNDAY, MARCH 23, 1941 VOLIDfE XLI N ~mER 152

As Fear of Civil War Grips Nation- , ,. ----~--------------.------.

Russia Assures Turkey 0/ Assistance Government Officials Told to Join or 'Else'

IfG.~rf!lany Forces Country Into_)\' a,- D'Y~:;r;::':iF~:"i!""~:::;;~IA~i.AxU • To Vienna Today

Move Indicates ' Soviet Against Axis Activities

Germa~s at Tripoli No~v Bolstering Fascist Defenders Nazis Claim 22 Briti h Ships Sent to Bottom Within 48 Hours

- - - - --- .

BELGRADE, Yugo lavia, March 22 (AP)-The ¥ugo 'Iav brovernmenl yielding to a German ultimatum, committed it· self tonight to enter the axi orbit de pite grave fears that the step might cau e civil war.

Mulua) Peaee Treaty Will Be Re-Affirmed ; Talks Held ill Moscow

W ork,nen Balk At Union Acts

Ori Arrny Job

German ay Many Of inking Occur Near Engli ' b Patrol

Mas res ignation of high officials oppos d to the alliance, street demon tl'ation in many citie • and uneasy friction in ,the army ranks were grave manifestation of th violent and growing internal dissent.

Ankara, Turkey, March 23-(Sunday)-(AP)-Diplomatic sour­ces said early today tho t if the Turks are forced to fight Gn'­many, now established on their (onticr with Bulgaria, Soviet Fussia will givc Turkey thc same helo she is giving China.

i FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, Mo., March 22 (AP)-Army con.;truc­lion corps of!Jcials ~a ; d today that mfl!'e than 500 workmen cmployrd

BERLIN, March 22 (AP)-Ger­man battle hip squadron raniing th north Atlantic has sunk 22 Bri Ush sh ips tota Iling more than hnlf the 224,000 Ions of British 10 ~es recorded In tho past 48 hours, Germany announced today. An authorizcd source added:

The harri d chief reg nt, Prine Paul, wa reported on re­liable authol'ity, however, to have arranged for Pr mier Dr -gisa Cvctkovic and Foreign Mini ter Alk ander Cincar-l\far­kovic to leav for Vienna Sunday night to come to t rm with the axis, barring la. t.minute complications. The atmosphere wa surcharged with the po sibility of such complication .

tc·re Itnd l·egJ.tere~ comp~ll.il1ts

t'gtinst two labor 11Oions whl('h Capt. Charles Meycrs estimated had collected "conservatively" $400,000 In initiation dues as n pre-requisite to employment.

"This is only thc start." The remainder of the deslruc­

tion was creditcd to submarines, 77,000 tons; and the luftwalCe 31,-

Government quarters said the German mini ter to Yugo­slavia had is 'ued a flat warning that there must be "an im­mediate end of procrastination" />ecau e Adolf Hitler wa not

tpr pared to tolorat d lay pa 't 'Aid-to-Britain' Sunday night.

(Russian aid lor Ohina has been primarily in supplies.)

This, these sourccs said, will lit the meaning Qf a common I Turkish-Russian declarjllion re­affirming' their treaty of friend­$nip .,nd non-aggressicn. ThEY said Ihey expeeted it would be mEde in general terms within the next ftw days.

The declaration, it is believed, will be published in Moscow and r.ot signed formally pecause of the Existence alrc<)dy of a non­llIlression pack bet ween thc tw(o COIIntries, they tdded.

11 was undcrstood to navc !>fcn negotiated at Moscow by Vyachesla[f Molotof.!, Soviet pre­mier and foreign commissar, and Alkily AliIv. ydol', the Turkish

bassador.

Released by tbe German censor, Italian African COlony of Llbya. [thC British Mediterranean block­this radiophoto from Berlin shows These troops have already aIlpear- adc i!ro loaded heavily wit., Ger­German troops marching through ed in action and it Is repor~ed man tools of war. Tripoli, important seaport in the that Italian supply ships running ----------------------------------- ------------------------~

VI. S. to Send 'France Flour

The workmen have been en-gaged in erecting barracks and other buildings for an influx of soldiers expccted to reach neady 30,000.

Several hundred complaints­most of them carrying the phrase "why must we pay union dues bc­lore we can work for Uncle Sam?" -were written, the anny olilcinis said, and many more were given verbally to army oflicers and con­struction company representatives.

Will Be Trial For Relaxfng British Blockade

High School Production

Players , to Open­Festival Tomorrow

000. The occasion was chosen to I Appropriation restorc "we sall against England" as the theme song of the war com- S TI h muniques ~n the rndio. . ped lrOUO'

Thc oUlctal war bulletin de-clarcd :

"Flcct Admirlll Luctjcn, as leader of a battle hip unit, re­ports as successes thus far dur­ing ext nsivc operations by !l

strong s a power in thc north At­

olll{ressmcn Exp('('l

Final AI>proval Of Measur Tomorrow

lantic, the sinking of 22 cnemy WASHINGTON, March 22 (AP) merchantmen amounting to 116,- -Thc $7,000,000,000 opproprio-000 registcred tons. tion Cor thc British aid program

"Gennan battleships saved 800 was ped throu&h thc senate or-survivors." propriatio committee in less than

DNB, oUiclal Gcrman news an hour today, and conire slOllal agency, declared many of the Ie del'6 toaged the measure 101'

Sinki~ wero within a few miles flJUlI appro, 1 by Mond y. oL Brill h patrol vcs cis and that Allhough th appropriations five ships trom Canada were dc- 81'ouP approved the huge expend~ stroyed "very ncar encmy battle- iture unanimously, Sena.tor Nyc ships." (R-ND), ranklng minority com-

IUIllIa recently rebuked Bill· prlt. for crantin, G e r man !rooPS pel'llJls~10n 10 ente\', !tiline hl'r the U.S.S.R, "can- WASHINGTON, March 22 (AP) * * * ... ... ... * * * It said this was the lirst time n:itteeman, declared he mi,ht re-

net sha.re thc opinion 01 the -The United States announced Bulrarhn ~overnment 1'5 to today it would send $1,000,000

"The play's tilC thing," is the 1rc Lola Hughe~, director of dru-. be made aL Ule conclusion o[ the In naval hlstory that first-line new on thc cnate Iloor an er. slogan of all committecs, judges matic al't at Iowa City high final 5cssion 111 each class. German warships in II large aroup 1r.r1 10 cut the amount in halt

tbe correctness oC the laUer's worth of flour to thc short-ra-and participants of thc Iowa play school, and Father James J. Dono- Scason tickcts may be obtain cd havc opcratcd In the open At- The committee made no changc production festival which will be hue of the English depltl'tmcnt at at the office ot the cxtension di- lantic. in the measurc pas ed by the

poIiUon." tioned people of unoccupied In that Ught, these sourccs said France as a gift, and informed

held on the university campus ' bc- Loras collegc, Dubuque. vision 01' at the theater tor 50 British Prime Minister Winston house.

the ,Russian-Turkish declaration quarters said the shipments would may be reJ:arded as highly signiI- be a trial by the British of the kant for the future of warfare ill practicability of relaxing tbeir eastern Europe as well as furthcr blockade.

ginning tomorrow and lasting Class B bigh school plays wi l! c~nts. Admission tor a Single ses- Churchill declnred (lve days earl- Senato committee membcrs de-through Friday. be judged by Major Charles C. sion is 25 cents. IeI' that Gcrman "baltle cruisers" dared, howevel', that Mr. Roo i!-

High school playCl's will Opcn Mathel' ot Culver mi Iitary aead- l'U~IORUOW'~ "1,,\1 '1' d b I tl d It Id "1 300 000 000 t (,h... (. 111 .. 10 "cloool an su mar nes were opera n. ve wou u e . , , , 0 the festlval tomorrow .morning, einy, Culver, Ind. Mo,nlJoc west of te 42nd maridlan, which is the $7,000,000,000 appropriation to an.d hold full sway until Friday Class A high schools and thc !lOt, about 1,500 milcs east of New rcplace equipment translerrcd un-

indica\ion that Moscow is coming This was taken to mean that if out into the open against furtbcr no benefit accrues to Germany nazi expansion in Russia'; own from the Shipments, the British spheres of influ<nce. might permit additional food to

'11 " 11 I IlL b j d d Ill' ijtuRn Jlunt('r evening. Junior colleges WI pre- JuntOI' (0 egc pays w e u ge I.IMboll JJIIlIi Selio .. 1 York:. The British Prcss associ- der his existing authority. sent thci!; plays . oh Saturday, by Prof. Wesley Swanson, prcsi- Sklly lJ"rI"~ . ...... !I,·rllk,. I,.·h,b"os lo ation said ho was referring to thc Undel' the measure, expendi-March 29, and the community play ~cnt oC Ihc National Collcglate ~!~:;'liJ~~~~~ l'.·· : ::::::: : ::: I~~~' ~[I,~;:~ 26,000ton battleships Scharnhorst tures would be divided into eight productions will be given April 3, Players, and a member of 'hc C"rl Ca"louII ......... . . n .. lv lo Horse and Gneiscnnu.) categories, but the president could

Should Gcrmany and Turkey Co to tbe territory governed by becomc embroiled, they said. it Vichy.

4 "nd 5. faculty at UniverS'ity of Illinois. I , 0 1'· ••• lor : ._".rlon Whinery 1 f ~ trans er up to 20 per cent 0 one

PI~y In U. Thealer All Iowa high schools muy pal'- .\ ~IA'rTI~R o~' PIiOle l') GOP" S allocation to another provided no Is expected that Russia will give In agreeing to permit the all pos, lble material rid to the ' freighters "lie de Rey" and "Leo­Turks since it is to her interest pold" through the blockade, the 10 keep the G~I'mllns away from Bl'itish government insisted on the Dardanelles, Turkish-guarded provisions to insure that none of IIQteway to the Blacl< sea, one of the food-or the ships- would Rl1SSia's most important com- benefit Germany or the German

. It' i a' . th pl' festival but II), WUII"I1I J . )'orl1l. pot All sessIOns of the cnth'c fes- IC p ~e. III . e ay, ulraror llIali lIelioul • • • S item was increased by more than tival will "be presented on the arC dIVIded Into three classes, ac- Phoul,.. Brent .... . ..... Arlut .. 1,:111_011 30 PCI' certt. The allotments fol-stage of the university thcater, I cording to their enrollment. ~:~~. ~;~~';t .............. : ·.il· ... U;I~~· n n~II:.~~~~~ H E S I low: using a specially designed set Comments By Judges Jennie BrOlit . ... . . . ... Coll •• 1I OU"~' III .. _ pang er Ordnallce, $1,343,000,000; ail'-

. d ' d d At th d f . h . th IIt'nr), lJrent . ....•. . . ,.... .Ilalc .to. ul WhICh may be rea Ily a apte to e en 0 cac seSSlOn e.\ Unl Marcarct , ....... \,lrl;lnl. nWI er craft, $2,054,000,000; tanks and any type of play. judgc will glvc a critical ann lysis M'"'eln Uront .. . ..... I}ornle. SlllIjJk ln. other vehicles, $362,000,000,000;

Foul'teen plays are schedUled of the plays prcscnted during the Dlrec\Ur: Clara Jlaolcy As Candidate For hips, $629,000,000; miscellaneous merce routs. II was not learncd immcdlatelY

when the declaration would be publishcd.

army. The state department announced

that "the French government hns given all assurances rcquired"

for tomorrow, all in the class C session. Casts and directors will ' rlla;: HAPPY JOUTtS'a;:y • t d II 260000 hl'gh school gt·oup, wl'th the 11'rst bh invl·ted to ask qucstiuns nt this lJy Thornton Wlld~r Consider COlnmitteeanan I eQulpme~ . a~ supp es: ' ,-

" Kalun .. High tlchOOI 000; Faclhtatlcs for bUIlding dc-scssion beginning at 9:30 a.m. lime. 1'10,· ~I"lfc MOlla,or. lIor. s07"th"lck I National Chairman tense equipment, $752,000,000;

Judgcs lor the class C schoois Announcemcnts of awards will (Sce PLAYS Page) tarm, industrial and other com-

Army, Airmen Split Refused' Department OppOSC8 Division of Flyers Into Separate Force

that: 1. The shipments will be sent Off- · I U

solely to ports in unoccupi~d lela rO'es France. (None 01 France's Medl-

I

t; teranean ports has been taken over W .- PI by the Germans and it is expected aterway. an the flour will be unloaded at

Marsaille). I I B d t 2. Every pound of food sent n roa cas

will be distributed within unoc-cupied. France under t~e direct I WASHINGTON M . h 22 (AP) bupcrvlsion of the Amencan Red I ' alc Cross, ,-Contending that the St. Law-

WASHINGTON, March 22 (AP) 3. Not a single pound of sim- rcncc waterway should be devel-

'

-Undertaking a new almost ten- ilar or equivalent foodstuffs will oped as a defense measure, Adolph told expansion of thc atr corps, be ltted t f the war depal'lment turned thumbs p~rm 0 pass ' rom un~c- A. Berle Jr. assistant secretal'Y

CUppled France to OCCUPled ' . ' . down again today on a conllres- France. (A provision considered of statc, s:ld tomght ,that jhere slonal proposal to lrans(orm it necessary by the British in view I was no assurance thc Europeall Inlo a separate force llke Ger- of reports that the Germans have I war would end beforc the project many's luftwaffe. I" . h . .. f d f th

Opposln d a bill by Senator )cen SiP omng 00 rom e could bc completed three years • unoccupIed area into the German~ hence.

Clark (D-Mo) to establish a seml- controlled area in the north). independent airforc!! and set up a 4. The sbips will return im- "Everybody hopcs that the war ~ew overall deppartmcnt of "a- mediately to the United StateS. (A may bc ove~', before. th.ree years bonal dcfense, Undel'6ecretory provision designed to insure that have passed, he said In an ad­P~tterson of thc Will' department , the two French vessels will not I dl':ss prepar~d 101: an NBC Mid the courso of the Europe.n be turned over to the German bloadcast. But since nobody war had demonstrated that all authorities, and wUl not attempt I can guarantee that, we must not operations must be under a £In,le to make unauthorized voyages in tak~ any chances. We t!t0~ough!-y commander. th areas) , believe that Great Bfltam wlll

"Although Germany has II sap- 0 er . win this war, but we propose to Irate alrforce," Pa !terson wrote be lully prepared for defense no the lenate naval committee, "It CIO Auto Workers matter what happens. baa throullhciut mlllntained this S AFL F ' I "We thInk that there will be tllentlal unity of mJUtary OontroJ uy UVOre( total victory for peace-loving na-directly under the head 01 the DETROIT, Mareh 22 (AP) - tions in Europe. But if there Is IOvernment, who lIas hiB own The United Automobile Workers not, we are goinll to be set for cbJet 01 stat!." (CIO) announced today it has fll- the total defense of our own coun-

Secretary Knox notc4 that the ed a complalnt with the national try and our own hemisphere." IIIV)' a. well as the IIrm,y had labor I'elatlons board that repre- President Roosevelt transmitted oPPOPsed the propoted defense re- :sent.tlves of the American Fed- to con,ress yesterday an airee­°l1lnlzatlon for )"earl. el'ation of Labor and of the P'OI'd ment neiotiated with Canadll for

Air officials said todar that the Motor company met secretly at development of a deep-water Il'III1 air corps 01. 800,0()() officers Cleveland in Februal'y to make route via the St. Lawrence from 111d' men which COlllre88 was told plans to "foster and encourase" the Great Lakes to the AUantic. the War department contemplated the AJI'L as a "company union Both congress and the Canad~n wGUId approach in alze those of amona the employes of the Ford parliament must approve the pro­Gmnan)' and Great Britain. . ;Motor Co. lind Lincoln Motor Co.", jeet before it can be undertaken.

Axis Looks For eIO Strikers U.S. Dmvnfull, Ask u.S. Aid

Press Declares ROME, ;;-;-;2-(AP)-ThC In Settlement

fascist press, in its daily attcn­tion to United Statcs aid for Bri­t;lin, said in effecl tod,lY that tile axis powers were out to OVErthrow America n as wcll a~ British democracy.

"The new Europe," declared the w:ll-conncctcd Rcla7.ioni I r. ­tcrnationall Of MllilO, ' viii not forget at the opportunc moment President Rooscvclt's aclion nnd fom now on assign~ its powerful arms to the duty of liquidating wilh its victory over thc Lond();1 c!emocn;cy also thc Sj:: urious de­mocratic l'cmn;:lnts across the ocean."

Said thc newspc pCI' I! Giomalc n'I1aHa:

"The democratic powcrs wanl­(,d war and now mu t undergo defeats and ruin. The Italian re­volution, begun 22 yenrs ago, is tQday a world l·evoluticn."

Tomorrow Italy will celebrate the 22nd anniversary of Benito MussoJin!'s {ormation Of the fas­cist party. The day will be ob­served with what have been un­nounced as "autere rites," large­ly mass meetings of fa~cist routb

Italy's beleaguered Lybian o~s­

iH Of Glarabub, delend ~ d by a l1andlul of fascist troops under a wounded commander, has fallen to superior British forces, the h Ilfh commllnd reported.

Newspapers callEd the OIIsis' four months of resistance ",pu!'e ,lory."

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A striking CIO diecasters union

askcd yesterday that thc govcrn­ment takc over operation of the Horvnl Aircraft Diecasting cor· poratlon's plant at Los Angeles.

Edward T. Cheyfitz, interna­tional sccrctilry-trcasurer of the union, said he had telegraphed this request to Presidcnt Rooscvelt be­causc the company had broken off ncgotiations for a settlement.

His charge was denied by Tho­ma F. Burns, scnior iabol' con· sultant scnt by the olllce o[ pro­duction management {I'om Wash­ington to Ihc strike scene, and by PaUl Shoup, a consultant in thc strike appolntcd by the OPM. They expressed hope COl' an eariy settlement and said that neither the company nor union had "taken a position that interfercs with" continuation of discussion .

Cheylltz said the consultants had proposed a plan lor the s trikcrs to return to work ' and arbitra­tion ot Issues, but, he asscrted, the company rejected arbitration, par­ticularly on a union demand tor II

wage increase. There were persistent reports,

meantime, In le,islative eircles at Washington that the government was conslderlni takin, over the AlUs-Chalmers plant at Mllw~ 1-)tee, shut down for two months by • strike of CIO-United Automobile Workers,

DES MOINES, March 22 (AP)- modites, $1,350,000,000; repalring Iowa rcpublican sources today re- ships and other defense articles, ported they had "known for $200,000,000. some time" that Harrison E. A total of $40,000,000,000 would Spangler of Ccdar Rapid , is defi- be provided. lor unspecilled pur­nHcly a candida te for GOP na- poses and $10,000,000 would be tional chairman. allocated tor administrative ex-

Spangler Is Iowa republican na- penses. tional committeeman. - - ------Repor~ yesterday from Indian- HIISband Kills

opOliS, Ind., quoted Congressman Joc Martin as saying that hc would rcsign [he GOP chalnnanship Monday at a mecting of the na­tipnal committee in Washington, D. C. Spanglcl' was undcrstood to be in Washington today.

The Inte Harry B. Swan of At­lantic, state cbalrman wbo was killcd in an automobile accident several days ago, also was mcn­t ioned bcforc his death as a na­tional chairman possibility.

Thc Sl)angler candidacy, how­ever, reportedly preceded the Swan boom among Iowa and somc othcr midwestern republi­cans.

Reports here said "definite com­mitments" have been made by GOP committeemen in other parts of the nallon in behalf of Spang­ler.

To Elect Chairman Meanwhile. Iowa republican

state committeemen began to gather here today preparatory to tomorrow's meeting at which a successor to Swan wlll be named.

Leading possibilities for the job of Iowa stale chairmen were;

Shannon B. Charlton, Manches­ter, fourth district committeeman; Clyde McFarlin, Montezuma, fifth diBtrict committeeman; Thad B. Snell, Ida Grove, ninth district committeeman, and Walker Hanna, Burlington, first district commit­leeman.

Mother-in-Law, Stabs Familv .

• CHICAGO, March 22 (AP)­

A lovelorn husband today slew his mother - In - law and stabhcd his pretty young wife and infant son, Police Chief Joscph Pilat of sub­urban Berwyn said, during a quar­rel thaL stemmed from hi op[)O­sition 10 a divorcc.

Mrs. Ethel Sanders, 45, was lain. Mrs, Nedra Evans, 22, wno

last week was selected as "thc most beautiful brullCtte mode'" by a society of illustrators, and her child, Doutlas Evans, two, werc rushed to a hospital with wounds inDicted with 8 hunting knife.

The chief reported that William Mortimer Evans, 25, confessed the attacks and attributed the dispute to his wirc's plans to obtain a divorce.

In his statement to tne police Evans said :

"My mother and her mother gol into an argument and her' mother called the police. I went after her and pulled the telephone (rom the wall. She started to hit me over the head with the 'phone and I stabbed her repeatedly with my hunting knife."

With this ultimatum hang· ing over his head, Paul WIlS reHably report d to have patch d up hi. broken cabinet by pcrsulld­ini Serbs to take two ot thc posi. tion vacated by llnll·axls mem­bcr~ and handing thc thtrd port­tol io to Slovene air dy In the cabin t.

A cord Inc to the ,0verollM!nL plan, the cabinet would be re­formed tomorrow ami approve the G rman demand 10 time tor th trip to Viennll. Just U h Uri later Iban orlpnally In­tended.

Many ob ,'V believed . how-ver, U,e 1I0vcmmcnt had only

tempol'arlly rix d thlngti up. For example, th Army Rc I've

OWe l'!<' a . :;oclat! n di n<it'd t J-

day wllh Ihe stlltcment: "Wc hove learnl'd we orc on the

eve of eonclu Ion or an ugr mcnt which does not conform with our national honor and ind pendence. Thl. I. why we give expr .' Ion to our protcst II rc rvc oWc f8 and comblltllnts and have deeided to dissolve our organization.

"Wc declar oun.elv rcady to de!end with our live our Indc· p ndence, 'over I&nty and th frontiers of our country. We ore truc to our king and fatherland and Inspired by nallonal Idcal. ,"

• • • Zivojln Bolugdzlc, Cormer mm­

ister to B r lin and tu lor of the latc Klni Alexand I',ummed up thc !lualion as making civil WIlL' Ot· war with Germany " the only two coursc now open to our coun­try."

That the governmcnt had chooen to l'isk the fOI'mel' Instead of the latter WIIS IndIcated by a com­munique to be publlsbed In all Yugo lav n wspapcrs Sunday.

It .. Id "nea~ nation can af­ford to underro risk but lbIaU nilotlon unno!..o Ya,oslavla has decided to maintain neutral· ity and peace as a basic colldl. lion or her development IUId proll'e "We demand nothing from any­

body but w yield nothing. We do nol want to usc our weapons cx­cept in ca'e of attack, for self­deIense. Con equcntly, Yugosle­vJa will I'emaln outside lhe war and not wage war so loni 88 her sovercign rights are respected.

"Such moments as this dcmand cold-bloodcdn and objectivity from the rulers oC thc nation . No rash gc ture. or !lets are permlt­tcd. Grca l Intercsts must not be endangered. The future must be prcpared with all clevernCl;S; all negligence mu t bc avoided."

4 Destroyers Collide in Night

Se{t Maneuver WASHINGTON, Much 22-

(AP)-The Navy tonight dlscloscd that tour large deslroyers 01 the flcct force collld ~d and were da­raaged sligh tly in technical exer­elses at nliht Of Pearl Harbor, Honolulu, last night.

There wes rn> loss oC II [e and no serious InjuriES to personnel. a navy spokesman said.

The destroyers, all amoni the fleet's newer vessels, were the Aylwln, commanded by Lieut. cummarder Robert H. Roaers, Staten Island, N, Y.: The Parra­gut, commended b)' Ueul. com­mander G. P. Hunter of Chll­nut Hill, MIIlII.: The Somers, commanded by Commandu Jef­fl'ey C. MetzE! 01 E1ain, Ill., IlI1d the Warriniton commanded by Commander Prank G. Fabron.

PAGE 'FWO

Censorship-----IF THE FREE PRESS BECOMES FUGITIVE

Censorship is a word that hll~ ugly and unpleasant connotations to m ost men asso­ciated with the Amet'ican pre. inee the first drafting of the onstitution the tradi­t,ion of the free p ress bas been closely asso­ciated w it h the SUOOt :; of our dcmooraey. ' In dark corners llOW th 're is muttel'ing

about tbo advi ability of muting this greatest and most effective voice of justice and free­dom. Ther£' ha" c been ugge'tions, so far olll~' hinted , that t hi' voice tulks too much. 'rlley hlln bCl'lI made by those who bel icve that the r i ,ht of t he Amcr 'can people to form their own opinions, from a complete lmowledge of what is going on, in times of teusion is an inconvenience and doterrent to ~ational welfare.

• • • We aI'e hearing of things that we

,~holLld not say, a11d of things we should , mCIlti.Qrt only slightly, if this censorship

should ever come to be. When that time comes, nat1t1'ally enmtgh, tli erc an going II) bl 111111' th in(Js than evar that we 'Will "/lOW about, and tleat the public should know about, but that we tvill be power­less to convey to that public.

• • • \\ • do not expect that time to come, and

c ccrta in l., are llot recommending that it :Plould come. In saying this we may be too (lptimistic. Sa it is well that we be pre­pared, and that the members of the public be prepared, too, against the time when these .. nil' mi!\l!lIid(>(1 democrats might stifle our Jlight to inform.

" ~ 0111' 11I'i1"IIl'( !If this prpp'l ration-.iust 11 '11)' it i~ lIt:c. T \", l'l membl 1'- -we want

I I!llul" h' our 1" ell 1-8 abont fI t r ick of read-III!! called j{rlltPI HI' \ ••. " I" 1.11"', J 1 11)

1'1'~(l1 ~ of II 1If1~t.' III I, ~1I~11I '101 tun t, liml Il'llt'ti<-l IhlS in tl'fl'si ng 1'(:111 1111 th~ ~me. '1 hey are the p ersons who perllse an 1'1ll0cent, simon-pure piece of Writing, and J)1 every clE'an-cut phrase sec undertones of tr IIson and of blasphemy.

They are the persons who interpret the word "equality" afl «communism." The tord "liberty" in an editorial or article, to lhem, means "revolution." 'The most good for the greatest numbel'" means, to them, (,' ,'upreme anarchy."

• • • " In normal times a person such as this

is a pest. These al'e ~lOt 11Ol'mai times, however', but times of international sus­picion and di t,·ust. Th erefore we are

, asking 01l1' reade/'s to leanl, this skill, as a precaution against the time when those mutterers about the f1'eedom of the 1)1'eS8

may have their way, and seltcl Am rican ncwspapef's u,ndet· censorship.

• • • If that time of cen orship comes, we Rhould

~e hardput to get our message to the Amel·i­an pUblic. It must necessarily bE' done by tcalth. It must be written, in fact, between

the bnes of a pale, righteous editorial, so hat only those who can Read Betwoen the fines may understand it. We print an ex­amplc, her e, for the practice of tho e who are intcre ted.

