Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1945 — Page 10
The 1nd} anapolis Times |
PAGE 10 Monday, June 23, 1945
ROY W. HOWARD = WALTER LECKRONE President * Editor : Business Manager a : (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) iv Owned and published. daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Pubfishing Co. 214 W. Maryfand st. Postal Zone 9.
a week.
Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Serv. ice, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. Give Light and the People Will- Fina Their Own Way
THE BARUCH PLAN FOR GERMANY T least 25 million killed and many more millions injured, hundreds of billions of dollars of accumulated savings destroyed, much of the finest cultural fruit of civilization wiped out, suffering beyond measure. That is just ‘Some
month.
of the cost of two German world wars. It is why we in |
Dissenting Opinions, But "many never again shall be strong enough to start another |
America, and the allied world, are determined that Ger-
world war. : But there is- disagreement -as to methods. much heat and little light in public discussions. The allied governments themselves have floundered and evaded until —at this late date—there is still no joint allied policy on what to do with Germany.
There is |
HENRY W. MANY |:
. Price in Marion Coun- | ty, 5 cents a copy, deliv- | ered by carrier, 20 cents |
and i { Mail rates in Indiana, | States navy (substituting another style, of course). $5 a year; all other states, | And with them presumably would go the rest of the
U. 8. possessions, Canada | American seaman'’s traditional garb. and Mexico, 87 cents a
SPR © 1 a RILEY 5581 What he craves is a new sartorial deal with a reet
| cling so long to an antique pattern of clothing for
in styles as dated as those of our own West Point
| |
In this confused situation we commend study of Ber- |
nard M. Baruch’s statement to the senate military affairs
|
committee last week. Because of his experience with the |
peace which failed after World War I, and because the late
President Roosevelt sent Mr. Baruch to Europe to get the |
| creases down the sides instead of a knife-edge press
answer, the committee asked him: How eliminate Ger- |
many’s economic potential for military aggression?
His test is not whether it is a “‘hard” or a “soft”speace, |
but a “sure” peace. His purpese is not to destroy the German
people biit their economic dominance of Europe, which 1s | their chief aggressive weapon. Specifically he recommends: | a lot of people on his side, too. Eliminate her heavy | to the slightly feminine lines and associations of
Settle Germany's future quickly.
industry, divide up her Junker estates, root out her foreign | assets and control her foreign trade. Give the invaded |
nations reconstruction priorities. ment with Russia—“what we permit the Russians to do, they permit us to do.” More recognition for Russia. All our international agreements should be in writing and public. Set up a. U. S. general staff for peace. Reparations at Germany's “maximum capacity to pay,
consistent with security and not to undercut living stand- | have grown a bit bald and paunchy, and whose
ards by forcing exports.” a Develop a positive and co-ordinated American foreign
economic policy, aiming at higher human standards all over | something there, at that. the world. Determined preparedness, including ratification |
of the United Nations organization, universal military training, strategic stockpiles, unflagging research and a modern mobilization plan. Probably few of us would agree with every detail of such a sweeping plan. But in our judgment Mr. Baruch’s
overall approach is both realistic and constructive, an
excellent guide for public discussion and official policy.
A. F. OF L. AND THE ANNUAL "WAGE
Make an over-all agree-
T is good to see the two big labor organizations in agree-
ment that the guaranteed annual wage must be a major | labor objective and that the way toward it is through col- | lective bargaining, not through law or government decree. persaude it that it is Wrong.
e
¥__Y Navy Pants ~~ By James Thrasher
WASHINGTON; June 25—If Senator William Langer has his way, you won't be hearing that “Bell . Bottom Trousers” song much long- | er. For the gentleman from North Dakota would remove said- trousers from the United
| The ufiiform is just a hand-me-down from the British, Mr. Langer complams, and the black neckerchief is still being worn in mourning for Lord Nelson.
pleat: It is a bit odd, cofne to think of it, that not only we and fhe British, but most other countries, should
one branch of the armed ‘services. Armies change their. uniforms, with every war, and frequently in between. But the world's seamen still go around
cadets, whose uniform hasn't been altered perceptibly since the Mexican war period.
_ THIS DOESNT APPLY to navy officers. Their outfits have undergone considerable change in late
years. . Today we see them in blues, whites, khakis and those new slate (or bus-driver) grays, in gold braid and black braid that goes all the way around the sleeve or only half-way, depending on how dressed up the officer is. At any rate, Senator Langer will probably hear some strong dissenting opinions. There are sure to be a number of traditionalists who know just when the bib first appeared on the jumper, and why those back-lacing, -side-entrance trousers have inside-out
| front and center, in the 20th Century manner. And they will want no alteration of as much as"a button. There is also sure to be a representation of bobhy- | soxers who never heard of Lord Nelson, but who are just crazy about.sailors and who think that those suits are just too cyte. ik ;
Some on_His- Side, Too HOWEVER, Senator Langer will certainly: find" Some may object
the jumper, since it wasn't too many years ago that the “middy blouse” was standard equipment for all school girls. =a And there may be others who will not object | to tradition or association, but will hold that the uniform isn't universally becoming. On a young, well-built, broad-shouldered lad it can look pretty
REFLECTIONS— wee Je
My Dreams Are Getting Better Every Day!”
: ; ~ ! A » - Ta
¢ tke hee
GUITER [7
PROMISES FOOD SITUATION WILL BE EASED
i fe A) (Hs (Ta 4
I
.
| fetching. But our present wartime navy has grown | to the point where it can't’ limit itself to young, well- -
| built lads.
| 3 | Navy personnel now includes some seamen wha
slightly less than eagle eyes require spectacles. Dress them up in jumper, tight bell-bottom trousers and a little white hat—well, senator, maybe you've got | 0 la
, WORLD AFFAIRS— le
World Law |
By Wm. Philip Simms
4 SAN FRANCISCO, June 25.—The tear] of Halifax, leader of the United | Kingdom delegation here, has laid
San ‘Francisco conference in a |
but very important paragraph.
| single,
blunt, § 1f one of the great powers persists in going its | own evil way, regardless, he said, all ist the ost | “THE WISE WAY of the United Nations can do about it is to try to | TO ENFORCE PEACE!
