Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1941-03-30 - Daily Iowan: Archive

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Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1941-03-30 - Daily Iowan: Archive

Davenport Wi,.. S&a&. Prep Tourne,

By 31-18 Count See 8&or, OIl P"6e 6. ailu •

lo .. a City'. M ornin,

IOWA CITY, IOWA UNDAY, MARCH 30,1941

New'paper

'tbe ~lal" prftl

Cloudy, Warnaer I IO\\'A-WU"IDrr east today; 10-

1~ID=orTO='" =Uo=wers=ln=ext=re=me =ta =1., ::!I/ _ col'er; _therly wiDcls toda .

VOLU IE XLI NU IBER 158

to Unite Reich Tells Nationals to Leave ~--~~~~.~~~--~~-- Province;It~iansQuHCountry

... ... ... ~WarThreat More Pertinent Than Politics'

Axis Yugoslavian Setback May Defer Tokyo War Entrance, Capital Thinks

hortage of Pilots Croat Leader Simovic, Premier

Delnallds Nati01~ Formed Regime of ewly ot Eaoer

Pre ent WASHINGTON, March 29 (AP)

- Dcspitc increasing German pres­surc On Japan to enter the war ag~inst Britain, the feEling grew in responsible' Washington qual'­tet·s today that develoPl'llents in YUlloslavia had tipped the scales allBinst such a step by Tokyo,

Chairman Georlle (D-Ga) of the senate foreign relations committee was one of those believing there was little likelihood of immediate Japanese action against BrItish far eastem outposts,

Adhere to A.tIS ' ZAGREB, Yugoslavia, Mnrch To Start Fight

29 (AP)-Dr. Vladimir Macek, Address Broadcast From Yaeht Potomac FotJaekson Dinnet'8

PORT EVERGLADES, Fla" March 29 (AP)-President Roo:.se­velt summoned Americans of every politIcal creed tonight to stand united in a determination thnt "with all our resources and all our

Those o( this view expressed belief the BaU<an setback to axis diplomacy would lead Japan to proceed cautiously and to weigh carefully the possible consequences of any action against Britain,

He told reporters that "the prob­abilities of an attack by Japan on Singapore have diminished ra­ther than increased during the last several weeks,"

leader of million ot Croat , was reported authoritatively tonight to ha\'e insisted that yugoslavia's new government publi h a declar­ation atcirmlng this kingdom's ad-herence to the axis oIUance.

The CI'oat peasant leader was said also to demand a declaration

power, we shall help tho e who block the dictators In their march loward domination of the world,"

Berlin reports have indicated that Germany wants Japan to at­tack Britain's far eastern naval bllse in Singapore, If the Japanese Qccept this advice, an informed source sa id, the United States un­doubtedly would take "immediate steps" to ~id Britain, The transfer to Britain of cruisers or other important American naval units was mentioned as a specific possi­bility,

The Georgia senator remarked that Japan "can not lose sight of Russia, and possible Russian in­terference if Jllpan should be in­duced to begin operations against Brit.ain,

, guaranteeing Croat autonoffi)'.

Arising Crom an "a Ulanee of dictator nations," the president warned, is a threat to America, il:s union, its democracy, and its cardinal principles of freedom-a thn'at which "draws more tightly around us day by day,"

But, peaking to :fellow-Demo­crats attending par t y rallies throughout the country, Mr. Roose­velt declared tbat to meet the ~reat nearly all Americans had n.<en above considerjltions of par­ty politicS and had remained de­voted to country and democratic Ideals,

The chief execulive sPQke by radio from the oUicers' wardrOOJll 01 the White House yacht Potomac to "Jackson Day" dlnner:s held to raise moneY for the democratic party,

Tokyo is believed to be par­ticularly concerned ovcr the pa:;i­tion this country might take in event of a Japanese-British clash. American policy, apparently hils been to kecp the Japanese guess-Ing. '

A. navy deparlment stalement of "no comment" rerardlnr the future mov~Dlents of a formid­able American naval force in tbe seutlt Pacific ama', has arou.­ed specula tlon lhat the vessels m\fht. remain indefInitely ill tbOR waters In order to exert "moral InIluenee" on Japan. '

"There is nothing in the present European picturc to reassure Ja­pan," he added,

Constantin Fotiich, thc Yugo­slav min ister, confel'J"ed IV i t h Sumner Welles, undersecretary of state, today on Yl!ga:;lsv events and their possible repercussions.

Talking with reporters after­ward, the minister sidc;stepped di­rect questions conci!rning Yugo­slavia's next move - part.icularly whether it would denounce or ra­tify the axis pact signcd by the deposed government.

Cimon p, Diamantopoulos, the Greek minister, also conieJ'-l'ed with Welles, He confined his ob­serva tions to reporters to an as­sertion that Yugoslavia's defiance of German pressure was most important in the Balkans because it meant that Yugoslavia was mas­ter in its own house.

of lhe air corps, testified betol'e shortage of pilot material for th{' the house miIilul-y atCalrs commit­rapidly-expanding United Statl's tce, Hc is pictul'ed with Represen-army air COI'PS, Maj , Gen , George talive Dow W. Harter of Ohio, H, Brett, letl above, i1cting chief committee chail'man,

TIle ellemies of democracy, Mr, BooeeveU a_rted, are "try­IIr 10 destroy 0111:' anlt,." usbIr II Ihelr chief wei POD a Jlro .. _ fllN\a 01 mereuinc' quanUty and YIIIenee. !cents 01 nlU.ii~m lind theic lin­

witting helpers, he aid, have at­tempted to exploit the natural love of Americans fOl' peace.

"They have repl'e cnt d them­selves as pacifists," hc said, "when actually they are serving the most

British Sink Italian W arship~ Cripple Others in War's Biggest Naval .Battlc

brutal warmongcrs of all time. PI S· h They have preached 'peace' in the anes Ig t same way the devil can quole &eripture, F · t C

"Of course, the purpose 01' all aSClS rews this has been to spread the terror Ad _ among us, The eUect of it has nft R' ft

.--------=-----------------------Sounds and Smells A.re the Sarne-

MEMORIES OF 1917 CAMP -0 hl ,Sol(liers A,.e Quickly Reminded

(Macek, who wa. ..tee Jlre-mler In the overthrown cabtDd of Drachla Cvetkovlc which slfned the three-power pad for Yuco lavla, was carried over In the new lovernmenl of Pre­u ,ler Oencral DUlI&n Slmovlc.

(III POlIUon, however. ba nol been clarltled, What eourse )\bcek decide. to Uke-whetber to revert to tbe opPOSItion or stay In t.he lovernment-lt ex:­Pect.ed to ",elch heavily on de· termlnlnr YUI'O lavia'. bome and forelln polley.) The leader ot the Croats, who

bul'ied their dtrrerences with thc Scrbs only In 1939 In a Croat. home rule agrecment, WD. expected, mcanwhllc, to remain lIent on all overtures that he be active in the ncw rcgime at least until he can go lo Belgrade Tuc day or Wed­nesday and Investigate the situa­tion at first hand_

Wlos and LOliea An important member of Ma­

cek's Intlmat.e circle a rted that the "ncw government has declded­Iy won I col'llidcnce ot all Serb but, has cost the con1idcnce of all Crollts."

Croats SIIY th re is a widesprcad feeling that tho coup was a Serb strOke directed morc again t Croatia than against the trl-par­t.1~e pact.

Nclt.her Macek nOr other Croat Peasant party officials ait.endcd the thanksgiving service cclebrat­ing youni King Peter's assump­tion of pOWel',

Croat suspIcion arc said to have strengthened extremlsts who been only to lorti!y our determi-/ on a s

nation," • * * * * * • * * * Coupling together a dcnuncia-I •

tion of dictators lind nazilsm with Adnuralty Announces a renewed promise of American 35 000 Ton Battleshl'p CAMP CLAIBORNE, La., March drill hours, Youths who left the cheaper than they can in nearby

• long have wonted an Independent Croatia and have contended that autonomy was a llction.

help for nations resb-tini them, I ' 29 (AP)-An old soldier slands heated apartments of their city- towns or than they could at home,

at Wanl Tim to Think Whether to B om ~

JUlHor Axi Parln r or Remain Aloof As People Desir

BY ROBERT T. JOH BELGRADE, Yugo lavi , March 29 (AP)-G rmany or­

dered a\l her national out of the provin e of erbia, Italian began leaving by the hundr d and Briti h women also were advi ed to go quickly a the new Belgrad ov rnment wrestled tonight with t.h probl m of keeping Yugo lavia non-bellig r nt.

There were indication that nothing ha!; been etUed yet -indication such as abandonment., on Berlin's order, of th Lufthansa. air line to B Jgrad ; ten ion in 11 diplomatic quarter ; n w Yug I v-GermAn com' r otion ; une minty in the Croat- erb situation and the rapid departur of foreigner.

One thing, howey r, was certain. Gen ral Du. n imovic, premier of the three-day-old r gim which ou ted the Yugo­lav signer of the axi alliance, is llot ag r to provoke a

conflict with anyon at thi m m nt. Simovic want time to r concile, if h can, wid Iy div rgent

Britain Knock At Back Door Of Nazi State

lay Hold On Key As Allie Prepar 4,,300,000 to Fi lIt

vi W~ on th cour, he hould fol1ow-wh th r to c d to nazi wish, and confirm ' ¥ugo lavis' junior partn r· hip in the axis or heed tho. e

of the Yugo lav rmy and people who ,houled aaoln. l il Thur&day aft r the o\'ernlaht coup whIch put hIm and youna Killl Peter 11 In pow r,

(R II bl, Ih ulb uno(fI I.at. advl from Istanbul Id thai Turk , n ural d b YIII~-II la' a \)0 u""au, hODed to

r a b an &6reemenl wllh Gf'r-BERN, SwIll: 'land, March 29 ny In rd r M Pl't"llen_ .. new

Balkan ",ar'r~nt. CAP) - Twenty-three y r: arler (Turke)" acrordln&' to thla the ucc (ul Salonlka campallrn of 1918, thc Brit!. h army PII In report, rxpe is the rooperaUon I knocklni at Gcrman,'s buck of YUIO lavla anet, perhap , door and hoplna thal Yu 0 lavill . other Balkan nations In an UD ­Which hol~ one of thl' key, will der landlnl thal If 0 rm.n)' aid in th openlni, doe not much In soutbe l.ern

What the new mililuy iovem- Europe none 0' tbem will aUack menl at B<l\iradc will do wl\.h lh G rmllln .) key Is a m lor uncertaInty. The cabInet held iI lona mec!t-

The In remalnlnl non _ axl' 1111 today, but an ottlclal -Latc-powers In astern Europe, I( they ment Id "only budiel matt r." joined lorces, coulrt challengc Ger- IV re dlscu' d, many with the greatest aggr ga- U. S. Mlnlst r Arthur BIl Lan tlon ot milltary Illrenilh Inee the had lon, prIvate con! rence Call of France. with Forei,n MinI. t r Ninole dur-

Allied quarters h v limaled ing the aft rnoon, havln, pr vi-that as m ny as 4,300,000 m~n ou.ly conferred wIth Preml r might be available (or th (ray Simovic.

the address was in many ways rc- 'Severely Damaged' back from this ollve-d.rab tent dwelling parcnts are comfortnble Company areas have becn span-I D f B d peUtious of other pl'cllldential city and rubs his :forehead and in tents and their faces are tough- ncd by endless lines of board e ense oar speeches in recent months, LONDON, March 29-(AP)-The thinks, "I have beEn here before." ened to the rain and wind, walks. The rough places on tile

The add~ess was deLiver~d at l'rl&ish nllvy aided b Grcek And he is pretty nearly right. Pretty soon there will be many drill fields have been pollshed I Settles Strike lhe conclUSIOn of a WeEk's fishing , y The ,other time was 1917. mOL'e soldiers here than the 11,000 uff. And, to most ot the men,

on the Brlti h I<ld . Orders trom nazi 1 alion tor n

I Tho valuc attachcd to Yug la- German exodus became pro,rc­vIa by both side I reflceted In I slvcl, wider. They appUed or181-the urgency of German dcmands nally to Belgrade alone, but were to know the Belgrad govern- extended laler to cover all erbla, mcnt's Intenllons and the JubiIo- the Serb province of YugoslavIa, lion with which the Brlllh ac- and broadened furlher lon\iht to claimed thc Yugoslav coup. Include the wives and children ot

trip among Britain's northern Ba- ,units and the RAF, at last has ' The sights and smells ana which 1'(lake up the 34th division. the drill field is the one trulY hama islands, Aboard the Polo- met the dwindling Hallan fleet sounds are the same; they touch Draftees from Iowa, Minnesota, important place in the entire 3,­mac, an Amlll'ican naval vessel away irom home base and sunk off memories :for the time-hard- North and South Dakota will be 000 acres which make up the anchored in BrItish waters, the at least ODe fascist warship and ened first serlleant who was filling out the division's ranks. camp, chief executive had signed lell.ls- htav!ly damaged several others "there" at the Marne, and for When ,the draftees come, the Here the soldiers of a new gen-

Fixes Cornell Dubilier Fight; Alii ·Chalmers Uuionists Fail to Work lation appropriating $7,000,000,000 in tbe castern Mediterranean, it the araY-locked colonel who first 34th must be ready to take them eration learn of the new war.

to aid naUons baUllng lhe axIs was o!1ici~ J.Iy announced today, wore the ,old bars of a second over, train them, So the 34th must Gone for most purposes is the powers, The admiralty and the RAF, in lieutenant in the LunevH1e sector. ' work fast-and working fast in close order drill of the armory. By THE A8SOCIATED PRESS

The cruise, Mr. Roosevelt said, p:ecemeal descriptions of this -- I the army means working long Gone, too, is the trench t.raining The deren e medIation board had alven him time not only for engaae~t-whlch seemingly The 34th division is encamped hours and working hard. of 1917, Today's Iowa guards- suceeeded lost night in settling the reereation but also for mcditation, was the largest. of the war-list.ed ,here. As far as the men know, When Iowa's troops first came men-and the guardsmen of all first strike on which it acted, 8

and he had "becom(' more than one lIaUan battleship, two to they are here for a Year, but I to Claiborne shortly after March the United Sl.ates-learn how to 20-day AFL walkout al the Cor­ev,r clear that the tIme calls :fo.r {Oil I' cruisers end a destroyer their immediate objective is a stiff I, they found a modern camp fight in small groups; how to nell Dl.lbiller corporatIon, South couraae nnd more courage-actIon, Ollll'lllllcd, Thls was followed by 13-week period of traibing which, which was about 80 per cent com- spread out over wide areas to PlainIield, N.J" but CIO unIon­and more action." the announcement that at least in the words of the martual, is pleted, which lacked many of avoid the danger of heavy cas- ists voted to continue their work

one IlaI!an ship had been sunk, to put them in condition to taKe what might be called the com- uaIties from "unfriendly" planes. stoppage at the Allls - Chalmers

ELECTION DAY-

I for Jowa CIt, 'or Coral ville

• for lJalvel'llly Jlea.btl

but wheth<:r It. was onc of those the field on short notice. forts of home, I Much of the training during the plant near Milwaukee. on the damaged list was not as- For the l88th and 13Srd infan- Now, a month later, most of three weeks that the Iowa guard A(ter neiotiotions In New Jersey ce,talned, try regIments lind for the l85tb I these comforts have been sup- has been in camp has been devoted Friday night and in Washington

Communlques emphasized that field artillery, all from Iowa, this I plJed, Regi menlal recreation halls to hardcning exercises-but eveh l~ t niiht, the board announced an rletall~ were as yet incomplete, training period will enter its fourth and canteens are operating, giv- more time has been spent 18k- agreEment by which the Cornell but that a big force of Ilalian week Monday. • I ing the men a chance to spend ing apart new and strange weap- Dubilier strikers would return to batt.leshlps, cruisers and destroy- Boys who left their farm homes what littJe free time they have ons and in studying the formulas work Tuesday and negotiations

Residents 01 Iowa City, Coral- era was Involved, just a month aio now are men I in an atmosphere which is pleas- upon which a major or a captain would be resumed on the wage ville and University Hellhts lIINIo~II' OperaUons accustomed to throwing them- ant, There is a tent theater where or a sergeant would depend to demands of the electrical workers WlU go to the polls tomorrow From Initial Inform?tlon ob- selves In the dirt durllll long they may sec the latest ,movies protect his command, union. to elect candidates to local of- tlllned trom the British naval ___ ~'_______________ The Allis-Chalmel's strikers, in lien, May we urge every commtnder, Admiral Sir Andrew deciding ugalnst ending their 68-eillible votel' In each of tl\,Ollle cunnlDfham, the Admiralty said Herring Says 'Tenth A venue Rei-ch Refuses day wall<out in the face of 8 re-coaununltles to cast his ballot. one be UeShl~ 01 the 35,OOO-t.on quest from Secl'etary of the Navy

Last November, we HwLlttorlo class, Italy's newest. had P La Cowboy' T rack.Ii T B G d d Knox and DIrector WilHam S. deawnstrated on I national ~en tlamalled and two cruisers rogram Ie 0 e oa e Knudsen. o! the OPM, aceused the lCaIe the democratic Interest 01 were "very sc:verely damaged" In , To Be Torn VI' two officials of conspiring to force AmerlcBns In a nationwide eleo- "neval opctations ot some ,1m- a "back-to-work movement." tloa. PQrtance," which bellan yester- DES MOINES, March 29 (AP) BERLIN, March 29 (AP)-The Seek Seearitr

let,Uie elee''' •• f ...... IdtD' d~, -Se t CI d L HIt NEW YORK, March 29 (AP)- th' d k f G In a statement, the union said f. !heae VIlI", 8'-'" II... "Ilal" .. nlalDlnc Ilallan na or ,e . err ng 0- The frontier spiriL definitely van- au oflze sp~ esmen 0 erma,nY its members would not iO back -.e 1 .. JHH1aDl .. lbe 01""0. IUVlvol'l have been repotW nlaht declared the great problem ishcd trom Tenth avenue today declared tomght that th.e reIch to work until they received the If u..e .Ia," 'hall 're ,he elee. ~..!IUIU..... br our IIlr- lacing the American people was . ' . ' I would not be provoked IIlto ac- security which "the United Stale8 ..... " local 0I11e1all la I.w. eran," l& ,~. "U JI¥I' &here- whether "we are willing to make Wtth the lost l'Ide of a city cow- lion against Yugoslavia by what government has promised us." It CIIJ, Coralv" .... Valvenl\Y for be 8lflUllled &hal a& Ie'" sacrifices to remain free men," boy. I they termed the machinations of added that the OWce of Produo-....... b7 'ho d&llelll of ...... OlIO IIaU.n Ih.Ip Jr. been "We, like the democracies of Riding herd on the last locomo- I British agents or the howls of Uon M agement bad promised to "-uia1&1ea. I .. all." Europe, are several years late in t1ve to puU fl'eight. along a Man- ,- street mobs in the Balkan king- force th \lIs-Chalmers manalle-

It', democracy all lhe WI)" The RAF middle east command our program ot national prepared- dom ment to accept a "union security" 1114 \he latter ph~ Is every I>l.~ annOUl'lccd that two Italian crul- ness and defense, We must exert hattan slreet, 21-year-old George I G~rmany, they said, can afford provision I! the union l\II'Ced to II bnpcrt.nt I. tho former, lien and a destroyer had beEn hit our every lnienulty to make up Hayde gave scarcely a "yippee" of to take hel' time and weillh in other proposed conditions for re-

Cut 10111' btUot tomorrowl ~~ectl)' with heavy bombs In a lor lost. tirpe." warning to motorists and pedes- caIro leisure the imPortance of the turning to work. W OIUtle. In the lonilln sea, between Praising Jackson as a president trians at intersections on the 13- upheaval which has turned out a About $411,000,000 worth of de-... Tax A ....... ee o,U~D8I , Greece and ijouthern Italy and who "had no patience with the block trail, But he waved his red pro-axis government and cast tense orders have been awarded l>!S MOINJS-(AP)-A lOuth- B,ppatently theBe communlQ.ues polley of appeaaement," Herring tlag solemnly, in keepinl with a doubt upon Yugoslavia's inten- the Allis-Cbalmers company. The

tI1I Iowa lealtlatllre opened. .1 all referred to one contlnulna declared: ninety year tradition, lions as to the tripartite pact, plant reopened and the rnanaae-drive In tho low. house y .. ter- .ct.l0II, "Everything for which Jackson There won't be anything left to which she sIgned only last Tucs- ment said about one-third the nor-~ to make tax ... Istance for No British 101181 were men- foullht and which, In essence, is I mark the route followed by day" mal day shUt rePQried. The CIO t~ bureau' ltd.ratlon. optional t10ned exce,pt for one RAI' bomb-I the American" way of life, 18 chal-I "Tenth avenue cowboys" since However, the s p 0 k e s m unclaimed no more than 100 of 7,8110 -.d of mandatory wltI\ the ej. whlc!, fliled to return to Its len,ed tor forc:ea rampant throu,h- 1850, as the New York Central warned: "Germany will not stand production workers were on the COiuIu., bUt, ", , _, out the world," " will tear up the tracks, for being insulted," job.

In order to obtain a foothold on German dJplomals. the continent for a blow ot Ger- All newspapermen, ve two many, Britain must, in the opinion permitted to remain with the dIp. of many trategisls, galn ace, to I lomatlc start, were Included, the Danube valley. The Oerman lelaUon 111M .. I.

The vital pOints leading \0 or to be laklDf an ext",mel, along thIs route arc: Llr t, th serIous view of InJDrlea lo naal Dardanelle, held by Britain'lI non- ass.lslanl A.lr Atlache Moser III belligerent Turkish ally; econd, the tumult TbUJ'1lda)' after the Nl , on the Morava river, key city Jlro-axls aU,nment Joft.rlllDeDl or sou (.1 east Serbia, held by Yugo- wa ca t aside. s lavla; lhird, thc Iron Gate, conlrol Concurrent with German)"s sus­o( which Is shared by Yugoslavin pension of air service to Yugo­and the Germans in RumanIa , and slav la's capital, the YUioslav gov­Unally, Vienna, gateway to old ernment stopped German river Ausu' ia_ lrllfUc In Its section of the Danube

Having overwhelmed the Ital- and military operators took over lans in Alrica, the Brillsh are leI'- telephone lInes in Belgrade. ryinll many of their veteran troops The governor 0' Croatia has­-repul.edJy 300,000 - across the tened back to Zagreb, his Pfovln­Medlterranean to GreEce. cia I capital, to report to Dr.

Board of COldrol Outlines Changes

For I. H. S. A. A. DES MOINES, March 29 (AP)

-Important proposals for consti­tutional changes and an outline of "present and future policy' de­signed to cover most points in a pending legislative bill were an­nounced here today by the board of control ot the Iowa High School Athletic association.

"We tried to work out definite reforms and changes to prove to \.he people we are endeavoring to meet the same situations 118 the leplaUve bill was desiiJled to meet," Supt. H. E. Ilsle.y of Spirit Lake, chairman of the board, said following a {lve-hour meelin, of the board and the association's 2:;­man representative council.

The lellislative bill, already passed by the senate aDd reported out by the house silting commit­tee, would pUt the association partly under state supervl:5ion..

Vladimir Macek, the Croat peasant leader, on what he had learned about the Imovie CoUl'SC,

ew A ault Craft U ed by ltaJian Navy

ROME, March 29 (AP)-Tin1, obstacle-hurdlinll craft 80 fast they can lay explosives alon&­sIde a vIctim and escape In a burst of speed were descrlbed in the press today as lta]y's new weaPQn alain8t British ahlppina.

Stefani, official Italian newt aaency, said these "SW'PrlIb.cb' lltlle" moaquito boats were the "naval assault craft" mentioned Friday by the h\ih command a6 having raided Suda bay, on the Greek Island of Crete., and sunk an "enemy warship."

Another attack on BritWl lhip­ping by airplanes-was reported by today'. war bulletin wbIc:b said three warships were torpedo­ed, one of them poeai.bb- havlnl , been sunk, and merdlant abips seriously dalJUlled-

, I ,\ I

PAGE TWO THE DAILY J,OWAN, roWA CITY ,

..4 Harvard Professor Discusses th~ Res.ponsibilities of Educators ill These Times-

'YOUTH AND A FREE AMERICA' (Tire !lailll Iowan presl'nl.~ Ilris 1Il01'lt­

illg a stillUllating di.~I'!/.~.~ioll of th ,'c­sponsibilities o[ /tigh/' /' crtltcalion in IIlesc times of rl·isi.~. P"ofesso/' TaylOl"s article app('ared il~ the IV pckly Magazine section o[ the CItf'i,~lial" Sl'ie111'e j1I Ollilo1' Nov. 2, 1940. Signifira1lIl!J, 'What the author /tad to say then /ta,~ becomo c'ven 'l'liore impOI·tant.

("Y01tth mu1. (l fr1l'r,(> Alncl'ira" i.~ "('­printed 11)it1£ the lcincL P "mission o[ 111(' Clu-1stian cience jjf onito,·.)

'you'rH AND A PREE A~1EIU A' by

O. n. 'rAYJ.OR

Department of Economics, Harvard Universily

Can we, who teach in the count.ry's col­leges, and our students discuss among our­selves tile problem of Am ['ican policy in relation to the war, in the civilized temper l\nd intelligent manner which bcfit the com­munity of ed ucated men Y At IIarvard, as the new college year gets lmc1er way, there is anxious hope in tllc minds of some of us that the level of debate will be highcr here than it wa last spring.

At that time, "I\liti-Wilr" ktudents were jibing bitterly at «wa)'-mongering" profes­SOt'S. And there were profe . .'ors Wl10 joincd with numerous "old grads" ancl other mis­guided adults, in condemning students as cowards, a unpatriotic, or as eynicR, defi­cient in "moml fi he)'."

Now many of those .~amc young men Itav(! ,·ctlll'7J('d to collcge. A1llllhcy comc back natm''ally fceliny somewhat sensi­tive and l'esentfl'Z over the failm'e of thei1' teaclte1'S mut clde,·.~ to give them light on the quos/ioilS i1~ theil' minds, in.~teact of vivisect'i01J, oj' thei,' ('harrac­e 1's. Hence we teachers al'c 110W con­fronteel with this fact: 1mle we can convince them tlw.t ['-1elldly, [t'ee, in­telligent disc1lssion with us, on, all issues ,'elating to the 10(/1', is entirely 1JOssiblc, our (Jff ectivcness as tf!achel's will be at an end-ancltve might as wen l'esign our job,~ (mel get 1Jl(lCeS (i[ we can) in the m'm!!. r believe the p[·oblem has also a more gen­

(,I'al public in tet'est , because so many adult cit izens, us pal'ents, I 'Iatives, or friends, facc the Hame dil<'llllna in dealing with these young U1(,1l which must be faecd by us "war-mon-

g ring" pt'of SOl'S. All of us who fe 1 cleeply about the W81' and American defen'lc have Ihe sam!' temptation to lecture or scold tll08C younger than olll's('lves, who l' fuse to sharp OUI' feelings. We tend to assume thl1t they mllRt bc moral defecl iVCR, because they m'e /llow to accept Ihe "all-ont" policies fol' nat ional dcfem;e and aid to Englahd which seem to liS the obviously nl'C ssary, ex­clusive meuns to an imp rative nd : the pre­SCI'vlltion of a libel'al civilization faced by hal·bariRI1I. The shift from discllssion to at-

twe 11 U lind the stnclentR as are any mm'al qll('s!ioIlS, Hilt differences of outlook upon 1 hI' lattrr also ('xist, alld 1 am not propoHLng that wc drop discl1.'sion of them. On the contrary, I RA id above HUlt th()1' atc two rea­ROll); agAinsl I).' 'liming thnt "antiwar" !\tu­rlt'ntR mns! be' moml d feCtil'cs. 'fhH,t they InDY of1 11 )' j('('t ot\)' fn~tnal or predi<ltive jU<l:,:mCl1tS is one ot' tliose l·on,OllR. 'l'he othe t' iH flllly ilR ih\portAllt, lind iR , Rclrl()m grnsrcd.