IT'S GREAT T O BE AN AMERICAN No people, in any other country in the The government is clamping down on Ameri can

Publis!trd pwry Illornmg exc!)])t Moncla~ )~ , 'tUdl'l1t l'ublil·al ionR I nllOl'pt.ratt'd at 126-130 f wa IIvenut', Iowa City, Iowa

Goal'd of Trulit!'e : Frank .t. Mott. Odi'l K PaitiOIl , A. Craig Baird, Kirk H. Porter , 90nulcl Dodge, Dellling Smith, William cncr, J reue I<'redl' rickson, RobeI'I Kadgihn ,

J<'red M. Pownall, Publ isher J.,oren I.. . Hicker son , Editor

Morty Tonken, Managing Editor John J . Greer , Advertisin~ Manager

, J<Jnter d a" ijt'tund class mail matt!'r at the Pustuffice at Iowa City, Iowa, under the aol tif congress of March 2, 1879.

, /3ubscription rates- By mail, $5 per year; tJ. carrier, 15 cents weekly , $5 per year. . The Associated Press is exclusively entitled

use for republication of all news dispatches edited to it or not otherwise credited in this

and also the local ncws published

I l!J~ 11 ~H

4191

DOlF HITLER-I

HItler was 110m In the villap of Bra\Ulau, Au.trla, AJlrll 20, 1889, the IOn of Aloll

~liclilekl,ell~uber) Hitler, t. cUltoml ofIlelal, ana Hitler. She wu a Bohemian, a n.

Pre, .. , .later "Vital of CMeIIotIovakla.

world, have the same freedom or liberties II1.Jt'rtl". gOQt.1 0111.1 pIOl)t! r. II sh4;!pherdl H. IIk~

as do Americans. In this land one is free lambs. \VllllnlJ ly, nH·~kly. wo CO wth're Wia are Ipd,

to go where he pleases, say what he without Illurmur or complaint.

pleases, read what he pleases.

The typical American is an up tanding, 'rh£' t Yll iC'Q I America n 18 a. " tOOI)ellhoultterf'cI IttLlp

vigorous, free-thinking individual. He rllnt with hi" tail betwepn hiM If'gM. H p 1M ACaT~rl of

holds his head high and looks the world hi " bOle, hie \VIreo, and hi" ow n ehlulow. }-le never

defiantly in the eye. As the blood in his ftxpn .. ut"11 fln original though L without d l.clalmlng nil

\ ems is that of fearless, enterprising pio-reepon.lbtllty. Bf" forf' uttering a t ern"ut or t'xpll)'"

neers, so is his s pirit that of the undaunted Ilv{': Btn.trm('nt he alway" ('llutloufC'ly look" OYf"T hi"

men who conquered and settled this great Ifh ou lder and u nJpr hi s bNI.

lund of ours.

H e is proud of his country's greatness, He tM lJu¥ptclou! a8 h eck th Ol 801llf'thtn jf llHhy I"

k nowing that it is built 'pon traditions of going o n In "~a.blnglon. but he (loeell't know what

worth and unflinching honesty, and that It h,. lie hi ehiverJng In h is ShOE'8 (or tE'ar tha t our

here is no place here for chicanery or de-tStale , t,'u Clur e will be us YUlnerahle to CL ltack. u s

ceit_ He looks with proud disdain at lesser rotten Rnd c rack ed us that or FI'u nce. Hi e tn'eal

countries that have succumbed to in-dq)end t!nce UllOO the Kta le comes 8M R re-aull of tenr

trigue within and invasions from without. .", ther th a n con UdencfI, Say to him, " H ere co m es

e knows that that can never happen in a dttler, BOO," ancj wntc h him tUl' k hiM Iwal'l under

land whose structure is based upon solid hl8 arm an8 roll up In a. ball.

worth, as is America's.

Thal is an example of what we mean. Read the sample editorial above severa l times. Be­come ad('pt at creating the small , still mes­sage from t11 big, sanctimoniollR printed words.

Tbe time ma:y come-understand we say .. may come "-when the only kind oC com-1111.' an Ami rican paper may pl'int i~ com­u ~II; t sa. s nlwa s "God Bless America," 01· ,. ilt ' I' ,iden l call do no wrong," or "(.lur t, I 1111': is alway ' l'ight." If thi~ hap­JlO'I~ j I WJ 11 Le because leaders of somp. con-Idlill!! I·il"'''' [11\: surc tl1at the AnH'l'cian

u('I)~'l Ul'lJ !lot level-headed <'nougll to form ,IISU and just opinions when they know the complete story of the l'upid-fil'e events of welay's world. It is thE'n , when eritici m is Heeded, that our right to criticise and inform will be deni d. It is then that you may llave to Relld Between the Lines.

BY GEORGE TUCKER EW YORK- A d('c('ptin'ly unattractive

ight in west 4 th str e1, jll!lt off Gth avt'nne, is a wcathcl'-I:ltained table Rtandin~ on the idewalk Against tIle fllC'aclr of' thl' Bry~J1t

Book shop. 011 1 his table iH pilod n mbbh' of books,

many of them as wcathel'-HtllinNl a~ the table itself. You will find old mystery thrill 1'8,

tl's\'cl journals, memoil'~, alld many similar I'olumes, some second hand, othel's the left oyers of old stock that did not Hell.

But now aud then one snatohe a l' al bal'­·ain hom the pile-bright, 11CW volulJICH with their jackets still shiny and untonchE'd. It is po~sible tlJat th(,He oCCIlRioJ1ul finds are tossed into view as a come-oil. J dOll't 1ul0W.

But I can tell YOIl that I picked up a copy of 'Villiam Fllllllmer'f; «rrhe UnVllllqll isbed" thel'e for just 35 eentH. 'l'h volume was un­~oiled. It had n \'C r be 'n r ea tl. Th list price was $2.50. "'l'he Umanquished" js a series of intel'l'at d shori. ,tol'ies abont the lao t two years of the Civil War, when it was all oyer, except for the fighting and the dying.

• • • I.Ja.ter, at the Lexington, where I had flUp­

pel', Lani Mclntire chided me for mis. pelling his llame i.n a recent story. "My daddy was Irish, not Scotch," he explained. «'rhel'e arc no 'y 's' in Mel nti I'e-only two i 's."

Lani is one of three brothers who, via IIawaiian music, }JRVe learllCd the way to promotion anu pay. He is a compORCl· and for years has h eaded hif; own orchestra. nis older brother, Dick, op rates more than 20 studios on the west coast, where the "Dick McIntire SYfltem" of . teel-guitar playing is featuI'ed, Ai, the youngest of the trio, is a bass playel' jn l.Jani's ballcl.

Though the!; boys al' half-llawaiian, and were bol'll in the Islands, neither could play Il note when they departed hom Honolulu. Dick and Lani went into navy and learned to play by sneaking off to the anchor locker, w!Jcre the anchor chains arc kept, to study Bnd practice. Lllnis says his father loft 1t'e­and and traveled to Hawai i on an old sailing

Yl ssel. H e went ashore, found d a steam laundry, and lived out his duys there. Luni's

10 hu was pure Hawaiian .

ilia parenti bavln, died, HWer. at &lie are of 10, went to Vienna wMre he ,ot a Job u • IUIIlon', aulltant. Ilt. ambition wu to become an artlat and lie devo~ an hi, lpare time practlelnr draw-In, and palntl.\l,.

NEXT-Hitler. embittered bl Gmn.n J

THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY SUND~Y, MARCH 23, 1941

THEIR HARBINGER OF SPRING :'

By PAULMALLON.

(Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc., reprodUction In whole or in part strictly pro­hibited.)

The Mediation Board Places Responsibility

r The lady cabinet member had

been working for a labor concilia-! tion expert. It was she who sub­mitted the name of William H. Davis, former head of the New York state mediation board, as I candidate for chairman. Mr.j Roosevelt made him a member in-

WASHINGTON-You won't find the punch of Mr. Roosevelt's labor mediation board in its enabling executive order. On its legal sur­face it looks like a coroner's jury, set up to ponder serious strikes probably after they occur and then largely upon the cordial invita­tion of both strikers and manage­ment. But it has hidden preven­tive power which no doubt furn­ished some inspiration for Mr, Roosevelt's determination to set it

s tead, I

I up. I Tn its unapparent essence, it I gives the government a moral hold on the responsible national labor leaders and those leaders a hold 9n their irresponsible locals who are causing much of the trouble. It places responsibility. Decisions of the board will no doubt have to be reached unani­mously. Split judgment on ques­tions of fact would only render

'That Night In Rio,' And 'Rage In Heaven'

By ROBBIN COON8 UOILL YWOOD-"That Nllrllt

In Rio." Screenplay by GC'orll'e Seaton, Bess Meredyth and nal Long, additional dialogue by Samuel HottensteIn, from pla.y by Rudolph Lothar and nns Adler. Directed by Irving Cum­mings. Principals: Alice Fay, Don Ameche, Carmen Mlranlia, S. Z. SakaIl, J. Carrol Naish, Curt Bois, Leonid Killskey, ()ar­men Mlranda's orchestra .

I

the rulings impotent. Therefore, Tuneful, guadily blilliant in co-C I 0 d lor, longer on plot than its pre-I when the two ... an two .. . , ~

A.F.L. representatives on the deces~ol's m the b\~dmg 101: ~oU~1I1 board join with their public and A:n~ncan fa~or, TI1~t N:ghl .1ll1 business colleagues, they will in RIO looks hkc a Winne! Pllllh effect join the government and the' and s?uth of the equator, .. ., I Unhke "Down Argl'nlml' Way,

people III a crushing mbvemeni to h ' h If d d ·t I I ! ' . w Ie 0 en e I S oca e n sev-Putkdown a ll \he unruly 10 thell' eral respects, the new film seems ran 5. • b f • d ' 1 f f 'P

Th ' t f th · n lidated pow- 0 e ree 0. IP oma IC au. as lea. 0 IS co so - unless Brazilians are taking or­

er hangmg over the heads 0(, t~e fense nowadays at the suggc,tion local unton leaders should elum- that Latins are NOT luusy Javel's. nate rump w~lkouts, such as .the The plot is reminiscent of thE' one now tymg up Vanadi~ old 20th Century film, "Follies steel, source of needed speCIal Mergere," done with Maurice che-I J~~~~~~~~~~,-J parts for machine tools. valier and Constance Bennett, and __ aL.:l~=-

has implications of the Lunt-Fon-CAN'T STOP STRIKES- tanne piece., "The. Guardsman,'" Carl Mcnzer, dirt-dor nf WSUI,

" .. no It\ ll,. U. I\-El~!;lTY CALJl:NDAJt 8.., oehed_I_ I_ flo OfflS.·~ 'Jf nu" l·rtl .. l~lfnt, 101 Old (~ .... '~ol. Uam, ror the O"I..NftM _'OTIC};/! .re dop.,I1"" ,··Jfh Ih. r.mpu .dllor 01 Th. JJtIIJr ... or tlW1.f hp ",IR(,ftl in lhft \)0 .. 1)~9\l'llf'd fllr their depoalt ta u.e • II.,.,.. Ok Th. lIallf 10""". GENEIlA I . ~OTICll mu.~ M .. Do 1XI111 Iownn hy 4:W I', m. the ... , o,,,,'odln, flnt 1IOIlIIIeMIaoI noth'l''' \dll ~, OT h.- tt(,,,,t"p ' fd ht te .... tJlu).~ "lid mGlt N IIYEII', OR LE<i18Ll· WUlTTa:;N and 81WilW ~, • "' DOo.lbIe _.

No one expects the boal'd to be th h d d dl th t th I t oug eCI e y WI ou e a - '11 b 't . d V' d able to stop strikes. Even in ter's subtlety. WI e m ervlcwc on lews an Vol. XII, No. 857 Sunday, l\farch %3, 1941

England a law against strikes Ameche plays a dual role-thc Intcrviews <1t 12:30 tomorJ'Ow on U n i V e r 8 i t y failed to prevent several recently. North ,Americlln. ,entcl'tai.nf'r IlIld I "Radiu ,Moving Day." Menzel' will Monday. l\<1ar~h 24 • Iowa High School and Junior

Calenda r

What Mr. Rooseveli hopes to get ~he suave BraZilian socla~lle 11." I discuss the reallocation of the l'a- High SI'I1001 Play Production College Forell$ic LPague finals, now is , 3 general acceptance by unpe~'sonates. Th,e ent~rtall1er IS dio EUltioll's frequency u' ign- Festival. 8 p.m.-Busine~~ meeting, Il'ri. labor of the principle that dis- marrJed to exploslve MIranda, the menls to take place Murt'h 27. anglc club. putes should be taken to the con- socilllite to Alice Faye. When a ___ 7:30 p.m.-Tau Gamnn, talk on Sunday, I\wrh 30 ciliation service and the board for big business deal involving thc I TO:\IORROW'S IIIGUUG ITS "Mexican Magic," by Dr. N. G. 8 p.m.-Vesper service; addresl fair judgment before the drastic Brazilian's airline arises, the cafe I Akock; north t'onferen('e room, by Heinrich Bruening, Macbride 8 Morn ng chapel. strike weapon is used. singer is presi-ied into service tn I 8:15-l\lu<ical miniatures. Iowa Union. auditorium.

It remains to be seen what suc- impersonate him for iln ev~ning, Tuesday, l\lar('h 25 . Ionday, MU'ch Sl

I 8:36-Dally Iowan of the I\lr. cess this moral suasion will have, with the usual mistaken idnntity High Sl'hool PIny Production Community P I a y Productietl 8:40--Moming ml;loriil'f. but it is only fair to say few of complications extending into till', FC'Stival. F tival.

R:50Scrvice revort . the well-informed have hopes as private lives or all-and going ,CIS • p.m.-Joio.t FI't'~hlm1J1-Sllphn- 7 p.ID.-Univertiity Srng semi.

• th ' d II N t 9-Suloll music. . high as Mr. Roosevelt. far as e movie co e a ows. 0 9'l5-Hprc's an iden. more Y.W.C.A. meeting, room finals for women, Macbride audio

VICTORY FOR PERKINS-The new arrangement represents

a rather complete victory of Miss Perkins over Sidney Hillman.

Up until an hour before the executive order was finally sign­ed, it contained a phrase connect­ing the board with the' O.P.M., of which Mr. Hillman is demi-boss. This phrase was stricken out, not only upon the request of Miss Perkins but upon advice of the other head of O.P.M., William Knudsen, who thought his organi­zation had plenty to do with pro­duction without getting mixed up in labor settlements.

Obviously Miss Perkins was trying to protect her brood in her labor department against super­imposed authority of the O.P.M. But her prevailing argument was that this should be a free and in­dependent agency under the pres­ident.

very far, but rar enough. II ~O-M·' 221A, Schaeffer hall. tnrium. Miranda, singing, dancing nnd , :' () f' un~ magll:. 7:30 p.m. - Bridge. University Tuesday, April 1

playing the tempestuous hell-cat, U~h - wgl ~m calenrlnr amI club. CommUllity P I a y Productilll1 h s enough liveline s and tropical \\'pn er repor . 8 p.m.-1\1ovic: uThe Thief 01 Festh"al. . allaUl'e to I·mbue "e· pI·oceedl·n~'s 1 IO-It hap.ppned,laSl v..'eek. IJ1 -... Bag<iad," Iowa University Film 8 p.m. - Address on "Honors with vigor even i{ Ameche, Faye 1~:15-Yt' terdaya; mU'lcal fn- society, nrt auctitoriulTl. Work nd Graduate Study," by

h h . 'I"k h'.) I vontes. and t e ot ers Wei c s .!c , w H I I 10.30-Th I 01 lwlf Wednesday. l\lar('h 26 Dr. Frank Aydelotte, senate cham-they aren't. Ameche, In fact, I., ' (' JO <5 - High School PIny Prodllctio. bel', Old Capitol.

11-MusiC'al chlll$. I excellent in both his role~, aJlrl! F~stiv[ll. Wednesday, April Z 11:50-Farm fla~hes. Miss Faye, singing Ilgain, is 11 7:30 p,m. - Sigma Xi SoU'Cc, CummUllity PIa y Froductioa treat in color. 12-Rhythm rambles. b ' t' d I' f t· 1

12:30-View~ tlnd int!'l'vi('ws. u nc"s. mel' 1I1g .. n e echon tl 1 FI' Iva. The emphasis is mostly on mu- officers, chemistry auditorium. Thursday, April 3

SiC, dancing and romedy, making I 12:45-~e~vi~e re'port~. 7:30 p.m.-Lecture: "A Vi,;unl Community P I a y Productioa the film passing fuir in lhe 1ighl l-RemlOu;cmg lIme. ate Ormnnstration Ill' Tran ient 1'he- Fl'.li\·,I!. entertainment division. 1 1:15-Throllgh the garden g 'nomena," by Dr. R. L. Witzke,' Iowa Supreme Court day, Old

• • • Gretrhcn Hal'shbal'gel'. I aUditorium, electrical ('ngill(> ring Capitol. "RAGE IN HEAVEN." Screen- I :30-Womcn in 'the news. building. 8 p.m.-Gennan club play, Mac-

play by Chrls'opher Isherwood 1:45-Concel't hall "election. Thursday, March 27 bride auditorium. and Robert Thoeren frem the 1:5S-UniVE'r~ity new. time. High School Play ProductIon Friday. AprU , novel by James Hlltoll. DII·ect .. d 2-ClImera news,' I Ir- t f t ch - Festi\'a _ I I' ory con erence, ena e am· by W. S. Van Dyke II. Prin- 2:0S-The world boe,f,man. lown High School and Iowll Ju- ber. Old Capitol. Cl'pals·. Robert l\fontgomDry, Jng- 2:10-Moncrn music. . C II ' . L I C 'I PIP ~~ tiOlI ' 11101' () ege fore-lisle eague 1- ommunl yay rU\iUC rid Bergman, George Sanders. 3-Adventures tD ~toryl~lId. nals.. r' ~\\'1~\. Luelle Watson, Osear Homolka, 3:Ifi-Melndy time. Friday, I\far('h 28 8 ll.m.-L ture by Arvid Ja. "hlilp Merl·vale. 3:30-Democracy is OUI' W;lY of JJ ' ISh I 1'1 l' ud t' b "Modern F'urnJ'ture and '" .Ig \ C 00 ay r uc JOn co ~on on

• ~ * life, l"t!fitivllJ. Interior Decoration," art audio Unless you'd pl'elel' to skl'p I'n- :J45-Wultz timf'. l ' I S 1 I I J . t· lJwa Hlg 1 ·C lUI) nil( ulllor onum.

sanl·ty I-n youl' dl'amatl'c Cal·n , 4-Writers' wOl'klhop of the air. I . I f' I 9 Pep Jamboree loW! ' Co lege Foren~lC ..cagul' lila . p.m. - , BIG NAME HEAD- here's a corker from Montgomery's the ('S$ny. ProL Carrio K Stanl<,y. 7:30 p.m.-Club C' barel, lowu Union.

Mr. Hillman also wanted a big growing SCI'een album of p, ycho- 4:30-Tea time melodi Union. name at the top. A good many pathics _ "Night Must Fall" and 5 -Children's hClur. Saturday, Tarrll 29 advisers around the president "Th Elf Ch·" 5:30- ,l\lufiicill monn: (For Informatlon rerar_ dill

beyond t.bl emester , see reterft Ucns In the offl e 1" ~ ,.. dent. Old Capitol.)

e ar 0 Icago. 5:lfi-Dally Iowan oC Ihe Air. Satl~rdny Classes. shared Hillman's view that a He plays here , n paranoiac-a .: I" I JUnior Col1f'gf' Play P roduc-dominant personality woyld aid "normal" appeal'lng fellow who, 6 Dmfl"l lO~~ mll. I~ .'J . li"l1 Fl'sti\'nl. the purely extra-legal purposes of behav€~ pleasanl.ly until jealousy 7 ..... Why dldalol. hips Polnf. l the set-vp· At one time, about loosens his mental screWb. BI'w RnhrrtR, . I a week before the announcement, What sets him ol i is his ima- 7:3~ ~pol'l,stJml'. , G 'neral Notice . Bernard Baruch was practically !lined fear that his best Irtend 7:4,)~lwellln.' mll~lcn.lf'. I --- '1<;'5Ier Vacation ubsUluliai signed to :furnish the glamor. But (Sandel'S) is ~teu ling the love of A-Con\'(' . ntlon at ."Igh!. 1 ":ssay ('onll·Hl. . Becallse of the short five .. he bae~ed out, ple!lding his years his wife (Bergman), Complicat- H:3~-AIlJum 0 1, artl. ts. 1 The Onjpr. 01 Arlus I~ ngnm one hillC day Ellster vacatlon II1II and health, and the president's ing his .conditi o.n is hL, jailllr~ , to I g:,t~n i1y 1o_wan II the' Ir. _ I ")JOII 'Itill" 011 t· 'IIY ("lIlh',t I')l~n th IIPcessity to maintaIn till

choice of Clarence Dykstra repre- cope With bU H Jn E'S~ hll', Ie adlll~ I til OJI1 lJlJrI"l'!lr;ltluilt ~llIcI('Jlt III Il]o. t }iJlisCaclol·y employe Itnit sented a reluctant compromise be- him t~ im!1~ine that tile whf,le lril'll!1 ,.nti W![" tOI!~llwr ill Ordtlr thl1 lllliv('I'Sity. '1'h!' "ays mu_ t for thi · pel'lod, substi tutions lie tween the Hillman and Perkins world. IS agamst him. . 10 "1111111' n hi It.-pI,nolls; he at- delll with ~11 lIbJl'cl \If e('l)no- to be ke. t to a minimUM. Ia. viewpoints, Dykstra already hav- In ~ealou.;y h.e doe~ ,1\'J~y w,lth I tempts .10 I:npdc!, III Jnend a!ld mie. il1lcreht <llId IOU L not e r!'d pluyccs who feel it nectiUlf-lo ing two other jobs, either one of the kl lten chens!,c? by. hiS wile,. then 1m. WI1~; frna lly he catTICH 5.00n worn. All c. ay!! mll~t hr. have a substitute are to map 6e which would be enough to keep a present from hIS Imngll1cd 1'lval;'1 ou D dl:.!)"hl"11 rill m!' 1,,1' \C'- dept) ilt'd in Ih~ l'olh'g, III ('0111- arrOlni(cml'nL~ III Collows: him busy. I he schemes constnntly to throw v nile, mp'I'I'e offkl' by 5 P,II1" Muy 5. ~'Ol' 1_ Sl'curf' upprovo) from tbc

_The Self-Exl·'ed--r--Austrl·a n ~~:"::~ l~:;I$~I~~II~t~~'lr ~II::~:'(:~ UIl'-1 ' U~~\~~~~~n~f,:o~~V~e~t~retm~~Cf ~~~~~~~~~~~

./

~ ~ DI.trllllltccl by Central P ......

Embittered bf h .. 'lillure to cain reeo~ltloD as an artist, Hitler qult Vienna and AUI'rla and went to lIlunlch, chief city ot'Bavarla, Gennany, early In 1918. He wu U . anti pennU_ llut ,till clanr to

hit art amWtto ...

cJt/"t, oll.niles N.tion.1 Soc/.lilt,.

When \llDr cam to Europr, trated yowig IDIIII IluIckly ol III "1\1 Austrlau, but the (j!'rmull arulY. Jle IIrht /jIlW actioll III tho blootly battle or Yprr. It \VD~ hi

first con tile' wHit the BtlU~h.

J' I: ' JIlt: 'T (Sl'f' 'BULLETll'I 1~ ... 71

Speal<ing of Religion . A Lentcn "'('a/urc (In Current Religlou8

Thought in th WB

('olllpill'lI by I.Ipwl'lYII A. Owen, Mlnls'.r. fowa 0ttJ {'ongreKatloual Church (\IIlIh the CooJlllrlUep

I Of Ihr National Itrll.,o CWI Service)

I Raptist GrOllt) Pltm Ih!' f/llhtinll i¥ over."

I 11'01' Crisix, (111(1 Dr.yond I "BlEND " WORK (JAM' .... $VHACUSE. N Y Ml·rnh.'l ()[ PIlfLADELPHIA- The-

the Hourd of Mnnallers of the I'lm )o'ri 'nd" el'vice ~ Stntl' Bnptl t MI .iollUl'll' ,m 1- hn 1I1l110Ul1 d fIve types 0' ~

I illl! In ('OIlV 'nlion hrr, dopt rl ump. In Ih ,11' eighth , .... J pori' upprovinR lIid to Davllsl pro !'OIm lor Jun 27 ~o ~­

' l 'o ll ~C'l l'\Ifi()u. CI/Jjel'tuI'H 10 milltlll·Y 22, 'CI'vlre, urgi ng prulel'liOIl of II'RIII - Two will be In the COIIl _.

I CP ill (ilII1P ugnillst Ihe "illt'oau fwo lunoilg !Ooperatlm, .... _ ClI lmmorullty," LInd plcdjtlllg uld !'UtilI rchabwtatJon .... .,..-; III "foI'lJlu/alIJlj{ ielenl, lind nhn or 11I1I1on mIgratory wol'tllM '" moral amI sodal J' COli IructlOll, [our JII w'uau c mmunlUtl.

Dick Ch.oice 01 QueenR

Pi Ep Dick Sh Iton

, ~ariners will 1-ibe main lounge pl~Y for the PE nuaJ informal Pl Pi Epsilon Pi, 10

Highlight of t the presentatio Iloha I Pep Qu ee I ants.

Sileiton will t Iowa City direct hawk hotel in vocalists will be Skip Farrell, w him al an eal'li \he Homecom! year,

The Musical introduced 10 dio audience mer Band they were th e that ever

23, 1941 ~

2

S":iDA Y MARCH 23, 1941 -::

Dick Shelton With Choice of Pel) Iowa City Churches ·Extend Queen Highlights ••

THE DAlLY IOWAN, IOWA crTY PAGE THREE

Musical Mariners for Pep Jamboree April 4 Pres. Hancher Wishes WOlDen ~Casual Perfection'

Pi Ep Dan c e InvItatIon to Young People • • DIrector Talk .~----------------~---------------------------

Dick Shel10n and his MURica l , Mariners will I'elurn April 4 to

the main lounge of Iowa Union to plaY for the Pep Jamboree, an.­nual informal party sponsored by Pi EJ:Ililon Pi, local pep fraternity.

Highlight of the dance will be the presenlation of the tradi­tional Pep Queen and her attend­ants.

Shelton will bring his band to Iowa City direct from the 13lack­hawk hotel in Chicago. Featured yocalists will be G Im'in Gilbert and Skip Fa n'ell , who appeared with him at an earlier appearance at the Homecoming Party l1el'e this year,

University students m'e invitetl . last rail, will discu~ "A SOwer by the churches o[ their choice to Went Forth ." attend social and devotional meet- Edison Anderson G of Terrell ings of young peollles' groups to- Tex ., will be vocal' soloist. ' day. At the informal Information,

"The Meaning · .. of Prayer" wi ll be the topic discussed .by Stacy Hull, A4 of Winona, Miss., at the meeting of t)le Rogel' Williams club of the Baptlsl ehurch. The meeting will slatt at 6:30 pl'eceded by a sup­per a'nd social hQur at 5:30.

