' ! ' ttooi aoice peons EFarinnieir's IF Two days of festivities pre sented by students of the College of Agriculture will open Friday. Events which will be presented during the two day fair are a parade, a midway, the Cornhusker Caravan, the Cotton and Denim Dance, a pie-eating contest, a barbecue, a rodeo, and a square dance. Added features to this year's fair are the Cornhusker Caravan which replaced the open houses, the typical cowboy and cowgirl nor Today and an approved rodeo. Reigning over the two day fair will be the Goddess of Agricul ture, and the Whisker King. The Goddess of Agriculture was picked by on all Ag campus elec tionjast Tuesday and the Whisker King was selected by four Mor tar Boards and two local bar bers Thursday evening. The Goddess of Agriculture will be a coed in the college who has a 5.5 weighted average and a senior standings The Whisker King is picked from the 100 con testants who signed up March 5 to. participate in the contest. They will be judged on the basis of their beard's length, texture, color and curl. Last year the reigning couple was Lois Larson and Vince Kramper. The program for the 1953 Farmer's Fair has the opening of the Cornhusker Caravan and the Cotton and Denim dance slated for Friday. The Saturday section of the program has a parade through downtown Lincoln -end the pie eating contest scheduled for morning. The afternoon sec tion will have the rodeo and barbecue. The square dance will close the Saturday section and also climax the 1953 Farmer's Fair. The Caravan and the midway will be open all day Saturday. Classes for the College of Agri culture will be dismissed Satur day. No excuse from Dean Eph riam Hixson's office for these classes is needed. Students wishing to work on the various phases of the fair on Friday will be excused from their classes. A list compiled by the fair board member in charge of these phases will be turned in to the dean's office. These lists will be used for the basis of grant ing the excuses for the Friday classes. Students may pick up their excuses for Friday classes starting Monday morning. One of the added features of the fair is the Cornhusker Cara van which will be shown to east ern Nebraska for the first time. This display consisting of four units and 130 feet of exhibits will be housed in the Ag Engineering Building. It is being sponsored by the University's Extension Divi sion and the Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben. The second added feature is the securing of RCA stock and world champion judges for the Satur day rodeo. Reigning over this affair will be the Rodeo Queen who will be revealed by leading the Saturday morning parade. This type of rodeo was mad possible by an increase In the University Rodeo Club's budget by the Farmer's Fair Board. The last added feature is the selection of the typical cowboy and cowgirl from the representa tives of organized houses on both the Ag and city campuses. the if Voice of a Great Midwestern (nirersifr VOL. 52 No. 118 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Friday, April 24, 1953 Jomm CoIIddds USecite nucwa Presodel1l, Wishnow, O'Dell, Launer Elected To Cabinet Posts Jim Collins will head the ac tivities of Nebraska University Council of World Affairs during the coming year. Collins was University HS Speech Fest Begins Thirty-seven Class A and Forty- five Class B high schools will be "represented Friday and Saturday 0m the University sponsored Fine Arts Festival. The annual Festival gives high school students interested in speech a chance to receive criti cism from University speech per sonnel. Speech events are divided into various categbries for student pre sentation. Extemporaneous speak ing, poetry reading, newscasting, discussions, debates, dramatic and humerous readings and interpre tative and original oratories will be presented. One-act plays will be given by six schools Friday and three schools Saturday. The Friday play schedule is: Kimball, 9 a.m.; Campbell, 11 p.m.; Shelton, 1:30 p.m.; Hildreth, 4:30 p.m.; Stamford, 7 p.m. and Holbrook, 9 p.m. Saturday plays will be given y Palisade, McCook and Bayard it 9 a.m., 11 'a.m. and 1:30 p.m., respectively. lolantort of tVio annual MTTPW A election Thursday night. Bernie Wishnow the second high