• • • lacks on theit· charaet ('Sis a Rhift that we WIH'llcvc)' a cli~a'·l'c mcnt cxtends 10 moral often find almost i'l1Pseapable. BuL all the issucs, it is incumbent on us adults to re. same it iF! unwarranted, fot· two 1'ea.ons. m(lmhrl' that lhc morsl judgments or the

In tbe first place, tbe necessary grounds of our own posItion Include not only our .YOung nrcd not express tlLeir mOl'al charac-own moral Judgments, but also a number I ('I'S, but always may be and orten are ne-of factual or predictive judgments. Most 1')11 i ['(>(1 orin ions, not yet integJ'ated with "antiwar" students agree wltli us about tbe th riJ' charllrt (ll~, Mrll's Cllltl'llctOl'S )IOt only vital Importance of a free America; It Is tcnd, when formed" to shape, I heir mOl,lt1 be-over the questions concernlnr future proba- li l'f. 'l'hOil' ~hal'acters ai'c also, oll'ring youth blllties and tbe course of action most likely and Pal' into ac1nlt life, s]c)\vly fOl'm d by to preserve a free America that the sput whlltE'vrl' 11'101'111 h(llie~s Or unbelle1A they may comes. We believe (1) That a liberal Iellm f'rom ot he)', and. ret'111n'. Our concern America will bardly surVIve If Germany liS the ('flchcl~ a <'I cIders of young men conquers England, unless In tbe meantime who.'!' ideas on mOl~al issncs we disapprove we enormously increase our military strennb shouW' 1)(' to rCH~on wit)\ them ort i h()~e iSSues and our will to fight. (2) Tbat by Ilvlnr all in a joint pmsuit of Wllllt t make bold aid to England sbort of war, wblle arming to <'all n'1or~ll trllfh , and ,'vc s\}o11l(1 in fa il'-America, we may be able to avert war', and Ilrs: do it witJi~;Ll't cv~r implyjJ\-g ndvcrsc tbat no otber course 15 as likely to do so. jll(lgmel'lts on theil' ¢Ilaract<irs, oi' turl)iltg And (3) tbat even if, by adopting tbls c1i~cUfisi(m of the intcilcctllal ttl'lll'its of ideas course witb tbat bope, we Instead ret Into into mel'e I'Cp'l'oo'f and exhorea,tion. war with Germany (wltb En,land as our ,'I/I'el!1 Ihfl/ app"n(lch La the I1ltlrlll i,~-ally, and after raining time for prepara- .~I(rs l/lltich /lll' 1IJM' 1',~ misill{J i,~ PIlI't of tlon) , \\Ie shall then still bave a. better ottr /('111'/(1'11(1 [II 11('li01l. Tn, the .Q1Jltet'c, 0/ Qhance of preserving America. than Is or- (~1l IItoral or ethical proOlel11s, 0117' whole fered by any otber course of action. tradition o[ higher teal'nintl has long But these m'e predictivc judgments, ba ed becn ,~lidinrJ, ] hetieve into' /1l .~tdt() thai

on what to us are probabilities, to our young cxpl{/l'n.~ biilh the m 'r6spbn,~ive'less of opponents only dubious hypotheses. lIow- Illrill)} .Q/ lulents to 111ilitant irlcaliMn, and evrr certain they may :eem to us, we are 1'he iI/ability of many tea-eltel's to ft~nc-bound in fairlless to meet honest ills 'ent with ti01t in th /i('Zcl a.~ inteU Ctual leadel·s. a}'~ument in terllU! of the factual evidence, 1'lte vrl'lj belie! that study of moral bc- ' un mix d with extraneou moralizing. Most lich is l'eally lJOssib7C and vital Tta.~ been Antiwar students think they have valid rea- givinG way to a railieat skepticism on sons for a much lower e timate of the dan- ati!; l)oint-a tendency to treat all moral gel' from a victorion!) Germany. And they .inc/gmcnts not as judgments, true ()r

think we ignore what they rl'gard as the faist', but as mel'e exp"essiolls of tlLe dif-greote)' dllngcr, that going to war (no matter In'ent ta.~tes b1'ed into mcn by their en-who wins), Or merely militarizing America, 1Iit'0IWtelltg, (lnd beyond the range of in-will d{'stroy libel'aliRm in this country and teller/nat interest. A high proportion mllkl' 0111' final state as bad as it would be of cnllc(J1' t/>achers were, prior to the war, if G I'mlllly conquel'rcl HR, indnrtrillofil1{J students with that 9l10ml

'fht'se qUl'stiolls a1'e aR much at iHsue be- slrelJ/il'islll. AncL now their sudden re-

(Mserti01~ o[ st1'On[J mm'oi C01lVictions comes a.q an abottt-/ace which only lJ11zzles mid exnspemtes .qtltd(ll1f.~. ~'hc truth about such teachers is thot their

former tendenCies, to scoff at nil al'dent iMalll, )leVer really o\.-rnptcd the in'nCl' spri"r.s of tMir OWIl ju'dgmmlts a~ d eply as til ir tll8ehin~ (\0. n'"upt d those of theh' sCl'dcn{~' ~t1 d~ents, .!\foral; convictions" re­mained do1'1l1nn,'t und r th p~se of sltepticlb1)l, to ' emerge in full vigor wilen eonft'onted b~ the pre. cnt crisis. But iIi scolding their' students now, sueh men forget tJJaL they n evel.' in the past gave the sludents the means of acquiring or of undet'stal1din~ the ideals now demanded or lhcm. No emotional bind-I gconing process wil! now prOduce Ruch moral convictions in studenl.s. We hav madc the lattN' into skeptics, who mllst be shown the grounds on which our moral cOllvictions 1'cst\ befOl'e they will accept them. And 1he power to discover Olld d:isclo e tho, e grounds in in­tellcctulll eli cllssi()n is what we teachers must 1I <\<'I\li1'(I, if we are to reach the stnc1f'nts at all.

TblS question, moreover, of the proper spb~res of faltb and of skepticism, Ig a cener.} dJltnuha lor ou liberal c!lvlltta­tlh\i' as a wbole, fn One ImPo~tarit sense, t'h'e Ini4!lIectual oore of the liberal traclUlClh' Is' eo\1imllted to skepUcisml It asserts the r1rht" ahd chliy of ea~ IndMdual to test till valldUy of every aDel'6d truth betore acci~j)~'blR' It. Tblt' a~"lIes to' moral' as well as to other propositions.

• • • Rllt 11\(' idCllI of tcsl ing all id-eals is not

tllll dogma that JJO tests can bc applied to tbem---that there iR nothing in them to tid te. :t~Ii-t11at the very notion of Illl ideal's validi't:,i is withont meaniJlg. When t'hat skepli ~i~lU pl'dper 10 liberuli~m if; perverted into 1~(\ negntive dogma that all ideals Ol'e "bunk," it works io undermine the liberal faith as a w1tole, and destroy the vitality of Olll' civilization. Where the process has gone far enough, liberal1,ati()t\s are ready for the nllzis to mop them up.

Tn our la, t analysis, we cannot defend or presl'r"e out' liberal civilization nnle, s we discover udcq\late, valid reason, for regard­illg the liberal, moral faith as true; and un­less we can make the study and teaching of those reasons and that faith, by ftoecibq\tiry and discussion, an effective part of Ill! cdu-

, cation, ----------------,-------------- -----------------------------------------------

NEWS BEHINQ~~ THE NEWS .. ,,, ..

probably has a good story to tell, but she should write about life as she knows it in boxcars, not attempt to glamorize it with the lights of New York. He thinks it is unnecessary to generalize too

Ken McCormick broadly, as many authors do, in 'Meet John Doe,' , Is Alter Stories selecting locales for plot aclion. If Mr. Capra's Lated

1I0pe, Dorotby Lamour, Una ~Ierkel, Eric Blore .. There's no problem here--un­

less it's hoVl the "Road to Sing­apore" crew is going to top this one for zany, wacky spirit. Made purely for laughs, and very suc­cessful at it-with Crosby as the promoter, Hope as the perennial stooge in his money-making schemes, and Lamour as an AmericaI'} goid-di~ger in the jun­gle. Of the usual songs, Crosb,.'s "You Lucky People, You" is catchiest. Don't miss it,

By PAUL MALLON. By GEORGE TUCKER you're writing about a small town By ROBBIN COONS

NEW YORK A . t iIi Minnesota, make that picture HOLLYWOOn-"Meet John - manuscrlp so true to Minnesota that readers

(Distributed by Kina- Features Syndicate, Inc., reproduction in whole or in part strictly pro­hibited,)

What Faces Hitler In the Vardar Valley

'" WASHINGTON - The stl'ategic importance of the Varda]' valley approach to Greece is the under­lying inspiration. for Hitler's des­perate efforts to control Yugo­slavia. He must have this valley. U he cannot get it by treaty, he will bave to take it by force.

There are two simple indisput­able military reasons. In the first place he cannot rescue Mussolini in Albania without it. In the sec­ond, the flanks of his forces in Rumania and Bulgaria are expos­ed dangerously at the Yugoslav frontier so that he cannot move into Greece until he clears this valley.

These simple military deduc­tions convinced all authorities here from the start that the in­nocuous treaty wrung from the repudiated Yugoslav government at Vienna woutd necessarily ha\(e to lead up to German occupation, They are now iurther convinced Hitler cannot bflCk down and must invade.

THE OAflY IOWAN Pub4shed every morning ex­

cept Monday by Student Publica­tions Incorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa,

Fred M. pown~n, Publisher John J. Greer, Advertising

Manager Loten Hlckerson, Editor

Morty T()nken, Managing Editor

Board of Trustees: Frank L. Mott, Odis K. Patton, A. Craig Baird, Kirk H. Porter, Deming Srtllth, William Sener, Donald Dodge, Robert Kadgihn, Irenr FJ:ederickson.

bunt that will take Ken McCor- will know that this couldn't have DOe." Screenp~ by Robert BRITISH-YUGOSLAV CHANCES mick !rom Manhattan to the Mid- happened in any state but Min- Riskin from story by Rlcbard

The Yugoslav army is .not high- west wheat fields and !rom the nesota. That is what he means. Connell and Robert Pre nell ly regarded, but neither was that Great Lakes to the Pacific is un- On a manuscript hunt such as Directed by Frank Capra, of the GreekS. The best our people der way. This chief associate edi~ this the routine is this. You go Principals: Gary Co q per, can now expect is that the Ger- tor for Doubleday, Doran will into a town and announce through Barbara. StanwYck, E4ward mans will be required to spend at spend tbe next six or eight weeks the newspapers that you will be Arnold, Walter Brenn a n, least 30 days in the conques't, traveling about the country, in- available (to writers) for inter- Spring Bylncton, James Ol"!a-which would give the British time dulging in leisurely discussions views. In one day on a previous son, Gene Lockbart, IlOd La-to bring Up their forces in Greece. with authors, meetlng new wrlt- hunt in Chicago, McCormick talk- Rocque, Irvinr Bacon\ Rertll'

The Germans have spread sonle ers, chatting of publishing trends, ed with 52 persons. From them he Toomey, fan t Ie bo t th ' tre gth You don't have to take any-cy a s a u elr s n and garnering new manuscripts-- obtained 99 manuscripts. Of these, b d ' d th t th" d in Rumania and Bulgaria but no biographical, historical, fictional two were accepted, and both de- ? tY s wAof

ll a h IS 1S

t a dgoo.

one here believes they have any- f 'bl bli t· I d' t PIC ure. you ave 0 0 IS - or POSSI e pu ca Ion. ve ope 10 0 successes. IJ te t fe f th g ts thing like half a million men 0lU! of tbe ideas oJ. this trip will Cleveland, Chicago, St. Pllul, tn- wWc~ ~n~ w:th° (a) e ,~r u;e~e ready to right there. Trustworthy be to, meet those people w, ho ha.ve r dianapollS; St. LOuis, P.ortland, Se- slloulda J'unmped," or (b) ~ I say checks indicate 10 to 12 diviSions ttl b t t wi be are now in Bulgaria, but they S ones to e 1 ~ can t wrl e, attle, an_d san FranClsco . ll. I he sh?u1da done just what he

"The PeIWI~y." Edward Ar­nold, Lionel Barrymore, Mjlr-811& Runt, ItObert Slerllnr Gene Reynolds, VtdlL Ann, BO~I.

Bandit Arnolt\'s son, reared to the profession, finds regenera­tion ~mid the simple joys or country life. Some clever twists and good performances, notably one by a trained goose, make it a good cops-and-robbers thriller with tear-jel'king extro.

Fast-moving in Ihe city se­quences, it bogs down somewhat when it goes bUCOlic, but picks l:P again for the son's final char­act:r test.

average probably only 12,000 men There U!e people ~ke th~t. Oscar the maJor s~ps op this t;rlP, did," Any picture that starts such each, Some elementi; were de- Leva~t IS one. A ~Jtty, ;hbbYOUng !bOUJh h~t. Wil; brant~h 6I.It ~n:o I a fuss about the hero's uItimatee tached before the Bulgarian oc-' mtoan Inticodnvetrsa °tn, e 'tecamIet Itmda Z~ dC les bromt "1 eds~, hPOlnh s. idte has to have a lot to oller <;upation. No heavy tanks were ngue- e a a. ypewrl ~r. , el"'n s on w a ea seas I before the Ilisputed climax ar-• '1 d d altho gh t f th d '- was only a question of brmgmg and what the prospects are. Tlves and "Meet John Doe" has mc u e , u wo 0 e I th . ht II b t t h' d I • • • ' , I visions are light panzer units. As e l'lg co a o:,a or 0 l~, an. pienty. I rrrr1 a matter of fact there is room 101' tlie reSult" was. a smattermg of McCormIck, "thOugh technically Capra, with his knack for mak- ~ only four to five divisions to Ignorance, WhlCh enjoyed a phe- a JerseYlte ( I was born there jng a sermon m6r~ ~terf8inin.g , ~ IS U I ' operate at once in the Stul'ma val- nomenai success. but we moved about five minutes than a ten-twent-thlrt meller, IS "

ley region. Probably 1,000 planes ,McCormick thinks writers w~o la!~r") will be heading i~to fa- t preaching broth~rJy lov~. When a At a.;o 0" ,...,. A.",O "'. ' .

have been sent in but the airfield live away from the IndustrIal millar territory. Most of h~ boy- pow~rful financier takes over 3 facilities will not permit the ut- East may be discouraged by what hood ,WIls spe';lt in the . MidWest I l'1ewsp~per and chops oft heeds, most concentration of German air appears to be an over-dose of war and hJS formative years m Salem, the gIrl columnist (5tanwyck) power. books under European datelines. Ore. He came to New York about I tllIgrlly takes a letter ftom on'e

Against this torce the Briti:sh But this is only the froth of the 13 years ago and at one time beld ; "John Doe" declaring that he w[J1 have only a. few hundred planes publishing business, he points out seven part-time jobs. He played a ~l :rump frOm the city hall tower on and less than 100,000 troops in -thin and transparent. \ piano three hours a day, he work- ,Christmas Eve as n protest Biain-Greece (not including those sta- • • • ed in a library in the mornings, I st th e evils of modern life. Tbe Honed in Crete.) Clearly the Ger- McCormick is anxious to dis- etc., Eventually he became identi- hoaX' blOssoms, forces the paper mans will have superiority both cuss what he calls "regional work" fiE'/! with Doubleday, Dorlln, and to produce John DOe in Ihe .flesh, in the air and on the ground. witb writers in various set!tions now he is their chief associate and Long John Willoby, a hobo,

Yet our people are not despon- of tbe country. By "regional" is editor. He is married to a former is drafted. dent about British chances. The meant definitive locale. A woman nurse at Bellevue who keeps him With speecbes written by tM limited fighting area In. deep val- who lives ten years in a box car , entertained with hospital stoties. rir! proclaiminl "Love Thy leys will probably permit them to Neighbor," the John Doe move-put as much power in the front ment sweeps the country. When line as the Germans con muster at S k · f R Zf Long John discovers that the any point. • pea lrtg 0 e 19l·on good-will clubs are being used to

promote Boss Arnold's Fascistic WHERE RUSSIA STANDS- designs on the country, he tries

A Lenten Feature on Current Religious Thought in the News

Compiled by Llewelyn A, Owen, MlnlJter, low. Cit, COl\ITeratlonal Cburoh (with tlie Cooperation

Of the National IteHrlous News Service)

Roman Catholic, ~of several special committees which previous to that time had

to expose the roke, is instead dis­cl'edited. Then he feels th'at to restore faith in his followers he must carry out the promised sui· cide. The girl's frantic pled­that the '(reatest of all John DOES centuries ago bad mode the sac­rifice unn~cessary-wins him baclt.

8-Mornlng chapel. 1I:15-Muslcal miniatures. ':Jo-Dady rowan 01 tbe Air, 8:40-Morninll' melodies. 8:50-Service repor1s. 9-5a10n music. 9:15-Here's an idea. 9:30-MUsic magic. 9:50-Procram cal ndar and

weather report. 10-n happeiJed la t week. 10:10- Yesterday's musicnl fa­

vorite . . 10:30-The booksheU.

}I-Musical chats. 11 :50-Farm flushes. 12~hythm rambles. 12:30-Vi W6 and interviews, 12:45- Servlce n!ports. I- Rcl'/.1ipiscing time. I: 15-Th'rouSl\ the larden late,

Gretchen Hanhbar!Cr. 1:30-Women in the news, 1 :f5-C(>nce1't h1l1l selectiOn .. 1 :55-Univelslty newsl!me. 2-Camel'a news, 2:0lI-The world bookman. 2:10 - Mod ern mu le, Prof,

Ph!Iip G. Clapp,

University Sunday, Marcb 30

Calenda. 9 p.m. - Pep Jamboree, I

Union.

Closing T UI Be }'0110)l

y Local Mcrch 8 "m.-;-Vesper service; Ilddres by Heinrlcl1 Bruenlhg, Macbl'ide liud1toril.l.in'.

Saturday, AprU 5 IIist()ry conference, senale Btginning Tuesd llY,

_ " )'fonday, March 31 1 p.~.-UniversitY Sing senU­

finiils tor w()men, Macbride audl­,tormm.

bel', Old Capitol. .il stores will at Commun Ity P I a j PrddU ' ing hours Irom

Festival. !f" ! I I g i 9 Jun.-Eastlawn forn\ar II I ."e usua cos n I TUesda'1, April 1

g p.m. -- Address on "Honors Work and Graduate Study," by

, Dr. Frank Aydelotte, senate cham­bet, 'Old Capttol.

~ ~ days and 9 o'c Union, river room. . II '\I b

Sunday, AprU 8 y nlg] , WI (

" p.m. and 8 p.m.-Easter ~ all local slores. per ;service: Last hall of List', A n~mbcr of, mel Christus," IQwa Union d It impOssl,ble , Wedrtesday, April 2

4':3d p,m.-eotree hour, Triangle I!lu\)"

Monda" .\prli 7 use of special I

'7 p.m.-University Sing , ~,earlY mo~mn! finals for men, Macbride aucia- dents or specl8l, c, '7:30 P.m.-"Opportunities in Na­

val Aviation and Nav:i! Service," Macbride auditorium. ,,8 p,rn. - Band concert, Iowa

'Unldn. Tbursday, April 3

Community P I a y Production Festival.

,Iowa Supreme Cou!'t day, Old Capitol.

8 p.m.-German club play, Mac­bride auditorium.

Friday, ,April 4 History conference, senate cham­

,bel', Old Capitol. Community P I a y Production

Fe~tival. 8 p.m.--Lecture by Arvid J'a­

co~son on ";Modern Furniture and Interior DecoratIon," al't audi­torium.

ium, • Wmdow cards w;1I 7:30 p.m.-Tau Gamma; all stores laking

speakl!r, .D 0 n aId Streel~r am, nccol'(lLng "Grease Paint and GodSe Pim~1 IIOre, chamber or north conference room, lo! '1 !rade I

Union. Tu~ay, Aprl 8 am are:

8 p.m.-Movie: "Plane er..,. Seal'8, Roebuck and "The Last Command," 5pqJ. ry Ward & sored by the Iowa University I'ibJt ,; J, C. society, art auditorium. arlmenl store;

Wednes,la" April , I slore; F. W, 12 m.--E~ter recess begins, rimm's;

Tuesda" April is enady; A. 8 i.m.-Classes resum~, ·.,vers Economy

el shop; S, (For Informanon reranlblr... hop;

beyond tbis semester, * .rttena op; EsteHa Uom in tbe office ", the rr. t shop; the dent, Old Capitol.) 's; Mueller's

--------------_ lothes shop;

General Iowa Union Musl" Room Scbedule

Requests will be pluyed at tbe {olloWing times, except on Sat­urdays from 1 to 2 p.m. and on Tuesdays from 2 to 3 p.m. when a planned .,program will be pre­sented.

Sunday, March 30-2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Monday, March 31-10 to 12 a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m.

Essay Contest Tbe Order of Artus is again

sponsoring an essay contest open to aU undergraduate students in the univ/!rsity. The essays must deal ~ith some subject of econo­!pIc interest and must not exceed 5,000 words. All essays must be deposited in the college of COm­merce office by 5 p.m., May 5. For details, see Schaeffer hall or Uni­verSity hall bulletin boards,

PRE IDE T

Easter Vacation SubsUtution Because of the shOrt fivc and

one half day Easter vacation and the necessity to maintain th£ most satisfactory employe service for this period. sub htutions are to be kept to a minimum. Em­ployees who feel it necess.sry to have a substitute are to make the arral1l(ements as follows:

1. Secure approval from the supervi or or your department.

2. Personally give the notlcF that you intend to leave and a;­range for substitute at employ­ment bureau not loter than Sut­urday, April 5.

MA A'GER

University Vespers lieinrich Bruening, fonner chon­

cellor of Germony, will speak ot uhlven;ity vespers Sunday, Mareh 30, at 8 p,m. in Macbride audi­torium. His topic will be "Spiri­tual Background of the Present Crisis,"

Admbsion will be by fr tick-ets available at the desk of Iowa Union for students und faculty ((fler Wednesduy, Murch 26; (or OU1!!I:S after Friday, Murch 28.

PItOI:. M. WILLAIlD LAMPE

walne cbolarsblp A sct}olarship or $350 is or{ I' d

annually by Robert T. Swaine, L.A. 1905, to a graduate of thi university who de ires to do pro­Cessional or other graduat work in Harvard university. Lett I'll ot application should b s nt to the office ot the dean ot th gradu e college by April 15.

Attention is called to the fol-

Notiee. Register at the physIcal educa omce. Anyone desiring' to lake III water safety instructor's c this spring must register for training to qualify for the gIven by the American Red field representative April 21 to May 3.

PROF. D. A. ARMBRUSm

BasketbaU Club Tuesday, April I, will end lhe

season for Basketball club. The-e

all; Ann lz Hat shop; H06iery store; illard Apparel; Wly; Speidel ~; Dunn'S;

ludio an? -----I

will be an election for Ihe Pleri- Tuesday will be dent for next year. All teams till I the coul'thousc. play, with games starting at 7:15 Co~nty p,m. It is important that all memo Ilmounccd the fl bel'S attend. 1940 taxes is due

RETTE EMBlCl C, A, Knee, highway

Ea ter Vacation Employ_ :nolorists Students and all persons!nl!r- tbeir 194

est£d in work during t~ JleIiirl lare subjeci Irom noon, April 9 through April ing !heir 14 are now to report 10 the l1li- Taxes paid iversity employment bureau, Od be considered Dental Building. a lax amounling

BOARD ACCUMUL ATIOK: of one per cent sixteen and one-half days rt assessed, Jansa board can be earned during !lis The dri ving IJeriod by working not more 1han offense is nine hours daily. The accumuit- meanor, ed meal credit will be charpd $100 or imr.riso,nmi of! at the rate of three (31 • a day whm classes are resumll, L 1 C

DAILY BOA R D: (3 mW' OC(/ lHlnl Since all jobs. especially thGsIat To Joill . meal nours, cannot be comb~ h.to accumulation schedule~ a Army large number of men and w­are nEeded who can work II: three meals a day only r'lI'lie brief vEcalion Qf part 01 it unit which leCt

CASH EMPLOYMENT: AI- Texas, January thougb employment payable In in a formai cash is very unlikely, your appJI- April 7, The cation wfll be taken and gil'al POrted last night. consideration. Every citizen of

So that the regular student em- is invited to p]Qyees ron have the privlle&e 01 said. A a vacation. all persons are ureed sent to Gov, to help ~ecure tl\e maXimUlll Olher troops r.umb~r of substitutes, All sublll- \he review wi!l tutes, even though secured pi! servalion squadro,n] sonally, must report in persoo lor Texas' approvol and assignment at 11/1,.=====::; university burEaU.,

LEE H, KANlf

French Ph.D. I~ ExaminatloDi

The Fr nch Ph.D. degree ing examination will be day, May 13 trom 4 to 8 room 3J4, Schaetfer hall. I ave your name with that major department in' room

ho f(~r haII by Saturoa,t, J O.

lowing stipulations: Fencl1\&' S4ua4 I. The scholarship Is given each All aspirants cor pdsiti'Onl

year to a student standing within Unlv rsltr ot Iowa tho top 10 per cent of the year's in fOil, cp e and sabre graduating cla.~s of Ih collf'g of port Mondo)" March 31, Lib ral arts. p.m. to COllch Baum,artner

2. It Is under tood that the fencing room above ~e flIId holder will undertake PI'Of, 10nlll pool. Thill meeting is or graduate work iii Htlrvard unl- iJOB versJty, pre! rably In th law school.

3. Ptef r nc is ltv n 01 0 to candidates who are ih need ot fl­nlll\cial a istance and whO t'On­template pending more thah one yeaI' at Harvard unlver It,..

DIAN O!OItGE TODDAItD Or.auate Collere

Application for Admilllioll 10 Prolftllonal (JoIlqet

Entered as second class mal matter at the postoffice at Iowa City, Iowa, under the act ot con­kress Of March 2, 1879,

Subscription rates-By mail, $. pel' year; by carrier, 15 cents weekly, $5 per year.

The Associated Press is exclu­sively entitled to use for republi­calton of all 'llSW!l dispatches credited to it or not otherwise eredlfed In this paper and abo t!],e local news pubmheCi herein.

No one is expecting much from the Russian non-aggression treaty with Turkey, The Russians had a non - aggression treaty with Po­land, reaffirmed as iate before the invasion as Nov. 27, 1938. This ironical red affirmation pledged "relations between Poland and Ru sia will continUe to be baSed on all existing treaties, including the treaty of non-aggression sign­ed in 1932 and prolonged to 1945."