Thanks! hour at 8 o'clock Prof, William Morgan of lhe school of religion, and Mrs. Morgan will continue with the lhird of th ir discussions on "Persot:lal Re­soul'ces for Marriage."

Rabbi Morris • ..

Gives Advice To Delegate On Careers

"A casual perfection - that is exactly what I wish for each of you;' Pres. Virgil M. Hancher told delegales and university women attending the vocational guidance conference luncheon in the river room of Iowa Union at noon yes­terday. In ~hat'ge of the supper is Mary

Lou Bol'g, A~ of Des Moines. The Rev. Elmer E. Dierks will

continue his discussion of "The Story of the Christian Cburch" at the Rogel' Williams Sunduy ,'chool meeting at 9:45 this morning.

. . . Kertzer of the school of re­ligion will speak on "My Pilgrim­age to the Holy Land" at th 6:30

"Our lives .eem over-organized and most of us are 100 busy to

meeting of W stminster founda- think, although this is lhe time tion of the Presbyter inn church to- we ought to be thinking," be went

Ilighl. James Waller, 01 of Bl'cda, will be in charge of the meeting.

On Vocations Conferenc peaker Urge College Coed To Train Them, ely

AtDi cns ion H~ tory of tlTsing, Opportuniti Topi Of Lois B. Corder

"Why should gtrls think serious- "Nul' ing lone at the oldest ly about vocations" was the topic !J"cte',ion for women, and yet of the address given yesterday ene of the least crowded," Loi morning by Mrs. Marguerite W. 1< Corder, dirrctor of the uni­Zapol on of Washington, D. C., to ver5ity school of nursing told C'.>I­lhe general group gathering of IE'geW'Omen yesterdty morning the "Facing the Future" voca- n( an · informal group discussion. tional education conference held Miss Corder is a!. 0 chairman ot in Iowa Union and Old Capitol. the Red Cros. committee for the

Mrs. ZapoJeon said there were stat- of Iowa . The Mu'leal Mariners Were first

introduced to a coast-to-coast ra­dio audience by the Fitch Sum­mer Bandwagon in June, 1939, and they were the first unknown band

odal .•• that ever appeared on the Sum- A. mer Bandwagon. Now they are .. ' evening has been planned for heard nightly over radio station the members of the St. Paul Lu­WGN and the Mulual Broadcast- theran student association tonight Ing Ryslem [rom the Blackhawk. in the church. The prog'ram will

Two violin solos will be played by Enid Ellison, A2 of Webster Groves, Mo.

on. "We know that over-tension and over-strai 0. lel1d~ to Jmper­fection. We must learn to bear these tim - calmly, sanely and wisely.

three definite reasons why girls "In lhe field of in titutional ought to think in te.rms of voca- nul'. ing there are educational, tions while still in college: first, ,.dmini trative, and bl'd,ide nurs­most of lhe girls have to earn illg o~ portunities," Mi~s Corder their livings, and even i1 the), aid, "but in the,e prog'rt',sive don't ha\'e to, it's a good feeUng fmc, many olhel' opportunities to know that they can If neces~ for nursing are opl'ning. ! ndu. -sary; second, their contribution to \. ies nnd businl' .. e~ employ hun­lhe family and community is cirl'd~ ot nul'. e<; many nurs[ . are greater if they've had the experl~ rmployed in the interest of pub­enee of workIng and earning a Ii(' helllth, tnd the national de­living; and third, they can make flMs!!' po 1'3m j. off ring po­the best contribwtlon to society if _Wons to thou-ands or nurses."

The usual supper and hour will be at 5:30 p.m.

social "But don't forget," he caution-ed his audience, "lhose people whom you will meet when you

Committee members for the Pep star' at 7 :30. have to face the world all had "Social Message. • • to face lhe world in their day." Jamboree are Arnold Levine, A4 In charge of the evening's en­

o! Centerville; Nyle Jones, A3 of tertairlme(lt will be Don Wehr­Iowa City; Walle I' Wright, A3 of spann, M2 of Ottosen, and Verna

I Des Moin s; Walter Sanford, A2 'Holt, Nl of Ottosen.

, .. of Cbrist," the second in a President Hancher was intro-series of pre-Easter services, will duced by Margaret Kuttler, A4 of be discussed by Alexander Kern Davenport, who also introduced of the English deparlment, tonight I the leaders of discussion groups at the Christian church youth fel- and committee members for the lowship meeting in the Kappa conference.

of Davenport; Ed Glazer, E4 of Sioux City; Howard Beals, A2 of Cedar Rapids; Louise Nathanson, A3 of Pipestone, Minn.; Margaret Mary Lynch, C3 of Algona; Rose­marie Devlin, A3 of Clinton; Jean Ludwig, A4 of Ottawa, III., and Kathleen Davis, A2 of De., Moines.

Selection of the candidates for the title of Pep Queen will be made at a meeting of the commit­tee Tuesday night. Nominations will be sent in by all women's or­ganizations on the campus.

'Facing Future' Groups H ea r

Marye Dahhke "Anyone can have any job he

wants if he wants it badly enough and is willing to pay the price."

This \VIIS assertion of Marye Dahnke, director of the home eco­nomics department of K r a [ t Cheese company, in her informal talk on "Retailing of Food~" be­fore one of the discussion groups or the "Facing the Future" voca­tional education conference held yesterday morning in the Univer­Sity Club room of Iowa Union.

"Jndu try isn't as sure of wo­men as it is of men; therefore women aren't paid a. much or ad­vanced as tapldly. Women must pay that price because they aren't usually as stable In business as men," the speaker poi n led ou t.

Miss Dahnke listed ~ome of the types of work open to home eco· nomists as advertising and adver­tiSing promotion, consultant ser­vice, equipment field, finance field, the entire field of foods, jour­nalism in magazines and hews­papers, radio, work in reslaurants and tea rooms and the field of textiles.

Personal qU:Jlifications neces­w:~ tllr an ap\lUc\lnt in any [[eld, Miss Dahnke listed as initiative,

THREE PARABLE

AND A MORAL

lIy ( '11.'\ m ,t;); m·:CKM .~

I· houM' •

1\1111 fH) It

\Vh,.n • ht\ rlvn n)"'("', t h f' dAm .r .. ,. t" " . " y. Th"'rf'l wa, too Itlu('h found. 100 litO .. c ~ m r n t. 'rh ,. 10\\,f'8t bld­dt"r hlul Imllt II. \Vh fO .. t ht rnln8 (' n III tf". ,. 0 "' e f'fllul1!I Ituk .. d. Thl\ low e" ~ hl.lller hnd "Mllt'd C h ~ m. " . h f' " I he * I' III t'll ine. ,.,un .. h () II "'. WfO nl rla-ht 1:4 I .. n .. wtth • h,. m . .\ II d I h l'1'W'l ",.rf\ thfJ

I' It .. II I' '" N f

Whl'll .HUI huy tnl,I" on n, blud" of "rlt''', )'011 rHn I1t"I', br- hure. It'. 1,1 11 ",lIu' t o) IIU,) fHII !Ullf'h , II""'U(" '0 PUy f ~ Iltt"I, ~ny ln .. ~uo "'lH'h , \' 011 ~Ofltf't Jrllr" I" ..... II UtilI" mOIH')'1 th •• 1111 Mil . IJUI 11 11,) ,,,,It to() Iltllf, )'011 frlonlf't lrn f"8 low: p\'I'r.,tlllllrr. h'4'hll~ "Iul.l )OU 1)o1IM'hC I", hu'Et llUhl ... fit dohl' th e f hln l" II " ' Ito;, hOlll'ht to ,Iu,

111ft Ill'" nt hll"IU"Ii~ hulll"("" pro· hlhlh IUl y ln. n lUll .. nlli l .... tllnr ft

lot. Jt i'tUI't hf' flO ll r.

S'n mAti ',. whll' HII 1)11.'", Ir )on fl tnl hnhUI",II), \\llh flit I('''f\,t.-,.rl(·fd tnlU', It I" w4· 11 to fuM ~"nl"lhl"* ft. l'O"fI'r th ~ "' /Ilk ~ 011 rtln .

J' nd I r ~'OU flo • hu I., ) 011 \\'111 """lUI .. "o" .. h '0 lHI3 '1IIKllty.

~f'Jt ""'ek 'Ir. n t4'kmun Itr the Rtf',"nf'" " " .. n"rn' JlOIn ~ ,,"III f'om· Infl'fI' nn \ ,j}r •• '.A.

"., • I £PIst es ••• · .. to the Galatians," a continua­tion ill the series of discussions, will be led by the Rev. A. C. Proehl, at the 6:30 vespers meet­Ing of the Zion Lulheran student association tonight.

Lowell Sab-e, G ot Webster City, will 'be in chll\'ge of the meeting,

A luncheon and social hour will be held at 5:30.

Windy Session • •• · .. will be the theme of the dine­a-mite supper hour of Wesley foundation at 6 o'clock tonight in the Methodist student center.

The Rev. Robert H. Hamill of Centerpoint, former student pas­lot of the Methodist church here and director of student work unti.!

sense of humor, power of concen-I tration, capacity for taking pa ins with a job, unselfishness, toler­ance, dependability, courage and endurance.

Personnel Field Shows Demand

they are trai ned to use their Miss Corder empha.lzed th

Beta house, 125 S. Lucas. Mr. Kern I In charge of the conference ar­will speak at 6:30 following a wor- I'angements were June Hyland, ship service at 6 o'clock led by A4 of Traer, chairman; Agnes Lorna Johnson, A2 of Newton. Agnew, J4 of West Liberty; Mary

talents in some particular Une, mllin ,erwnality and character eilher as domestic workers, paid qunlifieations n 'e~s ry for a workers or volunteers. good nur~p 1.I beillg good health,

Mrs. Zapoleon declared voca- aVlrnge mentality, r I' liability, tiona! planning need not be too loynlty, and above t il a ense of detailed or too 1inal. She ex- r('~pon 'ibllity to lhe profe~sion plained that circumstances change and n deep interest in it. constalllly and the lndivlduol her- "There ar(> thre g~ps of self grows and develops COD- nursinp: chool in exist ne -tinually, so in vocational training I privately owr.ed and 01' rat d, the girls should make very def- ~l('larian nursirg schools, a nd inite plans for the immediate iu- state nursini 5cools, ~uch a~ w t lure, but If planning for the far hove here," Miss Corder explnin~ future, should keep in mind pro- cd ... omi! ~chool' offer a three­visions for change and adjust- yenr course wlth no COllege work

Betty Colvin, A2, and Pauline Barnes, A2 of Iowa City; Enjd Colvin, C3 of Waterloo, are co- Ellison, A2 of Webster Groves, chairmen of the informal party Mo.; Barbara Kent, A3 ot Iowa following the discussion, City; Mary McLaughlin, A3 of

"A Docior Looks • • • ... at ReUgion" is the subject to be discussed by DI·. Ralph A, Dor­ner of the university hospital, to­night at 6:30 at the student asso­elation meeting of the English Lutheran church.

Stephen Westly, A3 of Manly, will be in charge of the meeting.

A fellowship hour and luncheon will precede the meeting at 5:45.

Tomorrow Three Organization

To Meet

LEAGUE OF WOMEN.

Monticello; Mary Louise Nelson, A2 of Laurens, and Jeanne Rowe, A3 of C('dar Rapids.

Jobs Open Now For Teacher. ,

Instructor Says

men!. "Many women," according to

Mrs. Zapoleon, "make the mistake of going into a particular field of

Teaching opportunities for wo- work, simply because there is a men majors in speech and dra- greater demand (or women work­matic art are better thi year than ers in thllt field, without consider­ever berore, according to Dr. jng whether they have the basic Gladys L. Borchers of the depart- qualiricalions for lhe work." ment of speech of the University Mrs. Zapoleon also believes that of Wisconsin. Dr. Borchers spoke most people are fitted rOt· a great during the afternoon session of number of occupations, :md would lhe speech and dramatic art dis- be equally successful in any cer­cussion in the senate chamber of tain number of diUerent jobs, pro­Old Capitol, yesterday. vi ding they are basically suited

"Finding work in the dramatic and trained to the work.

Rummaue ale Will Be Given B Cit High

Mrs. George Goy, chuirmnn for the Towll City High ~chool music axillary rummn~ sale, has announced the followin, comm.itt , for th sale:

field is a hard job," Dr. Borchers College women, she said, often

F G d ... Volers Foreign Policy study d 'tt d "H d t . cd do not relate their college ex-~ or ra ,uates group will meet for the last time a ml e. oweVer, e el'mU1 -

this season in the board room of ness to act and willingness to take periences to future experiences. the hard knocks will make it pos- It is important tor the girl to look

Ml ., W. H. Simp",", Mr .. Wil· Iiam Petersen, Mr~. E. E. Norton, Mr~. P. 0 , Norman and Mrs. AI. bl'rl Hrnsl('igh, rummng

"I th pa at· ely e f'eld the public library at 1:30 p.m. n e com r IV n WI. • • sible 10 get into this field. Back- at her college subjects in terms of of personnel work there is recog- BETA SIGMA PI I ground gained in college produc- how they will prepare her for nition of the individual worth of . . . . . Uons is very important experience work. She emphasized th im-the worker-a new interest in the . . . WIll m~et In the assembly when applying fOr a job, I portance of the lry-out element human factor labor," Mrs. Rheua .. ooms of the Ught and power eom- "The study of spe ch and dra- (a chance to compare one's self Pearce of the personnel depart- pany at 8 p.m. matic art is more importal\t than I with others) in extra-curricular ment of Marshall Field and com-, • • • merely as training for a profes- activities. pany explained in her discussion OLD GOLD . . . sion. Recent studies have not only Mrs. Zapoleon reported that in of store personnel yesterday mor- ... Theta Rho Girls will meet proved that students tallted much Alabama College for Women in mng. for a potluck supper at 6 p.m. in more effectively after they look Marietta, AIR., they had mnde (J

"In this day of greater need of OddfeUow hall. speech courSES, but also Pl'Oved study in which they eontaC'ied em-competent personnel management, that they developed mOl'e attrac- ployers throughout Alubama and the careless firm must pay in un- Colored Mov".es live personalilies," Dr. Borchers successful women workel's and employment compensation, poor said. asked lhem what qualities in wo-relations between worker and eJl- T B ~h Other jobs in the dramatic and men workers they believed to be ecufive, strikes and the like." Mrs. 0 e , . ., 01.Vn speech field include directing small most important for success in a Pearce added. T T G community groups; reading in the job. The first three requisites were

Personnel types in which stu- 0 alL alnmaS field of interpretation; directing being thoroughly reliable, posse.s-dents are most interested may be discussions, and speech pathology, ing t.he ability to assume I'espon-divided into two classes-co1Lege according to the speaker. sibiUty in business emergencies

C "Mexican Magic," teclmicolor and industrial. ounselor service, "A new day has dawned in ra- and being tact(ul in meetmg and movies will be presented by Dr. medical care, vocational guidance dio for women speech and dra- dealIng with all sorl of people .

miltl'e. Mrs. William Bierney Ilnd Mrs.

George Spence, magazine commit~ tpe. Mr . . Fred Goff will b in charge of the collect JOn of cont hangl'r5.

The rummn~e . ale will IJ(! held Saturday 1lI the community build­ing ft'om 11:30 a .m . to 7 p.m. Mr~. C. L. Woodburn i chail'man of the .'a te.

Sludcnts from Iowa City hi h schoolltr(.' l'olll'l'Iing clothes, dishl'S, magazinl'~ and hangers rm' the sale.

Anyone wbhing 10 contribute article~ for the rummog .,nle i asked to phone Mrg. David Tho­ma~, 5391, or Mr~. Frank Berger, 2245, and they will ho\"e the items collecled.

Thp sale public.

and placement bureaus are includ- Nathaniel G. Alcock of the college matic majm's," said Mrs. Pearl Recent statistics, she said, show-ed in the college personnel divi- of medicine at the meeting of Tau Bl'Oxam, program dl'rectol' of ed lhat 82 pel' cent of all govel'n- thO t . I d Gamma at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in IS percell age was mcrea~ ng u(' sion,

Industrial personnel covers a wide field of possibilities such as employmenl personnel and trans­fer, health and safety bureaus, re­search work, service programs and labor relations.

I "In department store personnel work, the successful individual

I must possess such characteristics as being able to get along with people, to talk with people about themselves and 10 mo t i vat e groUps," the speaker indicated.

There is an increasing demand 101' college graduates in the per­sonnel field, she said.

ASK

s. T~ MORRI ..

sort

\ These Questions : I am taking a lot of my per­sonal belongings to Ca1i!ornia , can I insure them against fire and theft? Can I carry a $5000 accJdent policy for just this four day trip?

Does Business Interruption in­surance pay salaries of men out ot work because of reasons other than tire?

On Any lDIuraace Ptoblem ContaU

S. T. MORRISON

of

S. T. MOrrUOD & Co.

the north conference room of Iowa WSUI, who led lhe last part of ment workers were women, and to national defen~e work. Union . the discussion, =============================

Shirley Johnson, A3 of Iowa City, will preside at the meeting,

Sing fest rehearsal has been scheduled to meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock in room 109 in Schaef­fer hall .

All town women are ' invited to attend the meeting tomorrow eve­ning.

Mt. Mayon, 7,943-foot volcano in Albay province, Philippines, is considered the most per(ect cone

the world,

City High to Give First Spring Concert

Iowa City high school will give its first spring concert in the school auditorium tomorrow at 8 p.m.

The orchestra will be directed by William Gower. The boys and girls' glee club will be undel' the direction. of Ansel Martin.

There wi ll be no advance ale I

of tickets and flo seats will be I'C- ! ser~ed. _ I

Dress up for Easter HAVE yOUR CLOTHES CLEANED & PRESSED TO LOOK LIKE NEW'

Woman ', Plol. 1 Pc.

D ISSdtCOAt Man·,

SUIT', O'COAl CLEANED & PRESSED

* 5HOI I.P .. II DIPT. * Lod~ ' , Rubber HilL LIFTS •••••• tc ". Mo.', RUllli HElLS •••••• 19c P',

ledr' 0' Child', HAU SOLES ••• 49c P', MI.', 0, aor •. HAU lOLlS •••• 59c pro

"gceIUc eoklu" tu,

PHOENIX Named ror Ameriu'. mOlt famous and rOinanjic IlCeD~1

See " MONTEREY" ••• • 8parldinfl neW SprlnS wine tAl

add e/renelH!ellee 10 Navy and Blaek W 81umee and dramatie accent 10 bright Bluet. And " UOLLYWOOD" , •• • lIew pink loned beisc 10 wear wilh tbe ra hionable l oft, chalky PlJ5le.l. und .. hile • • • altO beauliful for evtni ....

others

79c to $1.35

Phoenix NYLONS

$1.50

-I I

__ ....,;.. "I~'" WuJdDrtoa Streel "..,.. ... Mil

Chaperon --- ------"

frand Give. Benefit "Of H.uman Bondage," .tarrin,

Bette Da\"is. will be shown Tues-·day and W~nesdaT at the Strand theater as a benefit performance for the local Greek war relie f fund, it wa announced yesterd y.

A taunch Catholie nation, the Phillppine Commonw lth ha an e!;timall'd 625,000 pa a amon, its population of 16,000,000.

Get On The

Ball, F ,.llow.t"

-if you front that

DTE For The

p P

JAMB R E

llril h

Fa3lrio1l oy-

"It's Spring" (.'()(Its YOll JUSt. Know Belir

The IUllImotlt Lobel

, Woot.n t.omel fIMc.,j with b.autlfull.,....; pl"t back. I!ort-Olo r01o" lin It. 10 to II.

1[011 wood

k tone

bone with

bell, shltred walJt­

line. 10 to 16,

The distincllve touch is unmistakable! These Shanmont· coats, exclusive with us alone, have the fashion awareness, the un­compromising quality, the !Iawle Cit. .• that have made them famous!

ketched from Stock

In addition to Styles pictured here we are howing many other new coats from ~

See the new Spring sweaters, slacks and skirts in our floor college shop.

l'AGE FOUR

Varsity Rifle Teams Shoot In State Meet

Defend Title Today Against 15 Entries In Waterloo Matches

Annual Mecca Wee k Banquet

Held Last Night A cloud of confetti and a bushel

of toy horns brought out the "Irish" boisterousness of the engi­neers, last night. as they celebrated their 37th annual Mecca banquet, in the river room of the Unlon.

Prof. Raymond B. Kittredge,

Ad vertising Editor Offers Women Tips

On Future Careers

For all determined women ca­reerists Miss 'Elaine Patou, editor of the Minneapolis Tribune'~ "Peg-About-Town" s hop pe r s pflge stated, "You don 't find your j(lb, you drift into the field you are naturally fitted [01'."

THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY

She conducted the vocational does herselt. cllnCer:nce advertising discussion held yesterday aitemoon in the House Chamber of Old Capitol.

Miss Patou presented in postel' Corm a copy of hEr shoppers' page which appears every Sun­aay in the Minneapolis Tribune. III combination with this she Il'aced each stage in deVElopment, from the £ctual soiiciting of ads to the final make up which she

"Writc clevcrly and subtly so that the advertising pills melt away in the tonic of content," she recommended.

"Advertising openings being offered to graduates are more vast and tar reaching than ever before. NEwspa!Pers, magazines, house organs, fashions, depart­ment stores and advertising ager:cies are all on the outlook for fresh id ~ as .

Scout Council Organizes 13th

Iowa City Pack

SUNDA Y, MARCH 23, 1941 ~

was named cubmastel', to be 119- mony. Scout Executive Owen B sisted by Roscoe Taylor, Col. C. Thiel and Assistant CUbrnas~ A. Bagby, Dr. R. H. Ojemann, Dr. Ted Landsman directed the cere­Walter L. ,Daykin and Charles mony. Mott, committeemen. Receiving Bobcat ranks Were

The meeting, in charge of E. R. Puul Schuppert, Larry ~ovy

The thirteenth pack In Iowa WiJliams, cub commissioner, WIlS J immy Dooley, Bob Daykin, JOhn' City's scout council was establish-ed at a meeting of scout cubs and attended by leaders, den mothers Mott, Robert Taylor, Rober! Oie. parents Friday night in Horace and the younger scouts. Members mann, James Bagby, Dan How. Mann scbool. of pack No. 2, Longfellow school, ard, Donald Knoepfler and Virgu

Robert Knoepflef, 22~=E=. =C=h=u=r=ch=,=a:;:ss::i=st=e=d=in=:;:th::c=::in::d::u::c:::ti::o::n=c::er::c::-=H::a::n::c::h::e::r:;;J;:;f:;;. =======--==_

, Two university rifl e teams com­posed of the members of Iowa's varsity rifle squad and Coach Sergt. H. W. Wendlandt left at 6 o'clock this morn ing fOr Water­loo to defend their stale cham­p:onship trophy at the Iowa State Rifle association's Gallery Rifle tournament.

acting as master of ceremonies, (' r::;::============================;::;:==;:::;:::::;=;:=======================::================;, contributed his expression to the

Iowa's two four-man teams, out to r €ttain possession of the state t,'ophy, will also be aiming their Ighls in an eiort to break the

stale 'l'ecord of 1,019 points out of a possible 1,200 that they them­s€lves made lust year.

15 Teams Entered Approximately 15 teams from

throughout the state will enter t/'le match, beginning at 8 o'clock this morning in the WatErloo na­tional guard armory and carrying through until early th is evening when tabulations and awards will Ix> made.

University r iflemen will also be competin g for the individual grand aggl'cg:; te trophy awarded 1J the highest ~corer in the match.

Besides ind iv idual competition, the university will ent\!r a pair of two-man teams in that event of the match.

Fi rst, stccnd and third pIece meda ls will be awarded to indi­vidual winner;; and to winning two-man te,lms by the Becker­Chapman American Legion Post Rifle dub, co-sponsors of the meet.

Members oC Team Eight univcrsity I'i fl rmen Lnd

Sergeant . Wendlandl left this morn ing to firc at the match. Fir­ing on thc first Iowa team will be Robert Kadgihn, All of Iowa City ; Vi rg il PeWt, A3 of De; Moines; Conrad Schad! , A4 of Williamsburg, and S e I' gca'llt Wendlandt.

Ralph Boh lin, A4 of Iowa City ; Jay Higbee, A4 of Iowa City , Kenneth Heller, E4 of Marengo, and J . MUI'J'ay Ruby, A3 of Sey­mour, wi ll compose the second team. Kay Statler, Al of Keota, will compete for individual hon­ors.

.Pettit and Sergeanl Wendlandl, and Kadgihn and Schad l wi 11 m~ke up the universi ty's two­man teams.

Speaks To Negro Forum,

DR. S. nOSE

01'. Sudhindra Bose, lecturer in the politica l science department, will be gu ~st speaker at the meet­log the Negro Forum at 7 o'­clock tonIght in the north confel' ­once room o.r Iowa Union. Dr. ~ose will speak on "Social Pro­blems 'in India."

program. Speakers on last night's pro­

gram were Dean Francis M. Daw­son; Prof. B. J. Lambert and For­rest Seymour, assjstant editor ot the Des Moines Register and Tri­bune editorial page, who was the main speaker of the evenine.

Hugh Guthrie, E2 of Murdo, S.D., was announced winner of the freshman scholastic award lor having the highest grade point of any u'eshman in the engineel'ing college last year.

Following the announcement or the newly chosen Transit staIf, winners of the Transit's annual es­say contest were announced. "En­gineers Are Eccentrics" by Bill W. Elliott, El of Marshalltown, took first place, while William E. Schweizer, El of Keokuk, author of "Gun Versus Slide Rule," was second place winner.

The traditional Mecca week play was presented in the form of a "Quizz" contest in which five stu­dents and five faculty members took part. Though the majorlty of the laughter was at the expense of the faculty members, they were given the winning score in the contest.

Phi Alpha Delta Initiates 21 Here' Saturday

Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, initiated 21 men yesterday afternoon in a ceremony at the Law commons.

Initiates are LeRoy Sloan, L2 of Creston; William L. Connery, L3 n[ Dubuque; Arley Wilson, L2 or Marshalltown; Ivan V. Mel'­rick, L3 of Corydon; W. Dean Mc­Cully, Ll of Walnut.

Dean R. Dort, L1 of Daven­port ; A. V. Hatter, Ll of Marengo; John Young, L2 o[ Afton ; Frank Horan , L2 o[ Muscatine; Harvey Kimball, L2 of Guttenberg; John Radloff, L2 of Iowa City; FOI'­rest Mercer, L2 of Iowa City; Ed­ward G. Fogarty, Ll of Elma.

