TIIK DAILY NEBRASKA'S', THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1938 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THIRTY-EIGHTH YEAR EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF fdilor Morrl. I.tpp Buiuea Mmiagrr Krnnk Jolmin Hiaiftii (dlt.rt Marjorlt Chnrehlll, Howard kaplita A.ltni Hnln M.n.j.r. Arthur Hill, Hub BeHlel Kewi Kdltor. .... Merrill tntlond. Illck deBronn, Circulation Manager Sianlej Mlflia.1 Marj 8teutevllle. r'crs Kteut.vlll., Harold Mimanu, nrar Campbell. Sortet- ITriltnra Margaret tra. Dltle Davit Spuria Editor Kormaa Harm SUBSCRIPTION RATE ON THIS I8SIE. 11,(0 B Jr HlniM eop Sl.00 a irntealn Night editor Frrn struts illr f j.to mailed wnt fl.10 lemeitri Dk Editor Howard Knplln mailed Editorial Office tnlon Bld(., Room 20. Builnesi Office Union Bldj., Room 20-B. Undai dlracttua ui tna ntudeiii I'umtcaiiua rJuard, rdrprtana Ua Hill Nlfhl BUM. BXSSS (Journal). tntercn at aeeund-ciaia mallei at the poatutflc Ui Lincoln, Nvbrn.ka, under act ut con itch, March it, is.U, and at anrelal rat of poainits provided for in .rclkiD float, act of Ortoher II, till?, auihnrlird Jannanr tu, Wit. M Member 1939 ftssocidod Cotleflide Press Distributor of Go!le6ideDi6esl PublUhrd (tnlly dur ing the ftchmil yenr, nwpt Mondays and Saturday, vacatloni and camlnaMnn I rlndrt hy atudrntt nl In ITnlvfrltv of N hrala, unnVr Hid hii prrvlnlnn of the Bon rd of robllratlfliii. IP-MNT1D FOB NATIONAL ADVEHTHINa National Advertising Service. Inc. Colli k PHblishers RtfjfrtcntMtivt 420 Madison Avr, C MM ao ' IOSTON ' LOI NfcW YORK, N. Y. MUSICAL LETTER 'Peace! It's Wonderful!' The three congressional candidates from the First district, answered queries this week put to them by the pence council. A growing interest in political action along the pence l'rotit prompted the ((uestionimire which indi cated the status (if the candidates. Vnniiim ity oi opinion resulted. Coming on 1 ho heels oC the recent Kuro penn crisis, the poll of political candidates bolsters lip 1 he subsequent discussion on the United States' neutrality, national defense, munitions and .foreign policy. H strikes even closer to home when it is realized one of those First, district candidates may some day cast an important vote hinged upon Ihesc subjects. The peace council's questionnaire accom plishes one significant thing for which all eligible voters in the university who take Hieir politics seriously enough 1o include peace should be grateful it forces each candidate to commit himself or herself sufficiently so that an interested elector can weigh the can didate's expressed opinion. There are drawbacks, too. To answer simply "yes" or "no"' to each question does not complete the 1ask. There must, be explana tions and certain reservations which lead to non-committal answers. And there is the mat ter of campaign promises ami legislative be havior. The foreign situation might be com pletely reversed at this time next year. This year's declarations of policy by the solotis could not right fully be expected to stand un der entirely different circumstances. Ralph Waldo Emerson says it much bet ter: "A foolish inconsistency is the hobgoblin of little minds adored in by little statesmen." In short, "pinning down" the First dis trict candidates may be a worthy project for the peace council, but what eventual good does it accomplish when the First district repre sentative is in "Washington "legislating" under spur of the moment foreign conditions? young people who go to college, or arc sent there by parents, for the "contacts" and for the "prestige" of a college diploma. There is also extant, among many whose "ambition" is hardly more than wistful wishing, the notion that there is a suit of mastic in lining to col lege, which without I'url her effort on their part assures permanent place on the higher planes of mastery and earning power. Cater ing In any of these "student" types, plenjil'ul in all schools, involves public education in many difficulties. Forthright educators freely admit that half of those in college have no businesto be there. They, waste 1heir own time, waste the public funds, and. in far too many instances, actually unfit themselves for happy and suc cessful living. The notion Hint a few mouths attending occasional college classes automati cally confers eminence and wealth has done the American people much harm. The other notion that the "right" 1o education confers the right to enjoy four years of aimless pleas ure at the public expense has helped in i u lit i ly to build up a tax juggernaut which already is crushing the properly owner. The stale should not operate "finishing" schools for the children of parents able to pay for this luxury serving service. Neither should it operate an institution for coddling Hie un wholesome