Stalin is beginning to realize the mistake he made in feeding the German giant at the outset of the war, In numerous little ways in which he cannot be caught, he can be relled upon to annoy and hInder Hitler. But his word is no better than his interest, and in this instance all he is promising is that he \\1111 remdin neutral U the Turks are attacked, not it they go to the aid of Greece. In other words Russia is slIying she wlll help prevent Germany 'from mov­inll into Turkey and grabbing the Dardanelles, She would have to do that anyway in hl!r own in­terests,

Plan European Aid been operating independently in-WASHINGTON, D. C. _ The chiding the Committee fot Polish

• Relief, Committee tor Lithuanian !irst comprehensive nahon - wiae and Baltic States Relief, Commlt-appeal to Roman Catholics of this tee fOr Relief to France, Belgium, country for iunds lor the relief of Holland, Englund und the Scan­suffering and distress abroad, will dinoviRn countries, for refugees be sponsored this spring by the from Germany, Austria, Czecho3-Bishops' ReUef committee, It waS lovakla, tor Chinese relief, tor announced here. chHd refugees, and for the Mexi-

It is a fantestic fable, kept so consIstent!; clO!lc to the realitle.~ o ~ the modern American scen~ as to be credible, As usual , Gapl'a gets excellent pErformances from his players, gives them pun.ent dialogue. Samples: T 0'0 in e y'5 scene explaining to JOhn DOf' wh ~ t his message hIlS inean~; Gieason's barroom dissertation Oh what the stor-SPIlnIlI!d Banner does to him : Stahw,ck's clmictlc p:eo to John Doe; Brennan's dis­cOurse m "hel!lots"-iOm~thihi rotc.

3-Adventured in st6ry!o'M. 3:15-Meloi!y time. 3:30-"nemocrac, Is Our WilY

01 Llfc." S:~5-Wa1tz timc. 4-Wrtters' workshop of the nil',

the essay, Prof. CarrIe E. Stanley, 4:lIO-Tea time melodies, ~Chtldr!IJ'8 hour, 5:30-Musical mood., &:4I-D.UI IdMtn III ~ AIr. /I-D~r !tour mUll:lc.

I ApPlicltlornt fot adml Ion to professional college1 in ptu'n­ber, 19~1, (collell of d ntl try, law or medicine, or the hool 01 nur.lnl, combined nur in. out e only) n xl toll shou ld so Inform tho re.lstrar I soon a pOll!llble,

'ara Btidc'l Ili ... nnivruary -or a girc .0 y .u. home - fol • HOUle 8( Cud 'Ufsulion ,., /l'a

h •• ilver ... arc s ice o( H EI RLO Plale. bl u. sh ,you Heirloom's ~uilile drsigns lid hand,omc, IIrnish.proo( (hUll.

TELEPBO~E8 MUor .. 1 OffiCle ........................ 4193 Society Miter , ........................... 41.3 liulaed Office ........................ 4191

• SuNbAY, MA~CH 30, 1941

Present plans call for the special can Seminary. Three special cotn­appeal to be held in most dioceses mittees wJII continue to function throughout the country on Pas- as subcommittees of the general sion Sunday-today, commIttee.

The Bishops' Reliet committee The Billhops' ReUef commit ee was set up at the annual meeting is compl'lsed ot thO'.:!c prelates who of thl! archbishops and bishops 01 form lhe administrative board of the United States held here last the National Catholic 'WeUare November to coo rdin lte the work, conference.

• • • "11te lUI" • Z.nl""r."

sct ... , ... , It, FraIlk htter all41 Doll Han.an. DlrMted II, Y!e"'r Wet1IbIpr. flrtII­"I.-Is: IIbir CraIb, BIb

7..:...Why didatorshiPII? Prof. H w Roberts.

7 :80-Sp0rt JdmeJ 7:45-Eventna mualea1~. 8-Converstttloll at' eJtht. 8:lIO-Mb\ll'1\ of. ~K. 1:t5--D.II, ...... fit tile D.

HA.kY O. BUNE , Rertatrar

Ile. C.... Wa"'r lIalet, Uf6 Sav'*' CoUhe r.,. Men

The course for senlor llIe sav­inn water la£ely lnstrUct(,r nod te­fresher cour lor in tmetors wilt belln in the {leldhOu8 pool Murch 81 and ",lit continue until May t.

CI.8lIfII will meet !I'on\ 4J30 t() 1\ p.m. Monda), through Thursday.

MedIc!al VOl" 1\'" The AS8CJeI,UOll . of

Medical Co)[~ges' be riven on May e '"'II b I.llken by ull stud'enli

(See BULtzrIN ..

-and_

JEWELER III t, Wasbln,'

Street

seginning Tuesdl1Y, 36 Iowa City stores will advl1nce their

hours from 8:30 a.m. to

usual closing hOUI'S, 5:30 on days nnd 9 o'clock on S;'\t­night, will be maintained local stores.

number of merchants have it impossible to cooperate

of specia l services fea­motning trade from

~ .. ';:~ludellts or special contract work. Window cards will be furnished ali stores tak i ng part in the

BookPlates U.W.A. lo Sponsor

Design Con lest

UnIversity students inspired to crC<l te ncw and original ideas are Invited to enter the contest spon­Rored by the' University Women's organization.

Al l you have to do is ·try a hand ut d signing book plates. Your de­Rlgn may be judged the best and you will get the prize. Entrees must be in the dean of women's office by 2 p.m. Wednesday.

New books added to the Uni­vcr. tty Women's association col ­lection in Old Capitol are "Susan Be Smooth," by Nell Giles; "Ask My Secretary," by GladYB TorBon, and "Your Best Foot Forward," by Dorothy C. Stralton and Helen B. Sehleman.

Pep Jamboree Ticket Sale Tomorrow P cp Queen, Allen«Janls Will Be Preseutetl

TIlE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY

Lucas House,-Scene of Past Glory-Crumb,es in Ruin

Council Names Election Aides

Governor's Rifle Mat c h Firings

tart Wednesday . B TilE A SOCIATED PRE Properly Owner Here Pirings In the Univenilty of

P E · Iowa Governor's Rine match will The home or Iowa's [irst terri· · City) proposed a bill in the state rolesls xtens lOD begin Wednesday at 6:30 p.m ..

torial governor, Robert Lucas, is legi£lalure yesterday asking an or Busines Di lricl Capt. Joseph T. Zak, dlrector of slowly crumbling away on the out- appropriation or $10,000 to pur- rin marksmampip In the mlli-skirts of Iowa City, once the cupi- chase and rehabilitate the home. tary department, has announced. t I r tl t t TI . ls r d r $1 500 th t Preparatory lo the city biennial As Highlight of Party (I 0 le s a e. lere IS a 0 a un 0, a The Governor's Pistol match

In the years when Iowa h:ld bas been set aside by the local ell"Clion tomorrow, city council at \\IiU be fired on two evenin ,Ap­Tickets will go on 'ale tomor- only a territorial government and Lucas Memorial association Cor its regular meeting Friday made ril 2 and 7.

row at 8 a.m. a t the main desk of this city w.r the center ot activity. reconstruction purposes. the following election board re- Only R,O.T.C. tudenl$ " 'ho Iowa Union for the Pep Jamboree, Ihe

d Old. h usc saw the comings Mercer's bill is now \\11th the PluS(''ements: I hav made 360 poin or morc

an go lOgs of the state's mo t senate appropriations commitl c. econd ward, second precinct, by totalinl their high sco in informal university parly 10 be . t A bl It h bId th t r.~ae P d I ""11' G pr'ommen men. ny sem a nce, as een repor e a mem- 'I ar en rep aecs nl llIm . each position during previous 1ir-held Friduy from {) to 12 p.m. in however, that the red brick house bers ot the committce mny come Ruppert as judge, Leota Hotz re- inl\ll are eliclble to compete in the the main lounge. was once the ~ccne of gala govern- here this week to view the house places 5ara Bowman as clerk; rille match.

Chaperons fo" the danc(' arc MI' mental balls and receptions COt· and grounds. second ward, Cirst precinct, Chris P lol competition I open to all . '.. those early law-makers has van- Fund Sill AsIde Raynor replaces L. H. Hess as be f th ROT C d

and MI S. Wendell SmIth, M,. and I'shed \VI'th the years Tis! ' . mem rs 0 e ".' a \'8n<:-. . . he leg alive JO Lerlm comml t- police; fifth ward, lirst precinct, ed courses. Thirty shots will be Mrs. William Petersen, Prof. and ', BuiJt In 1844. tee last summer set aside $8,500 Clara Weber replaces Howard Cired with the .22 culiber pistol, Mrs. Fred Pownall, Mr. and Mrs. The house, which was con tl'uct- toward the purchase of the prop- Ellis. as judg~, a.nd fifth ward, :(in>t 10 each or slow, timed and rapid Jack Johnson an~ MI'. and Mrs. cd in 1844, was once the sooial erty, with the understanding that precmet, Win I fred Hodges re- fire. Both matches wil1 be fired Charles Galih~·. I center of the state and undoubted- the Conservation com m iss ion I places Clara Webt;r as clerk.. on a 50-foot range.

Listed among the highlights f Iy mOfe than one important an- I would reprcsent the state in the ASJde Crom takJng. Cl,nal action Three medals, gold, silver Dnd

PAGE rnr.EE

I City Hig" Te('nJ Qualify for Finals

In Typing Tests Three of Iowa City high hool's

teams competing in yesterday' district commercial coni at the school qualiHed for the nate commercial rmals to be held t Newlon April 26.

Roberta Clair Street oC Iowa Clty pla~ first in novice short­hand and amateur typing to win top honors in the competition. Other City high stud nts who placed were Jane Spencer,

nd, and Shirley Wiler, tifth, in no\ ice shorthand, and Belt,. White, fourth In amal ur typinC.

T ipton hl,h school placed fi rst in amateur shorthand, nO\'ice typ­Ing and amateur typing. Iowa City took first in novice dtorthond, and • cwnd in both nO\'ice and am3-t ur typinl. LeClare placed sec­ond In novice shorthnnd.

according to Leslie A. of commerce 1'e­

chairman.

Music Contests To Start Here

. . . . . 0 I nouncement to the people echoed deal. on adoptIOn ot the city s $264,995 bronze, wiu be pr ent.ed Gover-the pal ty IS the PI esentallon of tile f ' 't . 1'0" The·t " I d d l\~ budget council r newed class "B" tl'adilion,,1 Pep Queen and her at- 10m I s wa 1.>. n I was conc U e, .er?er ' nor's day, May 10, to the thrce . • tendants. Pep Queen candidate ' Several nt~e~pts have been. explal!le?' that the Conservation permits ~or the K. of C. lodge, highest &'Orers in each match. Louue Floralill Die.

participating in the pro- lor 1941 , ns selected at Tu('sday made to rehabllttate the ho.use, bul commJSSJon coul~ not e~ter mtu 328 E. KIrkwood; Roy L . Chopek Louise Florang, ister-in-I w of High school musicians of south- night's meeti ng of committee mem- weed~ on the lawn nre sltll.ra~ - an ?gr~ement WIth a private or- SPOG\Nlbo. t17, AdmeriCatndLegiOnl'ts20t4 ncr's pharmacy, 113 E. W hlng- E. R. Snider, Rivel'llid , died at

east Iowa will compete in a pre- bel'S, m'e Muriel Taub, A2 of Ro- p~nt In summer "nd the bUlldmg gamzatlon such as . ,,:,ould be . . r ,an gran e perm. 0 Ion a local ho pital 1 nilhl Fun-liminary sta te music contest hel'e chester, N.Y., Sigma Delta Tau; IS falling apart. nece ary under the Original plan, Evclett H. I1ull, 840 S. Clmton, . 1 eral arrangemenl$ have not been

C. Penney Co.; Yetter's . next Thursday, Friday and Satur- Jean Chr istie, Al of Belmond, Del- • • • so the purchase was not con. um- and Clarence Naughton, 230 S' I Atty. WlUiam H. Mocrshel, ap- made. store; Strub's depart- day. I ta Gamma; Connie Leonard, A I The old "mission" lool{s down matcd. The lnterim committe 's Dub~que.. pearlng in behaJ( of Chris Rayner, =============

. F. W. Woolworth Co.; The ~ nnual contest is sponsored of Chari ton, Pi Beta Phi ; Mary on the Iowa I'ivel' from" hill in allocation was not used. I CIgarette permIts were granted local property owner, prot sted

A. M. Ewer's & Co,; Supt. Iver A. Opstad, southeast. Gamma; Earlyne Johnston, A2 of city and was the home of ~ove~- Mcrcer said the hOU$e and four shop, 105 S. Dubuque and Bocl'- requestina councilmanic author 1- "W··I

Townel"s; Ricl{eLts and this year by Iowa City high school. Henaman, A3 of Estherville, Delt~ the southernmost district of the Public Shrine 10 Naughton, the Karmel Korn council' approval of a petition ~~,.." ~.&

store; Green's Ap- district manager, and Principal West Union, Gamma Phi Beta. nor. Lucas, who helped d SIgn l~, acres of ground still may be had zalion to permit extension of the 0 S. S. Kresge Co.; the W. E. Beck, competition mana- Betty Lec Rhea un~ll. 1653 .. It was t~e govern~r s by the state for $5,000. The re- I·ty liS a public shrine. Kirkwood avenue business dis trict.

Lorenz Brothers Boot gel', arc completing program ar- Belly Lee Rhea, A3 of Burling- offtclal reSidence untl~ the capItol mainder of th appropl'iation or "(owa hos Cew cnQugh places of In accordance with state laws, C; 666 Estella Zimmerman; Domby rllOgements. City high teachers are ton, Gamma Phi Beta; Shirley ste-i was moved to Des Momes in 1657. so much as would be necessary, his torical interest like this leCt. We the state auditor will make hill ", I shop; the Judy shop; Brem- assisting with the project. venson, A2 of Milwaukee, Wis., Proposes Bill would go toward rebabilitating the should preserve the ones we have," vislt here some time in April, 14M Mueller's shoe store; Eppel's Winners in preliminary con- Alpha Delta Pi ; Mary Kay David- Sen. LeRoy Mercer (D. Iowa house and maintaining the prop- Mercer declared. C lerk Grovcr C. Watson revealed. UClIII.WllII.MLVLIIOIlIaON

shop; Spencer's Harmony tests will be eligible to compete son, A1 of S:tvanna, Ill.; Kappa Ann Stach; R & S store; in one of fo ur state contests con- Alpha Theta; Elizabelh Stcven~,

shop; Scolt's store; H & dueted May 1 to 3 at Creston, A3 of Muscatine, Delta Delta Dcl­store; G. R. Kinney Co.; Oskaloosa, Sioux City and Wa- ta, a::d Rosemary Moran, 11.3 or

Apparel; Checker Electric verly. Supt. C. H. Munson, Freeport, Ill. Speidel Brothers Cloth- Whiling, is the state contest man- Dick Shelton and his Musical

. Condon's; Kndgibn's ager. Madners will furnish the music f'IlI~.IIU'"U and Anderson's studio. Each event of the preliminary for dancing. Featured with Shel-

contest here will be judged by six ton and his band are Glorip Gil­critics, three vocal and three in- bert and Skip Fal'l'CIJ , vocoli:<:ts, strumental. Division I and Divi- who appeared with lhe Musical sion II rati ngs will be made pub- Mariners at an earlier engage­lie by the judges. ment here at the Homecoming Warns Drivers

Of Deadline High schools may enter musi- Party last fall.

prll!. Tuesday wiii be deadline 1iIJ ( the courtbouse.

clans for criticism only, in the Committee members for the Pep three-day contest. Judges will Jamboree are Arnold LeVine, A4 not giv~ these performers rat- of Centerville; Nyle J ones, A3 of

day ings nor will they be eligible to Iowa City ; Walter Wright, A3 of appear in the state contest, Op- Des Moines; Walter Sanford, A2 stad said. of Davenport; Ed Glazer, E4 of 7:15 County Treasurel' Lumir Jansa

memo Innounced the Iirst half or the 1940 taxes is due on that day and C. A. Knee, chief of the state highway patrol, announced that

Highest Grades

J Lenoch and Cilek,

...

Seed Head(Juarter. lor ov r

30 years, oller you

Tru·Values in your

Lawn and Garden

eeds

;notorisls Tho have not purchased. W· A d inllr· their 194 Jicen~e:; by Tue~day In war s

Sioux City; Howard Beals, 11.2 of Cedar Rapids; Louise Nathanson, A3 of Pipestone, Minn.; Margaret May Lybch, C3 of Algona! Rose­marie Devlin, A3 of Clinton; Jean Ludwig, A4 of Ottawa , 111., and Kathleen Davi ', A2 of Des Moines.

period ·are subject to fine if caught driv-Alr'J ilIg their automobiles. I For 2 Co OpS III- Taxes paid a!tel' the date will -Old be considered delinquent and County T ra;nees

Rise to 34 .Mmt a lax amounting to thr -rourths Fulsom bouse, men's coopera-TIO.: or one per cent a month will be live dormitory, and Russell house,

It assessed, Jansa said. women's cooperative dormitory, IIis The driving without new plates were awarded the cups presented

o[[ense is considered a misde- last night for the highest scholar­meanor, punishable by fine Ill' ship in the cooperative dormitories $100 or imprisonment or 30 days. on the qampus.

1'0 Join ill Texas Army Day RevielV

Troop B, 113th cavalry horse­mechanized, locol national guard

it unil which lelt [or Cnmp Bowie, AI- Texas, January 23, will participate

in in a formal Army Day review apPil- April 7, The ASHlciatcd Press re­gi\~ POrted last night.

Every cililen or Texa:i and Iowa is invited to all('nd, authorities said. A special invilation was

to Gov. George A. Wit. on. Other troops participating in

the review w ill be lhe lllth ob­squadron from Iowa and

36th division.

'Qf a Btidc', girl­I. anniversary girt -or a girt to your 'WlI home- rollow HOUl e " Garden's luagu lion .•. mike It I .ilven"aro se rvo ice or HEIRLOO~{ Plait. Lu u. show ,CU Heirloom 'S ex· .uili le designs aad handsome, ta,ni lh.proof Chuts.

PIAU SETTINGS .. low os $4.75

I. FUIKS,O'. D.

OPTOMETRJS-r

_ nd­

JEWELER

Coopel'ative dOl'm itory associa· tion keys awarded for character, worthiness, scholarship and abll­ity were presented to Forrest Fer­gu 'on, A4 of Ft. Dodge; Virgin ia Craven, A4 of Sioux City; Edward Wilson, A4 of Ottumwa; AI Le­men, G of Akron; John HoIlman, A4 of Sigourney, and Dudrey Stee l, A4 of Charles City.

The scholarshi.p cups were pre­sented by Dean Adelaide Burge and keY''> were presented by Dean Robert Rienow.

Last night's presentation of the scholal'shlp cups was the third (.'()n. eculive award of this CUI)', made to Russeii bouse, which en­tilles the dorm itory to permanent p03Se s ion of the cup.

The awards were made at the annual cooperative dormitory ban­quet held last night in the main lounge of Iowa Union.

With the departure of [our vol unteers tomorrow morning fOl ' a year's training under the selec­tive service act, the number or Johnson counLy men in service will lotal 34 .

Men leaving nrc Fred C. Bal­lard, 427 S. Clark; Carl L . Krue­ger and Forrest Posten, both of Lone Tree, and Tudor G. Gould, 821 Webster.

The local draft board al 0 an­nounced that three men will be inducted into the army Thurs­day. The,)' are Nelson W. Holiand, Lone Tree; Lyle L. Frazier, 20 E. Burlington, and Bernard B. Da­vis, 1163 E. Court.

Meetings Elks, Batbnintoll Club,

Scouts to Meet

Monday, March 31 Elks' Noonday Luncheon-Elks'

J "dge Slate. Hearinll Grill room, serving begins ~lt 11 Judge James P. Gaffney has a.m.

tentati,,:ely scheduled hearing on Boy cout Meetings- Troop No. the aceld.ent damage case of Eliz- 2, Longfellow school; Troop No. abeth PeIffer vs. Ho":ard Sentman 7, Henry Sabin school; Troop No. for tomorrow morrung when a 10 St. Patrick's' Troop No 11 peUt jury will be empanelled at I R~ose\7elt school: Troop No' 14' 10 a.m. Elizabeth Peiffer Is the Methodist' church'. ., rd ministl'utix of the Paul Peitler I Badminton ClUb - Iowa City e~tate. I Recreational center, 7:30 p.m.

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

w.,.Oft·' !'toi. 1 '( .

DRISS or (OA 1 Mon "

SUIT, 0'(OA1

ll"r" ~.bb., HilL LIft' •••••• 9c , •. loll. ', IUIIII HilLS •••••• 19c , •. ll",' ., Chlltl ' , HAlf SOLES ••• 49c ,., 101,.', .r a.,. HAlf SOLES •••• 59c ,r.

I

BULK LAWN SEED I

and LAWN SUPPLIES MICHEAL LEONARD'S

Spading Forks Tested Lawn Mowers SEEDS The 'Inest mowers made at

98c _175 prices that you can afford to to pay.

Now (while tbe ,round Is moist) STANDBY MOWER Is the time to seed or reseed your Garden Ra~es lawn. We have tested Blue Grass $575 and Clover Seed , , , tbe ideal 95c our fine# '16~ lawn seed.

Plant Your Garden Now!

Garden Spade A Good Spade For The Small Garden

TRUE VALUE 'BARTELL

Lawn Rollers 1M Ilia. wUb waler 15. lba. with sand

'498

'1295

Hedge Sbears Good Sleel

8 Ineh Blade

Garden Hoes 69c '129

Hand pruJJen For PIowen • fJIu'a"

fr ...

SACCO PMNTFOOD

You'lJ be urJll'lsed wben ,OU lee tbe effeet that this rspedal plaltt food wUJ have on ),our IaDdleape, For more beauUful lIowel'll, perteet la_ aDd trim rreen aIaru ____ SACCO.

I Pound Sacco 10 5 Pound Sacco 45

10 Pound Sacco 85 25 Pound Sacco 1.50 50 Pound Sacco 2.50

100 Pound Sacco 4.00

LENOC~ and. CILEK THE STORE OF TRUE VALUE ON W ASIDNGTON ST.

---------- ----~-= =- --=-- - - ~- ---::- -=--~-~- -- - ~= - - - ~- -

~

• ~

PAGEFOt.fR

Songfest Preliminaries Begin TOlnorrow Night for Women

KappaB~e~t~a~P~i~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~;;;;~~~

M'eIl's Groups Slated To Sing Next Monday; Four Judges Appointed

• . ,-----------K:lppa K:lppa Gamma. Pi Beta Phi. Sigma Delta Tau. Tau Gam­ma and Zeta Tau Alphu.

Each group will be allowed sev­en minutes in which to sing two Rongs of its own selerlion. No mu-

Preliminaries for the sixth an- sical accompaniment. other Ulan nual University of Iowa songfest piano, will be a ll owed in the ('on­will be held in Macbride audj- test. torJum tomorrow at 7 p.m., for Men's groups wh ich will com­the women contestants. Men's pete April 7 are Sigma Alpha Ep­groups will com~te on April 7. silon, Phi Della Theta. Phi Gam-

Prot. and Mrs. Earl E. B~n·per. rna Della, Alpha Tllu Omegn. Walter Baderer, instructor in the I Quadrahgle-section D, Hillcrest.

, university hiah school, and Mrs. Theta Xi. Dean lIouse. Jeff I'son Boward Snyder have been select- House, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Beta ed as judges. Dorothy Ward. A41 Theta Pi, Della Tau Delta. Delt:1 oj Iowa City. will act as mistross- Chi, Gables and Grover house. oj-ceremonies. Four finalists will be chosen

The wom~n's groups have been from each group and will compete arranged into sections which will for first place honors May II, sing at the !ollowina time: 7 p.m. when the finals will be held on -Alpha Delta Pi, Coast House. the campus of the fine arts build­Currier Hall and Delta Delta Del- ing. ta; 7:45-Delta Gamma, Easllawn. Last year's cup winnpl's werP Camma Phi Betll, Kappa ·Alpha Currier Hall und Phi Gumma Theta and the Negro forum; 8:30 Delta.

Student Fellowships Emphasize Lenten Message in Meetings

I UniverSity students are invited . Killden. N. D.; Robert Genl'Y, G by Iowa City churches to attend oi Denver Colo.; Shirley Miller (levotional and soci~l .meetings or of Iowa dity nnd Norma Battey young people's religiOUS g~oups • t ,day. of Iowa City.

A recreation hour under the

'Medlling • •• I adership of Robert Hoyt, A2 of Creston, will follow the wor­sh ip services nt 7:30.

Gives Courtesy For Mrs. Ladd

'Mrs. Mason Ladd, l'ecenUy Ch03-en patroliess of Kappa Beta Pi, law SOI'()rity, was guEist of honor at a tea given at 4 p.m. Friday in the Law Commons lounge.

Wives of faculty memoers of the college of law were also guests. They are Mrs. Clark Byse. Mrs. C. M. Updegraff, Mrs. Philip Me­chem. Mrs. F. R. Kennedy, Mrs. Andrew Woods, Mrs. Paul Sayre, Mrs. Rollin Perkins and MI'". Percy Bordwell.

Members. of Kappa Beta Pi who were present are Lelia Weger­slev, A2 oi Minneapolis. Minn.; Lorna Murphy. A2 of Elkader; Dorothy A.wes. L2 of Cedar Rap­id;; Louise Beyers. L2 of New London; Betty Harpel. Ll 01 Manistee. Mich.; Patricia Olson. Ll of Iowa City, and Marcellina Hummer. LI of Iowa City.

Also sharing the courtesy were HelEfn Moylan, law librarian. Pau­line Kelly, an alumna, Mrs. Ethel Miller, chaperon at the law com­mons. and Lucille Zeller, secre­tary of the college of law.

Major Knltre Gets New Post

Maj. Rob~rt J. Fleming. NSA curps of engineers, Hnwiian de­f'artment, has been ordered to RO.T.C. duty here at the uni­versity upon completion of his tour or roreign service on the is-

· .. of Christian Fellowship'" th~ fom th in a series of talks on Christian beliefs. will be given by Willinm Kuechmann, A4 or Burlington. tonight at the 6:30 mleling of the Rogel' Wi11iams club of the Baptist churcH.

'Students • . • land. · .. or the Trinity Episcopal He will replace Maj. Leland B.

Dorothy Denham. A4 of Deep River. will be in charge of the 5:30 ·supper hour.

church will meet at 7 o'clock to- Ku~re as head o~ the R.O.T.C. l'ight in the rectory for a soci"l rngmeer unIt. Major Kuhre has and discussion meeli ng. . •. been ordered to report for duty

in the corps of engineers at St.

The Rev. Elmer E. Dierks wiJI di cuss "What Is Protestantism" at the meeting of the Roger Wil­Jia ms Sunday .school class at 9:45 this morning. Robert Brom-11lugh. E2 of Bonaparte, will pre­ridE.

'The Ethics • •• · .. of Jesus," the last in a series 01 pre-Easter talks, will be dis­cussed by Prof. Herbert Martill, head of philosophy department, at the youth Fellowship meeting of the Christian church tonight. 'rhe meeting will be held at (j

o clock in the church parlors. Lorna Johnson. A2 of Newton,

will be in charge of devotionals. A social and supper hour will

follow the meeting at 7:15. Loren Hesdell, A4 of Des

Moines, will lead group games.

'Thy Kingdom . .. · .. Come·· will be the topic of the Rev. Alvin N. Rogness. Lu­theran and Zion chUrches.

The meeting will start at 5 :30 with a fellowship hour and lun­cheon. The vespers will begin at 6:15 at which time th Rev. Mr. Rogness will speak.

P aul Wold, A3 of SI. Ansgar. will lead the dellotion<.lls and Earl Schubert, G of Fostoria, 0., Dccompanied by Harold Greenlee. G of Shenandoah will sing "Cast Thy Burden" by Hamblen.