Initiates Listed Clarold E. Rogers, Ll of Pel'­

cival; H. James McCa5krin, Ll o! Rock Island, llI.; Earl G. Sie­vers, L2 Qf Avoca; Leroy Jurge­meyer, L2 oC WaverlY; Robert A. Currie, L2 o! Sac City; Richard P. Lamoreaux, Ll of Iowa City; J ack W. Riehm, Ll of Peoria, Ill., and Luther M. Reading, Ll of Churdon.

Officers Installed Installation oC new officers took

place last night at a dinner dance at the Iowa City country club. The newly-elected officers are Frank Horan, justice; John Young, vice­justice; Melbourne Halsl'ud, L2 of Bode, secretary ; Robert Burdette, L2 of Afton, treasurer, and Arley Wilson, marshall.

Prof. and Mrs. L. K. Tunl,s and Prof. and Mrs. Meno Spann were chaperons at the dinner dance. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Hatter of MIll'engo, Franklin Geo~ge and Dorothea Volckman of Clinton, and Robert C. Peter­sen of Muscatine.

Punctuate Me Poppa GOLDSBORO, N. C. (AP)- To

distinguish between farm ,~ g(' n t

Colon S. Mintz and his four-yet:r­old son and namesake, friends call the youngster "Semi-Colon."

:l9f~ ~~[-~~ .....

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Suited • • •

J

--./'

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..... .- ------ -...-...-- ------- --..... ...-

\ .- - - - ---- - - -- - - - -- - - ---- ---- -- -- -- . -............

. .

This just goes to show you that the University of Iowa's engineers are not ,m ly capable in their re:;pective fields, but have splendid taste when it comes to £em­inine cbarm. Fern Eggen is a Kappa Kappa Gamma from Charles City, Iowa and is a Junior in the college of Liberal Arts. Fern is pictured here wearing a creamy beige, Camels Hair suit fashioned with a long torso jacket in the 1941 ~hree button style. The sweater is hand knit in baby blue. She has chosen a turf­tan soft capeskin, envelope bag with a diagonal flap fastened by a gold clasp. Miss Eggen's hat is a snap brim with color matching shoes and bag. The Mecca Queen is wear ing Hummingbird hosiery and ppris Fashion Shoes of Indian Copper shade. The entire outfit is a gift to Miss Eggen from TOWNER'S.

--

fashions PARIS FASHION

Crashes tlte

to your tastes-when one is particular about finely handled drape and impeccable tailor­ing. Sure! We have the color, style and size th at you are look­ing for

to

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In the freshest Spring dresses that you have ever seen. They have vCI'y be'coming ~ecklines and style Ih;)t I~ ini mizes yow' waistline. F~sl:lol'~d by Carole King, L'Aig­lon, Gay Gibson, and many other leaders in the style field.

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BRING TllEM TO YOUR FEET WITH CONNIE AND PA.RI FA HI0N SHOES

Eye clitching! Every­one IIf the~e exciting. youne shoes. Sleek shining patcnb, beau­tiful Ilew Gabardin 51 COl'day Sandals, New Saddle Beige Bump toe pumps . . . all of them will tai. e yotlr "eye-cue" ihls spling.

jn All .' i:t.c:-, C"I(/I'I'\ and Hly/cs

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wf)ave/ " tllJlIIlII;~

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Jf .It'8 !lew you'Jl lind II uL

TOWNER'S. Come III to-day to

enchant yourself with the new

Spring array. Follow the Com­

pus 1avodtes to this counter ..•

for lInaer.!e, cosmetics, glove ,

hankies, bousecoat~, anklets. , NYLON l·50 your out/it is ',ere 6~ up

--Union} Jlost to From 1 popularity, i\wartls tQ I i\l A£ter~

Eighty- liVe v

,rlists will . be formal opening

I student an n~a . 'I to 4 o'CIO('\\1I I Iowa \Jnlon

°t dents and S U '1 d ate inVI e

Visitors which the given Qua'

r,{artio Moines. is cram wh tation' of Musica l by Rob~J't. viUe, pJ3mst, of Iowa City,

r,{rs. Floyd City, and . of Evansvil of the tea. student

SUNDAY, MAIWlL 23, 1941 THE DAILY, IOWAN, IOWA CITY

85 Art Works Presented Today at Union Student Exhibit • In . ------- --------~------------------------------------------~----------------------

VnionBoard Host to Public From 1 to 4 Popularity, Quality Awards to Be Made At Afternoon Tea

Prudence Burg, G of Fayetteville, N. Y.; Joan Cox, A4 of Iowa City; Dorothy Dickinson, A3 ot Deca\ur, III., nnd David DUrst, G of Spring­field , Mo.

Enid Ellison, A2 of Webster Groves, Mo.; Stephen Greene, A3 of New York City; Mary Iiolmes, G of Greeley; Kay Kane, A4 of Dubuquc; Margaret Loughridge, A4 of Unionville, Mo.; I~a Helen Olin, G of Iowa City ; Elva Jane Seavey, A4 of Aurora, Ill.; Mer­rill Stricklin, G of Eldorado, Ill.; Vernon Stutzman, U of Iowa City;

Eighty-five works by studcnt Patl'ick Trivigno, A2 of New York artists wlll be pl'csented at the City, and Sol Wishnepolsky, Al

. of Bronx, N. Y. formal opening oC thc clghth an- Wal.ercolors nyal student art salon today from The water~olor and pastel art 1\0 4 o'cloC'k in the main lounge works wcre done by M. E. Bel-01 Iowa Union. All univcrslty lingcr, G of Spl'ingllcld, Mo.; sludenls and the gencral p\lblic Pri~ciJla Burg, G of Fayetteville, are invitcd to aUend. N, Y.; Leah Coleman, G of Iowa

Visilors will vote for tl1<' works City; Joe N. Cox, G of Indianapo­which they part icularly lil,e, nnd lis, Ind .: Stanley Czurles, G of the populnl'ity awardH will be Bufhllo, N. Y., and Charlotte Jef­given on the ba~i, of th(' ballots. [ery, G of Milwaukee, Wis. Quality awards w itl be given on Ruth Johnson, G of Iowa City; standards of excellence. Robert Keagy, G of Washington;

Awards Presented James McConnell, G of Chicago; Martin O'Connor , A3 of Des HelM Cabot Miles, G of Beverly

Moines, is chairman of the pro- Farms, Mass.; David Mitchell, A4 gram which includes the presen- of Detroit, Mich.; Malcolm Meyers, talion' of awards and a forma l tea. G of Wichita, Kan., and Mary Musical 8clcctions w ill be given Pal'ker, G of Virden, Ill. by Robert briggs, 11.2 of Ccnter- Remo Ru~so, U of Scranton, Pa.; ville, pianist, and Franc~s Carns Wilber Stilwell, G of EmpOria, 01 Iowa City, v iolinist. Kan., and Dorothy Young, A3 of

Mrs. Floyd Mann, A4 of Iowa Annawan, 111. City, and Martha Lois Koch, A'l Mouoehromes 01 Evansville, Ind., are in charge Monochrome selections are by of the lea. Womcn mf'mbl'l's of JO,1I1 Cox, A4 of Iowa City; Joe student Union boa rd wi ll pour. Cox; Dilvid Durst; Carl Heeschen,

Oil Entril'S G of Davenport; Elaine Healy, A3 In tl1c oil medium entries by 01 Cedar Rapids; Ben Hurwitz, Al

the f(1llowin/( :;tud nts Were se- ! of New York City; Remo Russo Jccted by thc juctg s, I,md Wilbcr Stilwell.

Donald Ande l'~on, G of C dar I Sculpture worles accepted were Rapids; Jeanne Bamberg, A2 of hy the following students: Maxim Cleveland Heights, Oh io; Vernon ~Jlas, G of Iowa City; Paul Harti­Bobbitt, A4 of De~ Moines; Shirley gan, 11.2 of Mason City; Helen Briggs, G of Iowa City; Byron Kohl, Al of New York City; Wil­Burfo rd, A3 or Jackson, Miss. ; !lllm O'Keefe, A2 of Sioux 'City;

• Remo Russo, and Charles Stallings, G of Gary, Ind.

FOR/~ / J. .

CING J277 Students ~ ITo Com.pete.ln,

I Speech Contest' I " ,35th Annual Finals Of Forensic League To Start Thursday .

Two hundred and seventy~seven students from Iowa's junior col­leges and high schools will con­vcne here lor the 35th annual fi­

AllenNye Named Editor Of 'Transit' Announce Complete Staff at Banquet Closing Mecca Week

Business. editorial and adver­tiSing staffs at the Iowa Transit. engineering pUlication, for 1941-42 were announced last night at the annuDI Mecca bar quet.

Allen Nye, E2 of Ida Grove, \\'a ~ named as the editor-in-ehief for the publication. General man­al.'cl· will be Raymond A. Lati­mer. E3 of Red OEl" nnd George M. Griffith, E2 or Des MOines, bu~iness manager.

Eng'neeri r g students chosen r"r 1he editorial staff inciudej Alfred Holmberg, E2 o( Glen­brook. Conn.: George Luth, E2 of Joy, Ill.. and Donald Arganbright. E3 of Gu thrie Center, associate editors.

Editorial Stalf Members of thc general cditOI'­

'&! s1aff rre O<cal' Kel'chefsky, E3 of Rochester, N. Y.; Frunk A. POI'k, E3 of Iowa City; Russell Millel·. E3 of Cotmeil Bluffs; Wil­llum M: tscn, E3 of Oak Park, III. Charles LeutwiJer. El Of Chicago UI.; Harold Hudachek, E2 of Iowa City; David Leverthal, E3 'Of New York. N. Y.; Francis O. Younl!. EiJ of Wapello; Bert BI;kesley, E3 of Menlo; Joseph Sherman, E3 of Stormville, N. Y.; James Brown, E4 or Iowa City; Sheldon Hughes, E2 of Sutherland, and Eugene Ryw, EI oC Milton .

Circulation manager on the new Transit is Henry Schab, E2 of Trenton, N. J., and Robert White. EI of Iowa City. and Ro­bt'rt Blane, E3 01 West N<w York, N. Y., ae assistant circulation managers.

Business S taft Richard Fountain, E3 of Miss­

ouri Valley, was named assislant l:usinel:s mrnagcr.

Roman Pottharr, E3 of Cm'foll, was named advertising manager with Willard Sfehorn, E2 of Brooltiyn, and Edward Sht y, EI of Dawney, Cal., assistunt adver­tising munagers.

Other members of the advel'­t,sirg fitaff ae Ted Snakenberg, E3 of Webster, Murray Dawson, El of Iowa City; FrEd Gegner, E2 oJ Oskaloosa and Daniel Mc­Laughlin, EI of Des Moines.

• ehus. Harnett

nals contest of the Iowa High ant; Oelwein; PeITY; Spencer; School Forensic league and the Thomas Jefferson, Council Bluffs, 12th annual tournament of the and Webster City.

• Glt'Jl Millcr

• Artie baw

• Duke Ellington On

Dance Record We All Wan~

3Sc mltl SOC

Spencer' Harm,ouy Hall 15 80. Dubuque st.

Iowa Junior College Forensic West Watcrloo; Adel; Clearfield; league to be held Thursday, Fri- Eldora; Hawarden; Lake City; day and Saturday. Laurens; Mapleton; Mt. Ayr; St.

The program will consist of de- Patrick's, Waukon; Teachcrs Col­bate, extempore speaking, poetry lege High, Cedar Falls; University reading, original oratory, pl'ose high, Iowa City, and Waukee. rcading, radio speaking ' and in- West Union; Forest Clty; La­terpretative reading. , moni; Minbul'O; Decol'ah; Onawa;

Prof. A. Craig Baird of the I Oskaloosa; Parkersburg; Postville; speech department is in charge Roosevelt, Cedar Rapids; Sidney; of the tournaments, with Waldo Elkader; Tipton; Traer; Wilson; Braden, assistant in speech; direct- Washington ; Muscatine; Ottumwa; ing tile higb school division and Guthrie Center; Hat'lan; Letts; OrvH\e Pence, assistant in the Cedilr Falls, Bnd Blockton. speech department, handling ju- Junior Collece nior college activities. . Partieipilting in the junior col-

. ~chools Enter.ed ' . lege events will be Burlington; . Fifty-rune schools WIll entel t~c Elkader; Ft. Dodge; Gn:lec1and, La­

high schQo~ contest. They ale moni; Maquoketa; Northwestern, Abraham LlIlcoln, Council :Sluffs; Orange City' Sheldon' Tipton'

I Algona; ~es; Bo~ne; Burlington; Waldorf, and 'Red Oak. ' ,

I Cenu'a l! SlOu~ city; Dnv~npOl't; Four-year scholarships in the East, SIOUX ~Ity; .E~st, Waterloo; colleges of liberal arts, engineer­,------------1Ft . Dodge, Jo a Cdy, Mt. Pleas- ing and commerce are awarded

ALLEN NYI!

* * * Gcnerol Manager

n ... nxoND .... L ... TIMER

* ... * Business Mlllwger

'Y-,

Ping-Pong Meet In Final Rounds

Th e last rounds of the univer­sity men's table ternis tourna­ment will be played ot 4:15 p .m. Tuesday in the main lounge of ]"wa Uojon.

In the single group, James LIghtner, EI of Cedar Rapids, is paired with Earl Crane, E3 of Iowa City, , nd Mike Porhomek, A3 of Kansas City, Kan., will ·play Luther. Smith, E2 of Des Moines, in the emi-futal round. The winners of the two malches will play fol' the tiUe of aU-uni­vel'sity ch,lmpiot).

by the university to six of Ule members of tbe high school debat­ing teams appearing in the final championship deba tes, to first place winners in high school ex­tempore speaking and in high school original oratory.

Th~ final m. tch in the doubles tournament will also be played .orr Tuesday in the main loungc.

Certi1icates will be presentcd by the extension division to the high schools and junior Colleges win­ning Iil'st and second places in the final contests.

Tours of station WSUI and spe- I

eial radio dramaUc productions wilt be given for thc visiting stu­dents.

A junior college dinner and a forcnsic and dramatic art lunch­eon will be held in connection with J

the tournaments.

UNIVERSITY THEATRE University of Iowa N.EW

S C 'H E DULE Fracesca Da Rimini

April 2], 22, 23, 24, 25

Matinee 2 p.m. April 26

TbeTempest May 5, 6, 7, 8, !I

Matinee 2 p.m. May 111

By Georce Henry Boker

By William Shakespeare

Fur'her Informa&lop concem1nl 'he schedule may be oblalned from ~e Theater Ticket ortlce. Room B-A

Shaeffer Hall, Ex'. 248

Five-Day, 750-Mile Trip for 84-Piece Concert Band Starts Tomorrow in Second Annual Tour

Reveal • larrla .. ~ HOLLYWOOD, Cali! . (AP)­

Screen Actor J immy Bulier aod

IJean Farney, former silli r with Horace Heidt's band, disclosed

The University 01 Iowa concert bond, with Prof. Charles B. Righi­er conductlng, will leave Iowa City on the first lap of its 750-mile concert tour tomorrow at 9 a.m.

• • • • • • • • • • • . ----- ---- _ ___ YClit rday they w re m rried at is as follow : Las Ve all, \'., Feb. 15.

For the programs, the second annual tour by the organization, 30 seleetions, v a r yin g from marches to grand opera, have been prepared.

Travelling In three busses, with a truck hau ling the heavy instru­ments. the 84-piece band will play 14 concerts in 13 diltel'ent town on the tive-day trip. The group will stay in private homes each night. Mrs. Paul G. PI'CUS oC Iowa CIty will act as counselor to the 17 WOrnell membel's o[ tbe band.

Each step of the trip has been timed lind tabled by Professor Righter. Most meals will be eillen in the various school cafeterias and a tJ except one concert will be played in high school nuditor­iums or gymnasiums.

Band's Prolratrul The complete repertol'Y 10 1' the

tour, from which each concert will I be selected, is as Iollows:

Choral Prelude-We All Be­'lieve in One God, Baeh-Gilletle.

Prelude and Fugue in B-f1al Minor, Bach-Moehlmann.

Overtw'e - Die Fledcl'mous, Strauss-Godfrey.

Overture-The C.·usaders, Buch­tel.

Symphonic Poem - Phaeton, Sai nt-Saens-Laurendcau. I

Finale, Irom Symphony No. I in E-nat, Saint-Saens-D Rub rtis.

Wotan's Fill'ewell and Firc Charm Mu Ie, Wagner-Winterbot­tom.

Prayer and Dream Pantomime, Humpprdlnek-Mnddy.

A Southern Rhapsody - VIr­ginia , Wood-Godfrey,

Suite In F Major, Opus 28, No.2, Holst: I

From the Suite-The Children's Corner, Debussy.

Two Folksong Settings, GI'ain-gel'. .

Dance , of Ule Tumblers, [!'Om

The Snow Malden, Rimsky-Kor­sakov-O'Donnell .

RussIan Sailor's Dance, from The Red PoPpy, Gliere-Leidz n.

Schel'l':o, from the Suite l or B-flat . CI<\I'inets, Cro~se.

.Corne~ Trio-Orion, WilJ i[lms­Smith- Lawrence Ales, A2 of Lost Nation; Robert Stolley, 11.2 of Hol­stein, and Lawrence Barrett, A2 of RockCol'd, Ill.

Adagio and Polonaisc, from Con­certo No. 2, Weber-MoreJ1i- Clnri­net . solo-John Webster, A4 or Iowa City.

Flz'st Concert Solo, Combellc­McCormick-Alto Saxophone Solo -Ray E, McCormick, G of Tahle­quah, Okla.

Stars in a Velvety Sky, Clarke-­Cornet Solo-Robert Stolley.

The Debutante, Clarke- Cornct Solo-Ruth Ostrander, Al of Marlon.

The Flight of the Bumble-Bee, Rimsky J Korsakov - O'Donnell-,

~.,:ti~ NOW'. L ... ST Tll\l£S

TUESDAY TIlt ... 1caI1Iit te start

.............. '''&la' I&Ilnl

EXACTLY as -OriginallY

Presented!

ARNOLD OEm. E

Marimba Solo- Hollis Mounce, PI o[ J eCferbon. Flute Solo-Frederick Bilker , A3 of Baldwin, N. Y.

Siciliuno, Bach -Leidzen. Rhapsody in Rhumba, Bcnnctt. Rhythm~ or Rio, Benl1 tt . Tango, Alben iz-Campbell-Wat-

snll. Reverie, T~l'hllikowsky . My lIero, StrauKs-AICord , Clribi r ibin. Pesta lo1:zl1-Altord. The WoJ'ld III Wai ting fol' tho

Sunrisc, Lockhart-Scitz-Alford. March- H;lwkeye Glory, King.

Oehlsen's Number Another numbel', an original

compo 'ilion by Arnold L. Oehlsen, assistant conductor of the band, will be incluclcd ,It the nd of (,lIch concrl' \ tWogram. Compos d of bits from "On Iowa," " Iowa on to Victory," "Iowa Fanfare," "Corn Song" and "Old Gold," the medley will be used as a sort of band thcme song.

• • • Complete Itinerary rot' the tour

-DOOR OPEN 1:15 P.M.-

l~i.J~~~:ii NOW END

MOND ... Y

ALAN C\)~T1S ' A~n.U~ KI'.HJ<t:Oy JOAN u.sun .IIENRY HUlL- HfJlfRY TUV£U

- ... DDED-­WALT DISNEY'S

"A Gentleman's Gentlemap" -LATE NEWS-

Shows at 12 - 4 - 8

5 BIG DAYS STARTING NEXT

• FRIDAY •

Monday - Washington, ML ===========-= Pleasant, ottumwa.

Tuesday-I nd ianol (two ('on-certs) , C ton.

Wedn . day - Shenand oa h, Omaha.

Thursday- Loian, Denison, Jet­tersQD.

Friday - Perry, Nevada, 'ar­shalltown.

On April 2, following the band's return to Iowa City, the group will present its annual spring con­cert In Iowa Union.

Among the traditional Phillp­pine virtue. eha ·tlty in a wo­

important s bra\'ery ,

START

Thursday!

t'h-L'.,. IT'S 01 THE SCREEII;

c ....... y GlAtt ...... OOAlJOIIJt_u GlNI""" • WillIAM RACY_o.. ,.,.. ....... ~ w.~'" Go-_·~T1IW)·_""'~' --. _·IIo-.l~, IOHN ro-o '-., ""Jllm • lAHUe •

• 2000. c-r '" _

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TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME li::;:;;;e~

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LATEST FOX NEWS

NEXT WEEK!

"TOBACCO ROAD"

Two Full Day ! Tuesday-Wednesday

REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES

No Contributions Asked Other Than Admission At Box Offiee

, PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY UNDA Y, MARCH 23, 1941

~Ramblers Triumph-in Sp.b-State Finals, 34-29 , * * * * * * '* * '* +-

-----,

-Win Berth In TakeSub-State Title at Ottumwa Loy J 'ulius Finishes State Finllis Of · Cage Tourney ] 28-Pound Class

in Fourth of' N(:AA

trail Tlir~ Starlzas; : :bock, Chadek Lead . Scorers in Contest mail» jatuan

$T. MARY'S (34) fg. ft: pt. tp. Brack, f ......................... 3 3 1 9 J. Chadek, f ................ .. 5 1 1 11 Toohey, c .................. .. .. 0 0 4 0 Bock, g ..... .. ................... 5 2 4 12 Eakes, g .................. ... ... 0 0 0 0 Colbert, r ...................... 0 0 0 0

Sherman Third In Consolation

Johrlson, tlemillg Fail In Consolation Rounds; Team Ties for 10th

·SPORTS E. Chadek, c ... .... .... ..... 1 ~ 0 2

TOTALS • .. ~ .... 14 '6 10 341

OTrUMWA (29) fg. fto. pf. tp. Huston, f .... , ...... , .... ...... · 0 0 1 0 Sullivan, f .................. 1. 2 1 4 Love, c ..... ..................... 4 0 4 8

S L Mary's state prep fina lists pi c-tured here are: first row It'om left to right: Coach Francis Suep­pel, Bernard Rittenmeyer, Tony Brack, BiU Bock, Jim Chadek,

Tom Toohey, Don Michael ahd Ed Chadek. Second row left to right:

lvie, Richard Michael and David Ivie, Regular guard Ray Eakes was not present when the picture was laken.

BETHLEHEM, Pa., March 221 ==========:-== (Special to The Daily Iowan)­Iowa's 128-pound Big Ten wrest­ling champion Loy Julius, fin­ished in fourth place in his weight division in the final round of the national collegiate wrestling tour­

PASSING THE

BUCK

West Liberty Cindermen Nip Blue Hawks in Opening Meet

Carr, g .......................... 4 0 1 8 Morrisey, g .................... 4 1 2 9 Bates, c .......................... 0 0 0 0

___ .-J

TOTALS .................... 13 3 9 29 Score by periods: •

Iowa ClIy .............. 6 9 11 8-34 otlumwa .............. 9 II 7 2-29

Bill Villhauer, Jim Alberha:sky, Don Brogla, Melvin Smith, Bill Sweeney, Clayton Colbert, Rodger

------~------------------------------------ nament here lonight.

Iowa F al{es., Dv .. , sa-rt~ ~ Cagers fe~:~ ~~m~~~;i;:n~:;sk O;~iC~~~ gan State, who wenl into the H­

by

BILL

Comet Snatch Win In Final Two-Mi1e Event; Anamosa Takes Third

By DICK McFARLAND

A d G ld M d I F· I nals to defeat Mike Slepecky of BUCKLEY The We s I Liberty Comets By MAXIE ROSENBLUM V nne e too 1. e a _ Ina. Keht Slale for the title. snatched top honors in th <> tri-

0TTUMWA, March 22 (Special a tos s, 8 to 3 angulal' track me t involving to The Daily Iowan)-St. Mary's Julius dropped an 8-3 decision "Whcre's Oscar?" West Liberty, Univel ',ity high, and fighting Ramblers overcame a • Anamosa here last night, to rute

to Dillard Talbutt of Oklahoma In iIln5wer to innumerable quer- U I . h ' t k three-period deficit here tonight W SUB STAT' E SCORES superior ovel' - 11g m rae · 0 D L · A and M . f' 1 oUI'd fOI' .toulth Its as to the whereabouts of Os- . to edge out Catholic Central high In ver ... . . In ma r. . competition for the [irsl time In of Ottumwa, 34 to 29, fOl: the / place hohors in the 128-pound di- . car HarCTave, to.rm.er sports e~- history. West Liberty chalked up Class B sub-state title and a berth Wit Q At Otlumwa At 'Sptrit Lake vision. lor of The Dally lowan~ let It 53'~ poinls; the Bluehawks came in the state tourney at Des Moines son Uihts Class A Clas& A Bill:!' Sherman, Coach Mike j!JGW be said t.hat. Oscar IS eon- I in a close second with 51'. points. ne)(t week end, Davenport 31; Grimlell 24 Holstein 33; Webster Cily 29 Howard's top-notch 121-pounder, lIreted with the Rock Island Ar- and Anamosa lagged behind in

Behin!;! the ortenslve drive of Class B • Class B ihrew Charles Parks of Appla- J<Ull, au afternoon paper, In (:on- third place with 28". poinL~. Coach Francis Sueppel's high- Z'nk M Le d Iowa City (St. Mary's) S4; Ol- Everly 42; Ledyard 23 chian with a hali Nelson and body nectlon with the city desk. West Liberly 8tarted out bril· scol'ing trio, Co-captains BlIl Bock J , unson a tumwa (CA.atthDoliC "senllrasl) 29 At Cedar Falls hold in ~:10 for third place jn the • • • Iiantly, winning first und thi rd and Jim Chadek and forward Tony Males in 38.28 Win; es ,nO lie. consolatIOn matches Dick Evans, who developed in- pla('es in both the mile-run and BraCk, the Marians staged a fourth F k T k T 1 Class A . ClasS A 27 Art Johnson and' Bob Fleming [oJ a standout end on the 1939 the 50-YDrd da~h. Rummels sur -quarter rally to outscore their op- a es a e 47-27 it Clarinda 36; Des Moines (Roose- Mason CIty 31; Nevada . I the other two Hawkeye grappler~ football team after two years of pl'i~ed the fans in the 60-yard high llot\e.t\ts, 19-9, and to forge into velt) 29 I Class B entered in the meet were elimi- comparative obscurity , nnd who hUl'dle event when he won first the lcad for the first time in the DYSART'S (38) fg. ft. pf. tp. class B Mason City (Holy Family) 32; nated in the qual'te~-final round is now taking graduate werl; place fol' U-high. La! night was gAme. King, f ..... --..... -- ....... -- ... 3 1 1 7 Cromwell 30; Wiota 24 Cedar Rapids (St. Wenceslaus) 14 of competition but failed to place here 3fter a season of pro ball the fil'st experience fol' Rummel ;

tenlral broke through for eight Fildick, f ....... -- ...... . .. 0 1 1 1 * * • • • • • • •• •••••••••• in the consolation round,' with th e Green Bay Packers, in trllck competition.