delusions of daydroaniers and w ist ful wishers. AVith these eliminated, there would not. be nearly 1(1,1(00 enrollees at llie University of Texas. In the meantime, we must sympathize with Ihe plight of those who must provide some way for Ihe throngs rushing to 1he Cix supported colleges. They at least are rot responsible for ihe twin false notions about a college education which, between them, per vade pretty nearlv Ihe whole population. -FoliT WORTH STAR. TKLKCIiAM. Clocks . ...Coking Classes. . . Cupid Shades of Nebraska! The 'College' Delusion The enrollment of more than 10.000 at the University of Texas, and similarly high figures for the Agricultural and Mechanical college, the Texas Technological college, and other related institutions, evidence the widen ing usefulness of the state's higher education system and justify pride greater than 1ha1 resting merely on statistical magnitude. , Hut this growth, particularly that of the university itself, gravely increases the worries of the administrative heads and board of re gents, by reason of the accentuated problem of carrying out a mass production project in the field of education with the implements of an era that contemplated no such expansion. The university must get its revenues from two sources. One of these, legislative appro priation, is beset with difficulties of which every university alumnus is aware. The other, ihe matriculation fees charged to enrollees. is not so susceptible of increase as may popularly be believed. Public tax supported education in all its divisions is confronted by the alternative of more money or fewer students. It may bo pos sible that the university will be forced 1o 1he latter of these choices and it may even be 1 desirable that this should occur. This enforced solution of the present difficulties of the uni versity might be effected by raising entrance ..requirements and imposing stricter standards for upperclass years. The design would be to eliminate the indifferent student and the time -waster, as representing an improper burden upon the taxpayer, avoiding at the same time any arbitrary weeding out which would deny -opportunity to serious minded youth struggling In increase understanding and equipment for life's battle. Most students of educalion admit that there exists an unhealthy indulgence toward the "country club" idea of college toward LINCOLN, Oct. 5 Dear Miss Kysor: Here is your friend selling up shop again in high spirits, anil no wonder! I nm still beaming with satisfaction over the delight ful Mozart that Professor Schmidt conjured forth from Ihe piano a few hours ago In the Temple the ater. You must know Ihe A major Sonata that he played. It is that whimsical, breathless, ebullient one opening unorthodoxly on a theme and variations allegro, and wind ing up (the composer all the while in his most radiant mood) with the Turkish March, a sort of musical trip to Chinatown that regaled Mozart's audiences much in the same way that Raymond Scott's "Twilight In Turkey" appeals to 1938. Mr. Schmidt reads Mozart with such loving authority, particularly with respect to the composer's in finitesimal clarity, delicacies of nuance, and spry good humor, that an all Mozart program would have been enchanting. Which is to say, I could not foci that the pianiHt did equal justice to the other niHin selections on his pro giani,"several excerpts from Schu mann's "Kriesleriana." Here, far removed now from Mozart's lucidly equilibrated muse, is the zenith of Oerninn ro manticism. When suitably played this music sings of the desponden cies and welling hopes of adoles cent love, the tenderness of fr'cnd ship, the rapport with a benign nature, traits all of which Schu mann shared with his contempo raries Heine, Mussel, Shelley and Schubert. Too little of these passionate emotions attended today's rending of the "Kriesleriana." Mr. Schmidt played with a rhythmic exactitude nmi h mastery of moid tempi thai fetched the admiration and often the despair of every pianist in the house. But Schumann the lyricist would have shook his head in askance. Here was not the stuff of dreams, or exultation, or gen tleness. Haven't you found that these in terpretative mounts and vales are never long absent from even the most artistically conceived con certs? Severai diametrically op posed styles of playing (and in a sense two composers are both sig nificant precisely insofar as they are antithetical! ran hardly be ex pected of the same pel former, es pecially in the frame of a single hour. Last week witnessed an other instance. Miss Olga Kitner, accompanied by Frank Cunkle, did nijf get much out of Handel's ag gressive, masculine, exuberantly dramatic K major violin sonata. Perhaps no woman violinist ever does. But then what insight she allowed in the