Lowell Satre, G of Webster City, will preside at the meetmg

A. Continuation • •• · .. of the discussion of the "Dis­tmctive Doctrines of the Christ­inn Churches - the Reformert Churches" will be held at the meeting of the St. Paul's Luther­un student association meeting

'Races' • • • tonighl. The meeting will be held '11 b th d' d b III the chapel at 7:30. · .. WI e e topic Iscusse y I

Marshall B. Clinard. instructor in • --the sociology department. at the A.n ElectIOn •.•

Louis, Mo.. a rter four years as a member of the university mili­t&l'y staff.

01 the meeting wi th Maxille Staker, A2 of Mingo, providing Grgan music. Dine-A-Mit~ suppel' hour wil

be at 6 o·clock.

Young People's . .. .. . fellowship hour art he Church of The Nnzarer.e will be held at 6:30 tonight in the church rarlors. All young people a~e in­~·ited.

'Prepamtion .. ... for Easter" will be the dis­cussion of the Westminister Fel­lowship group of the Presbyteri­an church tonight at 6:30. The Rev. Ilion T. Jone.~ will lead the devotio.1a]s and special music wiil be provided.

Isabelle M cC I u n g, A2 0 f Springfield, Mo., will preside.

Supper and a fellowship hOUl' will be held at 5:30,

meeting of the Pilgrim Youth ... of the Wesley Foundation association of the Congregational council for next year will be held Luncheon • • • church tonight at 6:30. Harold follOwing the 7 u'clock vespers .. . will be se.rved at 6 o'c1ock by Krizan. Al oi Chicago, Ill., will tonight in ihe Methodist siudent members of the Fireside cluo be in charge of the meeting. center. 120 N. Dubuque. of thc Unitarian church. A dis-

In charge of the 5:30 supper Carl Spriesterbach. G of Pine 1 cussion hour will be hel~ at 7 hour will be Harold Bi,ce, G of Island, Minn .• will be in cbargil o'clock followed by a social hQUf.

1wo Timers . '

It's a Fact.

But this is a double trouble

that ~ven you gali will enjoy. 1 0 29 These dresses (from the $ 95

TO

$ , 9! f4tellt clothillj ITIanUfflctuf-en In America) are appro-prJate at church Ql' jn the Union or the Pep Jamboree. We'l) see you to-morrow and wi 11 enjoy shoWiTlg them to much as you wJJI enjoy buying them.

Towner~s 10 South Clinton Sireet

Lots of Carol King's

And Gay Gibsons at

6.50 & 7.95.

= =

EYe-DEAL!! They say and the man by your side will walk with pride when you appear lor the Pep Jam b 0 I' e e in one oi TOWNER'S delightful new spring

crea tions . . . s t r e e t length dresses that spell success with every wear­. . . . Carole Kings and

Gibsons a re only !I part of TOWNER'S

selection. We might "When is a dress not

dress?" And we'd "When it's a Redingote"

. . . so very good th is year that we predict a lovely future. In one you'll be smart now, and through spring and summer. Some are print with plain; others are plain with print. but aU are ex­actly what the captain ordered.

@rAw \? {JjJ .~

@®~~~ell~u£l ,~~ \tJ IN I\t \E. :Sc U \.. Ly '_\..'W '"

~..".'

Gotta dress for spring. . . and TOWNtllt'S jacket dresses. long ones or short ones will fit right into the spring parties. teas, luncheons and the Easter parade.

• • • When is Brad "Wolie" Finch go­

ing to learn enough to layoff other people's girls. . . lIis own doesn't cater to it. and neither do the escorts of the othel' gals.

• • • Nothing can give a girl such a

lift as a new Playtex girdle ... and TOWNER'S have these new living girdles made of liquid la­tex. . . no seams, no bones, and an honest-to-goodness all-way

• new light-as-air girdles that ~..,stretch. Try one of these

• controls but doesn't con­':1 strict, has seamless garters.

part of the girdle. you know, and smooths wherever it touches. Those what wear them, swear by them, a.Q,d you will too 'cause we'll wager that you've never found a girdle that lives and breathes righ t with you. All you do to wash 'em is to rinse in suds, pat with a towel, and it's dry ... A marvel­ous creation if we ever. saw one, and TOWNER,'S will provide.

•••• Phi Psi Scott Swisher is in the

importing busincss. . . He called for Lushus Lucia Snyder ;_"1 Bur­lington and brought her to the Club Cabaret.

• • • The girl who leads the Easter

parac:ie will stop at the H & H HOSIERY & LINGERIE STORE. We offer one of the largest variety and qual­ity stocks of $1.00 slips in Iowa City. Some of the most popular -the swing skirt (98 in. sweep) with the beautiful lace top 101'

slim waisted girls-the luxurious new "stardust" material (biggest seller) with plain and fagot top -attractive embroidery tops­camisole and lace tops-lovely satins, durable knits, soft crepe silk, and stardust--white, tea rose, navy and black-all popular sizes -and AI.,L FOR $1.00.

• • • I t's the same old story . . . 0 f a

boy and girl who didn't have any

'" r '

Short skirts, and cut-out shoes is the 1941 Spring Lady! And between the two of them ... there is the question of hose. llere's a medal to the collegiate for wearing those sheer qualities of Royal Purple . . . the sheer, ful/-fashioned hose fro m SEARS. .New shades for spring ... talten {rom Mother Nature's own colors are now on display . Shades that blend with your skirt and loolt-neat-o with your shoes . . . is the deUght to find at SEARS.

• • • And what about Skeets Cole­

man. who was wanted by one N. Simonsen so hadly that she called him contlrluously from Tuesday to Friday when she told his room­mate as last resort to ask him to call her. . . but all ended as it beg/In for Skeets was busy with psychology somewhere on East Iowa avenue ...

• • • "First because it's Finest" ..

slogan that's true not only of Chevrolets sold at NALL'S, but

t rue. too. 0 f NALL'S obliging service . . oblig­ing and complete from the gas tanks in front to the Used Ca:r;s on second floor . . . The newly mod­ernized building on East Burling­tbn houses the best that General

Motors produces ... namely, Chevrolets, Buicks, and CadilJacs. 1t houses guaranteed used cars, a sqappy and efficient service de­partment. and a Parts department complete in ellery detail. Iowa City's proud of NALL CHEVRO­LBT. and you'll be proud of any car that leaves its portals, new or old ...

• • • foresight dl.\ring their college d!\ys. .. and neglected a business training. Befor~ you know It your chll-That's why the IOWA CITY COM-\ dren Will be grown and gone. MER(llc\l; COLLEGE makes a That's why yo~ should take ad­special effort for college students van~age . of time . . . so that th<:!~" before . It passes won't be left in the. too qUlckly, and I u r c h when Ihey have pic t u res graduate ... 8hort- ma~e of ~n. your hand typing and fatT\lly. This IS the gene;'o l stenogru- sort of a fami!y phical training is es- record that WIll sential to know for stay "allve" always. For "C'U .... LU.,

many pOSitions . . . life-like photographs that will Not knowing them. may cost. YOu k~ep memories kee.n in y~ur your opportunity to get the job mllld, make an apPollltment With you want. So. don't wait any long- ANDERSON'S STUDIO, dial 2488. e~, but drpp in at IOWA CITY COMMEROIAL COLLEGE tomOL'­row. and let them fix you a sim­ple pl'Oafam covering those bu:si­ness spots the personnel directors d~mand of college graduates ... IOWA CITY COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,

• • • Swing in.to spring with a new

car. Have the highway at your command witi'\ a new Studebaker -one of the s moo thest- c::J looking, eas- c:::::,::, iiSt-tQ-drive ~­cars on the. market to- ~ day. ' Go~-=""" ~1. down to See e:,. QOGM/ BROS.. long known i n Iowa City for the cars they. sell Ilf\d their square business deals, Tl'ade In your old model tOr a newer one that will give you rno\,!! driving pleasure and riding leomfort. Ma\<e owninljl a Stulte­bll\<er one of your family customs. · . ~

Right about face! And one sa lute to the girl who mllets the feminine inspections of glowing, fresh hair

EtthQt shines in the sun, and lovely looking nnils

1:;- ihai touch the glamour-

~ 'eking lad':s hearts ...

, RO drop in at VOOUE ~aEAUTY 8IJOP tomoi'­

f/l~j Q row. and let them make an appointment ... You Owe It to yourself. Diol 7552.

• • • Joan Houghton and Jeane

Fields are trying this pin angle now. Joan has Johnny Williams Phi Psi badge, and Jeane's wear­ina Jerry Hilton's Sigma Chi pin.

• • • Join the Easter parade with a

new bonnet from Florence Ray­bl,lrn's Mill i n e r y Nook at CONDON'S. Their perky lim hats with so­p hi 8 ticawd vei Is will gi ve you that mys­teriou s 1 0 0 k. If you're the sweet and simple type you'll go for their bonnets. New straws. sailors, felt.--everythlng for the college miss. Find your type of hat in Florence Rayburn's Milli­nery Nook at CONDON'S,

• • • Don't bc a slacker, the season's

here, and sO orC some of the snappiest was h a b l e r .. lack outfits we·ve.... ,,. een ... at WJ\RD'S ... ."..;'" .

Slacks that are tailor-~~ C,)' ed, yet sort of femi- t. . nine in saddle tones 01' ~\ _

brighter hues. Color!ul"0 stripes make their long-sleeved blouses plenty tricky . . . so pack youI' picnic baskets, sUp into WARD'S for the picnic slack suit, und happy spring ...

Srp..rF -

Looking at the River is fun. but if you two in the plr&ure would

rather see "Buck Privates" at the STRAND, your Campus Consultant

has a couple of tJckets tor you,

"Come on along . . . come on I Scientific research proves that along . . . and join GREEN'S heat in laundry washini and 1in-spring parade. There you'll find plu_ professional laundry

Casual sport coats make lege man . .. and line of taJlored coats top field. .. They're smart. the Class of '41. .. BREMER'S

conscious season. You'll give seU a build-up if your finery comes from BRIEMIIi fashion headquarters lor men ... the latest styles. the quality merchandise in thing from curt buttons to

• • • When Ruth Magill and

Tilly compared notes after saw Ruth wearing her (Mali's) ring, was Bob Ticehursl's ~

' red, and particularly so when !wi saw the ring on Marie'! W again! Now they wonder ille Westlawn girl has a miUt3l11-sign ia and Bob's undying a~, toC).

• • •

... there you'll find ... the smal't- pro C esses, Hey. hey .. . Pi Epsilon Pi IU est clothes on the campus. ' . . . de t roy S rume it again . .. This year then.

p I' a c ticaJly bringing Dick Shelton, direct inrl That's the praise the coeds have all bacteria the Blackhawk, to shoot the I1lIIi been giving GREEN'S . . , the without in- to you what'U dance at the lIP

most model'll women's jury to fab- JAMBOREE Friday nicht. Ti!Stt apparel shdP in town. 0 . . ric~ . the r go On sale tomorrow at ki Th~~I' "new d,;cornllon~ I I abo r atory Union, and for ooly $1.50 yllli11j SthPe. spring .... an tests show excessively high bac- dance at the last Informal parlJI

elf new s p r 1 n g.. t h t llA.. clothes cry "smartnes> ten a count m a\'erage home laun- 0 t e year. not 0 men 10' and style." You'll find dry work through lack of suCCi- Iunnest. With a little lore '

. you fellows might say thaI " . a Hollywood cotton clent volume~ of hot water and Jams bring May frolics" .. . I parade that will make other professional proce. e • either I you follow. and I think you do..

glamorize spring · , . Easter suits in not available or considered too Get your tickets early to be plaids of soft shades costly for home luundry. For you'll be among those inc1u~edl

. the PEP JAMBOIlEE. colors ... slack suits salllial'Y reason , be sure to • cnd

of spring tints to put on for those your laundry to NEW PRO E early picnics . . . and of COUI'S , • • • those sweaters, batiste blouses and LAUNDRY & CLEANING CO.

I The Len len s 850n lYit~ rts hot CrOSl buns and warm ii·

shirts that complete a co-ed's Dial 4177. spring wardrobe. GREEN'S. the latest l'c-decorated women's shop in Iowa City ... has tor you the latest styles from the East and We. I.

• • •

nook is almosl a thine II - 1/ j \' remember;jj, bu

The luscious while . before il'& \QO" you'll wan! It ~

chicken topped WIth OM ot tile ... slic s oC eri. p bacon on OLl'S 8 P !tId

• • •

swimming with ch .c Lenten lunc*l "He Came, he aw. he konked rarebit and served with or di\lMtl. !WI

her ...... If it's good enough 101' )'elish spells the club bluet that I as te it Arch Ward it·s good enough for room sandwich at the ~I," those tbat j UZ, me. D & L. U's a delicacy ~ out ot r,u, Ito • • • I hard to equnl lind beautiful to ...".. "'perlor in~ If

INFORMATION P LEA S E- taste - a luncheon sup rem ( _ tr)'ln, P!IIl ell thinking of the popular radio for only II qual'l r. e ms hardly mmm r if no nov.lty al" program. it re- enough as do 011 of Doug's price 'IUDDLE and are bakejl. or minds on that .... .,., _1 1"'11 at the D & L. Thcy'r set t.o ilt 0 perl llon. Abtt~ ~ folk do seek in-~ .lJ:I t.he -tud nt's buda t and to ult 'I1rd hlp When you ejlt 19111: • for mat ion in ,: • , .:, the student's taste. That's why sO dinners at the ~ .•• , buying _ we::: ,'i~ .. ', mony luwa students sweor by the wb7 ~ enjoy ~ ,... ,. s p e cia II ze in-: ,,/"; D & L and enjoy the habit of Euter HMODt, ~0Il eIIt II giving depend- . IIm'(' meo Is II day therein. HllDDLE. a b I e informa­tion concerning Drug and Toilet Goods items-see us at DRllO- nop. Edward S. Rose. Phol'maci t. 3 S. Dubuqu -at Iowa Ave.

• • • Were Lol'lla Densmore, Pi Phi,

and Wnlt Brown, Dell, Just tlllk­ing ovor old times th other af­ternoon, 01' is on old rOlllllnce started anew? And when' docs o ccrtllin 1I len m'/

• • • Fot' your regulal' Inst doy m DIs

durina Lent always hove lint ero.s Buns ... For ~ home-made buns cull 8324. THE PJ\STRY • I'ANTRY, III East B lIrllnliton, You w 111 find thcm full of fruit und mlll'k· cd with II white frosting CI'OS .

• • • Perry D ct rHo Rnth sal m n.

r ports on his moth r, Mrs. Adn Deetel's of Waterloo, who nt him a specllli delivery I [tel' to his post ofrice box. That get. fun­nicr liS you think about it.

• • • A curly top of 80lt wtlvy holr

will muke any man's h~urt spin ~ 111 ~prinilim ... 8-

J ~ P lolly tc It's don -- in the coil III t sty l

• J(,) by the Jli:FFUSON .. A j8EA TV HOP ..,

r:;,,/ What girl would r­sist the otter or u shampoo and linaerwave for fifty c nts? Drop In tomorrow. or dial 5065 tor (In appointment.

For thc benefit o( llIe who \Ii re wond rln, ~ ~..11 wh r about of Gay C,,~ I" we'll admit now that Jl WII' a Theta (rom Mlnne ola, bill cous or the little note 111.....1 column. aid pln Wal reillflll und Oay' ~llY, YOu mlll!t 111·

• • •

TONt'

CLIP,

BEAt COMI

SUNDAY, MARCTT 30, H)·11 THE DAlLY lOW

Band's Wednesday Performance to Conclude . University . ~~------------------------------------------

Annual Spring Tour Concert Event At Io.wa Union Plan Broadcast

ret\. a Iso wrote out a hot trumpet ChO l'US for "Ciribiribin" which was played several times. .

A response to Barl'ett's IIrrang­Ing came Friday night in Marshall­town, when the clarinets came back with a swing chorus ot their own on the rh umba number,

City High Rates Top Position Among 59 Schools in Forensics

Pontoniers Go 'Up alld Over' Bnlening Talk To Be on Story Behind eri i

program of cI 'ral 1ft' ons, acrompanied by William B~rg G of Gary, Ind.

Traveling Bandsmen journey 750 Miles To Give 14 Con.cerl8

Climaxing its seeond annuo l spring concert tour with a campus aPpearance, the Univen:ity of Iowa co~cert. band, conducted by Prof. Charles B. Righter, wf1l present. n concert In the main lounge of Iowil Union Wednesday night.

Oehlsen had a homecoming in Marshalltown. Born and raised lhel'e, he was re-introduced to his home town by Professor Righter and he conducted "Phaeton" over­tUl'e and hi s "S.UJ. Medley," witi­ning well-earned applause.

Organized and timed to the minute, the tour was completed without a serious error.

J. Borr Heads Ba.nd Each piece of equipment was

numbered and checked in and out at each stop by Jack Borg, A3 of Des Moines, president of the band,

Tickets rol' the pedol'monce nrc with the result that not one thing ava ilable, starting today, at thl' was lost or broken. A bass cJari­main desk in the Union. The con- net was left. in Jefferson. but the cert will be broadcast by s tation superintendent of the Jefferson WSUI. schools drove from there to Perry

Return ing to Iowa City shortly with the instrument in time for before noon yestcrday, the band the next concert. en~ed its second a~nual tour Committees were Damed for the which covered 750 miles In thc handlinlf of heavy instruments and southern half of the. tate. baggage, and individual members

Presentcd . 14 Concer!s . cooperated to make each set-up Alte~' presenting 14 concerts In with the least posslbl~ delay and

13 dlt!erent towns, Professor I confusion Five band men were in Rithter expressed, the oplnion charge of'music and music stands that the tour wnM hIghly surcess- lor the entl're tour. ful. Estimated illlendance for the I Mrs. Paul G. Pl'eus of Iowa series of perfor~nnces was 12,000 City was counselor and advisor for people. Paradoxically, the largest. the 17 women on the tour. town, Omaha, furnl'h\!d onc of the smaller audiences, and a ~mall town, D nison, turned out the lar!l~t crowd.

Band members [I'om surround­ing towns attended the concert in eac~ town the organization played. IPlaying from a repertory of 30

selections, the band'~ work was \fell received at each per!ormnnce. A highlight, good lor enthusifl-"tic applause at each concert, was As­sistant Director Arnold Oehlsen's "S.U'!. Medley" - a special ar­rangement of Iowa song' climaxed with the singing of "Old Gold."

PrOVing the band's versatllity and initiative-and giving Profes­sor Righter quite a shock-was the concert in wh ich four cornets stood up to pJay what had for­merly been a delicale solo,

• winK' by Barrett Larry Banell, A2 of Rockford,

m., had written a four-pal'\. swing chorus for a rhumba number. Bar-

The Newest Sensations in

~"., , 5#// ~ and 01;1>'

Junior College Players Rated

Judges Cive Awards To Four Schools As Festival Week Closes

One "superior" and three "ex­cellent·, ratings were announced in the junior college division of the Iowa play production festJval at the close of the final session last night.

"Superior" went to Red Oak junior college, which presented "Fixin's."

"Excellent" was awarded to Bloomfield, Maquoketa and 0e'3

Moines (Dowling College). AU of the schools receiving

"superior" or "excellent" ratings, except Des Moines, were directed by University of Iowa graduates. Red Oak was directed by Marie Schalekamp, Bloomfield by Adele Kennedy, and Maquoketa by No­na Seberg.

Mention for outstanding per­formances was given to Jack Smaha and Russel Bryan of Red Oak; Dorothea Snyder of WaSh­ington, :lIld John Robling of Des Moines.

Superior Rating Goes To Tom Wnriu, One or 2 Students Honored

Iowa City high school ranked top among the 59 high schools in class A and class B competition participating in the 35th annual finals contest oC the Iowa High School Porenslc league.

Tom Wuriu nt Iowa City high school was one of two students in the 10rensic fi nals to receIve su­perior individual r~nkings. Other student was John Stichnoth, Cen­tral, Sioux City.

Iowa City placed among the ex­ceUent ranking schbols. Otpers were Burlington; Central, Sioux City, and West, Waterloo.

Charles Ellett, UnJversity high and Terry Tester, Iowa City, were among the top 10 ranking radio speakers.

Iowa. City Winners Excellent individual rankings in

the debate division were given to Louis MarIas, Iowa City, and Gor­don Christensen, Iowa City.

Winners in original Ol'atory in the high school contests were Don Rivkin, Davenport, first; Robert Sharp, Hawarden, second, and Ju-

Miss Rohrbacher To Be Married

In HOlne Today Charlotte ROhrbacher, doughter

of nt·. and Mrs. William Rohr­bacher. 811 E. College, lind John Sll'Ohbeen, son oC Mr. and Mrs. J . H. Stroh been of Waukon, will be martied at 5 o'clock today in the home of the bride's parents. The Rev. Vincent L. Odon of Oak­land Pork, Fla., will officiate.

Miss Rohrbacher received her B.A. degree Ct'Om the university here and he(' M,A. degl'ee from Columbia university in New York City. For the past three years shp has been connected with the in­ternational center of the Y.W,­C.A. in New York City.

Mr. Strohbeen atl nded the Uni­vel'Slty ot Iowa Cor on year and was graduated fI'om the Mass'l­chUsetts Institute of Tcchnology in Cambl'idge, Mass. He is as 0-

ciated with the National Refining company in Wilmington, N.C.

Bartley Named

Once Gennan Official p aker to Analyze

, piritual Background'

lian Winston, Ottumwa, third. T LISt ff Extempore speaking conlestanis 0 C!!l( a

to place we I'e Richard Palmer, AI- '-7 gona, first; Tom Wuriu, Iowa City, I Of N L R B second , and Albert Goss, Musca- • • • • tine, th ird. •

Class A Debate Excellent ranking debate affir­

mative teams (class A) were Cen­tral, Sioux City; Iowa City; Bur­lington; Davenport, and West, Waterloo.

Excellent ranking debate nega­tive teams (class A) were Bur­lington; West, Waterloo; Iowa City, Central, Sioux City, and East, Sioux City.

Class B Debate Hawarden was the only class B

school to receive excellent rank­ing for affirmative debate team.

Good negative teams (class B) were Hawarden; Laurens, Lamoni; Teachers College high, Cedar Falls; Lake City; St. Patrick's; Waukon, and Mt. Ayr.

Good affirmative teams (class B) were Laurens; Eldo\'a; Clear­field; Mt. Ayr; West Union; Lake City, and Waukee.

Law Fraternity Initiates Ten

Former University Man Assumes W ashil1~on D'uties on April 10

Ten - foot walls offer no serious obstacle to members of Iowo'b R.O.T.C. Pontonier unit as they practice [or the second annua I spring m et with the Pontoni!'),

William H. Bartley, until 1'1'- company at Iowa Stat college, cently managing editor of uniVer-j Ames. About to clamber avel' tht' sity publication bulletins, ha, been wall, with the a Istance oC 11'1-appointed to the legal staff of the low cadets, and assume a tiring Washington office of the National position on the opposite side, ii Labor Relations . Board. He will David Hill, EI at Fl. Dodge. With assume his new dUties Apl'il 10. rifle slung over his !>boulder, Sey-

Bartley, who left Iowa City in maul' Lubetkin, E1 of Neww,'k. late January to become editol' or N.J., g ts rendy to follow JillL the Hawarden Indep ndent, has Holding another l'ifl as a ttlJl:e­resigned that po~ition effective oIl stcp fo)' the wall scaling man­April 1. His Wa.lhington appoint- euver (Ire (left to right) WiJlinm ment WIlS made by NLRB Gen- Schweizer, El of Keokuk; Jllme~ eral Counsel Robert. B. Watts lind Koslll', E2 at N vlnvill; Bob was approved Friday by the labor Schrimper, E2 of Cedar Rapids, bOard. lind Dan McLaughlin, El of D

Admitted to the Iowa bar in Moines. Ten men comprise the June, 1938, as the youngest mem- Ponton; r wall - scaling hquad. bel' of the state's Ipgal org:1Oi7.a- Starting trom 25 yards on one lion at that time, Bartley received side or the wall. thc cadets err ct his B.A. degree at Iowa in 19:i'1 a sClllin& of the 10-foot obstacle, and his J .D, degree in 1939. He hit the ground on the other sidc, was affiliated at h(' unlvl'r. 'ty ~u~h rorwarn nnother 20 yard~,

!lop I th ground and slmulnte building up of firing line

ngain<l ho:;tiIe troops. The Pon-

tonier comp tilions with the Aml'. Scripture r adln. and Invoca­. chool I. the only . cries or uch tion will be oft red by the Rev. me ts between RO,T.C. eneineer I AmbrOl J . BUrlte, PI' IdeM ot unit. in th~ Unit d St te . The I St. Ambro. e college, Dov nport. first ml'el of the rie. and the 'B d fir'lt of its kind in the country P. t qlll! wa· h Id in lowa Cily last y nr. M d Thi' y'ar th Iowa Stale unit wlll A'ward a e b ho~l [or the and meet, to bo held th I' in April. Tht' competi­tion is (\ whol -day offalI' of vaT­iou~ t'v!'nt~ ending with a b nquct and danc!' and thl! award oC lhe homt'-mllde grand trophy which the Iowa I:ompuny made and 10. t last yeoI'. The seven competllivl' events whi h form the day-lone m t UrI' the 10-tll t wall scalinll ront · t with rull equigm nt, a ml\­chine gun crew dl'IIl, ponton ri,~ ging l'V('t1t, crack squad drlll, pilituon nnd ('ompllny drills, In­dl\'idu:tl compdilinn and a rin match.

The best ~qu d In th! RO.T.C.'s enflineer unit, the Ursl Iqu d of the s nd platoon , (ompany C, und r comm nd of Cadet rgt. H nry Schab. E2 of Tl·~ton, N .• J., W·· annow)ced y 1 rdoy by th military dep rt­ment.

with Delta Theta Phi, legal Ira- ----------___ --------_____ _

ternily, lind Pi Kappa Alphn, so- Aydelotte Gl·ves I Amc. S oeioJogy taff

Member ot thl win ina quad whit'h took fir. \ pi e in th" l"Jmpetition March 19, are Schab, Ray Slezak, EI or Iowa CIty; Goorae Drnl', El of lown City; .Iames Swaner, E1 of Iowa City; hobcrt Rl!:jIell, El of l.:Jwa City: l Chodc Leu wil '1', El of Chicu¥o, I III.; Prston Cendl 1', EI of Iowa City; Irvinfl O'Harra, El of I wa City •• r>d Franc! Conklin, EI of Iuwa City.

cial fraternity. I ' I F I A former staH member on Th\! l'"!ost to owa aeu ty

Daily Iowan, Bartley was man- Graduate Talk ~ aging editor of the monthly Uni- Nine ml'mbcrs or the .ocl?logy versi!y of Iowa Ncws Bulletin {.cully wCre gu ts of th .oci-~ J~OUL.'

- VItTOR AND­BLUEBIRD REtORD

Large Collection

Tomorrow

Phi Della Phi, professional law [ratemity, announces the initia­tion of 10 members at a luncheon held yesterday in the Law Com­mons.

I New members are William C. from June, 1937, until Feb, 1, 1941. W 1l.Known Educator ology lafC at Iowa Slate college the past w k for an inlormal

d h wlll be awarded indl­vldunl quad m mber during Governor's day c remonie, Sat· urday, Mtly 10.

ot the late t dance band hits by thl' band'! you love

to dance to

35c & SOC also

A FINE OLLE TION of SDlPJlON(E

Concerto In Albums ...

'250 350 450 550

orne in See Our Fine CoUecUon

,Four Organizations Plan Meetings

ATHENS HISTORY ... · . . circle will hold a meeting at 3 p.m, in the home of Mrs. W. R Shields, 1010 E. Burlington.