.------Wilson (WL), Kinser (Al, and Lehman (UH) third. Heighl-5 feei, 2 inches.

Half-mile run: Fraz ier (UH) first, Pike (WL) second, Dumont (A) third, Brown (A ) fOurth, Time-2:06 ,2.

Pole vau It : lIonn (Al first , HeH~ely (WL) ~C('ond, Larson (Al thi rd, Evan, (UH) fourth. Height - 10 feet.

Shot put: Russell (A) first, Wil­son (WL) second, Shovel' (A) third, Crain (UH) fourth. Dist;mce - 38 feet, 11 inches.

Broad jump; Musgrave (UH) first, Smith (UH) second, Heu:;· inlwe1d (UH) and Askam (WL) third. Distanc('- 19 feet, 7 inches,

Mile relay: U-high first, Ana­mosa second, West Liberty third.

Half-mil relay: U-high lirsl, West Liberty second, and Anamo­sa third.

Two-mile relay: W(~ t Liberty first, Anamo~a second , U-high

third,

poinL~ in the first two minutes of Zink, c -- . ..... 4 2 2 10 Aggies Win Crown has been working wth the wing- Bus Smith of U-high and Nich-the contest while the Iowa Citians Chapman, g ..... ----...... 3 1 4 7 Two Parochial Schools Will Play in Piling up a total of 37 points men of this year's team in spring 015 01 West Liberty ]cap<>d to a WashlnA'ton State Advances were still adjusting themselves to Munson, g .............. .... 4 2 3 10 i ' on four firsts, a second and two drills. , . And don't think the tie in the high jump p\·enl. The KANS AS CITY (AP) - Wash-the tempo of play. Brack finally I Anciaux, g .... __ .... 1 1 1 3 Cnampionship Round at Des Moines third places, the Oklahoma Ag- boys don't lis ten to the voice of Rivermen grabbed firsl and third ingtnn State used a minimum of opened the scoring for the ~am- - - - - gies won theil' fifth stra ight na- experience. places in the 60-yard low hurdle5, effort tonight but won its way bIers with a close-In shot :follow- TOTALS ................... IS 8 12 38 By L. E. SKELLEY tional collegiate wrestling cham- • • • through the efforl8 of Mu~m'ave

d i kl b b k~t b B k 1 " into lht' finals of th(' National Col-e qu c y y a uc" y oc . DES MOINES, March 22 (AP) Fate of the draw brings Mason pionship tonight against a fie d They asy that Leslie MacMit- and Rummel ', while Askam and "Flicker" Chadek swished one W. PACKERS (28) fg. ft. pC. tp. f 38 'val olleges I th t k' fit h . . I legiate bask tball playoffs by -It's Mason City, Daven,pOI·t, Hol- C' h one, chel , who is e curren II1g 0 Fa er won t e remmJ1l11g , cone from the corner or the cOllrt aiter D. Zisko, f ............. 1 3 2 5 1ty and Holy Family toget er in Fou Aggl·e· s won l' I'd 'lvI'dual h '1 . th t h 1 d f th ·1' f tl C I'ompln" ()\'er Ark~, nsa"., 64 lo 53 stein and Clarinda in class A and r, t e ml ers 111 e eas, as a pu se an our PO"I lon, or 1e 0- " "., Sullivan'S charity toss to end the Novak, f ............. ..... 3 1 0 7 Sl. Mary's o[ Iowa City, Holy an intra - city feud in the first titles-AI Whitehurst, at 136 r3te Of only 38 per minute, as met~. for the western N.C.A.A. title. iirst canto, 6-9. ' Groves, f ........................ 1 0 0 2 Family of Mason City, Everly and round. pounds, David "Buddy" Arndt a t compared with the normal 72. .. U-h igh captain, Lynn Frnller,

Play Is Shaky Alton, c ...................... 1 0 ! 2 Cromwell ih class B. This is lhe first year Catholic 145, Jack Van Bebber at 155, and Glen Cunningham also is a sl-ow- galloped to 11 vidol'y over Pike. ___________ _ The Marlanks' second period play ~.~iSkO, g ........... ... 4 3 11 The "big eight" shot into the schools participated in the tourna- Virgil Smith at 16

d5; Whhiteh';lrst motion sptcialist, with ,1 rute of West Libel'ly 'lce, in the hnlf-

was still sha y as Ottumwa out- I son, g --.--... ... 0 0 4 G was the only defeh mg campIon. only slightly above 42 .. ,In fact , mile e\'t'nt, and crn' ed the filii. h scored the Sueppelmen by two Taylor, g .-- ............ 0 2 2 2 state high SChdOOl basketball cham- ments and two of them reached Sharing the spotlight with the it seems that all top-nolch long- line in 2:06.2. '

. t ' M t ' e d C ba k Meyn goo ri 0 pionship fiel with victories to- th h . h' t 1 pom s. or ISS y an arr, c ,. . ..... --. night along the four sub-state e c amp Ions Ip mee . Aggies were Mich,igan S ate's distance runners have ext!'emely Mu~grave of U-high leao('d 19 court Gaels who led their team's - - - - , _ wrestling twins, Merle and Burl sub-normal pulse rates, .. They feel, 7 inches in thc boul'd jump, scoring with nine and eight mal'k- TOTALS 10 8 13 28 tournament fronts at Cedar Falls, Palnngs Made Jennings wh? won the 121 an.d go together, like M and X. I' and was followed closely by team-ers, paced the Ottumwans in their Score by quarters: Ottumwa, Spirit Lake and Des , l 1128 pound tiUeg, and DICk D1- • • • mate Bus Smith, who trav('llecl first half attack, Qysarts ..... ......... 6 14 25-38 Moines. For Prep Fltta S batt.ista, University of Pennsyl- Football FOI·bl .s '. 19 feet, 6 inches.

St M ' b g 'ng . to WilSon 6 15 23 28 The winners, survivol's of a rec- d -its ~wn a~it:t' t~ anre~t~~rio;n to Refe\'e~~ "'B'I: ' chi'~~·. - ord-breaking list of 937 teams Unofficia l s tat e championship vama sophomore 175 pOlln er'l Reminiscing on Chicago's for- In the rE'lay evpnts, U-hil!h I'np- •

which started play in the sec- pairings by the Associated Press: who upset Al Crawford. of Appa- mer footbalJ fame, it is found tured ~irsl pla~e in the mile nncl, 1\\\ \ ~~i~~n~~:1 ~~uf~e ~~;i~n~~e o~o;;:! 11 &: L (Z7) fg. ft. pf. (p'l tiona I meets two weeks ago, will THURSDAY lachlan co~lege, Boone, N. .C., that the Maroons once played 2,3 half-mIle, but It was We'l Llherty '2 last quarter and then to knot the Weagley, f ................... . 3 0 4 6 compete next week in the Drake Ftrsl Round rorm~r Nahonal A.A.U. ,ch~~!llon games in one season ... And the who eame in firsl in the two-mile game shortly alLer with a tree Irvine, f ...................... 2 4 0 8 fieldhouse at Des Moines without Clarinda V5 Cromwell-2 p.m. to Win, the , east's only mdlvldual largest score ever record:d In ~ relay to clinch fir,t pIllce in the r lhrow by Bock. Vun Beel, c ............. 2 1 2 51 their class identification, Unof- Davenport vs Everly-3:15 p.m. champlOn:1hlPk Place college game was Georgie Tech meet. .'.. ,......,

Ed Chad~k Scorer. Jenkins gOO 0 4 ficial pairings, however, showed Holstein vs Iowa City (St. M' h' aWSetyeSt e' Spartans 220, Cumberland 0 ... Then ther ~'.. S~mmm II',. . ,,~ ,.................... that each class A team would I Mary's)-7'30 pm IC Igan as , the story thai Coach Lynn Wal- MIle run; K. Angel (WL) (I/·S!.

Wee Ed Chadek looped in the Keyes, g ............... , ..... 2 0 4 4 m~et a' class B foe in the firsi Mason City vs'Masoll City (Holy coached by an Oklahoma A. and dorf of Nortnwestern has ne\'el' Fred Zeller (UH) second, R. AlI-first basket in lhe periofi to put Crbckett, g ... ............ .... 1 2 1 4 . 8 M. graduate and boasting four . tJ · . gel' (WL) thll'cI Fr~nk Z~ller ' 1 I St round F.amily)- :45 p.m , .. called a spnng prec ce ill the SIX , " " the Marians in the ead or the ace, g ......... ............. .. 0 0 3 0 . 'Oltlahoma boys m theIr Imeup (UH) Iou ·th Time-4'S55 f · t t· . th t t B k - - - - ' th t t 'tl' or seven years he's been ther ~, I , . " . . Irs Ime m e con es. rac placed second m e earn I e ' ith t . ·t. ti. 50-yard d'l~h: Hawker (WL) dropped in a penalty throw to give TOTALS .................. 10 7 14 27 LuisetU's Team Loses Wisconsin Wins race with. 26 points, Other team ~~or~u or ~~~~I:~e~ ~~Id awe~~~~ first, Je.sen (A) second, Nicholl the Iowa Cihan:s a three point ad- DENVER (AP)-Giant Frank scores: Mmnesota 11, Yale 8, Ap- 11 Wh 'l thO • M' h ' _ (W L) third, Mu.'gra\'e (Ull) vantage. IOWA FAKES (47) r*. ft. pro tp. Lubin powered his Hollywood Eastern NCAA palachian, Kent State, Wisconsm spe 'h' ld .tl ef lIS y .ar, ~.d f()ul' th . Time-:6. ~ec()nd ..

"Bullet Bill" Bock then drove Miletich, t .................... 2 1 1 5 Twentieth Century mates to the 7 eac~; Kansas State and Penn- ~:~pit: 10~s ~sm:::!~~~e~U ;n~ GO-yard high hurdles : Hummels through with a bucket in the fi- Pettit, f ........................ 8 1 2 17 National A. A. U. basketball Cage Tourney sylvama 6 each; Franklin and (UH) firsl, FI.11ter (WL) ferond. nal minute followed closely by a Andruslta, c ......... .. ..... 3 3 I 9 championship last night, over- Marshall, University of Iowa, Iowa SIIOW on the ground. Peak (WL) third, Ken' (WL) counter by Jim Carr, lanky Ot- Enich, g ....................... 0 2 4 2 whelming Angelo (Hank) Luisetti State Teachers, five each; Penn • • • fourth. Time. :8.4 ~econcls. tumwa guard. With the gun in the Grim, g .......... .............. 5 2 2 12 and his San Francisco Olympic MADISON, Wis., Mal'ch 22 (AP) State, Lafayette, Iowa State col- Looking over the roster of the Quarter-mile: HawlICI' (WL) air to ~nd tfie contest, Jifrt Cha- Cox, g .......... "" ,... . 1 1 I 3 club team, 47 to 34, before a r ThE! Uttiversity of Wisconsin's lege, Illinois, three each; Ohio st. Wenceslau of Cedar Rapids fir.>l . Russell (A) second, Kent dek clinched the victory with a Metz, g ...................... 0 0 0 I crowd of 7,000. It was thl! first . State, Dubu~ue~ ':'1ichi,g~n, Temp~e basketball sqUl' d, one is greatly (UH) third, Smilh (UH) fourth . neat shot from the side to end the - - - - championship for the six-fbOt, six- baskelball team 100lgh! won th2 two each; Vll'gmla MIlltary Instl~ I'l'mlnded or the slartlng lineup Time-:55 beconds. evening's scoring, TOTALS ............. ...... .19 9 11 47 inch Lubin in eight IIIHional tour- [ national collegiate athldic asso- ~ute, Springfield, Rutgers, Wyom- nf the Pitt football tf'.ro ... Som e High Jump: Smith (UH) and

Close officiating resulted in. 19 Score by quarters: naments. He is tHe first player tiaion's easletn cage crown and mg, one each. of the name are Zohl, Tresuak , Nichols (WL) fi\'~t, K rl' (WL) pl!Daltl~ all together with St. Fakes ., .................. 6 14 29-47 ~ compete with national cham- a right to represent the eastern Leonard Levy, of Minnesota, Polansky, Pavek, Erceg, CaJlt'k Mary's collecting 10. Three men D & L .................... 1 7 16-271 PIO~S ?f Amer~ca and Europe. district of the association jn the captured the eighth championsbip and Navratil.. • • Lhtting championship of the No-left the contest by the fou l route Referee: Brechler. LUisetb, one-bmt! Stanford ace by defeating Larry Pickett, Yale's I . t h N with Tom Toohey and Bock re- and darling of the tournament NCAA national meet at Kansas Eastern association champion, in Anal egous state prep basl,et- batting champion~ up 0 t e a-

n TT d h ~ ll ht ~'11 C·t t S t d b d! t· th I 'ght f' I b ~ 11 notes concel'n '''1' 'COllSI'n 's tlonal league, after sppnding nil placed in the iinal eanto. Love By BOB filA crow erel was a g" a llg re I y nex a ur ay y c ea mg I e 1eavywel lI1a s. U YV f h ' b ' h tIl cI b I Th I F k d D" t" l' k' 15 b towans Finish High all-star get-loa-ether ... The tour- 0 IS c' reer clI1g s u e ae: fouled out for Ottumwa. e owa a es an ".sar sma oSll1g cause, rna \08 a stl,;\jborn Pitts urgh five, B6 I . . .. Clubs ... This year, poor Deb i _

Leading scorer of the evening cagers sweJ;lt through the semi- points. I to 30 How the Iowans fintshed m the ne:y is s~on ?red ann~allY by.thc I"t cven SlIre of H ~tarting berth B 'II B k ' th 12 a ke fl'nals of lhe Iowa C'lty Gold Me- D" t th' "I" final round of the national collegi- state univerSity, and IS -pubhclz d ·· th P 'lt 'b . h Wh ', I't' was 1 oc WI m r rs, ar mou , ,Ill a pre l.mlrHY ate ,"r"stll'ng tournament to- id I b th . ' t \\ I I S UI g . . . Y Is .

while Jim Chadek and Tony Brack dal tournament last night in two Cage Squad, Coach game. , w'on thIrd place 1,n the n'lg~t .. • " VI ~ Y Ylt he ulnhlversld~ ' ~re~~ Prospu'. rity nott: d · 11 d" . t torrl'd 11'lts 'vhl'ch ended wit'h the G f L t t b t ~('rvlce as rcc IVISlons t I II poure m an II pom s respec-' nests eiYl'on eas ern tournamen y n,osmg ou 1 5 pound class (final) Davl'd . , . 'I l\oIa ty Be I rec~n y

tl·vely. Guar' d M"rrlss'ey "onneded Fake whipping the D & L quintet, 0 I!! ~ versatil- North Carolll1a team A, Band C, and lhe gtr nd chnm- I I ··th th I . . is tid th" Otf 47 27 and Dysart's mowing dowh ----- 60 t 59 - , Arndt, Oklahoma A. and M., de- pionship Is called "Unlimited." .. ~I~~;I~~~rt c:~ ;~~~O~\lHr. ~\v~~~

FOR SPRING .. , recover [he lovely flower freshness and smart and fiteing styling ef yo~r cloches . - -

Two fine sen' ices Plain garmentfl

standard ...... .4ge For Your Everyday

lothes

D luxe .75 For Your J<'iner Garments

or ntmt e kPOlrnll 0 deab t e umt - a -.,;cl:appy Wilson Packers five, The university basketbait squad l OOt I . d d " g th f' II fealed Vernon Hassman, Iowa .Fans ['ram the Badger fiEldhouse ak It . I cl ho ever I wa a ac , o.owe. y. eamma es 48-28 and Coach Rolll'e W'lllI'a tns will be up aye " , . Utln e II'S State Teachers, (8-3). h ' h t· II e Ighbo hood m cs so ov y, IV , • L L E 4tr

ve an aIr WI elg mar - p' d b K P tt·t h guests of the Roy L Cho'pek "'ost I r , r I ~~fo 0 , e 121 pound class (third place- I)f 13,500. [or ull t,he games, Icr .5,000 "till has t,... ftlor-Lo d C th ht k f h If arld t it I 8 I 14 a! th w IC sea s m 1 ne I' Ihe tnct that his PI'(S nt ('ontract • ers each ace y en C I, W 0 pour- . p int~rtnlSsion vvlsconin display- . , . ~ .u, (I I' A E R d

. M Iii 17 points for top scoring No. 17, Amel'it!aH Legion, at its i il1ft iii£! Eklll and fight which conSOlab?n)-WI1.ltam . Sherman~ much as Iowa fans supported the 1'(31' to run , nf! th~ n~w Ir ~_ :.J '.. ;,

R 0 S I hOlTors of the evening the Fakes montl'Ily chow at 6:30 tomorro\\f brought it lhe Big Ten title Iow~ , thle.w ChalIdes Parks, dAbPPda sit te tou~ney here lost ~pJ'l n.g. . . 111(nt docsn 'l go Into rffect until 12·\ 8. Dial 4111 lCe ",atters ran away with the c~ntcst from I night in the Legion room of the domInated play during most of lhaclhdl,sin'3wlloth hpU I Nelsonl an! 0 thY Th e spinl of c~pel'U~lon IS so li~,~c~O~I~d~o~n~e~ru~I~ls~oU~t~. ~~~::::~;~~~::::::::=

I I . t J h ·t b ' Idi g E te taO 0 n : . ar {s I'ece ves .our ~ood, thai any dlssEn tmg VOIC!!' I d T MOl he open ng whls Ie. 0 nny commulll y UI n. n r 111· the final half. I b

1'1 00· "h.nJ. 1 h t fIt '11' ] d h I g f t p ace ttl change the setup orc huot<!(\ .. , Wv- C Grimm former Unlvel'si y 0 owa men WI me u e s ow n 0 wo The Badg£r hi g h-powered 128' d 1 (th' d I t ' 12 k ttl special movies Reservations ri . '" poun c ass n' p ace- down almosl un1 nlmou~ ly , .. 1t

M k OCh' s .a1', rang up mar ers, 0 a {e . . scoring combination , uene £.ng- finan-Dillard Talbutt Oklahoma i ~ done in Wisconsin, and CA N ar In lcago secon~ pl~ce in the scoring: Two should be made at once. lund, cehter, and JOhnny Kotz, A. and M., defeated :Loy Julius, bel' done in Iowa.

_____ o.t Gl'Imm s buckets came 111 the forward. sparked the Wisconsin Iowa , (8-3). Julius takes !otll.th CHICAGO, March 22 (AP)- lH:JL .two minutes of play, and 15-14 cbunt, aflcr a 6-6 de<1dlbck attock. Eng 1 and collected II place.

Little Greg Rice, the hUman dyna-I c?mbJl1ed With a gool by :etllt to at the end of the first quarter. points, and Kotz was good fOI' 10. 165 pound class (foJ' lhil'd place mo from Noh'e Same and ane of I g1ve . the F~I~e.s . a sl;c-pomt lead C. Zisko tallied 11 pOints for th e Both ,also starrcd on. defense. -final}-Charles Hutson, Michi-the ~r!!lIt~t di~tdncl;! ruhrillrll iii!! blllor/:! the Inlii al pe1'l0d was well loset·s, putting the Cedar Rapids Mmnstay of the PlttSbUl'gh of- ~an State, defeated Sam Linn. AmericaN t aclil ev!!~ hdS sellli, tah "starled. . five into the leai.! early in the fensive was Captain Eddy Stra- Iowa State, (4-0). Linn takes the fa~tt!8t tlidlJttt {wo-mlle yet tl!- The D & L aggreg!'l~lOn was third period. 10l'ki,fol'ward, who WiS partic- Iourth. corded tOOJ§ht in the tIlth Illillliel headed by Howal'd Irv1l1e, who Harry Zink, former Purdue ularly effective on long shots. He ______ _ Chicago t!!lays. gathered seveh markers, and player, and MunSon hcaded the tagged 12 points.

The Smj(1l Bend mite was timed sparked the aHack of the losers, attack of till! Dysart outtit, ~aeh The Bodgm' avenged a 34 to in eJihl Ihlnbtes 51 1 seconds Don Weagle~ counted six points annexing 10 points lot the win- 96 licking the Panthers handed beUeting his e~n 'itc~e~t~ record tor the D & L five. . ner.s, Dysart's weht ah~ad In the them last December. The oth.er for t he dlS{ahce as well as his WIlson Packers put up a spirlt- thil'd period, 25-23, by virtue of two teamq which defeat , d WIS­previou~ low Ulrie for the event ed battle in the opening engage- King's basket, and pulled rapidly C('nsin during the p ~s t eM;on, recorded just a few weeks ago in ment of the evening before los ing away in the 1!I ~t stllnza. Minnesola and M!lrqll~tle, were an eastll.rh ttldoqr meet. to Dysal't'~, 39-~8. The PB?ket· five Two Pocket's leH the gom!! wilh defeated in return engagements.

Rice laid back in second place were out In front at halftIme by a four pcrsonul louis in tHe tnudh Wisconsin hus com . lied u rccnrd for the firM inlj~ , Bnd a nail, ai- - period in H spiritt'd attempt lo of 19 victories and thn't! de-lowl", Ralph Schwarzkopf, for- New YOI'k was third. overcome the deficit. Chapm~lI1, ie~ts this sea'on, mer Michigan ace, and others to His 8:51.1 time was also belte!' Dysart guard, mixed freely In the -------

. set the pace. Schw81'zkopf dt'oP- l than the two mile o\ltdoor record last quarter scramb le, committing I W"!tia'oMy tih~h~s Thltd ped out Ilfter a mile and fI half, of 8:56, held by Mik los Szabo ' of I his fourth foul in lhe closing min- MIAMI, Flu. (AP) - Warren Ri(jl! taklnl the lead, lapping two Hun~ary, who sot thc mark in I uic ; of Ihe contest. Wright's Whi~laway, early Ken-runnel's bl!fore makin, his final 1937. Tuesday night the Fuke~ und I tucky Dl'l'by lavol'lte until he dc­spurt fot the tape, I Hice's acrepted marl, [or the Dysul'{ 's tangle 1M the Gold Me- veloped a leg aUment several

He hit the flJ1Jsh about 10 ylu'ds two-mile, which he now hns won dlll crown, A oonsolallon tilt is weeks ai<>, fInish d thlM behind aht.d of Met ThJtt, Des Moines, i' in 19 strnight st.ilrts, was ·~ ight I schedu led {or 7:30 willi the cliam- I Mrs. L. p , ll8dlno's' LiUle Reans who wu timed unoUleJally at near minutes, 56.2 seconds, set tas t pionship encounter coming orr im-/ ye,terdfly in a lcst race at Tro-record time, Joe McCluskey of year. medilltely after, pieul Purk.

Canadlcns, Blackhawks Tied MONTREAL (AP)-A goal by

Charlie Sands aftel' 14 minutcs and four seconds ot ·the second over­lime period gave the Montreal Car.adiens 11 4 to 3 victory over the Chicago Olackhawl{s lust night und squared their Stanley CUP hockey playo(f sel'ie~ at ont' vic­tory a pl<!ce.

" . . Big League Ba eb, II- Jchnnlc

Humphries. who transferred hi ; nbility from the Cleveland In ­djan to the Chicago White ox thIs year, pltchC1l only one game 101 the Tribe la t year ... lIe turned tn a three-hit Job tha.t time, and Vltt never started him again.

• • • Last year, Deb Garms wun th e

NOTlf£ rro T PA ERS !O.o • Q

FiJ ~,t half I!) 10 la , (\1'1 ate du and pllynbll! and ~ ill becom deJinqu nt pril 1 t. On thL date a penult. (,( :\ I of 1 l)er clin t per month v III II Ildded.

For the ('otlvenl ne or tu fJayerR the lreM­lIrer's otfic \ ill b open durin~ th noon hour bcginnhiSt I reh 21 ol1d fol' the tmlance 01 thf' month, ~Ind nl~(I on Suturdll. after­noon, ~1urch 29th,

LlUtlir w. Jan~ a County Tn'Rsurrr

Si~teen laW , to G' {ted In '

I:olessional II IP daY aftern() ler ~"e JIllons IOU,... : ,

Those lnit.i11 «lerson, L1 of Erbe, Ll oj rehseke, L2 0 f'\shburn, Ll e sting, L~ of C

Richard Me lJ)odge; Bruce I f;ake; MiIlar~ .catine; Robel t /flOntas; Wende Storm Lake; I conrad.

David Sayr George SchultE ~s, Minn,; Del foledO; Har lyn bOldt, and A I~ of cedar RapI -

I Plays-(Continued

~. KirbY " .. ),Jitll1r , •.•..• , •• CMob'n , . •.•. ,. PI k:lrby .. ,.". BClJhd1 Di;c("t~'r':"l

F'rNDltH ny (J,'

WolJman ~ Altlrla .... AI~' A.ldrld (Gfll1t~

••. ••••.•••. \\1 )Irs. .f{alirplOn,

neltrhbO,;tr;;,l.:,: :' At1

'l'IfIU1W; ny ~Rru H. I:l ('lart'm' ~ ( '01

II<Idl ........... . anule.J1n~ •. ..• ...

Dai *

MIMEO(

MIMEOGRAPE Public. Typ

Mary V, Burns,

APARTMEN': FURNISHED P

nished, Frigi<

THREE ROOM 819 River. FI

nished. Dial 64

FOR RENT-3 College St.

slon. Koser Br'

2 ROOM, 1st f Dial 6336.

FOR RENT -apartment, Il

large rooms, pri parch, electric bome. Adults.

ANTFf) Wl\NTED-Stu,

water used. ~797.

'PANTEr.. STU ShiTtIJ lOe ~

GUbert DI&I 2:

STUDENT LAl the asking.

Daily Iowan " the Classified today.

CUMNINO j

For QUALI"

DIA BR(

UNIQUE 216 E

DANCE n BALLROOM I

or class, Ha SltG,

--- ---US6 the

t9 ffi A

stlN'DA y, MARCR 23, 1941 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY PAGE SEVEN --16 J\~itinted Into Ellen ..••..•.•. ,..... PhylJ. RlbbJe Ooldf!lt,.Jn ., ..••• I ••• J8,"~8 r'anoYf>r Application for A Ion 1.0 in Harvard univer,.lty. Letters of

application hould be sent to the office of the d an of the graduate college b April 15 .

31 and will continue until May 8. same schedule as betore ucept r sixteen and ot there will be no . kat ng on on- board can be tamed during this "~Jlllpr ..••... • .•.•... •• . I~h»)'d J.fP:vpr Rom. ...•. ...• •.. fbtrhara KlllJnKltr Professional Colle&'e5 Classes will meet from .. :30 to 5

p.m. Monday through Thursday. Register at the phy Ical education oUl~. Anyone de!llring to take the wuter satl'ty instructor's cotm<t! this spring must register for th~ trainIng to qlJaJHy for tbe cou given by the American Red Cro&S field repr. entative April 20 to May 3.