quietness and sim plicity, the patient discretion with which she explored the Brahms A major Sonata! I Those discerning folks who i would set Brahms far above all of his late 19th century contem poraries, particularly over the megalomaniac, the pontificating Wagner, have reason to swell their phonograph record collection this month. What must have been the composer's last contribution to in strumental music, the clarinet son- Vocation Forum Hears Hancock Lincoln Specialist Talks at Meeting Dr. D. W. Hancock, Lincoln child specialist, will speak tonight on "Medicine as a Vocation" at the second in a series of vocational forums sponsored by the Arts and I ...A... . V--'--'j s i m i L I Unniln Journal. E. W. HANCOCK. Science college. The forum meeting will be held at 7:0(1 o'clock, room 101 of So cial Science hall. All those Inter ested in medicine as a vocation are especially Invited. Add Fashions 'Cords' at Indiana The rah-rah collegiate life evi dently is a thing of the past, if you take Indiana university as an ex ample. Particularly so is the case of thf lack of senior cords this year. Of course, there are a few four year men who this year have adhered to the old college tradtion of don ning the yellow trousers as the mark of their supposed superior ity, but in most; instances senior men have either neglected or dis missed altogether the Idea of wear ing the senior cords. For many years senior cords have been a pari of the collegiate atmosphere on the campus of nearly every university and college in the midwest. Uppcrclassmen t.vee looked forward to the time when they would be able to come into their own wearing this mark of distinction. To add to the sparkle and fun which can be found only or. a uni versity campus, it might be well to renew the old time practice of wearing senior cords at Indiana university. Indiana Student. 'Bawling Out' The Faculty There is not a single official clock in the Student Union. It was not an oversight by inose in eimrge or outlining llie bml.lihg j ata m E flat, opus 120. No. 2, is 1 hilt ihe clocks are conspicuous bv their ab- now engraved by Victor in a sence. It was purely ml ended lhat clocks hi kept off the walls Faculty Gripe Col. O. W. Hoop, professor at the University of Tulsa, recently answered an article In the Amer ican Mercury so adroitly that the O' Collegian takes the liberty to print it as it appeared in the Oc tober issue of the magazine. Sir: I have just finished reading your article "Professors Have Soft Jobs." As usual with your articles it is written w ith vim. vigor, vital ity, and inaccuracy. In defense of transcription for viola. No more the college teaching profession I admirable violist today lives than want to ask you if you ever had to: pi, , , , . I . i i t i .i imam i rimrose, wno piays on . aim usien wnue a aumo I hose men and women who were behind Hie j thesp disc,e. What with hj x Prt ,,Mn tiIs.0U how to tea(.h. ni,i, v i i7ili..i. 1....1 ,.).. . .... playing ami me innate virtues on i- Laugn at ine president s jokes the music. I do not recall a more vintage 1890. compelling composition than this ; 3. Kat your lunch in the college one among Braahms' lesser known cafeteria, where you have to re- l ii mil s realization had ideas about clocks. They believed that llie Union should be a haven of refuge from the "cloistered halls of learning.'' No ton-minute or hour bells should resound ihroiighoiil ihe luxiiriousness of Ihe Union, they felt, lleveiberations of routine class times would spoil Ihe presupposed Iran quilily of the lounge and carefree abandon of Ihe grill room. Thus, no clocks. Although no reports have been heard of in creased sale of pocket watches and wrist walches. the absence of clocks in ihe Union makes an appealing subject. , First, just Ihink of how many more lardy students there are 1o irk ihe faculty. The 1"achers must repeat assignments for ihe ben efit of late-comers and Ihe class hour is subse quently shortened. Second, remember llmt ii is highly fashion able to be bite. Students whose social aims are high arc afforded an opportunity to score by being fashionable. And who knows, if a stu- dent comes into class Into enough, he op she might be able to make the society column o' The l!ag or The Aw g an. Third, don't forget the romantic appeal lh;i goes with coking in ihe grill ro Into those extra minutes which righteously belong 1o Uni versity classes can be crowded date plans, gossip a 1 1. much of the seiilimental romance that goes with collegiate lite. No kick-backs bae been felt as yet by tin Union's administration, either by students who over-relax in the Uni r by the faculty mom- bers who are getting less lime in n class hour. One good thing is hound to come, howoer, from the absence of Union clocks the out side world can never ''bee!"' lhat the Univer sity is catering to n hunch of cloek-watchcrs. Lincoln, Neb. I w having lunch In the dining room of N. U.'t new Student Union build ing a few days ago. I thought that I might absorb a little cul ture from the many professors whs eat there. The events that transpired before my eyes were quite, quite disapointing. The "nouveau reiche" are ex asperating, but the "nouveau intelligent'' are disgusting. One very wise faculty member "bawled'' out student waiter because the food was not cooked to his liking. Nearly all of them crabbed about something or other. Few of them had reason to complain. To the best of my knowledge a course in god manners is not offered at our state university. It is too bad. Some of our fac ulty members are sorely In need of such a course. A STUDENT. (From The Public Pulse, Omaha World-Herald.) Jr. Fair Board Revealed Friday Ag Rally Discloses New Members' Identity Identity of the junior members of the Karmcrs Fair board will be disclosed tomorrow night in the pre-gamc rally party at the stu dent activities building on the Ag campus. This junior board is com posed of three girls and three boys. In charge of the party are mem bers of the senior Farmers Fair board who were elected last spring. Committees for arrangements arc: Favors and decorations, Marion Hoppcrt and Marjorie Schick; or chestra, Kay Cruise and tiorilon Jones; publicity, nulhanna Russell, and tickets, F.ric Thor. Music will be furnished by Eddie Jungbluth and his orchestra, Ad mission tickets at 40 cents for men and 20 cents for ladies arc now on sale. Students of both the city and ng campuses are invited. do jthletTs BORN OUT? (Continued from Tage 3.) physical examination of all who desire to go out for athletics. If organic defects arc detected, '.he individuals concerned are ordered to abstain from athletics and take treatment. Bui laxity in this re spect slill accounts for a yearly toll of deaths of former athletes over which the public crows as though such results were the gen eral result of sports participation. Robinson cited another test of this great efficiency of the heart. It concerns moderate work, where both the athlete and the non-athlete walk on a treadmill with the same efficiency thnt is, the same relative oxygen intake yet the athlete's heart beats 110 times a minute and the non-athlete's beats 150 times a minute. That shows pretty conclusively that an athlete's heart is sleadieu by long training to do more work with less effort, whereas the over age person's shoots up and pumps furiously at the same job. Two Reasons Given. In the final analysis, Robinson asserts. Lash and Cunningham can run the mile and two mile in world record time for two reasons. First they have enormous capacities for aerobic energy transformation follzqiaijL (f&johw, Oberlin coKKpe has rescinded Its rule that all town bills must be paid before a student is graduated. The University of Illinois is building a new student union build ing at a cost of 1 million dollars. A collection of propaganda pe riodicals circulated by the allies and the Germans during the World war has been presented to the University of Missouri school of journalism. IT. S. Negro colleges graduated 2,.r00 students Inst June. Northwestern university's prof. M. C. Carlson for four years has experimented with raising orchids In bottles on diets varrylng from carrots, beets and tobacco to sug ar and beef extracts. In 16 years Rensselaer Poly technic Institute's radio station has given intensive radio training to more than a thousand student.-;, According to a. University of Denver survey, theaverage coed wears a size 14 dress. Coeds are outnumbered by men in the Massachusetts Insitute of Technology, freshman class by a ratio of 164 to 1. The first game of six man foot ball was played on the Hebron college gridiron. Charles Turek paid his tuition at Washington university with four bags of silver dollars. The 315 women who passed tests for policewomen in New York City had 361 college degrees and four Phi Beta Kappa keys. Duke university will celebrate the centennial of its founding next April. pieces of chamber music To the Chopin Nocturnes, all 19 lately recorded by Arthur Rubin stein, it is next to impossible to react ss if thev were simtilv i I musical points of reference. Our age being one when virtue and vice are equally pedestrian and 1 crude, what rare distilled elixirs are potable in these sinister night pieces, flowers of evil that surely the high priest of decadence had in mind when he confessed: "After playing Chopin, 1 felt as if I had been weeping over sins that I never committed, and mourning over tragedies that were ljot my move the halfback's feet from the table. 4. Associate on terms of equal ity with the hairy necked coach ing staff. 