• • • WOMEN'S ... · . , Relief corps ollicers will meet in Meredith's tea room for a des­sert bridge at 1:30 p.m,

• • • BOOK AND, ..

Stuart, Ll of Chariton; John W. Phillips, L2 of Des Moines; Nile C. Kinnick, L1 of Omaha, Neb.; Richard G. Zellhoefer, L2 of Wa­terloo; Jame.> W. Dower, L2 of Marengo; Richard E. Benesh, L t of Cedar Rapids ; Wi lliam P. Evans, Ll of Waterloo; Charles F . Mur­phy, Ll of Dubuque; Tom A. Lou­den, L1 of Fairfield, and Lestel' H. Eicherly, L2 of Holstein.

Applegate Funeral SertJice Tomorrow

In Oathout Chapel

MUSt'c St,,(,ln.,ts peaks Tuesday at 8 group m ling ard di cu sion of '" or'· h sodol gieal ]:roblems,

T . R . I In Senate Cham er Prol . E. B, Ruter, chairman oC o G'V~ eCttlt I .. h u '" . , "BonOI'll Work and Gra(\lIut the 'ociOlogy d VISIon r, an

Prof. R. y E. Wakeley ot Iowa Study" is th . topic on which Prof. Slute colleg k-d thc discu Ion. Frank Ayd lotte, Amel'ican ,('cre-

Music students will present Q tary to Rhodes tl'u. te and former • recital of vocal lind instrum ntal president oC Swal'lhmore college. I selections in the north music hall will speak Tuesday night. I at 4 tomorrow afternoon. The leclure will be given at 8

o .nClAL DAILY BUtLETIN

Paul Brissey. A2 of Burlington, p.m. in the senate chamber of Old .. -------- ----.... piano, will play two selections by Capitol. No tickets are required (Continued [rom Page 2) Schumann. for admis ion to the graduate lee-

Dorothy O'Hearn, A3 or Mnson ture, which is op n to the public. peel to apply lor entrance to a medical chool by fall o[ 1942. A tee oC $1 I~ l't'Quir d of each stu~

- --=====-====-.. Vif'RneSe Mwician

To Give Program

City, piano, will playa sonata by Professor Aydelotte is now Beethoven and Merrie HeetJand, presid nt. of the In tltute for Ad~ A3 of Sibley, soprano, will sing vllnce Study at Princeton. N.J .•

S PE N C E R' S Funeral service will be held at Schubert 's "Heidenroslein.'· and as secretary to Rhodes Trus-2 p.m. tomorrow at the Oathout Marjorie Grim, A2 or Bluffton, tee~ he administel's the enlire

MONDAt' CLUB. . . funeral chapel for Thomast

Tf· Ind., soprano, will " ing Clu'pen- Rhodes scholarship pr?ee~~ngps .

· .. Basket club will meet In the home of Mrs. Jos~ph Walter, 204 E. Fairchild, at 2 :30 p,m.

• • $

dent taking the test, and mu he ------------­paid at th time hI' registers Dnd OPEN AT 11:00 A.M. ree iv s hi.· pl'ucbce ~h L Appli~ cations ~hould b made in the .. ~ ,...1 ...... ~ I