candidate was elected vice president. Neala O'Dell was elected secre tary and Ann Launer was elected treasurer. Collins is a member of Corn Cobs, Junior-Senior Class Council, on the varsity tennis team and is president of Acacia. During the past year he has served as chair man or the delegations commit tee for the NUCWA Spring Con ference. Wishnow is a member of the University ROTC band, Corn husker section head; and a mem ber of Sigma Alpha Mu. He was assistant NUCWA Spring Conference chairman. Miss O'Dell is YWCA president, past Tassel and a member of Kap pa Delta. She served as NUCWA membership chairman. Miss Launer is a member of Builders, Cornhusker section head and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. During the past year she served as Technical Arrangements chairman for NUCWA. Applications for board positions will open Monday, Joan Krueger, past president announced. The applications must be in the NUCWA box in the basement of the Union by Thursday noon, Miss Krueger said, and inter views will begin Thursday at 1 p.m. in the Union, Room 309. The board positions are, pub licity chairman, special projects chairman, program chairman, membership chairman and assis tant to the vice-president. Members of Kosmet Klub and the cast of "Anything Goes" will give two TV performances publi cizing the spring show on Friday. Three of the leading players in the shew. Marilyn Lehr, Jean De- Long, and Hank Gibson will pre sent songs from the show at 11:40 a.m. on station WOW-TV. Three members of Kosmet Klub, Bill Adams, Don DeVries, and Thorn Snyder, will hold a panel discussion of the plot of "Any thing Goes." The three will also hold a discussion of the history of Kosmet Klub. Annual Concert Includes Foltz Original Number Madrigal Program Scheduled For Tonight In Union Ballroom, 8 P.M. Mabel Lee Scholarship Goes To Phyllis Louden Winner of the $50 Mahel Lee scholarship for 1953-1954 was an nounced as Phyllis Louden, Teachers College senior and presi dent of the Womens Athletic Association. The scholarship was presented at the annual WAA banquet Thursday evening. Miss Loudon, curently president of WAA, has been Social Chair man of WAA, president of the Physical Education Majors Club, and a worker in Builders. She has also been very active in intra mural sports. The scholarship was estab lished in 1952 to recognize the outstanding service and contribu tion of Miss Mabel Lee's 28 year association with the WAA. Since then, the scholarship has been awarded yearly on the basis of significant contribution to the or ganization's progress. Last year's winner was Beverly Mann, 1952-1953 vice-president of WAA. Three One-Act Productions Slated For Saturday, Sunday. Three one-act plays, "Warrior's Husband," "Supressed Desires" and "Potboiler," will be presented Saturday and Sunday nights at 7:30 P. M. in the Arena Theater, third floor Temple building. "Warrior's Husband," directed by Bill Walton, is a farce dealing with a reversal of the sexes, in which the women are dominant. i The play originally appeared on Broadway starring Katherine ! Hepburn. The University Theater will produce only one of the three "Nets in the original play. The cast includes Katy Kelly as Heroica, Margaret Richel as Caustica, Beverlee Ehgelbrecht as Pamposia and Kathleen O'Donnell as Baria. Completing the cast are Kay Barton as Hippolyta, Jim .Davis as Sapiens, Robert Crossley as Sapiens Major, Robert Wells as Thesius, Byron Tullis Jr. as Homer and Marilyn Rowley as Antiope. Production manager for the play is Dean Jamieson. Director of "Supressed Desires" Is Dorothy Elliot. The play is a satire on psychoanalysis. Henri etta, played by Gloria Kollmorgen, takes up the study of phsychoan alysis. Her husband Steve, played by Dale Johnson, disapproves. JU To Play Host To Pershing Rifles . Forty delegates representing 117 units of the National Honorary Society of Pershing Rifles will meet on the University campus Friday and Saturday for the Little National Assembly. The assembly will prepare lor ;the national convention of the organization to be held this Oc tober in Chicago. National headquarters officers fit the University, have planned a series of business and social ac tivities to include a tour of the State Capitol and a banquet. ' John Graf of