5 Listen to an irate oil man in sisting that his pin headed son's grade should be raised 6. Dance the polka with the dean of women. i. Give an All-American guard a grade for two attendances in four months. s. Listen to a commencement address If you have never done any of these things and a million more of "Constantly to prove and Jm prove the power of the mind, to win by experiment and contact an ap. precintion of beauty, to give the spiritual side of man a chance to expand, whether thru formal as pects of worship, thru the Intel lectual approach to ultimate reali ties, or thru the higher types of social relationships these are tests which youth owes to Itself." And ,Yale university's President Charles Seymour believes that the college campus is the world's best testing ground. University of Kansas has the only course in milling industry problems in any U, S. college or university. "Not all our future leaders will come from the colleges, but there will be more college trained lead ers than in the past, simply be cause a larger number and pro portion of our young people now go to college. If they come out with inquiring minds and a healthy resistance to propaganda, our huge Investments in educational plants will be justified." The New York Times' editors voice their approval of the changing higher education. "A university is a place in which tolerance and lack of bias should prevail. If we and the thousand other colleges and universities of America do our job well for the million and a quarter students who are enrolled in them, our Amer ican democracy will be given its best chances to work and to thrive.'' President Thomas Gates. University of Pennsylvania, re- Rtr.tes the nlnrp nf hitrhrr prlurn- '"li,c"ut"i "I"-" i" i-niKicuj iu' mon in a democracy. oxygen intake i. Secondly they ; '. have hig'hly perfected skill in ran-1 ning which allows them to carry I ConvOCOtlon Goers Heor the pace with a minimal expendi-1 kA :ce Rfsv TfthrUlria ...... - - - Miss Bettie Zabriskie, accom- own. Music always seems to me ule same Kin(1' wnal lne boll do to create that effect It creates 'ou knnv a,,lt teaching? O. W. Hoop, I niversity of Tulsa, Okl, (Continued from Page 1.) Students are asked to use the south door at St. Paul's Friday. In a brilliant career, John Charles Thomas made his debut in London, Ontario, with the Savage Opera company. Rapidly rising to fame, he sang In the Royal Opera, Brussels, in 1925. and later in Covert Garden, London. Before joining the Metropolitan in New York in February, 1934, where he has remained, Thomas appeared with the Philadelphia Grand Opera, the San Francisco Opera, and the Chicago Civic Opera. CORNHUSKER DRIVE (Continued from Page l. their sales campaign. Besides sell ing the annuals on the campus, they will solicit the business houses and offices of Lincoln along with the alumni. The Tassels' one main objective, according to Miss Nolte, is to sell more Cornhuskere than have ever been sold on the campus in the history at the school. She urges &U ct the students to co-operate with the girls who make up the Tassels club by ordering your Cornhusker during their selling campaign. RHODES SCHOLARSHIPS (Continued from Page 1.1 English institution by Harry Flory of Pawnee City. The University committee of which Dean Oldfather is chairman will meet to examine local appli cants the afternoon of October 27. The state committee, H. A. Gun derson of Fremont, chairman, is scheduled to Interview candidates from the various schools In the state along about the middle of December, the district committees, several days later. Winners will enter Oxford in October of 1939. Dr. G. W. Rosenlof of teachers college appeared on the program of the Carroll county teachers' in stitute Monday four times, speak ing on curriculum and teaching problems before rural, high school, and grade school group meetings. Thursday and Friday he addressed teachers of Colfax countv at Schuyler and Saturday left for Chicago where he will attend the executive committee meeting of me .ortn Central association, that effect. It creates lor one a past of which one has been ignorant, and fills one with a sense of sorrows that have been hidden from one's tears. I can fancy a man who had led a per fectly commonplace life, hearing by chance some curious piece of music, and suddenly discovering that his soul, without being con srlous of it, had passed thru ter rible experiences, and known fear ful joys, or wild romantic loves, or great renunciations." Those frightened bv the brood ing invitation of such music will need. If only as a therapy, to ap proach Nocturnes. The others... have probably done so already, but they, too, will welcome a version so haunting and re-hearablc as this newest one. Rubenstein's un derstanding of the music compares favorably