HARMO Y HALL ... will hold a meeting at 1:15 Applegate, 79, former residen 0 ter' "The Sleep That Flit on A Rhodes ~eholar hlmsell, 1'0-. th h f M W F 30hnson county, who died at his Baby's Eye ," [e SOl' Aydelotte received the hon-15 D b St p.m. 10 e ome 0 rs. . . hid K D C L (0 f

~~~~~:' ~u:.~~. ~~~~~L:e:in:b~a:u~gh:,:42:0~N~.:C:I:in:t:on:,:::::~ orne in West. More an. an., Jean Meyer, Al of Wit\jams- orary ... degree octor 0

OA TILE IIAMPOO,

'l'ONIC lUNSE, NECK

CLIP, IIAIR TYLE

BEAUTIFULLY 50C COMBED .......

for Easter • •• PEClAL OFFER

Our $4 Value

CHARMING LADY OIL

PERMANENT

50 lilily.

Open Evenlnrs . With or Wllb4lul Appoln&ment

fREE REVLON MANICURE) WITlI EVERY MACHlNELEfiS PERMANENT

MACIDNELESS $2.75 , ,

PER JAN.ENT * * * *OENUINE

yesterday after a two months' burg, clarinet, will pl~ a I' lee- Civil Laws), highest degree orIer-. illness. tion by Verhey, and Quentin Um- I'd by Oxford university.

He is survived by one sister, benhower. A2 of Chariton, piano, He introduced and develooed Mrs. SIrelda Harrington, Downey; will play "Nocturne, OP. 32, no. 1" the now widely-used honoM edu­

, one brother, Wyram Applegate, by Chopin. caUona! system during hI 19 I Downey, and several nieces and Kathryn Fatland, A2 of Col!ax, years at Swarthmore. This plan, nephews. piano, will play Chopin's "Im- I patterned upon the Oxf.ord edu-

Burial will be in Oakland promptu in A Flat Major, op. 29."\ cational system, separates tbe su­. cemetery. periol' student from the averag!'

:~;:::::::::::~:~::::::::::~::::~ student, and giv the former in-i dlvidual attention,

(8)VOTE FOR ATTY.

GEORGEJ. JENSEN

for

POLICE

JUDGE •

CITIZENS' NON·P ARTISAN TICKET Gr/lduated from the College of Liberal Arts, 1935, College of Law, 1938, associated with Atty, Will J. Hayek for the last two years in the practice of Jaw. Member of Elks Lodge, Junior Chamber of Com­merce, Delta Theta Phi law fraternity and the Johnson County Bar Association.

]'OVR VOTE WILL BI .uPRROIATED AT TilE

ELECTION MONDAY, MARCil 31st

Professor Aydelotte graduated from the University ot Indiana in 1900, received his M.A. degrt'e from Harvard universHy in 1903, and his B. Litt. degree from 0'1(­ford in 1908.

The educator has been a mem­ber of the faculty of Indiana uni­versity and Massachusetts Imtitute oC Technology, as well as Swarth­more college,

NOW' LAST TIMES • TUESDAY

I'cgistrnr's office at oncc. " " ~WJ ., ., " PROF. JlARltV C. BARNE ,. _. ____ ...

Tau Gamma Sing Fest practice will b held

Sunday nrternoon at 2 p.m. In Macbride hall. It is ab,olutely neee sary that all who plan to ' ing in the group Monday night be at th rehearsal.

lllRLRY. JOHN ON President

Ba ebaU A II rl'e~hmen interested in play­

ing baseball should be out to start practicing Monday, March 31. All

NOW _NOS I

interested picasI' report. • t. COACH O. II. VOGEL ~ 11:11 A. II.

.IIT "" . "SUI UMOn ' PlESlOM . fOS1f.1

"MooN ovaR BU"" :''rf-.--

~ TO ~ 1:11 P. M. "4 CIalWra Z5e

Am. l:et ALL SUTS " , WEd DAYS TO 4:.

56c .. 40c

Child.'eD !5e

AF'nIl (:31 ALL SUTS 56c

G E T .R*

Doug & . Lvla of lh D &: L GlUt . I.. ravorite R nde1\ Oll (If th C m­pu Lead r.. ongralu­I le lhl ... w 'l" ~ \ ill r. PI USe . lop in for II menl "On The 1I11U~ "-your chuice or I h(' menu.

NOW! * * * ':' *

From Thi ' Week' "Liberty"

Th Long 1 Rnn And 10 1 Amazing

tage Hit in Theatrical Illilory

~~,~­GBII ~ • WlIlWAIMCY_o­__ ._~· w __ --.-~.-"", .. __ ·Do_"JOHH~ ,,_ OJ I),O»Y\, ZAr<~l

.. _c-..s..-. -LATEST NJlW~

Color Cartoon " NovelUes

PAGE SIX THE 'DAILY lOW AN, IOWA CITY SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1941

D.~av_~~n~po_r_t __ T __ o~~_~~H_.o __ I_st_~_n~~r Cha~pionship Michigan Annexes National Swim.ming Title Imps Surpass f -*u:x* --"

Noses Out Elis .By 3 Markers

r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --------.. - E~yL~Th~ \~~ ~ m-.U" J.o~'. stiRPRISE PACKAGE By Jack Sords Win Tilt, 31·26 • ._-'-' --i.

~ar ~ Ilolsteln (26) fr It pI It nOY Wehde f ............... 3 4 2 10

IOWa! Captures 7tJi Among nllishing Field Of Sixteen Teams

S P 0 R T· S Jack Silencer Paces nay Wehde f .............. 1 1 4 3

• .

'.# ' . F B k' D'1s Olson f ................... - ....... 0 1 0 1 ast· rea lUg eVI Goettsch c .................... 3 II? To Fifth State Title Asprey g ...................... 2 1 I I

E. Steen g .................. 0 0 3 0 DES MOINES. March 29 (AP) L. Steen g .... , ................. 0 0 2 0

- Davenport's Blue Devils, cun- Ttl - - - -. t t th I loa s .... ........ ........ ..... 9 8 13 21

EAST LANSING, Mich., March 29 (AP) - Michigan. tUI'ning on the heat when points were needed most. t:might won its eighth con­secutivc National Collegiate Ath­letic associalion swimming cham­pionship in a fight to the finish' with Yale.

Taking four individual titles and one relay in the two-day classic. the Wolverines piled up 61 points. lhree more than the Elis.

Clark Aids Bucks

PASSING THE

BUCK by

BILL BUCKLEY

these physical restrictions were e~tablished was because it was tIIought that anyone above or be­low the requirements was possi­bly a glandular case, and the urmy did not want to take a chance on it ... Now that the mysteries of glandular eHect are being gradually solved, West Point officials arc seriously tak­ing into cor.sideration changing ib physical requirements.

• • •

Ware First In Half·Mile Run

Misses Record By One·Tenth of Second; Davenport Wins Meet

By MERREL GOLDBERG • ThIs seems like a. steP In the Combining power and balance,

rjght direction, and It allo seems Davenport's Blue Devil trackmen (lnly sensible tha' the army yesterday forged another link in

Ohio State, mainly through the The number or top-noch pro- should keep abreas~ of medleal ability of Earl Clark, only double fessional athletes who are being advanees ••• If a man Is .,hysl- their impressive chain of Missis­winner of the meet with victories turned down in the draft for var- clllly fit In the medlcal llense, but sippi Valley conference indoor . h' h iollS physical disabilities leads not suitable for draft duty In the track victories by outdistancm' " 10 Ig and low-board diving. tied .. cne to wonder whether army re- Inllltary sense, • clash or au'hor-with Wayne university of Detroit gulations are a little outmoded or Uy exists that ahou,ld be eHmln- seven other schools with a total for third with 19 points. if tthletic officials are too lax In ated for the Cood of the U. S. ot 611-6 points.

New champions were crowned pE'rmitting such men to engage in Army. Franklin high of Cedar Rapids in eight of the 11 events but only "Physical activity. • • .. took second with 38, Clinton had

• BII' Ha.nk Greenberg. whose one record was e9ualed dUI'!ng Ilat feet may save Wm for lbe On the other hand, the fault- 295-6. McKinley of Cedar Rapids the two days. I Dttrolt Tleers this year after all; might lie entirely with coacheR, 18, Wilson of Cedar Rapids 10,

Michigan's C h a rl e y Barker. Gree Rlee. whose accompllsh- trainers alld managers, who allow Iowa City 5 and Dubuque 2. With­named by coaches tonight as the ments as holder of four wOI'ld their charlles to run or fight as out a point was Roosevelt of year's outstanding college swim- ellstance running records did not the case may be. without any re- Cedar Rapids. mer. equalled the meet record of IllUI. ress physicians as slgnlflcJ'lI\t gard for his personal he~ lth. . . 7 Ou' of 11

j I tl I d M1k Certain1y, if a man survives from • 23 seconds in regaining the 50- or se ec ve serv ce, an e t· h i nl i i Yesterday's conqu...,t on the Bellolse h Id t d a nple ern a, u ess t 5 a very ..... yard free style crown he lost last , ' w 0 cou co en roun S fieldhouse track was Davenport·s at to d In th In b I unusual situation. he should not year to Guy Lumsden of Wayne. p spee erg, u seventh wI'n m' the 11 tun' es th'e co leln't th b 11 f be allowed to exert himself in NeW Titleholders u even answer e e or meet has been held. Clinton's

Other new titleholders are Rene the army, are the three cases of any way. But if the situation 1s tsta din athl te h r 'd ullusual enough to permit the River Kings copped the remain-

Chouteau. Yale. in the 1,500-me- ou D g e s w 0 eoun" - I ing four buntings. tel' free style' James Welsh Michi- n't pass a stiff physical exam. man to run. the army shou d also ., • • • be in a situation to recognize it. . Although no records were

gan, 440-yard free style; James On these three. Greenbcrg'r and allow for It in its examina- broken in yestetday's meet, sev-Skinner, Michigan, 200-yard breast tioos. eral good times were turned I·n. st Ie ' w'n' P W leet, so the al'my says. would 1'0 {, I 111m r e w, ayne, . .. .. '" Paul Ware, CI' ty hl'gh's only en-lOO d f t 1 F . H d have bothered him on marches--yar ree s y e; rancls ey t, I try in the meet, came within one-Michigan, 150-yard back stroke; i!ut tails to recognize the Lact thai Spr n~ football Pllllctlee In Ble t

Ailf. 6Mr; IOOIS 1/\E'- MoS'(Se~o\ls COMPe:'f'111c;W I{e. Mef SINes: MAx

SCHMeLING­kNocKeD ;11M

OUT

, A6~ SIMON

• MAN MOLlNiAIN '. I Fr<bM New ,/or<K.­

-- fl-te: SUf<p~lse of" ~IN6 IN 6~NeRAL­,&,No Joe ],oUIS IN

I'AR'TicUL.AR.,

Wisconsin Takes NCAA Title By Nipping Washington State

Yale's free style relay team, and th is. same pair of iootsies have Tenl campS Is now ail-Inclusive. ten h of a second of tying the Clark in the one-meter. dive. I cBrn~d Honkus Pankus throu~h with Coach Harry Stuhldreher s~andi}"\g half-mile record set by Illinois Salesman Pulls Defense Out,

Successfully deiendmg crowns several seasons bf baseball, In ha.ving ealled his Wisconsin Bar- Bob Barsalou of Dubuque in 1938. Tl S k h d were Howard Johnson Yale 220- which he played day in and day I:ers Into action yesterday after- Junior Franck of Davenport in First in Singles len nel;t s Be in yard free style; Michigan's' med- (,ut ... ~Ikewise. ~ice can run all IIoon •.. Stuhldreher I' un s his Cthed 60-fyacrli~ t IOW

. huthrdles, and Of ABC Meet For 39-34 Triumph ley relay team and Clark in the day, tl'lple hernia ard all, but practice a Httle differently than a yon on 10 e 60-yard three-meter di~e: the army can·t use him in any other conference sehools, howev- high hurdles, also came within KANSAS CITY. March 29 (AP)

Iowa Takes 7th capaclty ... And Belloise could H , spllttlng his 5qUlld Into four a tenth ot a second of the re-d

. t t· t fa d "t· d ST PAUL M Ich 29 (AP) -Wisconsin pulled the Washington TI'a iling Ohio State and Wayne n(l .ouo ou fIght ninc out of ten III'OUPS 0 Il Y roun robin rames spe .. Ive recor s. . • a' -

at the finish were Princeton and soldlCrs. but Uncie Sam won'l (In successive Saturdays, and dl- Field Events Short Martin Carlson. 45. a meat sales- State defense out tonight, then Minnesota, 10 points each, Iowa 6; gi~e him a .chance to battIe anY-I "Idlng his ~quad later f~r the trs- Fie~d eve~t ma~ks. were. unim- man trom Rockford. IlL, rolled sneaked behind it for a 39 to 34 Occidental college 5' Massachu- thmg but nng plug-ughes. dUional Army-Navy ram ~ I presslve, wlth wmrung distances into first place in the singles with victory over the Cougars to keep sett~ St:lte and Wi1U~ms. 3 each; , . • • which winds UP 'he practlees. in ~e broad jump and shot ~ut 730 in the annual American BOwl-! the national collegiate basketball Sprmgfleld coli e g e Villanova There s a lot of research to be ,. • • r fall 109 feet short of the standing . .. . Brown ;lnd lhe Univc;sity of Chi~ done on thls subject of physlc~1 At Mleh1ran, little Mike S061k, ~ecords. Similarly, winning heights mg Congress tournament here late I tJtle In the Big ~en conference. cago 2 each and Dartmouth and fitness, and the "Tmy Is generally the all-conference baSketball for- 10 the pole vault and high jump today. He had games of 245. 226 The Badgers. 10 turn . stopped Stunford, 1 ~ach. becominc eognizant of II ... In ward, will b'~ a I1m-strlnr competition were far from out- and 259. all the far westerncl'3 but Kirk

recent weeks West Point Is stu- sbortstop wb with the Wolverine standing. I His tolDl pasbe.d the previou;s Gebert. junior guard. who collect-d~'lne the possibility of ellmln- hllseball team ... Mlehi&'an 8Wlm- The SU'DUllary ed 21 points in the vain effort to all.,,- 'he excessive hell:ht and minI' teams have .. one throul'h Pole Vaul~Won by Brown of high mark of 727 by Hilla Kallas, Catholic Champs Fall

man~ bilking Into consideration to1ckles of las' year throuh rrad.. and Philbrook (Dav.), tied for behind the mark of 742 with Wisconsin. with Johnny K(.tz

omg cour mas ers. won c owa high school ~asketb.all champion- Davenport (31) !r It !,11t ship here tomght with a 31 to 26 P. Day ........................ 2 2 3 1 victory ovel' the previously un- Rogers 1. ........................ 4 2 I 10 defeatcd Black Pirates of. Hol- Crow 1 ......................... 0 0 1 0 stein. Moon g .......................... 0 0 0 0

Led by Jack Spencel·. u thin Hogue c ........................ 0 0 4 0 fellow with a kcen baskct eye. Beckmann g .................. 0 0 0 0 the Blue Devils overcame a brief. Kelling e .................... 0 0 0 0 early Holstein lead. then moved Spencer g ...................... 6 1 2 13 ahead and successfully fought off Johnson g .................... 1 0 I 2 all challenges by the Black Pirates. Meier g ........................ 0 0 0 0

Record Crowd F. Day g .................... 0 0 0 0 The last breaking Devils. win- McGuire g .................... 0 0 1 0

ning the fifth state title in tour- - - --nament history for Davenport, Totals .......................... 13 {j 1331 out-sped the i r tall e l' rivals Missed free throws-Holatein, throughout the hot' duel before Roy Wehde 3, Ray Wehde. 6.600 fans, announced as largest Goettsch, Asprey. Davenport, P.

I crowd ever to watch a game in Day, Rogers 2, Spencer 2, John· the Drake field house. son 4.

The Black Pirates, who had Officials-Dick Pemble of Simp· taken 34 straight victories. went son; Elmer Starr 01 Des Moines U. down lighting. Several times it appeare that the Blue Devils Mason City (24) Ir It pi " would dr ve to a safe lead but Wass f .......................... 1 0 I 2 Holstein al ays roared back into Barboul' i-c ................ 4 1 2 g a threatenin position. D. Oulman e .................. 3 0 4 6

Ray hde Out Brown t ....................... 0 1 1 0 Fate went against the Black Harrer i ... .. ................ 0 1 0 I

Pirates in the midst () their next Holman c ...... ......... ....... 0 0 0 0 to the last bid to overfu Dav- G. Oulman .................... 1 I 1 3 enport. With only three aM a Shipley g .................... 0 2 4 2 half minutes to play. Ray Wehde, Klein g ...................... 0 0 0 0 one ol the famous twins, departed Sutherland g ................ 0 0 0 0 on four fouls with the Blue Devils Mettler g .................... 0 0 0 0 leading only by a 2'1 to 24 count. - - - -

I Thirty seconds later Slim Spen- Totals .................... 9 6 14 24

eel'. wide open under the basket, Cromwell (36) Ir It pf IJ dunked a fielder. Wendell Olson. McLaughlin f ........... 2 0 4 4

'

sub Lor Wehde, got half of that Chapman t .................. 1 3 3 & back with a lree throw and Roy Mullin c ................... 6 3 0 15 Wehde furnished anothel' point on Harrison g .................... 1 1 3 3 a charity toss to again reduce Dav- Mool'e g-t ................... 3 3 3 • en port's advantage to three points. Blazek g ........................ 0 0 0 0

Johnson Clinches Tilt ___ _ Bill Johnson. a hard-fighting Totals ....... ....... 13 10 13 36

little guard. put the clincher Score at hall: Mason City 18. through the hoop for Davenport I Cromwell 17. . with slightly more than a minute Free throws missed - Mason to play. In the final quarter-mln- City. G. Oulman 3. Shipley, Klein, ute! Coach Paul Moon sent an Metuer. Cromwell, McLaughlin %. entIrely ne~ tea.m on the noor. Chapman 2, Mullin 2, Harrison The champIOnshIp was a greal Moore 2. • tJ'lbule to portly. Paul. who lost OHidals-Fred Winter of Grin. t~rce stars by mld-te:m . gradua- neH C. T . Baldwin of Mar ville lion. and reshutncd hIS lmeup to T ' I Y ramble down the final stretch to _ e_ae_le_I'_8. ____ -=-___ _

Champ Beblnd 101' Holstein brought the Black the state championship. I

The game opened with Holstcin Raiders up to a 14 to 17 figure moving into a 3 to 0 I ad. but al lhc haH. Davcnport fI)aking Davenport's I'apid-fire attack soon only four point! In the quarter. carried the eastern Iowa entry Th Blue D viis wldcned the in to the front spot. It was 13 count to 2'\ to 17 at thc cnd o[ to 5 Davenport at the first quar- the third period. and were ahead tel' mark. A hot ~eeond period 26 to 19 in the fourth before Hoi·

stein charged back.

CHICAGO. March 29-(AP)-A rousing rally in the finel two minutes gave Leo of Chicago a 23 to 27 victory over Central Catholic of Fort Wayne. Ind., to­night in the semi-finals of th<! national Catholic high school basketball tournament.

weicht factors from Its eligibility nine seasons out of 17 undefeat- McKinley; Reeder (Dub.), sec- of. Milwilukee. who had held the bring to the Pacific coast the requirements, judging alone on ed ... Coach Frfb: Crisler has ond; Leuders (Dav.). third, and singles lead with 727 101' two crown won last yeal' by Indiana the physIca.l qualities of each lost aU but one of his varsity Obermiller (Cl.), Koprucki (Dav.) weeks. Carlson's score was 12 pins I university.

the element of individua.l dlffer- u&tlon and selective semee... fourth. Height-lO ft. 6 in. d G cnees. A hure freshman, Charlie Gibbs, Broad Jump _ Won by Pugh which Ray Brown of Terre Haute. I an ene Englund swiping the I e- R ... Cromwell Bashes

• • • Is retting II ble pby as a replace- (McK); Sword (Fr) and Harri- Ind., won the 1940 individunll bounds off both boards, built n I enunlsclng In the first place. the reason menlo son (Dav), tied for second; Mitch- title at Detroit. 21 to 17 advantage at the half. I • Mllsolt City, 36·24

Yote the Democratic Ticket No Increase 'in Taxes--No Increase in Rates

.1

HENItY F. WlLLENBROCK, Mayor

ATfY. EDWARD W. LUCAS HERBERT REICHARDT W. J. (BILL) MATfHES Alderman-At-Larle Alderman-Second Ward Alderman-FlRh Ward

FRED ROBEIlSON SAM WmTlNG, Jr. WILLIAM I. WJUn AJderman-At-Larie Alderman-Third Ward AIseaor

WALTER E. RILEY DONALD D. BROWN DAVID L. STOCHL Alderman-FIrs' Ward Alderman-Fourth Ward . TreUUI'e.l'

GEORGE KANAK GLEN R. BOWEN Park CommI.sloner Police Judre .

OUR-P[EDG E: .. Transportation I

We are pledged to serve the interests of "All Good Taxpaying Citizens":­we will start to work NOW. • , we will not wait until the last two weeks of our second term to begin eivle betterment.

-A Responsible Government , For Iowa City

ell (Cl) fourth. Distance-I8 Harold Kelly. 45-year-old sales - So . eUective was the Big Ten LOlli Figllts at cene DES MOINES, March 29 (AP,-ft. 10 in. man from Soulh Bend. Ind., soar- team s defense tha t Washington Of ItT . I Liltle Cromwcll . the flashy class

Hlrh Jump-Won by Mucha ed into [irst place in the ull-events State was held without 0 singie rUlIup I . D team Crom the southwe t. won (Dav); Gray (Fr) and Obermiller division Ulis afternoon when he point for nine minutes ill the fir. t .-------------: the con.o lation championship at (CI), tied for second; Cady (CI), t.otaled 2,013 acter rolling a singles hllif ;l11d struck anol~cr s~oring ST. LOUrS. March 29 (AP)- the .. talc hIgh ~chool ba,kctball fOurth. Height-5 ft. 6 in. series of 714 on games of 204, 244 ?rought. of morc than [Ive mmutes Joe Louis probably will do a little lournament wllh i\ 36 to 24 vic,

Shot Put _ Won by Kreiger and 266. Kelly is now third in the 10 the penod after the rest. reminiscing as he climbs Into the lory over Mason City's tallen (Dav); Mohrbacher (Fr). second; singles competition. The box: ring for his sixteenth Utle de- champion here tonight bcfore Burger (Fr), third; Burkert (Cl), His all-even Is score was 52 pins WISCONSIN (39) fe. fl. pt. tp. tense here one week from next 6.600 Iuns. :fourth. Distance-46 ft. 10 in. betteL' when the previous leading Epperson. f ........ .. .. 2 0 3 " Tuesday. Rex Mullen Cromwell center

H-Yard Hleh Hudles-Won by figure of 1.961 made by Frank Schrage. r ................. 0 0 I 0 To mo t fight fans his cham- who rammed home 15 points, put Cady (CI); Roemer (Dav), sec- Tlschock of Milwaul(ee the open- Kolz, f ......................... 5 2 2 12 pionship match with Tony Musto his males out In Iront al the ond; Gray (Fr), third; 'thorpe ing week end of lhe tourmlmenl. E~glund. c 5 3 2 13 is winked at as just another ·top thr c-qllarler m' rk and into (Fr) , fourth. Time-:07.8. Kelly's all-events total was 12 pill~ Tlmmel·mlm. c .... 1 0 I 2 on his "!ight-a-month" parade. vcnt.ua\ victory uft rUle losel"i

SO-Yard Low Hurdles-Won by higher thun thc 2,001 which Fred Reh':l' II 2 0 2 4 But It was just seven years ago lObt Dick Oulmall. their ace cen· Franck (Dav); Roemer (Dav) see- Fischel' of BU1I3 10. N.Y., shot to Stra~n. Ii 0 2 1 22 next week that the Bl'own B mber, leI', on fouls. ond; Cady (Cl). third; Sanborn win the title at Detroit in 1940. Alwlll . g 1 0 0 • known as plain Joe Loui , Detroit ============ (Fr), fourth. Time-:07.1. TOTALS 16 712 39 Negro Golden Glove whirlwind,

50-Yard Dash-Won by Cole- (P e e pie s, Harrison, Thomas, WA IflNGTON (34) r It r I come to St. Louis to win hi (ir t man (Fr); Franck (Dav), second; Franck); Wilson, second; McKin- ~. )' p [ Pi major , national title and start hI I Peeples (Dav), third; Newlanii ley, third; Franklin, fOUl·th. Timc g~~try. ~ .. 1 0 1 2 sen allonnl climb to lame and (WHit)I', :t0Murllth. RTime-:?~s. -:46.1. B~t~:·gf .. ::" I I I :I 10IF·'i

wh1e. I a - e un, Fu". Heat- Mile RelaY-Won by Franklin d 0 3 1" g Ung as II light-heavyweight.

W b B D Lin elnun. c .. .,

on y axter ( av); Langridge (Markey, Schwinn, Coleman. Bat- Zimmerman. cOO 0 0 he won the National A.A.U. crown . (FT)' second; Saunderson (CI), tin); Davenport, second; McKin- Gebert, g . .. ..... . ...... 10 1 1 21 r.nd started tongues wailing al\

third; Naugel (WiI), fourlh. Time ley. third; Clinton. fourth. Tim.;) Hunt. g ........ .. . ..... 0 0 0 0 over the country. predicting I -2.09.8. -3.36.2. Sundquist. g ............. 2 0 3 4 great future for him. Everyone I

Seeond Heat - Won by Ware One-Mile Medley RelaY-Won Hooper. II .................... 0 0 0 0 knows what happened. ! (IC); Hoffman (Dav), second; by Clinton (Rajccvich, Mitchell. _ - _ - This lounlament was staged in Rajcevieh (Cl), third; Clarke (CI), Nlcolasen, Parchen)' Davenport. TOTALS ................... 14 6 834 the same SI. Louis arena wher fourth. Tlme-2.05.8. second; Franklin, third; Wilson, Hair lime score-WIsconsin 21, Joe wlll engage Musto, squal Chl-

UI Relay-Won by Davenport fourth. Time-3:5S.7. Washington 17. cagoan, Aprll 8.

------

West Liberty No~es O~t U-High Again By DICK MeF ARLAND

The West Liberty Comets nosed out the Bluehawks of University high here last nlaht by 1 2-10 points to win the championship of the Eastern Iowa conference in­door track meet.

West Liberty and U-hlgh domi­nated the meet completely. count­. Ing 52 3-10 points and 51 1-10 points respect! vely. Following in third place was Anamosa with 23 1-2 points; tourth place was Occupied by Tipton with 22 points; Monticello landed In fj'fth place with 5 1-4 points, and Mt. Vernon faUed to score.

Hawker of Weat Libel·ty raced throuah the quarter-mile run In M seconds to chalk up Ii new conf~rence Indoor retord. an im­provement ot .11 second over ·the former mark of 54.5 set by Rob-

el'lson of Anamosa in 1939. and equalled by Frazier of U-high jn 11140.

Another con (erence indoor rec­ord was set by Universi ty high in the half-mile rclay, when thc time WIlS lowel'ed fl'om 1:40.4. set by U-high last year. to 1 :40.1.

Summaries: High jump: Smith (U.H.) firsi;

Nichols (W .... ) second; Kinser (A.), Larson (A.). Lehman (U.H.). and Mardor! (Mont.) tied for third. Height-5 foot, 4 lnche .

Pole 'vault: Honn (A.) Iirst; Heasely (W.L.) and Evans (U.H,) tie for second; Kerr (W .L.) and Clemens (Mont.) tied for fourth . Helght-l0 feet. 3 Inches.

Shot put: DIce (T.) first; Shov­er (A.) second; Wilson (W,L.) third; Russell (A.) fourth. Dis­tance-40 feet, 11 inches.

Mile run: Angerer (W.L.) flL'st;

Martin (U.H.) second; Frank Zel- (U.H .) third ; Musgrav (U .H.) IeI' (U.H.) third; Howe (Mont.)· fourth . Distance-IS te t, ) 1 fourth, Time-4:52. Inches,

50-yard dash : Leaphort (T,) Hl\lf-mlle run: Frllzier (U.Il.) first; Dice (T.) 6ccond; Huwkel' first; Pike (W .L.) second ; Zell l' (W.L.) third; JeH$en (A.) fOUl·th . (U.H.) thir'd; Dumonl (A.) [ou['th. Timc- 5.8 seconds. Tlmc-2:07 .5.

Quat'ler-mlle run: How k e r Mlle reIllY: West Llbel'ly (tirst), (W.L.) first; Russell (A.) second; Anamosa (s cond), Unlvel'slty Kent (U.H,) thIrd; E. Smith hll/h (third) , Montlc lJo (fourlh) . (U.H .) fourth. Time-54 eeonds. Tlme- 3 ,5 1.4 . (New conference record.) Hull-mile ['cloy : University hlllh

60-yard high hurdles: RummclJs (first). Tipton (second), Wcst (U.H.) first; Flater (W.L.) sec- Liberty (third), Anamosa (fourth) .

Titnc- l :fO.l. (New onference ond; Smith (U.H.) third; Behren record.) (Mon!.) fourth. Time-8.5 see- ============ ~nds.

SO-YOI'd low hurdles: Askam (W.L.) first; Musgrllve (U.H.) second; Flater (W,L.) third; Rum· mells (U.H.) fourth. Tlme-7.B seconds.

Broad Jump: Alkam (W.L.) fll'st; Leabhart (T.) second; Smith

STUDENT JOB Available Part Time

bekel Iln&rlDaIDl.

Write Box Ol-lowa Cit,

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KELLEY LAUNDEREIS

CLEANERS

DoT UNT KAPPA ALI Military min the casual n paired with

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--

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SUNDAY, MARCH SO, 1941 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY

~41 SO NEW! SO FRESH! SO SMART!

'I'll pick of the new season's crop of fashion beauties ... every important new style! Every clever new d • tail! In

COATS mm'f/y ty/erl

TJRESSES

$795 $1995 TO

EASTER • SUITS • DRESSES

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DE IGNING )lOOMS

TO

YOU HELEN McCAMBRIDGE KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Snm:r~y SUit~d ~ob sPring In so rt blue lVool shc!land wi lh big ncws ~olla~ 16~e tI~1 v~, u~ons. It 's u Fas hIon Townc. Stitch ing on the gloves by OSbornGY A ,oslC . I'UYOIl s ~l i l'l and on the Irjnged pigskin

. p am purse m l;add le.

I

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GIft Id e a l Phoenix In this ap.ec lal 8Pa r. klJnq C e ll o . phqne wrqp .

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DOT LINT KAPPA ALPIIA THETA

You can de­pend on its wear and beauty.

$1 Ne w colors for Ea s te r in you r fa voI ite thread. weights a nd pro­portions.

Others

MaIn Floor

Military minded Is thla Creslwood cavalry twill oUicer's coat in the casual mood. Draper hat Ulat snaps to perfection in beige, patred with belle KaYlror "I O~8. The purse: turt tan. \

Spring

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FULL SKiIRTED SMART­NESS 18 gore skirt adds verve to this f itted twill coat. White pique accent!'l: Navy, hlack.

$2500

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Adorable Easte,. Blo"ses

Come see OUI' wonderful collection of blouses by "Ship N Shore" , . ,"Joan Kenley" and Formfi t ... Sheers or tailored types.

$1.00 to $2.98

I ---~­

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~New Easler Accessor­ies. See the new ideas

f!:i1 n jewelry ; E arly Am~

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59(' to $2.98

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HANKIES New ~l(MJe Leatlacr Rehs 59c to $1.00

-25c to 50c

Colorful new llrinls

by Khnhal1 and oth-

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Main Floor

Photos by Everell

Collars To Brighten Up

Your Outfit

Large types with or

without cuffs.

$1.00 and $1.98

White Sharkskin Dickies

$1.00

wear-like· magic

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by KAYSER ':aJler "Mir.().KaI" Itocl>:in,s

., • mide from amazinslJ hi,b lwial Iilk I.hreadl. !;!na,-reliltaat ••• loa ..

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•••

B£'lT£ LEE RIJEA Gi\IU~JA I' m BETA Il's plaId and pI, In in a Krll-m .• Il'r "'" .ic dlt

PAGE SEVEN

with bl endiug IWet'(j JUl'kl'l. Jeuny u lldewrlll pill t' or IH1\ y calf. .. tllg~()nl'h" g IOl' \'s by K )' \. in n. \')' 1".1)") • it . II "l:ichovlll ll'l" hat of Uw 1111\(> soft 1'0 I!.

~IPonr gXPtfl~J STR1IBH T our OF AMERICAN HIST ORY

Kayser dipp d into our rubulou meric n Ctontil'r d yato g t inapiral i n for lId e. dling n w glo\ '. It putl! you in mind of the dURhin:; gUlwtle l. of II red evil xpr rid ra. \\. 'ar h for import III

afternoollJ, or after darl. ,halky rayon "KAY· CREPE," a wond C'rful dull C'(l fu bri tl lRt fit and wearll and Wa II I' -cr.. ·tly, Made iu th e U . . A., in light or Jark tonCi. l.OO

Other nl' \ KUYSl'r SI) II'S, "Stlle'1' ( 'oar h o'-" lII, I' t ·, • •• Lad .. t •• , l. ellthC'n-Ut' am. lIIau" olhe r" t" S." 1111 C'olor~ ri nd II'hlt.l'.

ALLAYNE KONECNY PI BETA pm

- ~. "' WE WElCOME

PVW CHARGE ACCOUNTS