Talmage heads the national society with the Persh ing Rifles rank of brigadier gen eral. I 1 All-Breed Dog Show Set For Sunday In Coliseum i Under the sponsorship of the Cornhusker Kennel Club, the ifighth annual Classic All-breed Dog Show and Obedience Trials will be held Sunday in the Coli seum. Judging of the 350 dogs In the show will start at 10:00 a.m. En tries have come from all over the I .lited States. The dogs will compete for tro phies in their respective breeds and then for a trophy for best in show. , B The show is sanctioned by the American Kennel Club. Maoei, a lime country cousin, played by Anita Daniels, comes to visit, and decides to go to a psy- cnoanaiyst. She finds that she has a suppressed desire to run off with Steve. In tVto mnnnurliiln GAirn hoc bIm gone to a psychoanalyst and finds' that he has a suppressed desire to' leave his wife. Eventually Henr- etta gives up her study and the; situation is straightened out. Harriet Harvey is production' manager. j The third play, "Potboiler," is! directed by Norma Erickson. It is a melodrama, a play within a play. The 6tory is of the dress rehearsal of a play written and directed by Miss Suf, played by Sandra Sick. The cast consists of Connie Gor don as Miss Wouldby; Carol Jones as Mrs. Pencil; Martha Morrison as Miss Ivory; Richard Fink as Mr. Ruler; Dick Schubert as Mr. Ink well and Brian Scofield as Mr. Ivory. Managing the "Potboiler" is Norma Carse. There is no admission charge. wf ""iiilp PHYLLIS LOUDON Union Dance A dance for students attending the Fine Arts Festival will be held in the Union's Roundup Room sponsored by the Union Social Dance Committee. Dancing will be from 9-12 p.m. to new and popular records. All university students were In vited to attend by the Dance Committee. TV Viewers To Watch llll Spring Show Skit The TV shows, under the direc tion of Frank Bock, will feature an evening performance in addi tion to the morning production. Chorus members will combine talents with the leading players for an 8 p.m. view over KOLN TV. The second view of "Any thing Goes" will be given as part of the Dave Andrews show. i The evening performance will !kive TV viewers a preview of the entire "Anything Goes' produc tion as it will be given on the Ne braska Theater stage April 29 through May 1. The annual Madrigal concert will be given Friday at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The program to be presented is similar to the one given to the North Central Music Educators Conference in Milwaukee recently by the same group. Tickets for the concert may be obtained in the Union activities Office at no cost. The Union music committee, sponsor of the presentation, said there will be a limited number of seats. Admission by tickets will be until 7:50 p.m. After this time the remainder of the seats can be filled by those without tickets. One of the numbers to be pre sented, "She Walks in Beauty," was written by the director of the group, David Foltz. professor of voice at the University, Foltz, who wrote the music to a text by Lord Byron, said the piece was his- effort to represent the sounds that tha words brought W Club Plans Entertainment For Trackmen Tentative plans were made to provide entertainment for ath letes participating in the NCAA track meet, to be held in Lincoln in June, at an "N" Club meeting Wednesday. The lettermen group discussed the formation of a social commit tee to handle hospitality for the 2,500 entrants in the annual event. A plan was presented to change the present Freshman letter em blems, making them either larger or in numeral form. The group discussed the possi bility of giving an award to letter winners in each of the nine var sity sports. The award would be presented on the basis of sports manship, scholarship and citizen ship. Following the formation of for mal initiation and banquet plans two members were elected to plan an "N" club smoker for New Student week next fall. to his mind. The music is written according to chord coloring, and is to be presented accompanied. Other numbers to be presented are: "Fire. Fire, My Heart" by Morley; "Lovely Singing Lute" by Pilkmgton: "Charm Me Asleep" by Leslie; "Come Away Death" by Williams; "I Love Thee" by Hoist; "O What a Lovely Magic" by Bantock; "Go, Lovely