.\lr . . lohMon .', ....... Itobf>tt .,("Un ~1f"1iI Rabprllll .••••.••••• Hpu)' 'WhH~ Application,; for admission \0

professional colleges in Septem­ber, 1941, (colleges of dentistry, law or m!'dicine. or the school of nursing, combined nursing course only) next fall should so inform the registrar as soon as po:;sible.

day and Wednesday n 05. ~rJad by orkin, not m!ll"e than IJlrpC'tor: Uctly Mount Olno/'tor: J...uJ a ", Jlum t'r

1I'1NOS OF DARKNERS Ity RQl)prt DroIlH"

. '0 nA'J~f.;H.~ J'~r .. \"L~(j By ;\III" If , Ba,,,.)'

nUhUfIUP (\'hillal'"" l ..... flf.llIy)

It TIl nine hours d:iJly. The acCumulal-Re,lstn.tJon, Pby Int tAlunlloJl I eel I l'ft'dit .... ill be charged

Law Fraternity Here aturday Oxford .rUIH.'llun luaH Sf'hnol

Arllnt< . .•..... ••. )i •• lty HtR1'r ,\1, ... "'rrIlPr'",k .••..••• ":If"nnor Kfllnrlk PUll ........•. ,.. ..... John Hlllhr !tnr hl"'& • .. "'" NIliJlle L..or .... k

Jnn"'~ lh.ll'tln •.• "UII$ltllnt'", TI-'·xlf·r

Attention is cnlled tt) lht! fol­lowing . tipulntioru;'

1. Til£> whtllat'Shlp is given ch lor Women \ off at the ra\e r Ih (3) meals

Reiil;tratloo (or dpho will day whtn c are rerumtd.

Hlrp"lor; t •. t •• L.ung'

Ilu')' Uf',I(nrll • J-'41th"a j"hwerald Elaiutl 1'1'rn.1I •. • •• "btlllPf'u f:lffH .\1 rJoi. \,,,,., in ••.• " \111 r)' '" nil f~rlf~p

IHrN'lor:' :-1'''11'' ~\fllry I.U(·),

PRJo;·r&.~ 1)1:\'

Sixteen law students were ini­~iated into Gamma Eta Gamma, proressional law fraternity, yes-tel'day afternoon ill the Law com- 'rlm BIRIIOP'H ('ANOLESTU'KS

By Normnn AlcKlnnf"1 H)' nrJ;lllltl ,'lIlll·lnKt·,.

J\! •• lhoun'f> \ 'HII 1'1{o\'f' IIllCh ~,·h'M.11 lIIlons lounae· 1I •• II·lon IIIKIl Hrholll )111,. 'ani, . h,rll "ann I,

Those initiated were Jack An- I't·rlllJlUI· ••... "f\rlNn~ St'lu'rn"'rhorll "'erson, L l of Atlantic; Norman MII,I •................ (' .. r",.n Brown loU Blllllol) ..••....•. ,....... DlInnp "'Iorp),

.'l rA. Hll1tlldH'r. . ' •• \"1·111 I\, II 1Ii:lu·iI PtiK«lty Antw ............ l;:r'l .. ·flM'I'P. 'frH. P(>mh(>rtutl • ••• llllroT \\. III

Ulrl'(',nr : .. :.lIlh (j;luul Erbe, L I of Boone; Richard ('"nvll'l . ................ Ito •• ,·",.hllil fehseke, L2 of Bul'!ington', ,John H",·g,·,IO" ............. Elwin 1,ln,IM.)'

'Ilrnulor; Ph ylliH }.t. UrI1UMl' -.,

Fishburn, L l of Muscatine; Edgal' I OFFICIAL DAILY ({ing. L I. or Cedar Rapids. . A. 'DANTE. I

Richard McMann, Ll of Ft. • II, W.,h·), ('",,11. i BULLETIN ~"tlon 111" 11 HI'IIOOI . I 4)Odge; Bruce Mal1um, Ll of Clear All!'. ........... ... . I·\·r... Pre,,"', _ _ ..

k Mill d M 'U Ll {M- I)ltvld Lawrt'nctt ....• .. , .. Curl Trout I La e; a1' I S, 0 us- ~",,·tI'" I.awrence .. ~l.,t.IYn lI.n,leroon (Continued from Page 2) IC8tine; Robert Pattee, Ll of Poca- IIr"." ............ Join,.. Re"rtlon •. Ir. . ttontas; Wendell Pendleton, Ll or IIr An,I,,·w. .... .. RoIM' r, I'lnn.·y that you mtf'lld' to lea e and:;'·

III "'c'or: lren" fluMtilln Il'an~e for sub!ititute at employ. Storm Lake; Dean Rolston, Ll of ment burellu not I."tn!' thr.n S<lt-Conrad. A WOMAN uF' (·IIARACT.)ll .. ~ ~

S L Hy 1.".11. Au'or,'y Brown urdny, April 5. David ayre, 1 of Ames; Ruwley (',,"0,,110111" '11 1<<'11001 MAN"'GER

George Schu lte, Ll of Minneapo- ~I'·". Adam" ...... . A "11 .\lrC'ormkk ft , In D . S · Old talily. hi'I' O)ll(he-r •. Cpl""hl Lit 'I'our --~s, M n.;emmg mlth, Ll of 1M' •. P,·d,I" ........ Norm" Zimph., Iowa Union !\Iuslc Room Schedule f oledo; Harlyn Stoebe, Ll of lJum- M,· •. AIIJdKhl ........ EvelYli oaPlnOkl/ R ' t '11 b 1 hA ... th

ldt d Alt · d W I h L2 MrR, 1.('(' ........ , ..... '\Iilry Msu:ur eques ~ Wi e p tlj"L"U Ll\. e bo ,an .re 00 ey an, 'l'h.' 1",,10' ...... Elhel ~JA. n".onr'·kn. following timp~ except on Sai-D! Cedal' Raplds. \lr •. Il ll"·I,,gloo·("ro.. . ilP,hel Hhorrer d r I 'j 2 d

.\tr". Cllnf' ............ ~1ary n('h!J('r~ ur ays rom 0 p.m.;:In on

Plays-(Continued From Page 1)

)It Kirby .. ......... ... .rt'un ,\ll11('r Art"ur .•...•• ...••.• noa .. r fo'P1411ll1t11 ClirOlyn .• •• .. ,. },1IHY ('ullt-"ll lIrlhl), f1. l\lrhy •. ,..... 11 11 rnltl l't'tN.'4l' iln Jl{lIjltilh .. , •..•••. ,. Pttullnf> OlngprJt.'h

Dlrl"C'lor: i\tarlrtlfrL .llIln ft

l>rNDEnH ·KEEPI!:R~ Ry O('orgt' K"lIy

.\1 r. I .. n~e. " w."",u, "r Tuesdays from 2 to ;{ p.m. when ('hlll'f\C'tf'r ..... . .. l .. elJflI-> ('orkt>r), 1 eel '11 b

J)il"f.{'tor Lul'ilf' 1\1cl'l"e a p ann program WJ C pre-

Y.'·("llnK WHE,\T FIIH~

lly Ht'rmlne )JUll1l(\ RllIHlallu ('oliflulldlllf'11 Hr'1I0oJ

~lll.rtll1 \\."1.111.' ., .. Hnlwrt 'lcHw('{>ny l'r"uluWllill .. ... . (illld)'1oI ('I''''Y Anna Olsl'lI .••. ...•. , ClLrolyn i\lnor(1 A III II 11 .. :.. I'ltt ,·'('trow

IIJn·(.'lI)l·; io;th)'1 Hull"I"

sented. Sunday, March 23-2 tn 4 p.m.

and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, Murch 2·1 - 10 to J 2

a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, March 25-10 to 12

a.m., 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. I.AnY !o'I:O<G~JRH Wednesday, March 26-10 to 12

fly Olr1nn HughpH ~run""" High IIdlOlIl a.m. and 3 to 5 p.m.

:\1tI·:I~ftl~:!~A'(,· .. ~\:·~Mtfl(" · n.tl,. 1'lItrftolli no.:,.!',. Thu rsday, Mal'eh 27-10 to 12 l\1Hrnr'r ~11'" Pnr/liUIlIi" "(HI~."1t.lt a.m., 1 to 3 p.m. and 7 to!) p.m.

Wt·lhr1Utl HItCh H(1hool at". Altlrhl ••.••..•.• :\11/ rlf'1

}

Mr. Altlr1fl (0(0"(10) •. , ......... Wlllttl·,l HWIII'b:r'IHitllh,'r

)I~ .HUlIlptOrl, nel,hhllr .•..•..• UN1yr> 'r\ll'nlfl~{'PII

nlrp('l (II': ('" rhllll,· '·nl,.

wldn", •....••... VhKlllhl nlttmlhOlU!(' Friday, March 28-10 to ]2 tLln •

·\I~~~')111:ltl:.~rl'lll~'"'' ..... funl' Ilae KIiIf;Pr and 1 to 3 p.m.

\1:"I~"l'~~/'II!:~n . w:}.'J~(:·::dl~K' .. Bl'lIy (Jrr Saturday. M:trch 2!J-IO to 12 plt'C'l'Iul': ";-,1), I). !-.11-kltll n.m., ] to 2 p.m. and 3 to 5 )J,ln.

1'lmFl~·~·rl"":'."HlWJ) fin: l'fIo'TI~I"N'I'1I (',\ !'i 111.1·: I Sunday, Mal'(h 30-2 to 4 p.m. By fillra )ot "n" F. C. ~1('('1I1 ty I J1\ Ha )wl 1 .. 'It·lll and 7 to [) p.m,

HARRY G. BAR E , Rel'Istrar

Tau Gamma Tau Gamma £ifng Fest practiee

will be held Saturday and Sun-

year to n uti nl ,;wnding , Ithin tilt' top 10 p r ceJ1~ of Ute year's graduating cIa, ut the college of lIber"l art .

2. It is under,tood that the holder" III underlake profe. ional or graduate w(lrk in Harvard uni­versity, preferably in the low

day aftern?ons March 22 and 23 school. at 2 p.m. m l'oom 109, Schnetr r 3. Preference i given also to hall.. . . " . I candidat s who are in need of li -

C~I~: ed. movies of MeXican nancial a~~i~tance and who con-MOglC ~11J be shown. t the regu- template .pending more th!ln on ~:. meeting Monday mght, March I year at Harvard university.

SIDRLEY J OHN 0 • DEA • Gt;ORGE ' TODDARD PresldenL

Graduate CoU~ce Graduate Rtudents Red Cro Water a,fety

A Echolarship {If $350 is offered LiCe S:n"lnl' COllJ'le tor Men annually by Robert T. Swaine, The cour for nior life sav-L.A. 1905, to a ,raduate of thi I in:: water ~atcty instructr,!' and re­\lniver~ity who de<ir s to do pro- fre"her course for instructors ill fe,~iOlwl or other graduate work begin in t e fi ldhou&p pool Mru'ch ------------

PkO~ D.A.ARMBRU TER

take place Monday, March 24, /lnd UArL Y . BOA D; (3 meal ) { .lunen Tuesday. !arch 25,1 tnee Jl J .~clally t '. at from 10 to 12 a.m~ and 2 to "'30 me I nours, cannol be combmed

C BAJR.."" AN large number or men and women n eeded who em work ror

p.m. in {he large aym. 'I to Ilccumulation J('I1Mult, a

Boian Club Ph y n l EdD~l1oD tor Women I t~ mea a d y onlY for the Prof. R. L. King or the zoology All sophomore women who ha\'t' brier " ration or fart or it.

depjlrtment will speak to the 80- not passed the university swim- CASH EMPLOY fENT: A 1-tany club Monday, March n, at min, lest, and do no have a medi- thougb empl mflll payable In 4 p.m. il\ room 40&, pharmacy-oo- cal excuse filed in our (flce. must I cash is v unlikely, your appli-tany building. His .abject will be r gi r for wlmmlnr in the catIon will be taken Dnd tivm "Th Effect f Centrifugation on I pring term. co IiIderalion. Plant Cel! .. " PROT. aJORJf! CA.~ 0 that th regul r tud nt em-

PRE IDF.."T can ha'·e the prh .leg ot all ncns a,e urged

Rollrr katlnl' W.A.A. roller . kaling rink an­

noune new hours: Tuesd y, Thursday and Friday: 12:30 to 1:30; Tu day and Thursday: f to 5:30 p.m., and Friday and Satur­day: 8 to 10;30 p.m. Thl. is the

to helD ecure t e m ximum r:umb~ of ub Ilut ,All ubsll­

from noon , April 9 through April tu ., even though roo per-14 ure now to report to the un- I !tOnally, mu..~t report ID per 0:'1 for iversity employment bureau, Old approval and i&nment ot the DenIal BuIlding. I univer 'itv bUr!au.

BOARD .ACCUMUL ATI 0 : i L

Clarenrp ('Olll'lolhl.llPfl ~rhool I £'urq(ln IIl uh Ht'iw() I I Monday Murch 3]-10 to 12 Iddle ......... " .. ,., (Jeorgf" !-ill!"lllnn f'itE"lJlt .. ..... . ......... J\1>'lthR 1"'f'nn d 2 t 4 IAlIt,lIn< ...... ......... 1,lIy Wlnf'Y \'Pliltil .. , ........... " .. riley Wolr. a.m. an 0 p.m. _ _. I BL=O:.:.N..:..:;D:..:T~R::.., ---~"r--r--''''-'''-T"'.....-.----:-:nn111T:rrrrrr.-:-:---'--------..,

OaiJv Iowan \l' aut ds oJ

... * * MIMEOGRAPHING

MIMEOGRAPHING - Not a r y Public. Typing of all kindS.,

Mary V. Burns, Dial 2656. I

APARTMENTS AND FLATS I PURNISHED APT. utilities fur-

nished. Frigidaire. Dial 3702. -THREE ROOM apartment for rent.

819 River. Furnished or unfur­nished. Dial 6455.

FOR RENT-3 room apt. 706 E. College St. Immediate pos,es­

lion. Koser Bros.

2 ROOM, 1st floor apt. Close in. Dial 6336.

FOR RENT - Beautiful modern apartment, partly furnished, 4

large rooms, private enclosed fron t porCh, electric refrigerator, like a borne. Adul . Dial 5360.

W~Students' laundry. Solt water used. Save 30%. Dial

~797.

~~uSTUDENrLAUNDRY Shlrt.8 lOe Free tle)lvery. 8111 N

GUbel'\. Oia' 2248

STUDENT LAUNDRY'S yours for

* * * CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING RATE CARD

CASH RATE or 2 days-

10c per line per day

3 days--7c per. line pe'r day

6 days--5c per line per day

month-4c per line per day

-Figure 5 words to line­Minimum Ad-2 lines

CL A <::lSIFIED DISPLAY 50c col. inch

Or $5.00 per month

I All Want Ads Cash in Advance Messenger Service Till 5 p.m. Counter Service Till 6 p.m.

Responsible for one incorrect insertion only.

Cancelus~)ns must be called in betore 7 p.rn.

DIAL 4191

* * * PLUMBING ----HEATING, ROOFING. Spouting,

Furnace cleaning and repairing of all kinds. Srhupp<'rt .mr! Kou­delka. Dilll 4640.

PLUMBING, UEATING, CooditlOmng 01 I 58~(I

City Plumbin"

'N AN'fED PLUMJ3lNG AND beating. Larew Co 22? I!.

Wasbmgton Phone 9061

ROOMS ~'OR REN1

PLEASANT w(>Il fUl11ishcd 3 room I apal'tm<;nt with bath - pl'fvute

entrance .lI1d garage, wet sirle week days. Call 7421.

FOR RENT-L<lrge double room, first floor, quiet. Couple pre-I

ferred. Dial 6301.

ONE HAU' ROOM for student' boy. Dial 7241. 112 E. Blooming­

ton.

FOR MEN: One double room $9. One double room with cooking

privileges $7. 221 N. Linn.

FOR RENT-Single room {or mnn Dial 2445. the asking. Ask through The

Daily Iowan Want Ads. Results the Classified Way - Dial 4191 loda,..

~===========::!I FOR RENT-Large double room war.m. Men. Dial 2066. 727 E. FOR SALE

Ct.KANINO AND PH-ERRING I FOR SALE-'29 Model A coach, $20. Dial 7291.

DANCE INSTRUCTION

Combination Study Lamp & tl Tube Radio $17.95

Use Budget Plan - U - - h W - \ Fire tone Home & Auto

sc t e ant Ads Supply Stores

_ (Across from Reich's) ~~~~~~g~~~§~1 Dial 492.4· 22 S. Dubuque

I~==~==========

Don't Let

Him Get

Away!

Don't lol'e him for want

of lh(l right hait

- A I(i1) f'rti8e.

in Dailv IOW81i .. WANT ADS

Dill14191

Washington.

ONE - HALF ROOM for student girl. Dial 7494, 604 S. Clinton.

rwo DOUBLE ROOMS. Close to campus. 620 S. Capitol.

• HELP WANTED

A UNIVERSITY STUDENT {or summer vucation work, either

young man or young woman. Sal­ary $175 for th" summer plus bo­nus. Mail full qualification to Suite 6, Capital National Bank Bldg., Iowa . City.

, MOVING

-----------For True Economy In ~~ovU1g Service

- Dial 2161-

THOMPSON TRANSFER CO., INC.

c. J . Whippl!!, Owner

FURNITURE MOVING

MAHER BROS. TRANSFER for efficient furniture movIng

Ask about our WARDROBE SERVICE

DIAL 96!)6

TAXI? REMEMBER ...

"The thinking fellow calls a Yellow."

VEl-LOW CAB CO.

Dial- 3131 -Dial

S TUDEN T S NE E D H ELP!

IF LITTLE J!;LL'iB!;AN fINDS OIJr I'M NOT OLD EiNOUGH 10 D~JVE A CAJ2. SHE'I.L N~ DATE ME AI'I'I MORE'

BRICK OPENS ' THE PUMPS

HE HAS BUILT

IN THE

FLOODED LOWER DECK

OF THE STALLED

TANK

SAY, Tl'EllA,..·5INC£ YOU VJ()tI THAT AUTOMOBILE, '(OUR MIND AND YOUR COOKING AREN'T PULLING T~£R!··· ··THE5£ WAFFl.ES YOU MADE, A?" SWELL 'RE·~EAP5 fOR. A TIRE!····ANDTHI5 ro'FF'EE IS so 5Tl<ONG,

I HAD 10 POKE HOLES IN IT 'FOR "c",,, ....

THEC?EAM!

PEAR NoAH - WOUI..D A RUl2IeER NE.Cj<. RU~

IF He: SAW A '-ITTL-E RUBa~ ~UCj<., TRUC

RUBl'ER ·?_-..T_'" -... ~. PEAR. NOAl-l- TI-iE ONI!.S THAT MAKE. THEM­SEL.VES SUCH PIU-S N~VEJ2. NEE:O TO ~RY AC30UT ANYONe: SETTING CI..OSE: E:NOUG/-l To ') SWAL-L OW THe:M \.IR.AH D&:AL.. ".ASl"ClNIA ~ ,..;G.

, PAGE EIGHT THE ,DAILY roWAN, IOWA CITY

;35 Appointed to Advisory Board Cancer Control City High Debate Restaurateurs C · Squad Ties For T GR ' '.

Navy Repre,entative Contacll Local CAA.

\ ommIttee Has Class B Honor 0 et emIt Drive in April Iowa City High school's second On Power Bill

For Student Piloll Arrangements with local CAA

officlals for the selection of stu­dent pilot material sometime in April was made here yesterday by Lieut. Comm. K. C. HuUman, St. Louis, representing the U.S. navy.

MaYOL' Henry F. Willenbl'ock, President Virgll M. Hancher and 33 other prominent Iowa City and university oCricials have been ap­pointed as a 1941 advisory board to the newly organized Johnson county executive committee co­operating with the Women 's Field Army of the American Society for' the Control of Cancer.

A local drive in connection with the National Enlistment Campaign will be conducted by the Johnson county executive committee Ap­rill to 30. The committee's main duty is to promote educati9nal campaigns by use of pamphlets, speeches and lectures. Two pamph­lets, "Cancer Facts for Iowa" and "The story of Cancer for High ,schools" are now available.

debate team tied for th il'd plnee with the G(llesbul'g, Ill., squad at the invitational ij division debate tournament in Pavenport yester­day.

Members of the team, coached by E. J. McCrary, are Bob Lubin, Helen MarIas, Bonnie White, Rita Douglas, Betty Noble, Dick Qpfell, John OpteD and Leo Greenfied.

Art Proehl and Betty White com­peted with students from 11 other schools as contest judge~.

Last debate for City high before the final meet March 27 to 29 at the university will be with a Mus­catine high sohool team here Wed­nesday.

-------

Gas, Electricity Used In Foods Processing Now Ruled Tax Free

Iowa City restaurateurs will rEceive a 21 months' rebate from the Iowa City Light and Power company on all bills lor gas and electricity used in th~ aetull'i pro­cessing of foods .

In a leHer to Roland Smith, president of the local restaura.ht cwners gr'Oup, Secretary PaullH. Martin 'Of the Iowa associat10n said the state tax commissiCtl 'had given approval to. the plan. I

The remissi'On grows out I'OI a

Lieut. Huffman flew here from his home elly, arrivlng at the Municipal Airport shortly after 9 a.m. He sald that advanced in­formation concerning the course may be obtained by writing the U.S. naval reserve lI1ght selection board, New Federal building, St. Louis.

Seek Workers For Defense

F. J. Snider, county S\lperinten- ture, March 26, 1939, which pro- P oyment ul'eau Evans. special act of the I'Owa l~Sla- Em I B dent of schools; R. E. Reinow, uni- vided restaurant owners wit gas fo Classify Skills

Members ot the executive com- vel'sity dean or men; Ade~aide L. and Electricity tax free,:p vid­mittee are: Dr. Pauline V. Moore, Burge, university dean of women; irg it was used in foods pr ess- Of Local Eligibles chairman, Johnson County Medi- Iver A. Opstad, City superinten- lng. \ , cal Society committee for the con- dent of scpools; Lois B. Corder, Iowa City operators wlll i re- Director William E. Barnes 01 trol of cancel'; Dr. H. Dabney Kerr, director of university 5chool of ceive the refund dating Ifrom the Iowa state emploYJllent serv­head of department of radiology, nursing; Dr. George D. Stoddard, pHsage or the act to D~. 31, ice yesterday called upon the Iowa University hospitiJl; Dr. Everett dean of the university graduate 1940. f I City employment office to assist D. Plass, head of obstetrics, Unl- college. ' Martin said operators should in the re-classifying of all eligible ver.sity hospital. Mrs. W. R. Horrabin, president file an affidavit with the' 'power men and women available for na-

Mrs, H. D. Brice, Johnson coun- of P.T.A. co~eil; John J. Swaner, company giving a reasonable es- tional deelnse work. ty captain ; Mrs. Lewis A. Bradley, state representative; AHa Hiltunen, timate of the amount of gas and W. H. Simpson, mal)ager of the deputy captain; Mrs. E. W. Paulus, county nurse; Sister Mary Rita, electl'icity used during an aver- bureau here, said his oflice would local board, and Mrs. Clarence G. superintendent o( Mercy hospital; age month's operation. remain open from 8 a.m. to 12 Strub, local board. Ray L. Helt, Solon superintendent Bla nks for computing the noon each day to hanclle persons

Lieutenants will be chosen from of schools; . the Rev. Llewelyn amount 01 power used in food desiring to I'e-register for possible advisory board members to assist O,:",~n, 'presJden~ .of Iowa City processing may bc .procured at work under the 20 biljion dollar in carrying out the campaign . .l\Urustel'lal assoc~aj;jOjl. . the power company. _ government program. Each lieutenant will have charge Mrs. E .. '1'. H~bbar~, pre~lde~t Estimates show that on a $50- "It is necessary lor the office of a county sub-division and will. of Iowa CI~y Women s. club, ~l- a-month bill for the past two of production management to distribute literature concerning thu~ Cox, dlrec~or cof rl1~t Caplt91 years, the rebate wQuld Ilmount ,know how many skilled workers symptoms and contro l of cancel'. 'Nahon~1 bank; M.I·s. Mllrtm Peder- 1.0 approximately $24 per opera- are available throughout the na-

. . son, director of local Red Cross ; tor. ' tion and what their past experi-The annual enlistment campa~gn Rabbi Morris N Kertzel' univel'- e h b " th t t t d '. d ' d t k·t 'bl f ., nceas een, e reques s a e .

1S eSlgne 0 ma e I p0S81 e or, ~ity school Qf religion. In ordel' to facilitate the work anyone desiring to help to do sO RET I I C·t R F W S by worldng with a branch of the ' wcoe . ayor, owa. I y ev. . • utton locally, Simpson suggested that

Chambel' of Commerce prestdent; I o. . leaCh person bring a written state-field army or enlisting 01' con- 01' H th I C·t J ' To fflclate Today to au, owa 1 y .unlol· ment of his , work abilities over tributing one dollar. The money Ch b t C d t ' 11 b am el' 0 ommerce preSl en ; At Bowman Funel'al the last 10 or 15 years to assure 'WI e used [or educational pur- ·LcRoy S. Mereel', state senator; "close classification." Included in poses, research and direct aid. !"Irs. AI·thur V. O'Brien, stqte eOITI- the ' report should be the type and

Advl~ory board members, be- mander of tho Women's Field Funeral service for Mrs. Belle size of machines operated. sides M ay 0 r Willenbl'ock and Ar~y for tbe Control of Cancer; Bowman, 70, who died at her son Director Bal'nes, undertaking a President Hancher, are Dr. fl'ank LOIS Lang, county nurse. Edward's home in West Lib~rfy survey oi. Iowa's availaole skilled L. Love, pres ident of Johnson The R1. Rev. Msgr . Carl H. Friday, will be held at 2 o'clock workmen for notional defense County Medical association; Dean Melnb. erg, S1. Mary's. church; said the re'glstration was purely' Ewen M MllcEwen C lleg f this afternoon in the West Lib-

. , 0 e 0 me- Maunce Dever, CoralvJlle ; For- voluntary and promised no cer-dicine; Dr. Pauline V. Moore; Ro- rest Allen, University Heights; erty Church of Christ with the tain employment. bert E. Neff, university hospital Robert Adams, farmer ; V. M. Har- Rev. F. W. Sutton officiating. The local branch of the state adminislrator; Judge Hawld D. sha, Oxford superintendent o( Burial will be in Oak Ridge ceme- office is located in the community ____________ .. schools, and E. L. Dickinson, Lone tery. building. II' Tree superintendent of schools. -------

Mrs. Arthur Y. O'Brien, of Iowa Survivors include foul' children, The Phi 1 i p pin e Archipelago CAMPUS

GUEST

THE WEEK

JANE NUGENT

Miss Jane Nugent draws the weekly D and L award 101' the honor that she has received from the women on the Iowa C a In pus by being elected U.W.A. president. Jane is a native of Oak Park, IUinois, a Junior in the College of Lib­eral Arts. She has been very active in extra curricular ac­tivities ... serving in the ca­pacity 01 Business Manaller of Frivol and at the same time maintaining a high scholastic average.