with Godowsky's and De Pachmann's, more than which no praise is warmer. An honest recommendation of the other recordings of the month might be given for the technical finesse that went into their fash ioning, but not for anything else. Arradelt's "Ave Maria" and the noble lament from Purcell's "Dido Ancneas" struck me as ungainly and "manques" In the transcription's sung by the University of Pennsyl vania. So did Luclen Cailliet's re scorings for orchestra of two Bach excerpts, one a movement from a violin partita, the other O' Collegian. Dr. John P. Sennlng, chairman of the department of political sci ence, talked before the Omaha League of Women Voters Monday on "The Future of County Govern ment." He also appeared on the a fervent choiale-prelude "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." Trying to overlay the latter with modem orchestral pigment is never likely to succeed. Paderewski's reading of the A flat Polonaise by Chopin misses fire for a more forgivable reason, the decline in his ripe old sge of one of the leading pianists oi modern times. The only other disc that had some appeal for me was Marian Anderson' grouping of "Tramp In' " and "1 Know the Lord Laid His hands on Me." It is always a treat to follow the art of this vibiant voice, the most distin guished of living contraltos, sing ing flawlessly and without visible effort In these two spirituals. Now I have told the tale of our ecent concerts and the new rec ords. Will you return the favor oy describing the outlook for the musical season in New York, an l particularly (for the benefit of us tadiophllcsi Indicating when the Philharmonic, the National Broad casting compnny symphony, and the Metropolitan Opera will in augurate their respective pro grams? Further, Is It true that the Roth string quartet shortly leaves its eastern haunts for a pilgrimage to the middle west? Cordially, Joseph Frank. tore of energy The Harvard fatigue laboratory men work along quietly and pa tiently, making such revealing physiological discoveries all the time. But they are not jumpers at conclusions, as arc their pseudo scientific, publicity seeking coun terparts. Breaking down such pop ular fallacies as that athletes burn out is only a by-product of their many research projects. Top Dancing Hobbyists To Meet Tonight at 7 Members of the tap dancing hobby group will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in Kllen Smith to plan their work for the year and to be divided into different classes ac cording to tap dancing ability. Miss Mary Kline is the leader. plished cellist and teacher at the university school of music, accom panied by Herbert Schmidt, pre sented a concert yesterday after noon in Temple. Her program included: B.'ftlinven. Sdnnts In G Minor for fflln and piHnn. Op. 5, Nn. 2. A(Uriu potlrnui" rrf fsprwivo. Alkcro molto plu t"rio preIn. Roniln-A lie pro. Iywtmi. AflAKlettu. ":i.rllfl, Tni'Hntflll. lEuvel, Tift-e tn forme de- Habanera. Krrii-ler. Slclllonn nnd RIRiidon. Pug" Griffin SPORTSMAN INN MEALS SANDWICHES WE DELIVER 136 No. 14th B7&44 Walter Pierce, Omaha, who won a $25 scholarship made available by the Kansas City alumni chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi, is now taking work in the college of business ad ministration. The scholarship was awarded to the high school student In the vicinity of Kansas City who had the highest icholastic average for bis four year's work. recent program club, Lincoln. of the Altrusa TYlMiWIt ITERS All ttandard mtkei for Is or rent. Uied and rtbulll machines on Urmt. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1M No, 12 (t. Biisr Lincoln, Nebr, Your Last Chance to Buy STUDENT TICKETS LINCOLN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SERIES Student Price 3.50 On Sale Room 216, Morrill Hall John Charles Thomas Fri. Eve., St. Paul's Church, 8 P.M. Stud.ntt mi louth door for entrance. p)ttem your Identification card with ticket. Ql'ESTIOXx Why Do Yon Like 1'enll? WHERE ASKED: Wmosf. tny immprnt AXSWEItS: 0LIVEI PUNDIT. Phi Safe: FLORA VAN OAUI, MMmjot: HUlDlTy 'ENABlfS M TO EXPRESS MY MOfT mime miEcmw with urn kuum PMITMSUCHA BEE-YEH-TIFUI UWH(rmH COLOR AND I ADOBE fiffirHEB0TTliVEW!) JOE PLUNGER. Tn,U ThreatJan: DR.STERUNG IMm.Chtm.Proh (CANT KICK A6AINST PENr.nrmsE- PROOF. PASS MB PlNITPORANtASf WtlTlNfrTbtlCHdOWN 'J I 1 -,u JUNE JITTERBUG. SminqaJJki: ' ' Ia k4 nruiT it On iT iai rcnn i? nirn in THE GROOVE WHEN IT COMES TO HHP I HO AT THE POINT OF A PEH MymimsptovE PENIT FREE FROM PfN-CtOO&M IH6REDIENT.ITI$ CAILI6PAPHICALLY PERFECT PETE. CamnatvUrx That mtket it juit tbout unan Imouil Try Penit. You'll like it! 2 oz. bottle, 15c; 4 or. bottle with chamoit penwiper, 25c. At your college tupply itore. Tj IANr-OHD'1 PENIT? 0H..SURE, IT WAS A CINCH FOR THE YANKS IJ 3 4