Rose" by Thiman. "This Little Rose" by Deis; "Go Way from My Window" by Miles "The Doe..; "The Swan"; "Since All Is Passing"; "Springtime1 "Winter"; and "The Orchard," all by Hindemitn. YW To Honor Mothers May 9 At Breakfast YWCA members will honor their mothers at the annual May Morning Breakfast May 10 at 0 a.m. in the Union Parlors ABC. Miss Ethel Johnson, Dean of Women at Wesleyan University, will be the guest speaker. The theme of the breakfast is "May Melodies." Marlys Johnson is general chairman. Committees are: pro gram, Sharon Mangold, chairman, Winnie Lautenschlager, Judy Price and Nancy Kiely; tickets and arrangements, Joyce Peterson, chairman, Kathleen Lang and Barbara Allen; mimeograph, Glo ria White, chairman and Nancy Hall. Decorations, Jan Yost, chair man. Jeanne Greving, Barb Ol son, Peggy Larson, Sue Ramey and Glenna Mong; publicity, Janet Gordon, chairman, Claire Hinman, Phyllis Cast, Roberta Hengstler, Rasma Balodis and Sylvia Barton. Cornhusker Interviews Interviews for Cornhusker staff 'positions will begin at 4 p.m. Friday in Parlor Z Union. Interviews will begin with those applying for editor. AWS Pi sums Meet ibh, Aoirkshops rrt System, Etyles, Standards Fifteen organized women's houses have chosen delegates to the Associated Women Students Workshop to be held Tuesday, May 5, from 7 to 9 p.m. . Frank M. Hallgren, dean of stu dent affairs, will speak briefly at the general meeting, to be held in the Union ballroom. At 7:30, the group will be divided into tnree discussion groups. A discussion group on the AWS point system will be led by Nancy Hemphill, AWS Doara memDer in charge of the point system. Mar tha Payne will be secretary for that group, and Miss Mary Jean Mulvaney will be adviser. Delegates chosen for the point system workshop are: Harriet Wenke and Phyllis Col bert, Kappa Alpha Theta; Barbara Spilker, Love Memorial Hall; Jo Johnson and Joyce Laase, Alpha Xi Delta; Nora Devore and Murt Pickett: Pi Beta Phi; Elaine Mil len, Chi Omega; Martha Hill, Del ta Delta Delta. Pat Hahn, Sigma Kappa; Shar on Mangold, Heppner Hall; San dra Daley, Residence Halls for Women: Beverlee Engelbrecht, Ravmond Hall: Dorothy Frank and Shirley Decker, Julia Love Hall; Neala O'Dell, Kappa Delta; Nancy Odum, Gamma Phi Beta; Carol Gillett and Nancy Whit- more, Alpha Omlcron Pi; Sally Kolnmon. Siirma Delta Tau. Kathv Nakagawa, Terrace Hall; Marilyn Erwln and Dottle Sears, International House; Kay Morton, Wilson Hall; Doris Mach, Towne Club. Shirley Murphy, vice president of AW4, will lead the workshop on rules, and Joyce Bennington will be secretary. Adviser will be Miss Elsie Jevons. Coeds who will attend the rules workshop are: Marlene Memke, Towne Club; Gloria Harris and Margaret Smith, Wilson Hall: Wilma Kindhart, Sigma Kappa; Gertrude Carey, DeLoris Clouse, Jan McCaw and Helen Jean Utterback, Interna tional House; Dora Mathews, Ter race Hall; Mary Ball Clearman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Joan Stoffen, Gamma Phi Beta; Frances Locke, Sigma Delta Tau. t Pat Graham and Kay Burcum, Kappa Delta; Corrine Hough and Maroelyn Dedrlck, Julia Love Hall; Jean Barrett, Raymond Hall; Eleanor Von Bargen and Jeanne Greving, Heppner Hall; Nancy Dahlgren, Delta Delta Del ta. Jane Brode. Chi Omega; Lou Webb, Pi Beta Phi; Marge DeLa matre and Joan Blotchford, Alpha Xi Delta; Betty Hrabik and Wan da Ham, Love Memorial Hall: Donna Elliott, Rose McLaughlin and Susan Stoehr, Kappa Alpha Theta. Leader of the standards discus sion will be Sue Brownlee, and Eileen Mullarky will be secre tary. Miss Mary Augustine, assist ant dean of women, will be ad viser. Those planning to attend the standards workshop are: Joan Roe and Marilyn Stanley, Kappa Alpha Theta; A r d y t h Smith, Love Memorial Hall; Dot Low and Nancy Draper, Alpha Xi Delta; Ann Jouvenat, Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy Orchard, Chi Ome ga; Nancy Hoile, Delta Delta Del ta; Shirley Thomas and Billie Croft, Heppner Hall; Mickey Rabiner, Sigma Delta Tau; Mar jeanne Jensen, Raymond Hall; Phyllis Hershberger and Linda Jacoby, Julia Love Hall. Amy Palmer, Kappa Delta: Margie Schurman and Shirley Hamilton, Gamma Phi Beta; Betty Pepler, Alpha Omicron Pi; Nancy Pratt, Terrace Hall; Elaine Kag awa and Lois Lawrence, Interna