Doug & Lola of the D & J, GRILL, favorite Rendezvous of the Cam­pus I,eaders, congratu· late this week's winner. Please stop in for It meal "On The House"-your choice of the menu.

City, state director of the field Edward of West Libel'ty, Joe of boasts of some. 2,000 kinds of fish aL'my in Iowa lor the last three Wilton, Mrs. Nellie ROllers of - the richest variety found in any 'Years should be contacted for fur - Jackson, Mich., and Mrs. limy single comparable area of the ther information on the campilign. Bowman Riley of Medford, N. J. world.

============================~=

,

. .

ligHf all • evening for buys good •

Enjoy Yf,)Ur ping-pong 01' table tennis twice (U muck

with good ligbting. A IOO·watt lamp over the table

~08ls only one cent for nn eveuing's play. For

belpfl,l) ~hting suggestions, ca)) the

Dial ~191

® fA!i::J \? tJjj .~

@®~ ~ ~~1l~\tl ~ ~ . \,J/NI\t\E. :.sCULLy

-You should always have a jar

01 cookies on hand lor the family to nibble on between meals. And /lere's where the PASTRY PANTRY comes in.

l~~~~') The y specialize in .. b a kin g delicious home-made cookies--"the kind grandmother used to make." Dial 3324, 111 East Burlington.

• • • POOl' old Bob Johann really got

his dates mixed ... Thought he had a date with Martha Lois Koch for the Club Cabaret . . . didn't ... thought he had a date with her for this week end ... didn't ... s tayed in Des Moines.

I •••

Spring is here! The birdies are a-singing and the last of the ke is afloating down the old Iowa river. You are getting that old yen to remain out-a-doors, and throw away those~­books . . . shall we say, "$pring-fever." ., 0 Perhaps you have all'eady taken out YOUI' favorite irons, restrung your racket . . . all ready for your first work out. Spring into a YELLOW CAB to take you to the courts and golf course. YELLOWS are dependable, courteous, and mOl'eover safe. Don't give your­self a track-workout in walking over to these sport centers, but Dial 3131 and ask for YELLOW. Remember it's a "Thinking Fel­low, that calls a YELLOW."

• • • Won de r how Becky Johnson

handled the situation this week end when Chuck Waldron, her Des Moines love, came to town . . . Diek Brecunier, Phi P si is on the other end.

• • • "Top down on your motor car"

is part of a song and such a pleas­ant song these days if one has a motor car with a convertible top. Otherwise, one might just be lost

tpin the Easter pa­rade. NALL'S used cars have an ap­

N peal to studen ts who are looking fol'

same. They're guaranteed, re­conditioned cars now at lower prices because the supply is greater than it wil l be later, the choice is better, and the time has come for the spring race to be­gin. Get in the groove and stop at NALL'S. . . . cause if it's a new one or a used one ... NALL'S have it.

• • • At WILLARD'S, with Spring,

comes something new and mighty neat. It's panorama mesh, a new

material that's dressy, :001 and practical. You'll love one two picce dl'ess in brown mesh. It has a long fitted coat of the same material with pearl buttons and I dainty lace around thc neckllne a n a pockets. Others have

jaekets, but they all have the ~ook for an Easter paradc. Polka dots in brown silk make for a tricky little spring frock and WILLARD'S huve thcse too ...

• • • Jackle Doran, Theta siren, has

cleW'ed hcr deeks lot' the spring season by rcturning the (Ive-l1rm­ed star of Ted Wolf, Sigma Nu . ..

• • • MI'. Spring will be giving you

an Jnspection from head to foot ... lind what will he Bay? Don't let him catch you with winter shude8 ot hose with postel ski rt and sprinll shoel Meet Inspection Ilnd receive a full 8IIlute by wearIIli SEARS Purple hose. 81ARS have the hose in soft sprinll shades to blend with the hues In your skIrt. .. In sheer, full-fashioned hose. Q<!n't get a call-down by Mr. Sprilli .. . so call In to SEARS for your spring hose.

• • •

D.S .... Well those initials could stand for a number of things such as ... 0 as in Drug . . . S as i Shop ... DR SHOP, a friendly little p h arm a c y .... c'.'A'_M' which is anxious to ' supply you your drug and vitamin wants-3 S. Dubuque at Iowa Ave.

• • • Once-married Sid Smith found

himseII working out a speeding fine in hard labor }i'riday after­noon. Ask Sid and he' ll tell you what he thinks of working on II

chain gang. · . ~ Looking for good sport ond fun

with people you like to be with? Drop in at the DUCK PIN BOWL. ING ALLEY and bowl a few

games ... It's a~ game of skill that ~ r will give yOU a real thrill w hen you rna k e your first stl'ike . . . Besides Q being fun, it's good (01' the con­stitution. Phone 9927 for rcser­vations.

• • • The Irish went out together on

St. Pat's day. One Irish la.,sie camc home with the Irishman's S.A.E. pin. Shure and it's Pat Hogan and Danny Whalen we'l'e talking about.

• • • College men on every campus

are casting landsliding ballot:; ror the new 1941 spring sui ts, top­coats and sport coats such as are being shown now at BREMER'S . . . A stock packed full of the snappiest sport coats this side of

dressed.

5th Avenue ... cam­els hair, tweed, plaid, plain colored tailored coat. to be worn with slacks on .my occasion. BREMER' suits reek

./ with class, they mal,e each man what wears one a camp1J.3 best-

S'timc now to discard heavy overcoats and to don a light weight topcoat . . . For the smartest or these, you have but to sce the large and over!lowing stock at BRE­MER'S. Coverts, tweeds and cam­els hair that arc something to talk ab'Out and only 22.50.

• • • We wonder If Junc Nugpnt will

havc hel' cake ulld eat it, 01' if she' ll pledlle now. The Pi Phis and the Thetas are wondering too ... All's fail' in love and war and campus poUtics ...

Srf\rr - .

In the spring, a young man's [ancy turns to thoughts of cokes in the afternoon and thoughts of cokes in the afternoon mean cokes at the HUDDLE. You'll find

Spring breezes into season, with the announcement that OREINiS, the women's apparel shop, has completed re-decoration and mo­dern IZIl tion throughout their store.

\\ rr q n 1 way s a With their store decorated In the , ~ u y young

~(j ti)\ :.': 0 I lege

~- ./ -~rowd tak-

~ing Time

~ 't~')ut [or the II! .':!1' .~cr.~ ~lI UDDLE ...,,;.-"-';~ .~ ~~.-:.(~ . . . cause

it's Iowa City's finest restaurant ... your own lunching headquarters for breakfast in the morning, lurlches, dinner~ or coffce I,lte at night. It's right smack in thc middle of town, handy cnough [01' betwecn classes and before the curfew at night and serves the kind of meals, the like of which, you'll find in no place its equal.

• • •

sPting theme, they have stocked themselves with sprine dresses for all occalions t hat s pel 1 love linea, smartness and style.

Walls ot soft pastel shades are the back· grounds for the Callfor· nia "cotton parade" of frocks fou nd at OREIN'S. Standing "at rest," are

the luclous sort plaid suits and single skirts that are the cssenUals fOJ' a collegiate wardrobe. EvCII swinging llnd swaying at their "1'C',t period," on the hangers at GREEN'S are the sprlng·hued date coats thnt are screaming "umph" and "spring-tra-Ia." You'll have a 'battle of deciSion to malte when

Among those who will heal' the you see GREEN'S vast assorlment call to Hrms this June al'e: Julius of spring dresses, skirts, sweaters Kunz, Steve Swisher, John Wil-I and blouses. Iiams and Bob O'Meara. Reports GREEN'S have prepared them· from Louisiana and Dave FocI' tel'l selves for you ... so that you can are cncouragi ng. Says he mJnag Ill'poare yourself for spring at occa~iona lly to have a Gab) GREEN'S. time, and what's hard about thut?

• • • Sec yourself as othel's see you

-in 0 picture. Do nllt delay any longer-make an appointment with AND ERSO 'S STUDIO, imme­diately to have ,10 up - to - date portrait of your­sclf made. Then you will have n really good pic­ture On hand to use When thc occasion demano!,­for gifts, jOb applications, remem­brances, and many other things. I\cmcrnber~ ANDER O,·S ST -DJO.

• • • Thut's Jo lIamilton's B ta pin

you see thes doys on Jan Water­bury, delectabl D.G.

• • • It':, a rCa I pleasure to eat out

when you are sure of getting good food and service. You con be sure of getting both at the PRINCE S

NO. I. They ~\,..: greet you ' \J. w hen you

. come, bel'Ve

I you co U 1'­

I teously with _ . the be t food

ill the housC, nnd make you wllnt to come back agoln soon. Remem­ber the PRINCE S, whether it's 11 hamburger you want 01' a two­inch T-bone steak.

• • • S ems the weather'd pleasant in

Des Moi ne Cor Kay Kirby . , . went to Des Moines Tuesday, came back Thursday, sleep Friday, and went to De. Moines Friday night. Why did you come home, Kirby)

• • • Casuals and saddle! shoes, snn·

dais and huarache, every kind of campu, spring and sUffiII)er styles in footwear all at prices that will be music to your ears -styles that are differ nt. yet the same . .• sites for every pre!­ercnce at WARD' ... And gi I'l~, let not N y Ion ~iii5jii!!~ hose be out or question for your budgct ... At WARD'S Nylons arc I;til1 only $1.25 ... lovely sheer hosiery tha t weul'S like no!hillf else ... Make WARD'S your hal· iery headquol·tcl'S, for there YOll will find the bcst for less.

• • • Mary Hellllman, Delta Gamma.

wus a Iillle conCubL'<i Friday nJcht wh n Pete S ip and Dan Stoelt· ing, both of whom :<lhe's been dat· ing, round thc same telephone at the same time, called her and both ... lrpo her for late dates .. . Mary tactfully refu ed both and accepte<l apologies in the morning.

• • • TOWNER' IIrc uwaiting to_

w r (III ye,ut· pl'oblem, you sullo cor.!cious co llell girls. Por \JII 'Ult's the thing, this springl ... TOWNER' suit arc (eminine btIt not (ussy; casual and easy to well. The tallol'ed sui t is sorter-eVID nllitury and nnvul 'ushions urc feml­tlz d. Shouldet·s arc I ~ s pronounced, woist/in 9 nr I 59 '1ipp('d, ~kl rt1l 'I pl{"utcd . . brightly co l or c llalds, cllmeL, h8 • us chosen IJy \<teCe!! Quecn), wccd and navy" rOWNEIl' s ui t 8

II r' ITt any, and 1'OWNKR'S s ui t s ure thIs year's [0 hlun finds. Thlf ar{" lovely and will put thc flnit' Ing touch on your Easler wa" ' robe.

prlng's h r und the weaUttr'l rlghl fol' light I' 1"0llL~, In brl8htlr .hodes. TOWNER'S ~lock I'eSPiII' .ienl in co lorrul reefcrs, bel" bucks, full or box .• . ~ youthful cual , pluld 01' plain .. · II I' Just whn t YOU co-ed» o~ Nu vy or black eoata ate u tfI populur with ' plushes of while" COllllr and pockets, but wh.~ the style, the shade or the IfIIA TOWNIJl'S have It.

• • • Caught "slttln' 1n the spring 8un," tbil lucky girl can lee Il Campus Consultant about gettinll her ticket fOl' "Tob8CCO Rood ," atarrln, Charley Grapewln and Marjorie Rambeau al th STRAND b ginnlne Tftursday.

BUltlllo l! crl p ... MIMS Daughton when Howard I dldnlt let the buketbiU down Illst night for the eurrf dlnn r-danc .

@fA!}:] \? {Jjj .~

®~~~tl1rt:l~~~ 'vJ/NI\t\£ :SCULLy

'--always have a jar

hand for the family to nibble on between meals. And here's where the PASTRY PANTRY comes in. T he y specialize in b a ki n g delic ious cookies--"the kind used to make." Dial

Burlington.

Bob J ohann l'eally got .. . Thought he

Martha Lois Koch Cabaret . .. didn't

t he had a date with week end . . . didn't

in Des Moines.

here! The birdies are the last of the ice

down Ihe old Iowa are getting that old

out-a-doors, and

have already vorHe jrons, reslrung . . all ready for your out. Spring into a

AB to take you to the course. YELLOWS

courteous, and Don't give you1'­

\{-""Or\{o\l t in walking sport centers, but ask for YELLOW. a "Thinking Fel­a YELLOW."

r how Becky Johnson situation this week

Waldron, her Des came to town . . . , Phi Psi is on the

on your molor car" and such a pleas­

days if one has a a convertible top.

one might just be lost in the Easter pa­rade. NALL'S used cars have an ap­pea I to students who are looking tOl'

guaranteed, re­cars now at lower

the supply is it will be later, the

Ic)', and Ihe lime has spring race to be­

the groove and slop , . . cause if it's a

used one ...

, Thcln si ren, has /01' U,e spring

' ng the fl ve-[\1'1n­Wolf, Sigma Nu ...

a full wearlna SIARS

sc. SEARS have the sprlnl shades to blend

hues In your skir t. .. full-fashioned hose,

a call-down by Mr. 80 call In to SEARS tor

hOlle,

• • •

ANP Sr{Aff-

D.S .... Well those initials! In the spring, a young man's could stand for a number of things fancy turns to thoughts of cokes such as . . . D as in the afternoon and thoughts of in Drug ... S as cokes in the afternoon mean Shop . . . cokes at the HUDDLE, You'll find SHOP, a little ph arm a c y ""G/_~' which is anx lous to ' supply you your drug and vitamin wants-3 S. Dubuque at Iowa Ave.

• • • Once-married Sid Smith found

himseU working out a speeding fine in hard labor Friday after­noon. Ask Sid and he'll tell yoU what he thinks of working on a chain gang. · . ~

Looking for good sport and Iun with people you like to be with? Drop in at the DUCK PIN BOWL­ING ALLEY and bowl a few

. " II ~ a I way s a " q a y young

~(j if) ~~r~~d I ~a~:

~ing Time

.. ~ " .. ~ ~')ut for the I;; .. ~ '~"JI n U DDLE ~ ...... -~.. .~ ~F' ~<,: . . . cause

it's Iowa City\, fine~t restaurant ... your own lunching headquarters for breakfast in the morning, lu~ches, dinner~ or coHee I"t at night. It's L'ight mack in Ih middle of town, handy enough tor between clas es and befOl'e the curfew at night and serves the kind of meals, the like of which, you'll find in no place its equal.

• • •

:I

Spring breezes inlo seasonl with lhe announcement that OREEN1, the women's apparel shop haa completed re-decoration and mo. dernlzation Ihl'oughout their store. With their store decorated in the sPring theme, they have siocked

themselves with sprlnc dresses for all oeC8Sron. t hat s p e lJ loveliness, smartness and style.

Walls ot sort pastel shades are the back. grounds for Ihe Califor· nia "cotton parade" 01 frocks found at GIlEEN'S. S landi ng "a t rest," are

the lucious sort plaid suils and single skil'[s that arc the essentials foJ' [\ collegiate wardrobe. Even swinging and swaying at their "" ,t period," on the hangers at GREEN'S are the spring-hued dale coats thai are screaming "umph" and "spring-tra-IlL" You'll have a

'battle of deciSion to make when games . . . It's a~ game of skill that • r will give you u "cal thrill w hen you m u k e your first strike . . . Besides 2

Among those wbo will heal' the you see GREEN'S vast assortment call to arms thi s June are: Juliu 10f sp'ring dresses, skirts, swea\e~ Kunz, Steve Swisher, John Wil- and blouses. Iiams and Bob O'Meara. Reports GREEN'S have prepared them· from Louisiana and Dave Focrt l' I ~elves for you ... so that you can are encouraging, Say~ he manage J)l'Poare yourself for spring at occasionally to have a Gables GREEN' .

being fun, it's good (01' the con­stitution. Phone 9927 for reser­vations.

• • • The Idsh went out together on

SI. Pat's day. One Irish Ia;sie came home with the Irishman's S.A.E. pin. Shure and it's Pat Hogan and Danny Whalen we're tallting about.

• • •

time, and what's hard about thal?

• • • See yourself as others see you

-in u picture. Do nClt delay any longer-make an appointment with AN DE RSON'S STUDIO, imme­diatcly to have

College men on every campus an up - to - date are casting landsiiding ballot;; for I portrait of your­the new 1941 spring suils, top- se]( made. Then coats and sport coats slIch as are you will have a being shown now at BREl\fER'S 1't'ally good pic­... A stock packed full ot the lure on hand to snappiest sport coats this side of Usc when the occasion dema

5th Avenue ... cum- [or gifL" job npplications, l'emem­els hail', tweed, plaid, brances, Dnd many other things. plain colored tailol'cd Remember! ANDER 0 , ' T­

• • • coats to be \Yom with DIO. slacks on any occasion. IJREMER'S suits reck Thllt's Jo Hamilton's Beta pin

you sec these dllYs on Jan Water­bury, dcledabl D.G.

dressed.

/ with class, they make each man what wears one a campll3 best-

S·time now to discard heavy overcoats and to don a light weight topcoat . . . For the smartest ot tbese, you have but to see the large and overflowing stock at BRE­MER'S. Coverts, tWet'ds and cam­els hair Ihat <Ire something to talk about and only $22.50.

• • • We wonder if J<lnc Nug£'nl wili

have her cake and cat it, 01' if she'll pledge now. The Pi Phis and the Thetas arc wondering too . .. All's lair ill love and war and campus politics ...

• • • It':; II rcal plcatiure to cat out

when you are sure of getting good (ood and service. You can be sure of g tting both at the PR1NCE

NO. 1. They

11\,.:: greet you • \.~. w hen you

come, berve , You co u 1'-

teously with ........... _ the be t food

In the house, and make you wan t lo come back agoin soon. Remem­ber the l' ltINCESS, whether it's u hamburger you want 01· a two­inch T-bone sleak.

Cauaht "sltUn ' In the spri ng BUh," Ihl» l ucky lirl can see a Campus Consultant about lettlnl her ti cket for "Tobacco Road," starrlnl Charley Grapewin and Marjorie Rambeau at th STRAND b glnnllll 'l'~ursday .

• • • Seems the wcathcr'~ pleasant in

D s Moines for Kay Kirby. , . went to 0 s Moines Tuesday, came back Thursday, slecp Friday, and went 10 Des Moines Friday night. Why did you come home, Kirby!

• • • Casunls unrl .addle slJoes, san·

dais and huaraches, every kind of eampu, spring and Sll/lU!)er

style' in footwear all at prim that will be music to your ears -sty II's thul nrc diffcrent, ret the same . .. sizes Ior every pref­erence at WARD'S ... And gir!R, let not N y Ion 'Iiii~jij!'" hosc be oul of Question (or your budget ... At WARD'S Nylol13 are stili only $1.25 ... lovely sheer hosiery that weill'S like nothilll else ... Make WAllO'S your hOli' icry headquarters, for Ihere yoo will find the bcst for less .

• • • Mary Hcnl.1mlln, Della Gamma.

was a litlle ronCused Friday nighl when Pete Seip and Dan Stoelt· lng, both oj whom she's been dat· ing, found the same telephone a\ lhe sume time, Cil iled her and boih ,,,lrl'ri her for laic dates . .. Mary tactfully refu ed both and accepted apologic In thc morning,

• • • TOWNER' IIrc awaiting tn a ..

weI' all your prob lcm , you sui\. conscious colicge girls. por lit suit's thl' thing, this spl'inll .. , TOWNER'S suits are feminine bill 110t fu~sy; casual and easy to wear, Th toilored suit Is soIter-e11 nilitQI'y and navlll ·ashlon. Ilr r mi­It?. d. houldcl'S arc I s pronounced, wulsllin H ar Ie. ' IIp]l d, t;klrts soft 'J' plrut d . , .

brightly color Jllllus, ellmel i ' U~ d1V~('11 by VTCCCIl Qucen), wcrd 11 n d navy " rOWNER' s u f t III'C mony, unci TOWNER' s ui t H

III' thl year's fashion fi nds. ~ re lov(,Jy lind will put the f\n'"

InK leu ell on yo ur Eo~ler wart­robe.

Spring' her lind Ihe wc.ther'I !'Ighl fill' lighter rOll Is, In brl,~111 ~hud M. TOWNER' ~toe k rellPfd' lent In colorful reden, ~I~ bucks, full or box ... !Il1I"

youthful coal, 1, Iuld or pl~I~_:..j · RI' Jus t whut you co-ed~ oro-­Novy or black coats are at ffCf populur with p lushes of white" coUaJ! and pock ls, but wh. lfII lhe sty le, lilt' shade or the llIiA TOWNER'S have It.

• • •

H.,v.,d H •• d U"., Aid to B,itain Pruident J.mtl 8. Con.nt of H.rv.rd University i. pictured " he urged 1M! tht United St.t.s pl. dg. itself to an .II-out effort of lid to Engl.nd 10 insure the def.,t of the A.i. power. in hi. testimony b.forl the ~nltl FOrlign R.lations Com mitt •• rec.ntly . . "c ...

. . , i. Ihis .Iunt which was forc.d upon Mervin Simp­'IOn. Phi T,u "lIO.''', durin!! the H.II W.ek p.riod.t tht Coli.,. of Willl,m .nd MirY. F",hm.n Simpton diel.r •• thlt A.h/nl out of , ptjl before f.llow .tu­clenll.llng. , f.llow pl.nty. but In • dlffer.nt pl.ce tlNn the old.fllhion.d Plddlln, did, 0i,<1t ""010 wRost

C.n.dian Cop. Dartmouth Slci P,i .. Doug M,nn of McGill University, Montre.I, spe.d. down the sid. of "Suicide Six" hill nil' Woodstock, V.rmont, to win the .lllom ric. It the D,rtllfOuth Winler C.rniv.1. Btd wII,h.r conditions .t D.rtmou,h cau.ed th •• kilns r'ctl to b. tr.nsferr.d to the tr •• cherou. Vermont hill . Mor. pictur •• of this colorful Clrniv.1 .te to be found on Pig. four,

01, ... Photo by Nufu.

This B •• uty Shunned HoII-flNoll The fun .nd thrill, of colle .. looked IIIore IlIurlng to Carol ... a..,.­III.n, Los An,ela co-cd who en,,,ed ,'" Un1""", of 0 .. 1Oft thl' Y"', ttltn did. CI"" \n \h. IIIO.,\tL 5potMtl by I tal.t scout .t • bel. I .. t 'umm" in Hollywood, MI" Che,...n ...... toM" on hit ICr'tn tat but pro __ of ........ nti.1 COlttrlet tal .... 10 .-~tr .w.y fro .. th •• c.d,"k life. c.a...... ~""'1If~~"

Where Spanish and American Cultures Meet American colleses have no corner on cute co-eds. The University of Puerto Rico sends this picture to prove the point. Shown draw­ins the Ions bow is pretty Gloria Ariona, a popullntudent on the Rio Piedru c.mpu~ Glob.

Fir.t L.d, Speaa.. at New En,land Colle, ••

Editors of the M.rsh.1I College Plrthenon reverted to the " town crier" method of presentin! the news when printers w.lked out in I dudl ine dispute. Dr.fting reporter Emmitte H,rrison Inc! Irmins him with I thrn-cornered hit Ind I hind bell, they selTt him out on the clmpus .nd into the popullr Student Union build·

I in9 to procl.im the news Coli ...... D,St" Photo by D .. ,.I

Mrs. F. D. Rooltvelt is pictured here with Robert Morgenthlu, Amh.rst COII'9' Itnior, .nd his mother/ Mrs. Henry Morsenthlu, Jr., wife of the Secretary of the Trtlsury, iust before she .ddressed the Amherst student body on "The Future of Amerlc.n Youth". She emph"ized the im· portlnce of "If ditcipline .nd individu.1 responsibility in ~ democrlcy.

Th.,,, Shoot. V.rb.1 8.".,e (ols.le Universily will this ye.r throw " shot Ind shell" It in,lilution. d whom its deblte tum argues the nltionll question , "R.,olved: Th.t 1M ~ lions of the western h.mi,pheft should form • p.rmanent union '01-mutu.1 defen,e". Shown Ibov. in Ippropri.t. settin9 .ft George E. Scr.a. lelt, and Edw.,d T. Schell. who will defend the union pl' lI

I

S I .... PI Si ..... , honor.ry physic. h.temlty, recently In.lll1ed Ib FOllrth lOuth ... tem ch.pter .t Th. (Ilidel, Th. Mlliliry (oU ... of South Carolin •. Thl •• roup photo .... lIk.n I ... ",.d·

iltel, .Fte, the In.lIlI.tion ceremony .

SMOKE O:f SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS

EXTRA .lJfILDNESS~ EXTRA COOLNESS,

LESS NICOTINE

than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested -less than any of them - according

to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself.

THE SMOKE'S THE THING!

Y £So, when you smoke the slower-burning cigarette ... Camel ... you have the plea In ":; assurance of modern laboratory sCIence

that rou 're getting less nicotine i'n the Jlnoke. ~ot onl y extra freedom from nicotine-but other important ex­

tras as well-extra mildness. extra coolness. and extra Aavor, too, for Camel's lower way 01 burning means freedom from Aavor­dulling excess heat and the irritating qualities of too-fast burning.

There ' economy in Camels, too-extra smoking per pack.

And by the carton. Camels are even more economical.

Try slower· burning Camels. Compare them by smoking them. For, in a cigarette. the smoke's the thing-and Camel's the smoke I

BY BURNING m' SLOWER Ih.n th •• ver .... of the 4 olll.r l .. r,ell· .. llln8 brandl .... td-Ilower th .. n any of I~ .• m-Camel •• 110 8he you • ""ok In. p/u. equ.I, on the ."e,.._, to

5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACKI

LIGHTS ••• MIKES ••• CAMERAS ... ALL SET FOR IIAMERICA'S MOST TELEVISED GIRLII!

Beauty, voice, dramatic ability­it takes more than one talent to click in television. And it takes mOTe tnan mi\nness \0 tI;~"" ~\\h

te\evision "cness ~\\e Read \1'. 'iI.

cigarette. "1 smoke Camels." she says. "They combine a grand extra flavor a nd extra coolness with the extra mildness that IS so essential to me."

SUCH A

, . -'

GRAND - TASTI NG CIGARETTE _ CAME LS.

AND THEIR EXTRA MILDNESS

IS VERY IMPORTANT TO ME!

THERE ARE NO "RETAKES" in televi­sion. Every night is first rnght. "That's the thrill of it," says Miss Read . "And the thrilling thing about Camels to me is that they always taste so good. I don't get tired of smoking Camels. And they really are so much cooler and milder."

The more you smoke Camels, the more tinei.

Strike Revives Old Custom

co-tds. Tht Univtrsity the point. Shown dr.w­

I • popul.ntudtnt on

Editors of the M.rsh.1I Collt,t P.rthtnon rtverted to the " town critr" method 01 presenting tht news when printers w.lked out in I deldline dispute. Dr.fting reporter Emmittt Harrison .nd 'rming him with I three-corntrtd hit .nd I hind bell, they sem him out on the clmpus .nd into the popul.r Student Union build­ing to procl.im the ntw~ Coli ...... D, •• " PhOlO by D.n .. 1

Glob.

here with Robert Morgenthlu, Amherst Mrs. Henry Morgenthlu, Jr., wilt of the

belore .he .ddrened the Amherst .tudent I"\,nl.rl.~an Youth". She emph"ized the 1m­

individutl responsibility in a democracy.