A deer print silk in luggage tan fashioned by Wellesley Modes to serve double duty. The straw bonnet rolled and veiled for extra charm. La Garde bag of chocolate brown and immaculate whiG! 6-button gloves from Kayser.

PA.~EIGRT THE DAlLY lOW ANt tOW A m

Interviews Start Tomorrow for Places 'Women's 'Orientation Program Students Wed Here Recently

Council to Pick Aids in '41·'42

Activity Plar"s Orientation interviews will be­

gi~ tomorrow at 1 p.m., according to Corinne Hayes, J3 of Iowa City, a member of the 1941-1942 Orien­tation council and head of inter­views.

Appointments may be made in ' the morning at the office of the dean of women. Interviews will be conducted by members of the Orientation council unt U April 8.

All women interested in the orientation program are urged by the council to make their appo;int­ments as soon as possible.

lI'rom the group of students in­terviewed, the leaders al;ld their assistants fol' 1941-1942 will be selected. Additional women will be chosen to help with the orien­tation program.

The purpose of orientation is to help in the adj\,lstment of new stu­dents to university life. The pro­gram seeks to acquaint them with students and faculty anc;l to intro­duce them to the activities and routine of campus life.

Transfer students and fresh­men are divided into two groups with the freshman section sub­divided into about 20 quads.

Barbara Kent, A3 of lowa City, is head of the orientation council. Assisting her are Edith StUl;1rt, AS of Dubuque; Josephine McElhin­ney, A3 of Iowa City; I!athryn Klingbeil, A3 of Postville; Miriam Katz, A3 of Osage, and Miss Hayes.

Alpha Xi Gives 'Bo'wery Brawl'

A "Bowery Brawl" in the true Gay Nineties style was given last night at the Alpha Xi Delta sor­ority house for members and their dates. An imitation bar and ging­ham covered tables decorated the house in cabaret style.

Chaperons for the occasion were Prof. and Mrs. Louis Zap!, Prof. and Mrs. Herald Stark and Mrs. Gladys Pi.tt.

Members of the committee in ch1jlrge of the party were Julia Henoing, A2 of Cedar Rapids; Ei­leen Biddison, A2 of Des Moines; Catherine Harmeier, Al of Iowa City, and Carol Christenson, A3 of W. ;Hartford, Conn.

Miss Emerson to Lead Gladys Emerson will be the

leader at the meeting of the Sara Hart circle of the Christian church TUElsday. The group will meet in the home a! Mrs. Eldon Miller, 829 Hudson, at 6:30 p.m.

r Y. W. C. A. Calendar i . ---. Y.W.C.A. Calendar

Monday 4 p.m.-Minorities and civil lj_

berti.es group, north conference room. Virginia Ivie, A3 of Shen­andoah, chairman.

5 p.m. - Executive committee meeting, conference room. Pa­tricia Sleezer, A4 of Freeport, 111., chairman.

Tuesday 4 p.m.-Community service and

l-eseal'ch group', conference room. Mary Barnes, A2 of Iowa City, chail·man.

4 p.m. - Religious resources group, Y.M.C.A. conference room. Mrs. James Youtsler, executive secretary, chairman.

5 p.m. - Executive committee meeting, conference room. Miss Sleezer, chairman.

WedD~y 4 p.m.-Refugee and the nation

group, conference room. Miriam Katz, A3 of Osage, Chairman.

4:45 p.m.-80phom,Ol:e cabinet, Y.M.C.A. conference room. Wini­fred Coninghf)m, A2 of Middle­town, III., chairman.

7:15 p.m.-Cabinet meeting, con­ference room. Miss SleezeJ', chai\'-man.

Thursday 4 p.m.-Livi.ng creatively discus­

sion group, conferenee room. Mrs. Youtsler, chairman.

7 p.m. - Recreational therapy group, children's hospital. Jeanne Rowe, A3 o( Cedar Ri,lpids, chair-man.

8 p.m.-"Y Glimpses" ovel' ra­dio station WSUI. Betsey JoHn.son, A2 of Kewanee, Ill. , ch'1irm:m.

Friday 3 p.m. - Installation ban,quet

committee, conference room. Miss Ivie, chait·man.

• • 1 Y.M.C.A. Calendar 1 . ~

Y.M.C.A. Calendar . Tuesday

6 p.m.-Soclal service, children's hospital. Ed Wieben, 1\2 o( l)y­sart, chairman.

\ Wednellday 7 p.m.-Cabinet meellng, COIl­

ference' room. Robert Ml)yel's, 02 of Guthrie Center, chairman.

Thursday 7:15 a.m. - All "Y" members

are invited to attend worship ser­vIces in the Little Chapel. Rich­~d Lancaster, Al of Ottumwa, will be in charge.

Sunday 7 ! ~I' .m ..• -Sel'v[ccs tit tlw Fil'bt

PrelO)'teriun church in Cedar Raptcls. Max Paige, A3 of Cedar Rapids, will cQnduct the wOl'ilhip.

8 ~.m. , -. Informal discussion Jl'oIlP, conference room. John Boy''!, G of Wichita, Kan ., chair­anaa.

It's a Hard Grind! Cancer Control Workers Guests

At Tea Today

i HOvst TO HOUSE i Eight ¥(ljor University Club Events , . - • A.nno,uncedfor Aprll&ciQlCfJlendar

Betty Hemsky, A2 or Cedar Rapids, looks a bi tdoubtful at thc probability of using such a 18rge mortm' to grind the medi­cinal producis used by the col­lege of pharmacy in laboratory courses. The huge iron mortar, holding two gallons and measur-

Pharmacists Inspect Detroit Drllg Company 28 Students Leave For ThreerDay Trip To Parke-Davis Labs

Twenty-eight students of the tollege of pharmacy left thIs morning fo r Detroit , Mich ., (or a three-day field trip through the Pmke-Davis pharmaceutical la­boratories and biological farm there.

The group will be chaperoned by Prof. and Mrs. J ames W. Jones. Mark Langfl'itz, Parke­Davis representat~ve from the eastern Iowa distr ict, wi11 also accompany them.

Aimed to acquaint the students with information on the plant manufacturing of pharmaceutical products, this year's annual field trip will take the pharmacy stu­dents through one of the largest and mosi modem phamaceutica1 plants in the country, Professo .. lones stated.

To JUake Trips Studen~ making the Ll'ip are

John W. Bolle, P3 o( Elgin , Ill.; James C. Buchner, P3 of Maquo-

Y. M. C. A. Hy l ' lli\llLEi'! BJo:l' IUJi\N

T"alm (\ lC'ood ltJen, t'oot it in 1

til 1.1 rldt sun or hllintUI need. nmJ Uw re liltS

j tOll lJe rUlll'UJl­t~('It1 .. u.st..,n .. lsIl the world. Tho8t' who ... t} .. ul h.h J t'le lIQ('d tor tiut h un or­gunhnUulI us the V.;u.;(J.i\" 'wd whu sturt, .. t:d the uun'" .. meJlt. IJfotUlhl y brut little ('011-

cepf ion or Uw .~tlJe~ Qf tllI'~ 00..:1. or or the vasb wh:., to which their Wen. W 0 1.1 1 (j

t"11'nu(1. '1'1I(oy ("Qol~l I1Qt h ,.""e fo~ tft'f'n its growth '0 IwtiolUll UJh! In­trrJUdluJlltl illlvortRU('C.

Looking IUH'lunuti, Or t:our@4l. "f~ ('IUl

Utlllt~,~t"lIll. AN'(' is '" mo"eu .. • .. t. wldeh capit.llzc, alld .ublhun les lhe "gn ug IlItiiUnt"t" whi..,h Illi me" p6fUi.',ljH. LJtHo slltnert'. In lItoule ",ehools, t\.utOJn{"l1t~dUy hof'pnratt.1 'b~m .. JWln"S {nlo· .. nl~.H or tn'UtillM Ilud tlte "(UI,, habiL . ,ontlnue.s UttOOlJh all IIft'--thlIU~" ltlttl' we n1fer to It. as "OUI' ..,ro" d,"

Tlw Y •. U . t '.,\ . W1tH th(' fir .. , Sf 0111) 1.0 r~alJze I hut it b~ JUII*' "''' l'UtfY t.o starl n )'OlUlg Inun. to 1rotUug with I

I' KtKH: ' ,;'u.ng nO, wit h a bwl I'IiUlg.­ouster Jf the goud M'tiI.ttg hOli mOl'e, l.n t ('rl''''U n#; 1 11..1 n.~ hI dv. And ~u Ie, furubihed CUn1puulomlnh. in U .ooll .-lUl!:" It, hu!!' tJ\nlht 1 hat bdul' $

hou('st, uUfl luunly lUul ('lean IlDd fle(,~ lIj "lid hf'u lthy and ti4'If-rt·'il"~."" illlr Itrt' JWe UJf"re'y t.tdng-s 11ltlt ono 01 1()IlT I" I)", 1:h~y are tb" tlllugPl Ullt) It'tM the (uoal, fun out. of dVUIg',

It h'ucln'H rl,.JltJ C1llribUltil Ih'llIM' Hut m.,rt"y 11.) I)rea~hJl1g aud ,.l'elept hnt by t~"l."lnl,h· lIotul ubIJorlJUon. ~J tb~ Ie tNtl. stl,1 k"" ItJ Is the (lhurch's 1"00(1 right "rna 111 making J\n ... rl(l~ '" bet-ter IUl-Uml afltl the world ... butter plM-f.'\!, J\ ntl tbl~ ,",uvea if d"b ~'UUIO~ be 0 ,'crCb' imu.t t'd,

-Nul week ~Ir. lJerkm .. " of th. Ike·lnnDn FUII~rQl 11 .... " wUI c.:om­men. 011 tllfI GraUl"",

ing 11 inches in diameter, was donated to the college of pnarm­Bey recently by Ray E. EveL'ly of Keton, Ill., 1916 graduate, and will be ,placed on display in the college museum. Everly aisl) gave t1:e college several old books of formulas.

Chi Omela.

" Chi Otl;\ega l19l'ority jlnnounces. Mrs. Edward N. Anderson, Uni- Shea lind Mrs. Joseph Zak will tJJ,e pJ,e4&ln, Of J.. ne <Bul:gett, A3 , "~I h f b'd A II 22 Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Plass, 407 of Eveleth, Minn. versity club chail'man ,for the ""'t 7 1'l30 C arge a rt ge ,tPr

Melrose, will entertain at a teo month of April, announces eigh" a : p.m. Guests in the chapter house • R ad It today from 3:30 to 5:aO for work- . I" 'n ,.,.ro . way II s .0Nr ·the week end were Ann maJor c H ... ~vlln",. "Ht'ts on B"oadwav" will be

ers in the cancer control cam- M t P t1 III d ,... ~ Paign. .."eyel· 0 . 911 ae, .. an Bever- BJ;i~ge is SCMPH1~ for April 8 reviewed by Prof. yr. Leigl'! Sow~

Iy WUsQn of Davenport. t 2 . Ih 1'" t th I ·t.... I' h d Mrs. Clarence G. Strub and Mrs. ,a ,P rp. ,ID ' t'.e q \1" \'QOms 01 Iowa el'5, 0 e un vel'S) y ""ng IS e-Jeanne Tulett, A3 of Daven- U· M E P '" t t t til A il 24 t' E. W. Paulus will be in charge of mOn· /I.·tS. 1 . ' . '£ . ,TYlldall, Mrs. par men, a e Ill' mee 109

port, spent the WEek end in Cedar J E ",1'.. d MG' 3 15 t 5 45 K j t the arrangements. H03tesses will . ,, ' 1 .... · ~l)J1 an ~_rs. . . H. Holf- .rom; 0: p.m. ens ng on be Mrs. A. W. Bennett, Mrs. H. D. napids. mlln are ~~mit~ee cjlalrmen. will also be pl,ayed. Evans, Mrs. Carl L. Gillies, Mrs. It ,YJUI Pe dinner .and bridge Committee members are Mrs. John H. Randall, Mrs. Arthllr Dtlta Delta Delta April 16 ./I t 6:~.5 p.lJl. Dinner chair- William Coder, lVII's. J. S. Gott-Steindler, Mrs. William F. Men- Dorothy Boisen, A2 of Oedar men are Mrs. ,I. J. ~arron and leib, Florence Schneider, Mrs. ger t, Dr. Lois Boulware and Mrs. Ropids, s,pen,t the week end at ¥rs. Qeorge '1~Q4~r. ~s. Edward James Allen, :Mrs. E. G. Gross and M. E. Barnes. her home. Anpersop, ;~rs. ~ell \'Vl\l ahd Mrs. Ml's. William Spear.

Mrs. Arthur V. O'Brien, state Eileen iP1lynf,1, A2 of Perry, vis- !lse .i\l'\tol)ovleh w 11 be in oharge ~llUIer and B~lness commander of the Women's Field i1'ed in r;>es M;oiJ;lEs over ,the week of brJ,ige. , It will be a dinner qnd business Army for the Control of Cancel', end. ' ~!I .~" ~"~!l,<;/I~ rpeeting April 28 at 6;15 p.m. Laws will speak on the history and pur- A guest in ihe chapter house J;>rpf. MI\.\'~elle IienQ' will dis- or amenpmepts to be added at the pose of the campaign. Dr. Pauline over the week End was PhylliS cuss /per,s0PlI l re(:q\lectip!1s of her final bu~iness session in M/lY will V. Moore, chairman of the John- Eitmann of Muscatine. stay ip , ~ndo.Chil}ll lit .the Apl'll 17 be discussed at this meeting. Cllrds son county medical association's Charlotte ijraun of Mediapolis, mljetillJ· . will be sent to all members to committee will intl'oduce ~I,e l a former student at the univer- NIl's. M. E. }lal'Oes, Mrs. Geql'ge place their choice of officers for speaker. , '. ·ty hne, spent Friday and yes~' Robellon, ,P,1o\'ence Schneider, Mrs. coming year. Members are asked

Mrs. Vlt'gil M. Hancher, Mrs.;E. ~er~~)' et the chapter hous~. C. W.;l(~y$~r, ¥fs. P. B01and, Mrs. to fill in the cards and return T. Hubbard, Mrs. Phillip C. JCI\Il<, J . ~. \~rl~S, ,Mrs. ·W. H. Morgan them. ' Mrs. 1. A. Opstad, Mrs. Roscoe .. and ,Mts . • B. ,.wells h.~a!l the com- A bike and picnic supper is

I Taylor and Mrs . A. H. Woods will ~,ta GalllDJa ,Delta mittee. sclleduled for Apdl 30 at 6:45 p.m. 'pour. -e,¥1 llagens, A3 of jVIissoula, Ptqf. il<~~1 ,:E. Lei", of the uni- ' The supper will be beld in the

Those who will help distribute ¥ont., anll Steve Slaughter, A2 ' versiD' C;pllltlie ot cOl1'1l1lerce, will 'lTniversity club rooms. All reser-literature are Mrs. Olive .B~\leJ', of ~9Wa' City, are sp.ending the SPII'lk on "War /lUP ~usiness" at' vations must be made at the Iowa Mrs. A. R. Ellis, Mrs. Roi;lert iL. · wee .tw,d i? Alexander, Mo. tlle ,6 ,p·lJl· ~upp~r ~Plil l 20. Union desk by April 29. Jackson, Mrs. R. ,H. Justen ails' .J:l9u Ha~e of oBone is visiting ~CofTIJI1ittee ·m"mpers jn charge MI·s. C. W. Keyser an~ Mrs. J . Mrs. Lloyd Howell. . .Qi<;lt ,C!I,I'!IP, Al of Perry. ¥(\11 lie ' ~rs. E. ,G. ,&$l'oeder, Mrs. F. ReUly will be in charge ot the

I Guests at the tea will incluqe :SQ\:> lYi,,:ingstoll, C3 of Des ,Ec\Y"!ll'!i ~. AllP~r.sOI'l, :Elizabeth supper. members of the executive com- ~o~\les, v.:6r\t to Strawberry ,Hl\l~«;y, Mr~. J . ~ . . !ildrldge, Mrs. Hiking chairman is Prof. Mir­rnittee for J ohnson county, mem- ,Pt. ~r,)l' ,tlW, w.e!llt q~d. C. ~. Me<lrdQn, r,i1"S. C. J . Lapp, lam Taylor. She will be assisted bel'S of the advisOJ'y board and ,Ga.~c;lI1E;r ':Williams, A2 of Can- , ;Mrs. P. l39!am:l, ·Mrs. C. ~ennett, by Dr. Martha Spence, Eula Van lieutenants. ' fl~a, ,mterWlled his brother Qet- '€1!l1ralJ;)aley, .fph/ffine,Forland, Mrs. Meter, Mrs. Elda popoef, Mar­

q~~, a junior at ~urdue univer- <F. P . SchQpe Iln!i Mrs. Sic)ney L. garet Wallen, Johanne Forland, Pilgrim Fellowship sity in Lafaye~te, .lp~lana., during M~lllr. Mrs. James Jones and Mrs. Merle

O Ch l S . , t~e ;Pil~t week. ~rs. ». ,F . . P,,,,~~ick, !'drs. Robert Webster. n ape er"'CC~1 JO~ll Maher. C3 of Springfield.

M b f h P 'l . f \1 I )11., is in Davenport. ern ers 0 tel grIm e Q)V- . __ ship of the Congregational churQI'i will take part in morning chllpel l ~i ~;a. Alpha .

TauJ;a~ To p.ractice

tee chairmen.

services broadcast over WSUI this ' , ,LQ.~is Jurgensen, C3 of Cedar week. The members who wiJ1 pat- ·n~Jlid&, went home [or ~he wetlk

keta; Richard D. Casey, P3 of ticipate are Gladys Parizek, 1\3 of' en,li. . Tau C;;amma \\!i~l practice for Mason City; Robel·t R. C1Qthier, Iowa City; Don Wenstrom, A;l of l¥Qwa"li Irvine, C4 of Traer, the song festival this afternoon at P3 of Polo, Ill.; Leland C. Coon, Chicago; Jim Roach, Al of Rl)ck' .e\l,teQmillEld his brothel' and sis- 2 in Ma4p,\iide hall.

Members at the academy at friendship will meet at 6 p.m. in the Moose hall for a pot luck din­ner preceding the meeting. The executive committee will hold a brief session before the regular meeting to discuss plans for the Easter program. P3 of Van Horne; A. PI~il Coontz, Rapids; Cathryn Irwin, Al of ter-in-law .at dinner Thursday All p~l"Iions who plan to sing in

P4 of Waterloo; Robert J Deur, Iowa City; Janet Howie, Al ol Ilv~¢Ilg. the TlI~ Gamma "roup are re-P~ of Lake View; Waylan\i C. Monticello, and Miles Brown, 1.,1 Phil Smith, A3 of Des MOines, quest~d ,to ,attend ~ practice. Fuller, PI of Port ArthUl', Tex.; of Ottumwa. is E:ntertaining his brother Dean The group wlll .1peet at 7 p.m. Henry F. Hauth, P4 of H\lwkeye; ;============. Srn.itl;l, who ' is here for the weelt in room 109 SchaElffer hall. Mrs. John H. Hallth, P3 of Hawkeye; • • end. . Robert Day, advi~ of the group, J"mes B. Hayslett, P4 of Iowa I Graduate Musicians Norman Warner, A3 of N' th is in chal'ge of the arrangements

~ .pr k for the song practice. City. I Plan Dinner Dance English, WEnt home this wee '

Alvin M. Heussner, P4 of Mus- end' T E · . catine; Robert W. Jennings, P3 omorrow venlng r

o{ Mar~halJtown; Norm~n R. .----.---.--.• - •.. - --. Johnson, P3 of ManChester, Ricb- Sixty students are expected to ard H. Johnson, P3 of Washlng- attend the formal dinner dance to ton; Edyrn H. Jones, P3 of Spo- be given in Hillcrest tomorrow at kane-, Waash.; Wendle L. :(Cerr. 6:30 p.m. by graduate music stu­P4 of Humboldt; Wilson R. \lents. Koube, P4 of LUZel'\le. Chaperons will be Prof. and Mrs.

Harold Ladenihlll Earl E. Harper, Prof. and Mrs. Harold! C. Ladenthin, P3 of Philip G. Clapp, Prof. and Mrs.

Sllma. Phi Epsilon Gene Crowley, A3 of Freepprt,

iiI., is at home this week end. Horner Hildenblddle, G of ClIn­

to, Ohio and David Armbruster A2 of Iowa City, went to Rock Island.

Hinton; Max L. Memler, pa of Herald Stark and Prof. and Mrs. Baguio, summer capital of the Iowa City; Marvin A. Parry, P3 Arnold Small. Philippine Commonwealth, is sit-of Remsen; W. John Puis, P3 of R. E. McCormick, G of Tahle- uated ,in the mountaqu; pf '~orth­Bell~ vue; O. Keith Smith, P4 of quah, Okla., and Agn~s Engell, G .ern '~4Z~m Ishln(1 ilt lin Altitude Iowa City; Bernard Slaff, P3 of of Spring Grove, Minn., are in of 5,000 feet. I~ site ?las dis­Passaic, N. J.; R~bert J. Telfer, ch;lrge of the party. covered in lSWl by a Spanish ex­P3 of Nevada; Gharles F. Watson, Arch L. MacGowan, G of Iowa plorer whi!e leading an expedl­P3 of Humboldt, and George T. City, is president of the group of tion to the f,a~~ ~rin~ad val-'" eirick, P3 of Colfax. graduate students in music. ley. ==========================~======~~~~~~~

. -

TOMO'RR,OW I

8A.M .. UNION '.,1---.. ..

For The

Women 0/ Moose Meet Tuesday Night

Women of the MOQSe wiJI meet TUe!iday at 8 p .m. in the Moose hall for a regular business and social session.

Mrs. Clillord Heacock, senior regent, will be in charge of the meeting. Committee rcports will be given by the vatious commit-

..

J /

Medical 'Fraternity WiJI Initiate Eight

In Ceremony Today

Phi nho Sigma, medical fra­t(;tnity, will initia te eiiht mem­bers today.

The new initiates are Vernon Plager, Ml of Grundy Center ; Watson Hamstreet, Ml of Titon­ka; BiJI Updegraff, M2 of Boone; Bob EIJiott, M1 of Oskaloosa ; Dean Estes, Ml of Pella , and Paul Kock, Ml of Ft. Atkins.

A dinner will follow the ser­vices. Alumni guests have been invited for the occasion.

~ERE'S CHEAP

I .~

The maniage of Eita ~IIIZ of Iowa City, daui~ter of ¥ri:.ilBula Revesz of Center Lovell, ¥e., to Walter TO(jd 01 IQwa City, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clate Todd of Hen. derson, Tex., March 21 at ,Daven. port was annou~ced at a dinner party at the Alpha Xl Oelta sor. Ority house Friday . evening.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Todd attend the university here, Mrs. Todd be. ing a sophomore in the schOOl of Cine arts, and Mr. Todd a senior in the college of ijb\!ral arts. The couple will be at home in Iowa City.

The bride Is Bt!iJiated with AI. pha Xi Della sorority and the bridegroom is a member ot &igma Nu fratel·oitY.

Monday Club Play. Bridge Tomo,~01C7

The Monday club will ,meet to­morrow at 1:15 p.m. at the home of Mrs. W. S. Leinbaugh, 420 N. Clinton, for a dessert-br~dge party.

Members will call Mrs. Irein­baugh if unable to attend.

SON

These Questions: ( want to insure lIlY men under a workmen' compensaUon )HI1. Icy. Wha.t if !lOme slranJtr would ret luart, would I be protected?

Wbat if I ha.ve a loss by smok~. Am I covered under my fire In.sura.nce poUe;,' If I hang a SlIn over my place of bWllness. must J buy a bona?

On Any Insurance Problem

Comol\

S. T. MORRISON of

S. T. Morrison & Co. !03~ East WasbluteD Street

TelephoM H1I

~

\

bringing you FOR A ~OUSE L~Fir DESERTED • Direct From Chicago's Blackhawk &~ ,.

DICK ,SHELION

/eat"ri',g

.• . Gloria Gilbert • Skip :FarlQll

It's the L~st Informal of the "ear

BETI'ER BE EA:Rur:!

I

• 1

THE EVI:NIN6 Wlt~ YQU go out {or Ule cvcniug,

leave a lilht '~rned on. A 4().wau

lamp costs less th(.llt one .cel&t f9f

six houl'S.. For helpful tiugg lio~

about your IU)lue lighting, call our

office. No char8e.

Dial 2191

~on [,uthel J~and

'" C. p~ • ~unday s<

9:1:r' ail ages. Young

9:30 TeacherS' dJiSes. Divine ! IO:3OC~ristian

'SoJIIe . t rneE 5:1~~~nt as:

tIIer.n ,/ ch' ish chur . ~I esS student

~~ cdllege, ~~~ WednesdaY, .•

~eek Len tell CrY of A'hiie2vlsl I10[l~

TburSday, : society. 7 30

Tbursday, : gue at chu:ch.

Friday, 7.S0 DBuon 01 cOnfirmed Palm

941 ---n

SUNDAY, MARCH BO, 1941 ~ .

I

dt lOUla City

t ti U I? .: ti ,t= J

ZIOJI Lull\eran Church Je\uIIOn .od Bloominrton

A. C. Prqehl, Pastor 9:15-Sunday school. Classes {or

iiI ages. 1:30 - Young people's Bible

clilSes. Teachers' training class. 10:3O-Divine service. Sermon,

' same Christian Paradoxes." 5:ls-Joint meeting of the Lu­

thetan Student association at First ~lish church. The Rev. A. N. R!I'Iess, student pastor at Iowa state colleae, speaker .

Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. - Mid­week Lenten service. Sermon, "A Cry oj Achievement."

-This. Weeli

meets at the rectory, 212 S. John­son.

Monday, 10 a.m. - Holy com­munion.

Wednesday, 7 and 10 a.m.-HOly communion.

Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. - Junior chOir supper in parish house.

Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. - Lenten evening service.

First Church of Christ Scientist

722 E. Cellen 9:30-Sunday school. . ll- Lesson-sermon, "Reality." Wednesday, 8 p.m.-Testimonial

Fln& Presbyterian Church ~6 . E. Markel

Dr. lijonT'~~ jP~ 9:30-Cburch s\!hooJ. All cj.epart­

ments meet at same hour. 9:SO-Bible class, university stu­

dents. 10:45-Service at worship. Ser­

mon, "The Mind and the Will." 6:30 - Westminster fellowship

vesper service. l:sa~lIe ~cClung, leader. Dr. Jones will give pre­Easler meditation.

6:30 - ~uxis society. Virginia Lampe, leader.

Tuesday, 6:15-Pot luck supper. Dr. Jones will speak on tile bOok of Romans.

Firat B&ptlst Church Clinton and BloomiBa1,on

Ebner E. Dierks, Minister

THE DAThY lOW AN, IOWA CITY

midweek service. Thursday, 7:30 p.m . - Church

council meeting.

Church of the Nazarene Walnui and Dod .. e

M. Es&H Baney, Paawr 9:45-Sunday school. Classes for

all. lO:45-Morrung wdrship. Ser­

mOD, "I Can." 7:30-Evening service. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. - Mid­

week prayer meeting.

Catholic FoundaUon Rev. Donald Bayne, Chaplain

Chaplsln's Ollice, Mercy Bosplial Religious services at St.. Mary's. Students' mass, Sunday, 11:30;

holidays of obUgatlon, 12:05 p.m.

Mrs. Masl!lTlore in charge. 7:45-Eyening service. Theme,

"The Reconciling Work of Christ." Wednesday. 8 p.m.-Prayer,

praise and Bible study at pastor's residence, 817 Dewey.

Friday attcrnoon - Children meeting in chapel.

Fricla,y, 8 p.m.-Young people's meeting. Bible study.

Coralville Bible Church

Owen. 10:45-Public service. Sermon,

"Religion for Living." 6:30-Vesper hour. Tuesday, 7 p.m.-Comrades of

the Way. Prot. 1. Willard Lampe, director of the school of religion, will speak..

Wednesday, 1 p.m.-Plymouth circle luncheon.

Wednesday, 7 p.m.-Choir prac­tice.

Coralville MetbocUst Churclt 9:45-Bible school. Classes 10r Jefferson and Dubuque

all ages. Edwin Ecipr Vol&t, Minister lI-Morning worship. 9:3O-Church chool. 6:30-Young people's meeting. 10:45-Morning wo hip. Ser-7:45-Evening evangelistic serv- mon, "The Religion of Jesus-Sel'-

ice. vice." Tuesday, 7:45 p.m.-Cottage 6--High school league at center.

prayer meeting. Wesley Foundation. 9:45-Church school. Classes fof' Uniled GOlipel Chapel Wednesday, 2 p.m. - Women's 7-Candle -light vespers in the

Daily - G u ide d meditations, 4:30- :45 p.m.

Tuesday, .. :30-4:45 p.m.-Holy Communion.

8t. WeJICeIIa_ Chureb DavenPOfi Del Dod .. e

Key. Eo W. NeuU. Pastor ilev. J . F. FaleoDel', ' t PastM

63O-First mass. 7:3O-Second mass. 9:3G--Last mas 7 a.m.-Dally m

t. Fal.rick·s ClUlreh Kev. Patrlek O'KeiIly, Putor

Kev. FTaDefl E. LoIlJeb, AIIIstaD~ Putor

7-First ma . 8-ChUdren' m 9:15-Low mass. 10:3O-}{ilh mas .

all. . 91B Falrcblld prayer and Bible study group. church. Election of Wesley Foun- Cbrll&lan Clulrdi 9:45-Roger Williams cl~s for J. L. Masemore, Pastor dation council for next year. U, 101".

students at Roger WiliiaDlS llPlUe, 9:45-Bible sch 001. Ad u I t ConrrenUonal Church Jolul Bruee Dalton, Pas&or 2:30 N. Clinton. "What Is Pro- classes. Clinton and Jefferson The Little Chapel 9:45-Church school. testantism?" will be discussed. ll-Morning worship service. Llewelyn A. Owen, Mlnlsler Jefferson and Clinton 10:40-Morning worship, com-

10:45-Service of worship ~ ~ermon, "The Cross; An Inspira- 9:3O-Church school. Daily, 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.- munion and sermon on "Double sermon. Subject, "The Cross as tion fol' Christian Service." 10:10-Clmrch sqhool worship Open to people of all :faiths and or Nothing."

PAGE~

meet in church parlors. 8-Uruversi~ ... WedIIesday, 7 p.m.-Choir p

tire.

t. Mal'T'1 Chunb Ill. Rev. art IL Meblberc. Pas&.r Itn ......... trab,

Pastor 6-F t m "36-Second JnIlS5. 9-ChIldren's 10 :1~Hi&b m

Unltarlae Charclt 10 ...... GUbeI1

Re,'. £l'am A. \\'orthle" M1nIatcr ll-PnblIc IO!nice. Sermon.

"Hunger for WbolinJ ; A Vatl· ant Lenten emphasis."

Production of oleom 1'1 rin , butterine, nut m rgarlne and imJ­lar products showed a 23.5 per cent decline between 1937 and 1939, accol'dini: to the census. An­nual production now amount to about f35,OOO,OOO. Over 300,000,-000 pounds of oleomara:arine re made. Thursday; 2:30 p.m.-Ladies' aid

scciety. meeting. Power and Practical Wisdom!' 7-&peclal service for children. service conducted by the Rev. Mr. creeds for meditation and prayer. 8-ChrillU n Youth group will

Prof. Thom~ MUITwill sing sow. ----~----------------------------.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------... Thursday, 7:30 p.m.-Luther lea­

gue at church. Friday, 7:30 p.m.-Public exami­

nation of catechumens clllSs to be confirmed Palm Sunday.

TrlDlly Episcopal Church 3~Z E. College

'l\e Rev. Richard E. McEvoy, Reclor

8-Holy communion. 9:30 - Children's church and

sebool of religion. Junior choIT will sing offertory aJithem.

lO:45-Morning prayer and ser-111011. Anthem, "Thou Knowest, J.Ml."

7 - Episcopal ~tudent group

st. Pa.1'1I Lath~an Unlvenlty Church

.04 E. Jefferson L. C. Wuerffel, Pastor

9:30-Sunday scnool with Bible classes.

10:30-Divine service. Sermon, "A Friend at Court: ' Special mu­sic.

Tuesday, 8 p.m. - Lecture Qn "Christian ;Fundamentals." TopiC, "The Law of God."

Wednesday, 7:45 p.m. - Special Lenten servipe. Subtect, "Behold the Man! Bepold Your King!"

Thursday, 8 p.m.-Final meet­ing, advanced class in "Christlan Fundamentals. "

8-University vespers. . Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. - Chutch

family night and pot luc;k sMPp~r, ' __ - I

Flrs~ Encllsh Lu.therall ,Qh,..-c;Il ,[ Dubuque .and ~~t .

Rev. Ralph M. Krue"r, ~~ 9:30-Sunday school. 10:45-Morning worship. See­

mon, "T4e Glo{'y of the Cross." 6:15-Joint meeting of L.S.A.'s

of Zion and First churches. 6:30-Luther league JO~tlng. 7:.3O-Lellten evqning se ,(iCI!.

Subject, "Whom S~k Ye?" WednesdJIy, 2:30 p.m.-Women's

missionary society. Wednesday, 7:30 p.",. - Lenten

Daily Iowan ~T ant. Ads * k *

ClIBANlNG AND PRESSING

lor QUALITY & SERVICE

DIAL 3063 BROWN'S

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FQR SALE

CombinatiQn Study Lamp & ~ Tllbe :Radio $17.95

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LOST AND FOUND FOUND: Woman' Elgin' wrist

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REAL ESTATE FOR SALE - A beautiful large

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for efficient f\lrnitw:e ~ovtqg

!FlED DISPLAY Nik about our CL.A~S WARDROJl . .E .~. WCE

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icebox. Dial 3702. Mary V. Burns, Dial 2~6. ReIpoaaible 10r one Incornct

2 ROOM, I t floor apt. Close in. iDIert10n eDI7. Dial 6336. Cancellations must be c:alled In

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908 E. Washington.

- Beautiful modern partly furnished, 4

DIAL 4191 rooms, private enclosed fronL electric refrigerator, like a ONE - HALP ROOM for st~dent Adults. Dial 5360. girl Olal 7494, 604 S. Clmton.

rNO DOUBLE ROOMS. Close to campus. 6'0 S. Capitol.

FOR MEN-One double room $9. One double room with ~ooking

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TAXI? REMEMBER ..•

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~ ~-DID 'J.le; . FAt;l.M. GHltJ.. NAJiI50 Mf;:ET ~ HONEV A"T

'1"J4e: J.I USKI NS - BE:.r;. '"l '1: V.

CLARE CE GRAY Of THE MlXIUAIW TANKS IS EQUIPPED TWO-WAY RADIO SETS TUNED TO TlIE

IN THE "MASTODON" C»J!

PAGE TEN THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY SUNDA Y, MARCH 30, 1941 -'----!:'

] 5th Annual Supreme tourt Day Will Begin Thursday Morning Coif Initiation At 10:30 Starts Laws' Big Day

. . . . . . . . . .. .......... . --.- - -- ----- - ----I gil Hnnchcr' will givp fln addreRs. ducer~l are Wallei' L. Reitz, L3 of 'Follies' Membcl's ~ngJish ; Kenneth Anderson, L16( D· Set D Frederic M. Miller, Ralph Oliver, Day's Entertainment Cedm' Rapids; Willium Wci~kirch, Law students hIking part in the Atlantic; G. Bruce Mallum, Ll 01

f,SCltSS upre,ne -,our ay E. A. Sager, Carl B. Stiger, 'r. G. Concluding thp day's activitieR Ll of Sumner; Don Budington, 1.1 Folli eR will be Georgc Soumas, Clear Lake; Frederick C. Luderer, Garfield and C. F. Wennerstrum. will be the Supreme Court Fol- of CrE'Rlon, and John J. MarUn , L3 of Perry; Nell Naiden, L3 of L3 of Punx Rlltawney, Pa.; Robert

~owa Supreme Court To Hear Arguments Of Four Seniors

The complete program of the college of law's 15th annual cele­bration of Supreme Court day Thursday has been announced by Dean Mason Ladd.

The ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m. next Thursday with the initiation of the Order of Coif.

The men to be honored into the Order of Coif are Robert S. FOllsek, Iowa City; C. Neil John­son, Manchester ; Cor'win W. John-on, Center'ville; W. Howard Mann,

Iowa City; John P . Mansfield , Og­den; Walter L. Reitz Jr., Cedar Rapids; Richard K. Smith, Clar­ion, and Robert L. Brooks of Chi­cago, who was graduated in Au­gust.

The appeal from the university lies of 194J , directed, written and L2 of Des Moines. Mar s llalltown; Pat Manning, Ll Livesay, L3 of ToJedo; Deming produced by Harold G. DeKay, L~ Music wi lf be under the di l'ec- of Dallas Center; Dean Dort, Ll Smith, Ll of Toledo; Edgar King,