tional House; Janice Bull, Sigma Kappa; Marilee Nyquist and Jean nette Hilyard, Wilson Hall; Lola Monia, Towne Club. uipn cholarship Gcas To 19-Year-Old ghiS Paul A. Olson, 19-yar-old graduate assistant in the English department at the University, has been awarded a Fulbright Schol arship which will allow him to study Literature and Aesthetics at King's College, London University in England. The award is made under the provisions of the Fulbright Act and is included within a total of about 900 grants for graduate study abroad in the academic year 1953-54 under the United States Educational Exchange Program. Olson receives his Masters de gree from the University in Feb ruary of this year at the age of 19. He received his undergraduate work at Luther College in Wahoo and at Bethany College in Kansas. He was recommended by Beth any College for the Rhodes Schol arshlp but was rejected because he was only 17 at the time. In cluded among his list of achieve ments are several poems and short stories as well as a novel. Harper's Weekly Magazine ccn tasted Orin Stepanack, associate professor of English at the Unl versity, and requested that he send them one of Olson's literary works that could be used for pub lication In their magazine. Olson will start school at Lon don University in September and will study there for one year. His wife, who teaches in the Lincoln Public School, will accompany nim on the trip. odeo Contestants Number Fifty-Six Fifty-six contestants have j signed for the six events of the Farmer's Fair Rodeo. j The Saturday afternoon affair is slated to start at 1:30 p.m. at the rodeo grounds on the Ag campus. An added feature at the '53 rodeo is that the Governor of Nebraska, Robert Crosby will open the first gate for the con testant. Judging the rodeo will be the world champion saddle b r 0 n c rider, Casey Tibbs and the world champion bulldogger, Jim Boyle. Tibbs has been rodeoing since he was 1 year old. He has for the past two years held the saddle bronc championship. Other personnel for the rodeo are announcer, Jack King;' arena director, Cal Lemmon; time keeper, Bob Tebo and secretary, John Obermire. The Rodeo Queen and the typi cal cowboy and cowgirl will be presented during the events. The final act for the rodeo will be the coed calf catching contest. A team of two coeds will match their strength and persistence against that of brahma calves. Entries for the saddle bronc riding are Richard Pederson, Paul Stokely, Harry Stokely, Gene French, Tim Hamilton, George Hlrtman, Don Cooper, Warder Shires, Charles Carothers and John Butcher. Bareback bronc riders are John Forsyth, Richard Pederson, Harry Stokely, Paul Stokely, Delane Wesch, Stan Eberspacher, Gene French, Tips Hamilton, Tim Ha milton, John Ranney, George Meyers, George Hartman, Don Cooper, Warder Shires, Charles Carothers, John Butcher, Tom Butler, and Dick Townes. rt if iiifciitiiiipi Courtwy Lincoln Star CASEY TIBBS Bulldoceine contestants are De- lane Welsch, Richard Pederson, Paul Stokely. Harry Stokely. John Gibbon, John Forsyth, and Charles Carothers. Calf roDers are Richard Peder son, Paul Stokely, Kay Schwend hplm John Gibbon. John Rannev. Ned Luther, and Charles Caroth ers. An added event to the fair is the brahma bull riding contest. The entries are Gene French, Don Cooper, Harry Stokely, Kay Schwedhelm, Charles Carothers, John Butcher, Delane Welsch, Paul Stokely. Warder Shires, John Ranney, George Meyers, Richard Pederson, Tim Hamilton ana George Hartman. Fifteen floats Entered In Annual Ag Parade Fifteen organizations will have floats in the annual Farmer's Fair parade, scheduled for 9 a.m. Sat urday morning. The parade will start from the Coliseum and go down 11th St. to O St. It will travel up O St. to 16th St. The floats will then travel to the mall on the Agriculture College campus and assemble for final judging. The three judges will be sta tioned along the parade route. One judge will be at the Coliseum, one on O St., and one on the Ag campus mall. The judges are Miss Michaud, Miss Wilson and Mr. Miller. A traveling trophy will be awarded to the first three place winners of the parade. The order of floats and the or ganizations entered are: Color bearers and honor guard, Rodeo Queen and her court, rodeo con testants, the