Th.,11 Shoot. V.,b.1 8.,r.,« Col9.te Univtrsity will thil ytar throw ",hot .nd .htll " It in.titvtiOlll.l whom itl dtbate ttam argve. the nationll question, "Resolved: Thal~. tion. 01 tht western heml.phere .hould form • perm.nent vniOft 101 ta.r mutuII defen .. ". Shown .bove in ,pproprilte .elling are George E. Sc~ leh, .nd Edwlld T. Schell. who will delend the union pl.r.

I,ll, PI 51.", •• honOf.ry physic. J"tlfnlty, rec.ntly In.lIl1.d III fourth lOuth ... tern chlpt.r .t Th. cllld.1. Th. Milltiry CoU ... of South Caroline. Thl. trOup photo wIIII".n " ..... ct· ., .her the In.tllI.tion c ...... ony .

THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING

EXTRA .LJ1ILDNESS~ EXTRA COOLNESS,

LESS NICOTINE

than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested - Jess than any of them - according

to independent scientific tests of tke smoke itself,

THE SMOKE'S THE THING!

Y E~ when you smoke the ,lower. burning cigarette ... Camel ... you have the pleaslOI' assurance of modern laboratory sCience

that you 're getting Ie s nicotine in 'he smoke. ~ot only extra freedom from nicotine-but other important ex­

tras as well-extra mildness, extra coolness, and extra ~avor, too, for Camel's slowl!r way of burning means freedom from ~avor· dulling excess heat and the irritating qualities of too-fast burning.

There 's economy in Camels, too-extra smoking per pack.

And by Ibe carton. Camels are even more economical.

Try slower-burning Camels. Compare them by smoking them. For, in a cigarette. the smoke's the thing-and Camel's the smoke I

IV BURNINC l!1ii LOWER Ihan the averill. of the 4 olhu IIlFtHt-aelllnl brllnd. IHled-alower Ihlln Iln), 01 I~em-Camela IlIIO Ihe )IOU

a amoklnl ,,'ul ecjual. on the averale. to

5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK!

LIGHTS ••• MIKES ••• CAMERAS ... ALL SET FOR "AMERICA'S MOST TELEVISED GIRL"!

Beauty, voice. dramatic ability­it takes more than one talent to click in television. And it wkes more than mildness to click With

television ac tress Sue Read in a cigarette. "I smoke Camels," she says. "They combine a grand extra Aavor and extra coolness with the extra mildness that IS so essential to me."

SUCH A GRAND-TASTING

CIGARETTE _ CAMELS. AND THEIR

EXTRA MILDNESS IS VERY IMPORTANT

TO ME!

THERE ARE NO "RETAKES" in televi­sion. Every night is first night. "That's the thrill of it," says Mi"ss Read. "And the thrilling thing about Camels to me is that they always taste so good. I don't get tired of smoking Camels. And they really are so much cooler and milder."

The more you smoke Camels, the more

EXTRA FLAVOR

. you'll appreciate ·the freedom from the irri­tating qualities of excess heat ... the extra mildness and extra coolness of Camel's slower-burning, costlier tobaccos. And you'll enjoy Camel's full, rich flavoc all the more, knowing - by the word of indepen­dent tests - that you're getting less nico­tine in the Jmoke (see above, left).

J. Pluvius CReigns· At ·Dartmouth·s 31st Winter Carnival

Towering more th.n 40 feet .bove the c.m­pu" "Heyderdahl", the I."est ,now sculp­ture ever constructed! sct the winter sports theme for the Carniv •. Heydtrd.hl Wit the ~rst Norwegiln ski jump.r, m.de his (jrst iump in 1547. This m.mmoth ice sculpture, higher th.n • three story building, Wit con­structed in Ibout two weeks, required the work of ,ome 30 members of the Dartmouth Outin, Club 10 do the job. (harle. W,isker, I,ft, designed "Heyderdlhl" Ind ,uper­vised the wor~ . "'c ...

- But.Fails To Dampen Festive Spirit Oldest Ind be,t known o' college mid-winter c'rniv.l, i, the f,mou, DII tmouth Winter (.rnivil. This Ifflir is tops for entert,inment.nd ,howm.nship, drlws students from .11 !)Iris of the country each tear. After waek, of the usull cold H,nover wt6lher, • frCl~ w."" ,p," brought tlin to D.rtmouth jUsl in lim. for (Irniv.l. The snow sculpture too~ • bt.lin, Ind snow conditions for the skiing events were poor, but the weekend WIS • hu,e SutClSl just the slm •. Even though they h.d to sit through I driving r.instorm, 2000 people wt on' snow-covered hillsid. for In hour to w.tch the colorful spectacle of Outdoor Evening. J. Plul/ius found th.t no m.tter how hard he Ilied, he couldn't d.unt the fun-loving sludents lind their d.l.s .

The grlC' Ind ski" nh ibited h.,. by Rog,r Simpt.r, D.rtmouth '42, won for him the .ki jumpin, tit/ul the (.rniv.l.

Richard H,mpJtud w.s the "t m.n on the campu, wh,. "d.t,", Joan Walters of Roc Minnesota, was named Q

of the (.,nival. She w .. It trom I I. rgl grou p of "ndl

,A,lve,. Schuylll, SumMit, N. J., ."d •• this .ki-joring ie. m.n ,ft" h, h,d "f.lI,n

"'. Up lut Not In louis KIIPerik ml .... this I'r-up thot for Duquesn. I. h. t,b lIOund the gUlrd of Simon 0""0. MOl Beck,,'. lonl ,.oel froM ",Id-court, with 40 ltCond. to play .... v. Duquesn. Unl­_Iv ' 36-34 victory oVlr Lon, I.Ialld UnlYefllty. A crowd of 18105 fin. wltn .... c;I thl. nip and _It blttI,. foocM ,

Fa;r Cherni ... Alice Wettm.n .nd Elsie Stahl arl the only two girl students .mong 2000 men It Polrtlchnic Institutl o~ Brooklyn. Both girls Ire chemistry m.jors .nd are shown sttting up .pparatus for .n explriment in .dvanced orgenic: chemistry.

0;1(11 Photo by Vas.'

Boots .nd shoe, of ." Porter, Oberlin (011.,. sludy with other school four students to mek. the

igns' At 'Dartmouth's 31st Winter Carnival

more thin 40 feet Ibove the clm-", the Ilr~est snow sculp­

set the winter sport. Heyderdlhl w.s the

ski jumper, mlde hi. first , This mlmmoth ice .culpture,

I three ,tory building, WIS con­Ibout two weeks, required the

30 members of the Dlrtmouth to do the job, Chltl" Weisker,

"H.yderdlhl" Ind .uper-work. ,",coo.

- But,Fails To Dampen Festive Spirit Oldnt Ind best known of college mid-winter clrnivlls is the flmous Dlftmouth Winter ("nivll , This Iffeir is top, for entertlinmenl Ind ,howmln,hip, drew •• Iudents from .If ptllS of the country uch yeu, After wuk. 01 the USUI' cold Hlnover weither, I frelk wlrm .pell brought ,.in to Dlrtmouth just in time for (arnival. The snow sculpture took I be.tin! Ind snow conditions for the skiillg events werOl poor, bullhe weekend WIS I hu~e SUCCISS

just the Slme, Evell though they hid to .it through I driving rlinstorm, 2000 people Sit on I snow-covered hillside for In hour to Witch the colorful spectlcle of Outdoor Evening, ) , Pluvius found th.t no mltter how h.,d he !tied, he couldn 't dlunt the fun-loving students ,nd their d.tes,

The 9rece .nd skill exhibited hm by Roger Simpter, D.,tmouth '42, won for him the ski lumping titl,.1 the (Irnival.

ColI'I"" Do .. " Photo by N .. hI1

Richerd Hempstud WIS the tit man on the clmpus " dlte", )01 n W.lters of Koc:IIeIIIQ Minn •• ote , wu n.m.d of the Carniv.1. She WI' Irom I 1119' 9'OUP of ClnClIO ..

"Iver. Schuyler, Summit, N. J., feed. I this skHor!"9 ice "'In .ft,r h. h.d "f.lI.n

Itt, Up But Not In loul. I(I.perik ml .... this 'Ir-up .hot for Duqu .. n, I. h. set. Itound thl gultd of Simon ob.llo. Moe Beek,,', lont pi ho.I "Id-court, with 40 .Icond. to pl.y, .flV' Duqu .. n, Unl­'tIIIty • 36-34 victory over Lonl 1.1111" University. A crowd 0111105 f.n. witntlMd thl. nip .nd hlek bettl., I\cIH ,

F.ir Chemi.ts Alice Wettmln Ind E/.ie Stehl Ire the only two ,irl students .mo~, 2000 men It Polytechnic 'nstitute o! Brooklyn, Both '''/, .r. chemistry m.jors Ind Ire shown settin, up 'pperltus for III experiment in .dunced or,anic ch.mistry,

Ois.1I Photo by Vosd

Boots Ind shoes of .11 description, were Picked IWlY by Bob Porter, Oberlin (oll.,e senior, wh.n he I.ft for three yetrs study with other .chool officii Is of "Free (hinl ". Porter one of four students to mike the trip, is a former varsity footb.11 center.

""<Of

-

~

" ,

o,P.uw UniVCflity .tud,nb hlV' .greed thet JI"''' Collin. end Wllter H."". he" thl IIIOIt ,n;oyabl. way of "worlei", th.ir Wit. throu,h coll,g,". Th,y Operlt. "Th. Runi.n Embuty', which I. I dele bur.lu with I contln,ntll urn •.

..

Around the Clock With a Champ d t the University 01 flollda

J hnny Joel is one 01 the most modtt ~u. tn1hen he's. bo\,blng, fighting o Cl: t whtn ht is in the 10~ enc ost "lftl htwtight division .11 KnoW

- e:doP (olltgiate bOlltlS Rghting in .t t '~tmen of that class .nd c.rried ~~bnny 'fol he h.s dusted off ~ ~he t~"!ltt:s~~'ies of pictules delPbic~ ~ ~tY off 'ht IIghtwtight c1wn ~ .~ne'vll,O~ the time he jumpS out 0 e In c

in the. lif~.?nlthh~~s~:.d~~~ i:~b:~K in at night. mornIng \ 1

u ••• G.n"'.r M •• hod. to G.t Thi. D", <'ow

It W!' .n ucftin. mome~t for PI Phi VIr,'nlt O.vl" nl,ht editor 01 the Indlln. Dilly Student, Indllnl Unl. ve",ty clmpu. or,.n, when Woodford Molt('Y, tIIlrei fro .. rl,ht Invlded the office with MV.,., P."hln. RIA .. office,., Vlr,inil .urrendered wlthollt • R,ht .nd MOllley d.ted her lor the .nnllll', U. Military Bell,

Hit Th.t Line! Dress these players in footba ll uniforms and you would h.ve I typical Iclion .hot of a hllfback st.rting throug h tickle. Rllph Vinciguerra of Noire D.me scooped up • loost ball and sllrttd through two N. Y. U. players in rtll football fash ion .

The, C.", 'he M.il One w.y to c.rn tilt" money .t Mt. HolyOke (olle,e i. to coiled early morning m.il between live .nd ,;x •. m. June B;III •• rdt .nd Eltlnor s.y are two 01 tbe elrly-r;,;ng colledoll

It WI. Delivered, Too A (I.m.on (ollc __ •• dmirer clipped thl' CoIefSicje DE ~Ictu,. of M.rth. P.tat out of (oll.gil'. 5octieoo Oi ... t Ina mlil.d the .bo.,.lett.r to h.r. ....... •• 0.. . ... It WII promptly d.live,.d on the Unlv.r. ........ ... ,. r .... ,Ity of Geor,11 campus. 0, .. " Photo bot lo. ________ _

Around the Clock With a Champ d t t~. University of Flonda

J hnny Joe. is one of the most m01est ~u. en~h.n he's. bobbing, ~9~tin9 o exee I when he is in the ro~ ene o.se rlnl hlweighl division .11 know

;;'n.d/ Collegi• lt boxers ~,9h~ing InRithh~ mli~tmen of th.t el." .~d e.r~ed Johnny for he ~'hs dusttd ~ff G.:n:s~fIe. fhis series o! pictures defPbc~ ~n th: off the !igh lwe,g I crown 0 • f the timt he ,umps oul 0 • in tht life of this modest e~.mp,obn, ~r~mat night. morning 'till h.', re.dy 10 ,ump .e In

I Yb,lnU DIYI~I nl,ht edito, of the 'ndlan. D.lly Student, Indl.n. Unl· MOII~Y, Iftlrel frO,. ,1 ,hi Inv.ded the olllee with stY ... , p ... hlnJ

'I~Ilthl .nd MOle',y deled he, for the ,nnlltl'. U. Mlliliry Bell.

*

Hit Thlt Line! Dress these pl.ym in footba ll uniforms .nd you would h.vt • typical .clion .hot of • halfback 'IIrting throug l.c~le . R.lph Vinciguerra of Notre D.me scooped up • loost b.1I and .lIrttd through two N. Y. U. pl.ytr. in ,til football fuh ion. Acme

One w.y to e.rn extr. monty .1 MI. Holyokt (olleg. i, to collect tlrly morning m.il betwten ~vt .nd six • . m. Junt Bil/h.rdt .nd Eltlno' Sty • rt two of tht tarly. rising colltctors

Arti.t Gtorgt Pttty seltCltd .It"ctiyt Royct Adtll p.lmtr, K.ppa Alph. Thtll membtr.t W .. hbuln (olltge , IS ont of Iht btluty Quttn. for tht 1941 K.w, W .. hburn ' • studtnt yearbook

It W II Delivered, Too A CI.mlon Collt .. t ,dml,er clipped thil ,..-L...:,.,a.... n: ... _I.w..-. , ~Ietu .. of M,rth, P.tel out of Colle, I... ~~ UI(Jt::X HA"OHAL AOvlUISING

Dilfttena mell.d the .bove I.tterto h.r. , 'I, " 0i'M • • ,'..... ... ~v~~~ " ... It Wit promptly delive,ed on the Un Iv.,· ........ MI... • • UI • ,... ... .............. "-. a...-,11y of Geo"I. ampul. D'll" Photo ... kn _-:-__________ "_-=*-:.:..:'.:' :'k=.1 ...:'-=.:A:=:,:I::..J

Tie. Worlcl Marie for Incloor Mil. Never h •• th.r. been. f.ster competitive ,crelch mil. run indoors Ih.n th.t ,I.pped · off bv Lesli. M.cMilcheli of N. Y. U. wh.n he cov.r.d the distlnc. in 4:07.4 to win th. Baxler Mil •• t M.dl.on Squ.r. G.rden. H. b •• t out W.lt.r M.hl, Wisconsin'. f.m.d runn.r, bv.n 'v.I •• h.

d ~ Why 'tllln'lde 011 cIa.,1 II~. tltl' ".y lou",.11tta M.rlon

• Elsdon, 11111., J" •• r .nd C.lherln. D.w ... II th.y acen ,h. ,. ... t .dlllolt of ,h.lr piper. Sprint r.ach .. M.ry 8.ld. win CoU ... In VI"'nl ... lIy. (:011'11'" 01 .... PIIoIo bY s •••

(inllmlclor Roberl T Iylor di,cu .... clet.iI. 01 P. (oll.ge', n.tionwide interoColI'S!'!1I On.·Ad~ writing Comp.tition with .Iud.nb Shi~.y KiItIM' Hel.n Stull . T.ylor, who gr.d".ted 11011 P.' 1933, Is off.ring • gr.nd pritt of S100 ..d wilo ,Ider the winning pl.v for poulbl. screeA

Iowa Fakes

Mec& Dysart'll TonlgM J In Medal Finals.

See Story on Page 6.

I~.-- '0.,0 City',

The Assoclut." I'rt' • IOWA CITY, IOWA

u",,,,,',, g Up Move With Heavy Troop Concentratio1lS on Balkan Front-

Leaders Threatened With Dea .------Approve Naval Work Program I Nazis Report In Two Ocean Shor~ Bases British Losse or Submittinf!;

o Nazi Order I Strike Called jPreSidCJlt Signs B~s 130,000 Ton~ I For More Improvements At Scattered Bases Train Takes

Ministers to Vicuna To Sign With Axis

B_V_L_L_E_T_I_N

(A report from Bel,rade said RaPlan war materta/s be .. an movlU across the Ca ucaSU5

frontle,r Into Turkey only a few bours after announcement of tile friendship a,reement.)

I BELGRADE. Yugoslavia , March

24 (AP)-Yugoslavia's leaders, called traitors and threatened with death for their submission, departed by special train tonight 101' Vienna to sign up the country with the German-Italian-Japanese military alliance. Th~ train, guarded by 50 secret

agents, departed [rom a suburban

In Huge Steel Defense Plant

WASHINGTON, March 24 (AP)

New Raiding S Of Synchronizing Battleships

BETHLEHEM Pa. March 24 -Legislation approving a $340,-." 526,283 outlay for naval works, M h 2A (

(AP)- A stnke was called late I including development of oUshore BERLIN, arc ~ today at the huge Bethlehem Steel bases in two oceans, became law Germans offiCially reported company plant where 18,000 em- today. day the destruction of at ployes have been worldng on de- The White House announced 30,000 additional tons of fense contracts aggregating more that President Roosevelt had sign- shipping, and issued an

ed two bills which authorize the eye-witness account ot how than $1,000,000,000. program. Other bills to appro- earlier "cat and mouse"

An hour aiter members of the priate most of the money are on had ended in the sinking CIO's steel workers organizing the way through congress. 000 tons by U-boats committee were ordered out, The measures authorize devel- by battleships - a new groups of pickets began marching opment of the Samoan naval base I technique. outside each of the plant's six main and impl'ovements at Guam, both The nazi story of the gates. Cbief of Police Ernest Stoc- in the fat· Pacitic, and in ALBslta, sea thus was in two .p",tim'Q

ker said there was "no trouble ::1Il0 northern bastion of the Pacific first, dealing with cu everything is ~el'Y quiet:' The defense, as well as shqre pro- and issued by the high pickets made no attempt to pre- jects in continental United States. itself, declared that U vent anyone from cross ing their The legislation also aull;lorlzes erating in the North line. expenditures for the development just knocked out 27,500

~tatiQ~ in an atmosphere of grav-

1

PolIece Escort Ity, and upon the Laces of the emissaries-Premier Dragisa Cvet-kovic and ~oreign Minister Cin- Force to W orI{ car-MarkOVIC - there were no

of Atlanllc and Caribbean sites two small ships aggregating leased [rom Great BritDin . For- tons had been sunk by mal leases for the bases are to Inaissance planes north of be signed at LondOn within the that in the waters of next two days by ,Ambassador land islands a John G. Winant and Prime ' Min- antman had been

smiles. ister Churchill. dive-bombing attacks;

Gloomy Departure AFL Workers March There were no flags, no bands, I Joseph Martme Mediterranean south

000 tons of shipping

and t\1e public was barred Irom Into Harvester Plant; the l;lJatrol'm.

Attaches of the British legation CIO Members Gather I WI-II Remalen announced almost at the same time that it was crowded with Serbs CHICAGO, Mal'ch 24 (AP)- G.O.P. Head who 'yVanted to enlist in the allied Hund!'cds 01 AFL workers mard1-forces . ed into the McCormick works oC

Vice Premier Vladimir Macek. ~ _ head of the country in Cvetkovlc's the lntl.'rnatlonal Harvcst~ com- W ASHlNGTON, March 24 (AP) absenc~, stayed beh ind to try to pany under the eyes of 700 police- -Representative Joseph W. Mw'­de~ with the internal disorder I men today but CIO strikers called : tin, Jr., of Massachusetts, agreed clearly threatening the country. for a "maSs mobiiization" of fel- I today to remain as chairman of

The Way Clear \ low unionists and contended "no the rcpublican national committee Technically the way for Yugo- one will walk into" the plant to-I aitel' the committee had voted un-

slav membership, at Germany's morrow. animously to reject his resigna-demand, had been cleared by re- A spokesman for the firm stated I tion. pIa~ment. ~I two dissident Serb that 3,223 employes went to work \ Because ot his duties as house cabinet m1Dlsters. on the day shiH, which provided minodty leader, however, Martln . W.ilhin a lew hours aIler Yugo- I jobs for 5,344, including office help said he would need a salaried as­

sIavla has signed on the dotted and foremen, before a strike spon- sistant or executive director to do line, pI'obably at noon tomorrow sored by the CIO Farm Equip- the main chores at the committee. at Vienna, diplomats fully expcct ment Workers Organizing Com-' He added he already had the pow­Germany will set in motion an mittee closed the big farm imple- er to name such a man and prob.

tacked and heavily <inlmRI1'"

The second eflig!l~~en)enl~, the Gcrmans termed hi that it was "probably SUCCCSs by cooperation ships and U-boats in fare," was sa id to have .. bout al mid-Atlantic.

German sutfacc Ilips we clared to have held off warships, including u t1eship of the 31,OOO-ton class" while submarines about beneath to loose pedoes.

Senate Oka Appropria

attack eon Greece: . ment factory three weeks ago. ably would do so in a few weeks, Seven BHlion Dolla Hat:dly had offICial quarters ad- The ~'EWOC demands elimina- although he had no one in mind •

mltted the irrevocable decision had tion of piece work, wage increases at this lime. I Btll Passed After bee~ taken to sign the pact whcn and rccognition. The organization Han'ison E. Spanger, national 2.Hour Discussion SllVIet Russia and Turkey were re- is on stl'ikc at three other Hal'- committeeman from Iowa, and \ ported by unoWeial but reliable vester plants in Chicago, Rock I State Chairmen Arch N. Bobbitt B RICHARD L TU 60Ul't'CS In Istanbul to huve a eoun- Falls, Ill., and Richmond, Ind. The of Indiana and Kenneth Wherry W...{SHINGTON Nt h ter blow rcady In case Turkey McCormick works has no deCense of Nebraska, were mentioned, Th t ' dD~ch f I h t r ht , - e senu e pa~se ,e ee, s emus Ig : orders but makes some parts for among othel'S, fo!' the post. 000000 lease-lend

These sources stud ~urkey an.d other plants with defense con- , The committee, \neeting tor the bill ' t d b RUSSia would reaIflrm their tracts first time since the November elec- r 670 t OYg y dU I friendship declaration of 192,6, I.l I . tions, avoided pollcy discussions : ~I .\ 0 tan,. p Iln~ WCI;

step toward Russian aid "shol't of and devoted its sessions solely RY I lOt mOl! ow , . 0 . '-----------------.,4f "1 T k FIB d M . DOBeve , v U C II 'Ion I n g Repr ••• n .. H.r School., wBArt tlor til' ey;. I ' I d' L renc 1 rea, eat to orga~lzalion problems. . Caribbean .

. 11: same ,Ime liS 1 Ip 0- Martm opened the meetl.ng With The action came u[ler For the Rrst till" In th. history 01 GIl... II\Ratl~ quarters h~I'e l·epol·ted that Allowances Reduced a plea that the republican party two hours' discussions and

Gr •• , which -1-t- L - -Ie to 1861, .L USSl8 had forbIdden export of "police and audit the new deal l ·t· d'd t h -.- UK - il t h . h' M h I VICHY F' M h 24 (AP) POS! 10n \ no so muc Houston w •• reprtHnl.d by • ,I_t 0 0 t e relc slOce arc, , mnce, arc administration to pwtect our coun- am d t The

J It cI b tIM the day Bulgaria signed with the -The government nnnounced to- try from financial political and :n t en ~te~. 1 1 Mary .n. Dawson w., ... et. ., axis, as an emphatic sign of dis- day that the daily bread ration social bankruptcy:: 'I ac ',_ co~s s e .. ar1e y

vance in the Balkans. grams (8.5 ounc(~) in Fl'llnce's oc- . Skull Fracture Fatal the ,many senato~s. Who h to CI"'f out the 1II1.lon. approval of Germany's steady ad- will be reduced from 300 to 240 I men"" 0 POSitIon rom

In a last minute eHort to pre. cupied zone, effectivc April I, and KEOKUK (AP)-Geol'ge Woods, \ agams~ t~e ongmal ve~t thc Yugoslav-axis deal Irom that it will be I(cpt ut 240 grams 26, Keokuk taxi driver, died yes- autho~·.lz~tlon bill, but fOI' gOing through, Bl'lUsh Amllassa- in the unoccuplcd zone. \ terday of a skull fracture sus- proprlatlon. dol' Ronald Ian Cnmpbell person- At the same time, meat will be tained Sunday night when hi s au-I T?C $7,000,000,000. fundi aUy delivered to Foreign Minister reduced 20 per cent-to 12 tickets I tomobiJe overturned in a ravine ti~n s largest peaceltme Alkssl\dcl' Cincar-Markovic a note of about 3.18 ounces ench pel' beside Highway 61 near the Dcs atl.on, would provide,

(See THREATS, Poge 7) month. I Moines river bridge. thlOgs:

Fresh Off the Assembly Line of Democracy

$2,054,000,000 for a neecssories.

$1,343,000,000 for ordn ordnance supplies.

$1,350,000,000 for of rniscellan(!o}ls industrial articles . •

Lessel' sums wcre inel tanks, for rcpail'ing and ting belligerent vessel' in can ports, for building 01'

wise acqUiring factories 01'

sitcs 101' the manu facture supplies, and (01' the expo administering the act.

Denmark Smokers Using Tea as R or Tobacco Sh(]

COPENHAGEN, (Via March 24 (AP)-You ca l your tca or smoke it the In Denmark.

Ersatz tea, a mixtuI'e oj and Hawthorne leavE3, j great guns at local markE canny Danes found it to as ,ood Ersatz for scarce becco.

Dr .... d In cowpunch.r .ttlre, r ... ·Ii ..... d Rlch.rd Row. .nlo'/l dtt 'prln, ,unlhln. wid! Myrtl. Wolfahohl on II.. C41II'p"1 01 T .11 •• (oU ... of Attl .ltd 'ltd",trI .. w.y

Jo. Appl ..... , K.ppe SI'IIII, ..... 0",.,., stay." In the Unlvmlly

An Increasing horde ot tanks such I tional defense program speed's up I partlclpalinl in man.~vers at Port II thJe&e are pourin, oft Uncle production 01 war material. Pic- Knox , Ky. Note varilJlle. type&. Sam's a:ssembly Hne as the ns- lured here are scores of tanks ,

The mixture is doubly by pipe smokers !linee' lt I~ tea substitute tind cannot I as tobacco.

dowlt in Klnttvill., T .... , Coli ...... Ill .... ",... bY MoIot_,,, 10 .Iu"y II loltt ., th.y cOllld, .... II.. be ... , 01 11..111.