court will be made at 2:30 p.m. in of Sioux City; Paul AlexandPl' lion of Dar'old .Jack, L3 of Cedar of Davenport; Don Swanson, L3 Ll of Cedar Rapids; Claude Pen. the house chamber of Old Capitol. Black, L3 or Algona, and R. Carl I Rapids; Ar·thur Haller, LJ of M~- of Webster City; Lest I' Menke, l..1 1 dlclcm, Ll of Storm Lake; Joe

To Argue Case Reed, L3 of Cresco. l'engo, ~nd Don Dodge, L3 of Oel - of Calum t; Edward F(Jgarty, LI K('ul1, L3 or Grimes, nnd Roher( Student attorneys for the caSf'l Sp <:1.11 assi~ lll nl~ to the pro- w in. of Elma; John EVl1ns, L2 of N()I'th Burling, L2 of Postvill e.

will be (OUI' seniors - i1oi>ert C. --== Fisk, Curlew; Richard W. Df'eve, ~--------------.Ncw 19 11 Model-AdvertiA in(~ Ilecial--------------~ Wever; Elwood H. Olsen, B res- ... ford. S. Dak., and Robel·t S. Fou­sek, Iowa City.

A Supreme Court day banquel will be held in the main lounge of , Iowa Union at 6:30 p.m. Jack Firth, L3 of D'1Venport, will pr'e­side over the program during lhe dinner.

Dean Ladd will speak, and' Judge Paul McCoid will present prizes ~ to second year contestants. They I ... are Philip B. Bergfield, Sheld()n; I 't:I Robert W. Burdette, Afton ; Tim J. 't:I Campbell JI'., Newton; Richar'd L. -r: Fehseke, Burlington; Rex B. Gil- rn christ, Ames; John A. Gillolli , Des ~ Moines; Horace G. Hardy, B100111- ~ field; Shel'lock J. Hartnelt, West 0 Bend. -LeRoy L. JUl'gemeyer, Waver'ly ; ';a Rob e \' t E. Mannheimer, Des ~ Moines; Lorna D. Murphy, Elka­der; Vic R. Pomerantz, Des Moines;

I Sidney B. Smith, Corydon; John ' S. Sproatt, Iowa City; John F.

ATTY. ARTHUR. LEFF AND DEAN MASON LADD Stone, MalcQm, and Alfr'ed Woo-_____ --_____ . ____________ ._ leyhan, Cedar Rapids.

\Iller

Value!

Lifetime

Sensational Sale of Nationally Advertised Gl'lIl1lnll

$15 Underwood DE LUXE ELECTRIC

IVORY·CUSHION GRIP

Shaver

.Just received only 30 to be sold at this I -flOUR Sarc. By arrangement with the manufacturers of this natlol~\Iy advertised $15 dry shaver, we are positively limited to 30 only. GET YOUR IMMEDIATELY!

1 Hour Only MONDAY

MARCH 31st 3 to 4 P. M.

Sample 011 Display

YOIl ' 1I get the thrill of your IIfc when yon II SC th(' 111' V Umlerwood Dry . haver. Just 1,lng In socket and shave-no water, blades, . 0110 1) or hrush. Will pay for liscH- nothing else to buy, This Underwootl Dry SIHW r will br suM fill' the regular 11I'lce of $15.00 after Monclay, l\1arch 21.

I If You Can't Attend This Sale, Leave Money Before Sale and Sha.ver Will

Be h eld for you

RACINE'S CIGAR STORE

These men will be presented with Coif certificates by Prof. Rol­lin M. Perkins at an Order of Coif luncheon at the Law commons. 'roastmaster at the luncheon. will be LeRoy F. Simpson, L3 of Fair-1i Id. Donald D. Holdoegel of Des eon, a reception will be held in judges or the district courts. Moines wlll be the speaker. the lounge of the Law commons Presiding justices, headed by

Justice T. G. Garfield will pre­sent the Law Review -certificates, and Chief Justice Oscar Hale will

STORE NO. I-DIAL 6404 132 E. Washington St.

I ~ellf·SharJ)enillg Head

u Radio Interference ('uts Lon&, and horl HlLir

Double Actioll Head Endorsed by Bnard or

(1nd .. rwrlters

Reception Planned r in honor of the visiting justices Chief Justice Oscar Hale, will be Immediately following the lunch- of the Iowa supreme court and Richard F. Mitchell, W. L. Bliss,

pr'esent plaques to the Supreme 11IiI1I!II __________________________________________ • Court contestants. President Vil'-

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

FREE TRANSPORTATION TO THE POLL Dial

VOTE THE 1s t Ward 1st Precinct ................................................ 7532 1s t Ward 2nd Precinct .................... ........ .................... 3145 2nd Ward 1st Precinct ................................................ 2661 2nd Ward 2nd Precinct ...... .......................................... 92:.17 3rd Ward ....... .................................. ............................. 5431

NO'N .. PARTISAN 4th Ward 1st Precinct .................... ......... ...... ............. 3812 4th Ward 2nd Precinct .. .. ............................................ 5749 5th Ward 1st Precinct .... .' ...... .. ...................... ............. 4808 5th Ward 2nd Precinct ............ L .. L ........................... 3230

TICKET

C.E. BECK CANDIDATE FOR.

JOHN GRADY CANDIDATE FOR.

EVERETT R. MEANS CANDIDATE FOR.

JOHN J. OSTDIEK CANDIDATE FOR

W. J. TEETER CANDIDATE FOR

R. J. PHELP CANDIDATE FOR

Fifth Ward Alderman First Ward Alderman Alderman-At-Large Aldel'ma n· A t· Large Second Ward Alderman Fourth Wald Alder",:ln

THAT THE CITY'S BUSINESS MUST CONTINUE TO BE CONDUCTED

WITH HONESTY AND INTEGRITY, IN A FEARLESS, IMPARTIAL AND

BUSINESS-LIKE MANNER

W. HAL STEWART

CANDIDATE FOR

MAYOR

CITY ELECTIO MONDAY MARCH, 31st

FOR TRANSPORTATIO TO TH POlL CALL HEADQUARTERS-DIAL 9693-9691

HEADQUARTERS HOTEL JEFFERSON BLDG.-FIRST FLOOR HEADQUARTERS HOTEL JEFFER ON BLD J.-FIR. T FL OR

This Council Believes in the Followi~lg and Will Work to Secure

1. A much needed railway viaduct in East Iowa. City, for thc

use of its school children and citizens.

2. Further improvements at the Iowa City Air)lOrt wiih Gov­

ernment assistance.

3. The straightening and paving of Ralston Creek from the

railroad to the river.

4. Added park improvements and playgrounds in the cit y.

5. More sewer projects to furnish work und property imllrove­

ments at a minimum cost.

(i. Added street improvemenis at low cost to city

('oat.ing! old paving, ' and adding some new.

7. Continue careful attention to snow removal and the sanding

of icy streets and walks.

8. A ' continued reduction of the City's bonded indebtedness

. and an early reduction of taxes.

9: Polite, efficient treatment of Its citizens' suggeRI ions and

requests.

No favoritism, but a continuation of the handling of all city business fairly and efficiently, as in the past four years.

THE CITIZEN'S NON·P ARTISAN TICKET RECALLS that you elected your council-two terms ago with mlLch confi­dence in thei,' ability and integrity. Since then by thei,. service to Iowa City they IUlVe justified your confidence and have maintained, constantly, those characteristics of high in­tegrity, strict honesty and keen business judgment lor which they were chosen. Tltey are "lways unbiased, considerllte, careful OIul thorough in deliberation; experielu'p(/ (Inri Sll(,­

cessful; co-operative in effort; holdin!! first wul foremost tlw welfare o/Iowa City in every action taken. They hflve given generolLsly of their time, and a friendly "ecepti(Jll to (Ivery· one. Their plpdges have belm, and will be kepi.

CHARLES BECKMAN (JANDlDATE FOR.

Park Commissioner

E. B. RAYMOND OANDIDATE FOR City Treas urer

Atty. Geor~e .r . .Ten en CANDIDATE FOR

Police Judge

The Citizens' Non-Partisan (.oll1lri/ Has A ccomplis/t ell :

t, The reconstruction of the Community nllildin~ lind e. tab· Iishment of the community cent r.

2. The Fire Department hill; been re·equlpped. :t A two-way radio communicnOon system has hr('o in~ta\l(ld

for the u e of the police. ~. l"~ighty (80) block. of Sllnitar .• c\ r were rompleted and

l we\ve (J 2) more ure under const ruction. n. Eleven and one-half (11 Yl) hlocks of I-tt n'el JIll l'ment were

con tructcd and two and one-half (Q h) "lurks of ulley Ilaving were completed.

Ii. Twelve (12) blocks of new idewnlk, including I he !lllprOuch to the new High. chool. wer' ('omilleted.

7. Thirty·two (:12) block of city paving \\cr' '·l'. urfll('ed hy fhlsh coating at a minimum of c p n. •

R. Extensh'e improvement wer(l malle tit th rlty park. 9. Two new bridges were conl'h'urlt'd Il .. cr nul ton ('reek

which ollened lip II lihort ('ut to the new HIgh Rr huol. 10. Extenl'h'c lm\lrovemcn(s wen' mudc at Uw Municipal Air·

port with thc II I tOllce elf I he "'edt-raJ Gllvernment. 'rhey were insll'umental in obtaining thl' IMatillu and ron­~) trllction of the new Armo\'Y U);l'd by the utiolla l (;uard.

12. The sewuge dispo~al planl hll 'l heell IJi;u'ul UIJUIl II elf-Ru" tuilling basis of operation.

13. They caused the railroad to con!ootruet ero., Inj( and repair their bridges and viaduct •

14. They made pO!iSlble the In. lallation lind improvement of the Rtreet lig htihg ystem, which when ('ompleled will be unequalled in Iowa.

15. Streets huve been cleaned of snow quickly and efflcleIJUr I and the streels and Midewltlk. II nded in Icv weather

AT ONCE. . 16. A SUBSTANTIAL R£ O crlON OF Till<; ('IT ,' BOND~~D

INDEBTf.lONE S, AND NO NEW BONDS.

ill Begin Thursday Mornin -- -...

~;ngl bh; Kenneth Anderson, LI !if 'Follies' Members ducer.~ are WHile)' L. Reitz, L3 of Cedar Rapids; William Weiskh'ch,

g the day's uctivilies Ll of Sumner; Don Burlington, LI Supreme Court Fol- o[ Cre~[on, and John J. Marti!),

1, directed, Wl'ltten and L2 of Des Moines.

Law students taking part in the Follies will be Georgc Soumlls, L3 of Perry; Nei l Naiden, L3 o\' Malsha lltown ; Pal Manning, Ll of Dallas Center; Dean Dort, Ll of Davenport; Don Swanson, L3 of Webster City; LesLel' Menl<e, Ll of Culumet; Edward F(,g!lrty, LI of Elmn; John ]1;VilI1S, Ut of North

Atlantic; G. Bruce Mallum, 11 ot

by Harold G. DeKay, L3 Music will be under the direc-City; Paul Alexander lion of DaroJd J!ick, L3 of Cedar of Algona, and R. Curl \ Rapids; AI' Lh ur Haller, Ll of Mn­of Cresco. rengel, and Don "Dodge, L~ of Gel-

' Iear IJake; Frederick C. Luderer L3 of Punxsutawney, Pa.; Robt~ Livesay, L3 or Toledo; Deming Smith, LI of Toledo; Edgar Kin&: LIllI CE'dur Rapids; CJaude Pen. d Jeton, L I of Storm Lake; J~ Kr:lJ1, L3 nf GrimeR. and RI!b!n 13t1I'l'rng, 1,2 of P()Slv J1lI'. assis[,JIlts to tht' pro- wein.

/IIi1I..a-------~---N~w 1911 MHdcl-Advcrlil'ling SJleclnl--------------I'~

uper

Va.lu!'!

Lifetime

8t>nsational Sale of Nationally Advertised GI'II\1h1l'

$15 Underwood DE LUXE ELE TRI

IVORY-CUSHION GRIP

Shaver

Just received only 31) to be sold at this I-IIOlJR are. By arrangement with the manufacturers of this nallol~lIy advertlse!l $15 dry shaver, we are posillvely limlte!l to 30 only. GET YOURS IMMEDIATELY!

UMTTED 2 TO A COUI'ON-oN ALE ONLY

WHITE IVORY CASE-PIG KIN POUCli No Calch 10 ThiR-Jusl Pay $] .99 and

1 Hour Only MONDAY

MARCH 31st 3 to 4 P. M.

SUlllllle 011 Display

............. $] .99

II's YmtrR YO\l 'U get the thrill of your life when yOu uSt~ th l' Ilf'W Undt'rwOlld Dry Shanr. Just I1lug III socket and shuve-no water, bbdes, soall or hrush. Will pay for Itscll- nothing else to buy. This Ullderwoml Dry Shaver will br solt! rClr the r egular price of S15.00 after MOllllay , Marl'lI 21.

I 1f You Can't Attend This ale, Leave J Money Before Sale and Shaver Will

Be held for YOU

RACINE'S CIGAR STORE 1~~elf-ShllrJJenjng Head I

o Radio Interference ('II Is Lon&, and horl Hair

Double Acllon flead EndorSl'd b.Y Board or

Undt>rwrllers STORE NO. I - DIAL 6404 132 E. WashIngton St.

VOTE THE

.. PARTISAN TICKET

JOHN J. OSTDIEK CANDIDATE FOR

W. J. TEETER CANDIDATE FOR

K. J. PHELPS t\ NDlDATE FOR

AJdeJ'man-At-J,argc econd Ward Alderman Fourth' aid Idcrman

TICKET RECALLS s ago with rnuc" conli.

Since t"en by their' YOllr confidence and

fJ{n·nf'j~lI.ris'ics 01 high ill. jlulg1lte1lt lor which

unbiased, considerate, ; (!xperiell(,prl amI .'Wf'.

fi rst (lJul foremost llul . They Il(lve given

dly receptioll to every. be kept.

Atty. Georl(e ,1. Jensen CANDIDATE FOR

Police Judge

CIT·Y ELECTIO MONDAY MARCH, 31 t

FOR TRANSPORTATJO T THE P LI­CALL HEADQUARTERS-DIAL 9693-9091

HOTEL JEFFERSON BLDG.-FIR. T FLOon

The Citizens' Non·Parlisoll .()U1/t'iI

lias Accomplillhe(/:

1. The reconstruction of the Community BlliMing und e.lllb· Ii. hment of the communit, cenl r.

2. The Fire Department ha been re·equipp d. :J. A two-way radio communiculion S.\stCIlI ha hC'C'/\ in. lalled

for the u e of the police. 4. Eighiy ( 0) block. or snnihlr) sewer were ('o l1l111eled and

twelve (12) more lire und r clln< truction. 5. Eleven and one-half (J 1 liz ) bl(\('kA of . 1 r el pavement were

con tructcd and two nnd nne-half (~IZ) block of ulley paving wcre completed.

(;. Twelve (12) blocks of new idcwnlk, {"dUlling the allprollch tn lhe new IIlgh , chool, were ('ompleled.

7. Thirty-two (32) block of city I)aving were re~urraced by rtul'Ih ('onllng Itt a minimum or . pcn"l~.

l'l. Extensh e improvement were mad~ II I the l'It~· park. 9. Two new bridge!! were cnnst ructt'd 1)\ 1.'1' Jtnl.,tlln ('reek

which opened up a • horl ('ut to the n w m lCh • chuol. Exlen~ il'e iml)rovemcnL weri' made at the lunlcipal Air· port with the nssi tllnce of Ih "'cdl'ra l Go\' rnm nl.

J l. 'rhey werc instrumenllli In (I"tallling ihl' lorHtlon lind con· !llruction of lhe new Armory \I ~('d hy the atll)nll l (:unrd.

12. The sewage di po al plant hfl. heen /)10 1.' d "1)1111 n elf-su, tainlng basis or operation.

1 a. They caused the railroad to 'onstrurl cr()~ lng, and repair their bridge lind viaduct .

14. They made po Ib~ the In talllltion Hnd Improvement of

] 5.

Ihe street lighting . ystem, whi h when ('ompleted wlll be unequalled in lowlI. Sireels have heen rleaned of snow quickly lind cffldelltly Rnd the streets und I!idewalk" unded In Icy weather AT ONCE. A OSTANTIAL REDU flO OF TilE (,ITY, BONDED INDEBTE1JNESS. AN)) NO EW BONDS.

f

.. . for pon.uion of the ball, th ... tank­st.,. ... m to be h.ving plenty of fun dur­ing their intrlmural g.me. W.ter polo i •• f.vorite sport at S. E. Miuouri Stat. T IIch­ers College, C.pe Girarde.u, Mo.

Queen Rul •• by R.mot. Control When In appendectomy thrlltened to upset pl.ns lor crowning Mary Lib Resmussen queen 01 the Junior Prom .t Gettysburg Col­lege, band I.,der Will Hud.on WI. whi.lced to the hospital to perlorm the ceremony. Mary Lib ruled the d.nee by remote con­trol. Lelt to right in the picture: J.n. Henry, • member 01 the Prom committee; Will Hud­.on, and M iss R" muSien.

D.f.n •• Tr.inin, Prectice in nlVII ordnance and gunnery is being started by students enrolled in Brown's new course in navll science and tactics. L .. ,ning how to .im Ind ~re I lour-inch 50 c.libre d"troyer gun Ire Ch.,l .. Gladding, Frederick Whit~J Lieut. E. C. Goyette, USN" Richard Menplon, O.nlel Sang., .nd )lmull Thompson. Col. lObl, N ..... Photo

~ ! 11 Ed "Moose" Rhenstrand, center 01 Superior (Wis.) Stlt. T elchers' chlmpionship t •• m, completes his w~eel shot with th. ulu.1 result - I baslcet. He h .. Iverlged 14 points per g.me, his t .. m 53.

ColIC'slt.tt Di!lttt Photo by Butler

%

Co-.cI. In.pect J.il It WI. I bit out of routine but Sheri" Hlrry Smith toolc it in hi •• trld. the oth., dey wh.n IllllIIben of the AII ..... ny Colli" L .. ,uI of · rlltur. WOIII.n Voten In.pect.d the Crawford County jail at M .. d­viII., Pa. Sh.ril Smith i. pic­tur.d ,reltlnt Shlrl.y Silver, prnldent Ind organlz.r of the AII.,h.ny Ila,ue,

Li ••• nin,·. A Ho .... , . .. with tlti •• tud.nt troup in C.rnlgil roolll at IIllnol. Stat. Normal Univlrsity. Althou,h WOlllln outnulllb.r lII.n two to on. on thll. S. N. U. calli­pu., lIIorl lII.n than wom.n Ii.t.n to lIIu.IClI recordin,. from the Carn.,i. collection livln thl colll,1 In 1940.

eXTRA MILDNESS

IS WHAT 1M AFTER.

LESS NICOTINE

SO , TURNED TO CAMELS AND

FOUND SEVERAL OTHER SWELL I EXTRAS' TOO

tIuIn the average of the 4 other lar,e.t­ullin, brands te.ted -Ie.. than any of them - according to independent scien-

tific tests of the smoke itse"

YO U doo 't need a high 1. Q. (0 figu re out that

the qualities you enjoy in your cigarette are in

the smoke it elf- the smoke's the thing!

It's quite likely, tOO, that if you are not already a

Camel " fan" you smoke one of the other four brands

tested. That's why the scieorific findings of the smoke

test are of real importance to you.

Science has already pointed out that Camels - by

burning slower- give you extra mildness, extra cool­

ness, and extra flavor. Now science confirms another

important advantage of slower burning - of Camel's

costlier tobacco - tX/ra f reedom from nico/hlt i" the ""0111/ And the moke's the thing!

Your dealer is featu ring Camels at an attractive

carton price. For coovenience, for economy- buy

by the canon.

BY BURNING 2S~ SLOWER

than the average of the 4 other largest­seUing brands tested- slower than any of them-Camels also give you a smoking pins equal, on the average, to

5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK!

"Moolc" On • Ramp. ,e ~!1I Ed "Moos." Rh.nstrand, c.nt.r of Sup.rior (Wis.) St.t. Teach.rs· ch.mpion.hip t •• m, complttes hi. whetl .hot with the ulull rtsult - a basket. He hiS . ... er.ged 1,( point. ptr g.me, hi. team 53.

Co-edl Inlpect J.il It wa. a bit out 01 routine but Sherlll Hllry Smidt took It in hi •• tride the other dey when m.mbers of the Alle-,heny Colle,e Lea,ue of ' Future Women Voters Inapectld the Crawford (oun~ 'lailat Meael­ville, Pa. Sherif Smith I. pic­tured greetln, Shirley Silver/ prnldent and or,.nller of the Alle,heny I.ague,

Lil.enin,· I A Hot,t" ... with thia atudent ,roup In Carnegie roolll at IIIlnol. State Normal University. Althou,h women outnumber lIIen two to one Oil the I. S. N. U. cam­pu./ mort m.n than women Ii.ten to muaie.1 recordin,. from the Cam.gl. collection ,iven the coll.ge in 1940.

The SMOKE of Slower-Burning Camels gives you EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS. EXTRA FLAVOR

and

%

LESS NICOTINE

.... n the average of the 4 other lar,e.t­

.. Iling brands te.ted - Ie.. than any of them-according to independent .cien-

tific te. t . of the smoke itself -- -YOU don't need a high 1. Q. to ligure out that

the quajities you enjoy in your cigarette are in the smoke itself-the smoke's the thing!

It's quite jikely, too, that if you are not already a Camel "fan" you moke onc of the other four brands tested. That's why the scientific findings of the smoke test are of real importance to you.

Science has a~ready pointed out that Camels - by burning lower-give you extra mildness, extra cool­ness, and extra flavor. Now science connrms another

important advantage of slower burning-of Camel's costlier tobaccos - txlrll frmlom from nitoJitle i" the sWlM,/ And the moke's the thing!

Your dealer is featuri ng Camels at ao attractive carton price. for convenience, for economy - buy by the canoo.

/

THE S/IIfJKeS THE THING-/ -

EXTRA MILONESS

IS WHAT 1M AFTER. SO I TURNED TO CAMELS AND

FOUND SEVERAL OTHER SWELL 'EXTRAS' TOO

BY BURNING 25'" SLOWER

than the average of the 4 other largest­selling brands tested-slower than any of them-Camels also give you a smoking plus equal, on the average, to

5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK!

Theory olenginl' .nd study 01 p.rts is nlcell.ry so th.t the luture Ay­ers may determine motor lailure C.USIS in times of emergency. A com­plete cour" in .Irodyn.mics .nd study 01 instruments is .Iso part of . the ground schooling which takes up 72 hours in the prim.ry course, 108 in the secondary courst.

Plotting. coune incidentll to thlir crou coun­trr Aight Ire L.wrence Brown Ind Oren POlge o Mlrsh.1I Collegt. Extensiyt instruction in m.pmlking Ind rtlding Ind generll meteorol. 09Y is required 01 .11 ,tudenls. Thus they learn how to reid wtlther maps and choolt .nd Ay Aight courslS.

Reidy For the fin.1 ex.m, stu dint Edm.nd Fill .. ~nli instructions From John F. Lynch, Itk belc Aight. ProoF th.t collegi.ns takl to tht lir 'Ii~. c Ie .. th.n eight per cent 01 thl It.int .. drop ~

wotk1 on I cvlinder ".intd pilo,s mlV to taltt '\It COil"".

I'\.o,o""c'" '" Uhim.te . im of many of the colle9t tr.inees who finilh tht ItC­ond.ry courlt i. R.ndolph Field, Texa., where.n intenlive course turn. out military pilots lor the Army Air Corps. Here Lieut. Fred E. Hild, former AII-Ame,ic.n btck .t Cae Collegel. IX­

~I.in. part 0 the day'. ",i. I IlIson to Ayin!!.. cadet O. K. S. G,ahlm, who lugged the pigskin for Colorado State lalt y .. r,

is necessary so that the future Ry­in times 01 emergency. A com-y of instruments is Iiso part 01 '

72 hours in tht: primary course,

Ploltin, I coune incident. I to their crolS coun· Irr Right are L.wrence Brown and Oren POige o Marshlll College. Extensive instruction in m.pm.king .nd reading .nd gene,.1 rneteorol· ogy is required of .11 ,tudents. Thus th. y I •• rn how to ,ud weather m.ps and choose .nd Ry Right courses.

Rudy for the fi n.1 eurn, stud.nt EdMund Fell" An.1 instruction. from John F. Lvnch, I.k btk Right. Proof that collegi.n ... Ie. to the eir 'Ii~. c I ... ,h.n .i ,ht per cent of 'he trainees drop o.

S'd M.e R,. ~ Student pilot I neY nd " hOC jIiI9. "ead durln9C"er !ld'o~ .11 ,tc' .,. J L _ .n 0 - 1 s In ~ wom 'I' "''' d th.1r quotr I· "avI .. " V " I

~ on II cylinder 'II ".ined pilots mav

to Ilk. tile countf. 1'\Io •• ,,_C'" ,., Ultim.te .im of m.ny of the colleg. tr.inees who finish the IIC­

ond.ry coune is R.ndolph Field, T ex .. , where.n intensive course turns out mil it.ry pilots for 'he Army Air Corps. Her. lieut. Fred E. Hild former AII·Americln back .t Coe College ex­pl.in. part 01 the dIY" .erill lenon to Ayint cadet O. ~. S. Grah.m, who luned the pigskin lor Colorado s .. t. lilt yllr.

Tradition .mon, .vi. tors is the te.ring of. person's .hirt .. il immedi­ately .fter he h •• completed his first solo Right. Thi •• erie. 01 pictures, .. ken .t the University 01 Chicago, show. the action which .. k .. pllce during this unusu.1 initiltion ceremony. ColI.,I ... D ..... P ........ by Notdl

Harvard Journalistl Settle "Ment.lity Dilpute" To decide the battle 01 witt between tholt historic riv.Is, t"e Hlrllrd ~rimsoh' undergrldulte dlily, and the HIIVlrd L~mpoon, ,student humor mah

9if.:e, t i C ' Network celled in Prof.Slor OUIl 01 rldlo lame, Alter I lour ° th::~fnng and jabbing quips at .ach other, it WIS lound that th. Crimson .ggrt~l· t' f Robbins 8111antine and Lyman had prov.d th.ms.lves mentally, sup.llor t~~h: 'Poon te~m 01 Phini~y, Bowie, and Richlldson, by the o"erwh.lmlng score

01 13~~0~e1!~~'Robbins, president 01 the Cr!ms~n, is stu~ptd, by hthe tdb~ehm t h I et a twig wit" a bird ptrched on It Without dISturbing t e , II, ~

0p lOW 01 9 ks a b'lt punled himsell, In the picture at right, Col.s POhlnl1h

Y, preSld-ro eUor 00 'I h h t Ih I P I uix IS u.e d t f the Llmpoon drews I qu.stlon rom I e I I ro el50r ' h t th' ,en ° 1 his I' ellances, 'the Prof.ssor will nol do a program Wit ou IS In e'lelYd 0h ne. ° d 'Pt PI ,to: 000 ColI.,I ... \)I,c" PI>o\o. by Soul~W'C\ H.N"d e".",n hat, In a. InIlU. I or.~, '

His Music C.n" Entir. C.mpul ~~~~ in the !tud.ent bUildin! clocle tow'r at Indiana University, Ned on th:t~~lo, In the School of Music, piaYI I U'I alma mat.r song

ColI.,I ... D,s.,. Phot<> bo; Kno.

CoIe~ Dieesf s.c-

, U 'I 0l1000 .. ' ' ....... ........ tM ,r IIIUIIooI_ ... ,

Footb.11 Cheerleaclen G. Into Sprinl Tr.ininl

.. I~II tea", worlct out On On. end of the trldiron Unlv ... ity of Georgia cheerlead ... cut ca.,... on the pedecti"S new Iwnb to e"tertlln the thoUllnds who Roc~ to the ,. .... Here Wilson Hudson Male .. a runnin,

eNin, In I soltlertiuh, OYer ",e .. bert of the "yell tea .. ", Wid. World

rnali.t. Settle IIMentality Di.putell

wits between those historic riv.i., the H"v.,d Crimson, the H.rv"d umpoon, student humor m.gn!ne, the

d In Prolenor Quil of "dio I.me. Aher • h.1I hour of quips .t e.ch other \I WIS found th.t the Crimson .ggreg.· ntine, .nd Lym.n ~.d prov.d themselves ment.l1y superior Phinily, Bowie, .nd Rich.rdson, by the overwhelming seole

ptcsident 01 the Crimson, is stumped by the probl.m • bird perched on it without disturbing the bird. The

puul,d himself. In the picture .t right, Coles Phi~ity , presl· dr.w •• question from the h.t th.t Professor ault h.s use~

IDI,e."nce,. The Prol.ssor will not do • program without thIS SS 1000. Colttf/.t( Ol,tl( PhotD' b., Southwtc.\;, H.~.,d Cft.lOn

It..av •• rtl Entir. Cimpul clock tower .t Indi.n. University Ned of MUlic. pl.ys I U'I .Im. mett; song

ColI.,I't. Di, ... Photo by Kno.

CoIeede IltSesI s..-, •• t 0II0e. II. , ..... ...... 1'1.. J' t,' ,.

Foot"." Ch •• rl •• cI.,1 Go Into Sprin, Tr.inin,

Iht food,,11 le.m wo~ Ollt on on •• nd of th .. tridlron UniftfSity of Gear!i. cheerl •• den cut c.pen on the ~tin, new .tunu to entertlin the thoultndl who R~ to the 91"'" Here Wilson Hudson mikes I runnin, ead,n, in • SOMeruult, over ", ... ben of the "yell tu",". Wid. World

1

Recipe for Moek Initiation Tie pledge'. h.nd •. Blindfold. (rack three .gg. on noggin .nd cover with ~enerou • cup of mol ... es. Top with liberal .prink. ling of cornA.kts. then .tlrt pled,. w.lk· ing home five miles. This "blue-pl.te spe­ci.I" WII dre.med up by the Kapp. Sig. m. b~1 of Southwesttrn Collt,e. Mtm­phis, T tnneslte. ColI .. I" . Di,o" PIlot<> by Slu ... ,

He Won $11 on • D.re No ont c.n d.II R.lph Btllow, Univtrslty of Michig.n sophomore. He bOllted to fr.ternity brothers th.t he wouldn't mind h.ving hil h.ir clipped. They d"ed him to the txtent of $15. threw in .n extra S3 whtn he off.lld to includ. hil eyebrowi. Hert he is, minus h.ir .nd eyebrows. but h.ppily ,rinnin, over the $18 In hll pock.t.

Arlene Schwob is shown .. she Ippelred in I recent Dr.ke University ell-school production of Mllwell And~n 's "Win,l ... Victory". Shi' took the I •• din, role of Op.rrt. M.I,y p!inc ... Ind wiFe of the son of I .trlct New Engllnd flmily.

i

!

Bill WlkeAeld hurtle. over the b.mboo pole It .i. feet, hil "warm­ing up" htight in prtp'"tion for the coming trICk Mllon at Sent. An. Junior Coh.gt. He sports. record of lix feet, Itven inch"lnd W tit COist orfici.,. Pftdict h. will be the Artt hurun to jump Wltft

I.tt. Coli.!; ... DI .... Photo by SUll ....

Stealc Fry The hOSl.1 art hun9ry too - but tht 'ttl~s.r. r.,.rv.d for coole. M.rth. Wilkes, J •• nne Pryor, .nd GrlCl L.wson. Thty stopped for an outdoor supper on onl 01 th.ir ridl ••• IIJul.r , •• tUII 0' the ridin, prO!l"m .t G.or,i. St.t. Wom,n '. Coli., •• t V.I. dost., where they," students. COII'8iO'l D,t ... l'hoIo br Ph" ••

D .. dJine for the fourth .nn.,./ Coli";,,. Di~ Stlon Edition it APfil1 - so _It NOW to pi. your entrio. Whether vou .r •• ct • .,1 I.n or III

I

your pictu," un win nluebl. wh pri'lS t4 nl tion,l recognition 10f you. 1'1Ii' Y'II I spal

,fi nd prill 01 $25 will ,0 to the penon lubmi.., the outstlndins pholoSflph In the cOllpetilon.

Division winners willlpJit .noth.r $50 in ctsh.A8 winning picture. will be r •• tured in I specill ..

tion I.te this .ptl" s.

S.lo" Competition Rul.s 1. All ... I .. ~I III'" be M.l ftOt "let 1M AJIf!I 1. to: S.lot'~, (011.,1* Oi,.,t s.ct OIl, lU F."" .. hil.." Mln._,

~Is:;. .. tac lui elate .bo,,' .. II ".. .ittecl. Gi .. ::t ~II ex (I<wlty iNAdl , of III_ pilato"...,. WotaatIOII ...

~ltJed 01 tIM pIIoto "ill be he'pI.l. Any . .. of pIIoto II~, tHo, pin ... , .. , .. "- ) ~., SIMile! ttt ,..,~. 1 E",- yow pho\o III o"e of tIM hlllo""", cIi~ ..... ,: .~ :~i b) IWI •• , c, tdlOft •• eI ultCl d ~1Of1 1l' """t5 :t ~ HCDt!' Filii ... FOt til. baa ~ • 'PK~I "ill of U5 . .W __ . __ J

plK' w"" ..... _h di. Oft ... 11 .eeIM . - ._c/ of J­.nd u-inI pig. w, __ • n tf\c/ U . S Thett II 110 e."" fu , ... d .ach IHI.w..I Ny wblll • .., ,.hatol .1 h..... .. PHlol will be ... .rMCI " ........ ,...". (0 .. ,.,,1 .. I"b .1

Send Your Photos T oday\

H. Flo ... Bill W.kefield ~urtles over t~. bamboo pol •• t .i. feet, ~i. "w.".­ing up" ~.ig~t in pr'p"r.tion for t~e coming trICk .... on .t Senti An. Junior Cohege. He IPOrts • record of .i. feet, leven inc~es .nd West COist offici.l. pr.dict he will ba the Rn\ hUll\ln \0 jump Hven feet. ColI.!I" . DI! ... P!.olo by SUIl ....

~ Stealc Fry T~e ~01S'1 .r. ~ung!y too - bllt tht ,ttl~, ar. 'ttt,ved Jor cook. Mllth. Willees, Je.nne Pryor, .nd GrlCC L.Wlon. T~.y stopped for .n outdoor supp.r on on. of th.ir rldtl, • ,,-,ul., I .. ture of the riding pro grim .t Georgi. St.te WO"""" ColI.~ .t V.I . dOltl , where they .re studenb. Coli., .. ,. 0'1'" PhoIo by Pt..I ••

D"dline for the fourth .nnlUl Co/legl.t. Dig~ Selon Edition is APJil1 - so Nit NOW to pia your entries. Wh.th., you Ir • • " • .,. f.n or III

I

your pictures Gin win 'I.lulbl. (ISh priz .. .! n.Uona' r.cognltlon for you. This y.,r • spciel g,.nd priu of Si5 will go to th. penon lubmiw., \h, oubt.ndin! pholo!l.ph In the comp.tilon. Division winntrt will spilt .noth., $50 in "sh.AII winning pictures will b. f •• tur.d In I specilledi­tion I. t. thl •• prin,.

5.10" Competition Rules 1 AII ....... I ,",vII N Milt _I t.t. """ AJlfil l , lo: S.lor'~, C~Ue,1N Di,.,. ~o'" ltl r ....... h ll • ." MI,. .....

M "". - -'- - ,~-" G ::z: I s...cf _""lui dN .bcllo! uclI ,.. -'-a. lye y~., oc 1":1I11y 1IAoIacIIto, 01 ~.".... W-'iOIl .... MlO;KI 011'" 011010 w.1I ...... Ipl.1. Aft, tilt of pIIoto I,~, IM/j ,"clwtt I." J by S IltCh .. tIC ,..IetmI. . l . £II\to .,OW p!.olo 11\ Oil' 0.1 1M Iollowl .. , • .nI~: .)II1II ~,I b) sca_, c) Klioft ''1e1 uftclid oM .. , eI) portr.~1 I' cDI",,/h . ... Foc Ih, "" pholO • lIMa. I pril. 01 SI' ",11 '" .w .... Filii pIKe w .,,," I ... Kh eI .... Oil .!II • ..:, I ... uM ._eI 0115/ MCOIId .,,41 Ihlnt '"tet w.II tn. U .nel Sf. 5. That, h ftO ... tr, 'n, .nd e.eh 1IIIIi.wl.el Ny .......... , pholol .. h. w til ... Photo, will N ,..... \I ....... ~ IC' CD_pM'.' ..... ,

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