band. Home Ec. Club (Goddess of Agriculture) float, Alpha Gamma Rho, Loomis Hall, Farmhouse. Love Hall, Phi Upsilon, Tri-K club, Ag Builders, YM and YWCA, Country Dancers, Voc Ag Association and Ag Men's club. The float themes wil be cen tered around the theme of the 1953 Farmer's Fair, "Rural Rendezvous." Audience To Select Cowboy, Cowgirl A new event at the annual ro deo is the selection of a typical cowboy and cowgirl. Voting for the two positions will be on the ticket stub at the gate. A University identification card is necessary to be able to vote. Coeds vicing for the cowgirl honor are Mary Clearman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Phyllis Colbert, Kap pa Alpha Theta; Ann Kokjer, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Carolyn Mock, Love Hall; Mickey Moore, Alpha Chi Omega; Pat Hammond, Delta Delta Delta; Gwen Uran, Gamma Phi Beta; Norma West cott, Chi Omega and Naomi George, Kappa Delta. Candidates for the typical cow boy are Don Cooper, Alpha Tau Omega; Tom Haley, Sigma Nu; Cal Lemmon, Farm House; Gene Wells, Sigma Chi and John Ran ney. Alpha Gamma Rho. Casey Tibbs will present the winners at the close of the rodeo. Championship Bout Set For Pie Eaters Thirty-seven entries have bean entered in the two divisions of the pie eating contest. The event is set for Saturday in the College Activities Building starting at 11:30 a.m. Judges for the event are the members of the Innocents Society, The pie eating contest is co-spon sored by the Ag Union and the Farmer's Fair Board. The winners of the men and women's divisions will compete for the champion pie eater. The winner and the second place win ner in the finals will have their names engraved on the plaque in Ag Union show case. A timed event, the contestants will be given a certain amount of pie to eat in a given time, une winner will be the one who can eat the amount of pie in the short est time. Candidates and the organiza tions which they represent are: Women's division: Kathy Bon- ness. Love Memorial Hall; Doris Carlson, Gamma Phi Beta; Carol Crowl, Towne uiud; caroxyn Goetz. Kanpa Alpha Theta; Elaine Hess, Delta Delta Delta; Marilvn Lehr. Kappa Delta; su- zanne Lowell, Pi Beta Phi; Jean Loudun, Alpha Chi Omega; Mary Sue Lundt, Alpha ftii; narDara Melin, Alpha Omicron Pi; Marilee Nyquist, Wilson Hall; Barbara Oliver, Amikita; Carla Olson, Delta Gamma; Carol Patterson, Chi Omega; Nancy Pratt, Terrace Hall; Shirley Slagle, juoomis Man; Granny Warren, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Wanda Wood, Sigma Kappa. Men's division; Paul Anderson, Phi Deltr Theta; James Brown, Sigma Alpha Epsilou; David Ward, Pioneer House; Bruce Frank, Cornhusker Co-op; Wayne Frates, Acacia; Francis Gowln, Ag Men's Club; Otto Haman, Alpha Tau Omega; Bill Harm, Delta Tau Delta; Joe Hurkfrtdt, Alpha Gamma Rho; Bill Ilol loran, Sigma Chi. Wayne Keiser, Delta Sigma Phi; Jim Knisely, Phi Kappa Psi; Dudley McCubbin, Theta Chi. Arnold Morton, Phi Gamma Delta: Norm Phillips, Sigma Alpha Mu; Leonard Singer, Zeta Beta Tau; Dick Schuity, Pi Kappa Phi; Berky Smith, Delta Upsilon; and Russ Uehling, Sigma Phi Epsilon. Haman Trains For '53 Pie Eating Contest By DICK COFFEY Feature Editor "There is no such thine as a 'moral victory.' " , This was the opinion of Otto Haman, University pie-eating champion at his training quarters in an interview Thursday. Haman will be defending his title this Saturday for the third consecutive year. The contest li scheduled for Tl:30 a.m. Saturday. Haman would not reveal his technique of pie eating, but said one should strive for speed. "I regard the pie eating contest as any athletic contest," Haman said. Patsy Dutton, women's pie-eat ing champion, now at nurses school in Omaha, ran a close sec ond to Haman in last year's con test, and Haman regarded Miss Dutton as his toughest competitor. Haman appeared to be slightly worried about Miss Dutton's pie- eating abilities. "My stomach is In good condi tion for the contest," he said, "and I have trained down to a lim 30 pounds." Haman said he had lost macy dinner Invitations by wlnnln we fTiite, but f'rrt- kn't " -;;:.!. in Rterh"2 3 one ! m t : ? ' 5 1 1 f j if t e if V 1. h t f y v A , O ' , ( 1 11 1 '5 -L V ! ft. 4 : ; 4 1 h fi ' s. 4 . i s t ! I. ! t 1 .... J