If they fail, either
The field for steady-job, steady-pay plans seem more | they must acquiesce or go to war.
restricted from the A. F. of L. viewpoint than from that of the C. I. 0. President Green of the A. F. of L. holds that | ; js "halifax was quite honest about it. Some who
the annual wage cannot apply successfully in the building | attended his last press conference here very much He | wanted to hear him say the new league had made
trades, for example, or in highly seasonal industries.
believes, apparently, that it is chiefly important to maintain to encourage any such belief.
high hourly wage rates.
But A. F. of L. interest in the subject is evident from the statement that 30,000 to 35,000 members of ‘A. F. of L. unions are now working under contracts that provide yearly wages and that a number of unions are pressing for such |
agreements. .
Mr. Green is entirely right in saying -that there is no single, simple annual wage formula; that no plan can be | satisfactory if, in stabilizing the income of some employees, it leaves less stability for others; that any successful plan | must grow from mutual agreement between workers and | unization. management and be shaped by the practical experience of both. His opinion that the annual wage is not applicable to all situations certainly is justified at this time, but we
hope that before long it can be modified. .
We believe that each company or industry which works | out a successful annual-wage plan for its employees will make it easier for other companies and industries to work | Eventually, we think, enough diffi- | culties can be overcome so that even in the building trades | workers will find jobs—and pay by the year~more profitable | and desirable than the highest possible hourly wage rates
out successful plans.
with long periods without jobs or pay.
DEMOLISHING A BOGEY
VERY important new book, we think, is “The Bogey of
”"
Economic Maturity,
chinery and Allied Products Institute. It isn’t light summer reading.
But thoge who take the pains to read it carefully will find | Mr. Terborgh | the organization.
it thought-compelling and hope-inspiring.
has dug up facts and figures which, in our opinion, demolish the theory that the American economy has outlived its
dynamic, expansive youth.
Before the war that theory was hailed as a profound | new truth by people who wanted to justify the New Deal | policy of continuous government borrowing and spending. | if they do their job at all, they must serve the comIt still has great vogue among those who contend that mon cause. deficit spending must keep right on after the war if this |
country is to have enpugh production and enough jobs.
Mr. Terborgh, having searched, has found nd credible | the gangster who defies the police—either ‘the new evidence to back up the “stagnationist” belief that the | economy is senile because of chronic oversaving, reflecting inadequate opportunity for private investment, and brought on by the decline of population growth, the passing of the land frontier, the lack of great new industries, and the alleged growing importance of corporations’ depreciation
reserves.
Qur real problem, he contends, is not the combating of chronic stagnation but the damping down of cyclical swings so that booms and busts will not be disastrous, That, he believes, calls for wise government fiscal and other
policies, but not for continuous government deficits.
written by an economist named | Th George Terborgh and published in Chicago by the Ma- |
In fact, it’s hard going, | rather
This book probably won't ba one of the six best sellers, but we wish it might. For we believe in the soundness of : the American people can go forward to AWA A 41 i \ known, ;
That is the story, insofar as the peace-saving branch of the new league of- nations is concerned.
war obsolete, that it was a cure-all. But he refused
"lt Has Created Unity . . .'
It has achieved a considerable degree of unity among i
“MIDGET CAR DRIVER | YEARNS FOR RACE” | By C. W. P., Indianapolis. {
bonds, money, marbles or chalk. |
{ lotteries, poker clubs, crap games| ! and many more are wide open in the} | gambling line and all the sports are| in full swing. |
down the whole meaning of the lon Sunday morning out at the]
good to keep our hand in?
| By The Watchman, Indianapolis
{ peace, because communism conceived as an uncompromising enemy and antagonist of the existing order and committed to destroy and rebuild civilization. | nism is a world menace, therefore |we must guard against it. |
; or . LE : right now the United States has its WHAT LORD HALIFAX did say, however, Was 'oreatest opportunity to reach and
that San Francisco has created a world organization. | promulgate the doctrines and bless=| tap »
- ] H | F ] [Times readers are invited to express their views in i th lum igi - I am one of the many midget | these golaminy, tefigiod eon. wners and drivers of Indianapolis| f th 2 “ nd the surrounding county. For no| of the volume received, let00d reason that I can figure out we| ters should be limited to 250 !| words. Letters must be
re still unable to race ‘for war signed. Opinions set forth who
Why? | here are those of the writers, Slot machines, jars, punch boards, and publication in no way ones pinball, bingo, pools, baseball tickets, | implies agreement with those | How do
opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manu-
people?
. { Why can’t we even run them|
respondence regarding them.) begin with Stalin and De Gaulle.
them. peedrome just for free, for our own
2 2.4 sanctions will be most potent for|
checking and restraining aggressors, a simple and lg get at home. notice and public statement that “we won't do business with war making aggressors,” is the first step. Second, ‘We will not recognize any ruthless aggressor as a legitimate form of government.” Third, “We will give material aid only to those nations who maintain peaceful and friendly relations with other nations, and whose actions and policies are peaceful in charac-
Communism is a menace to world, was!
Commu-
All nations are weary of war and
ngs of peace. The American peo-|
“1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”
these mothers expect | their children to ever respect older| the perpetuation in key places, often in Boys and girls of school age flop down in a seat and| erners because of the one-party system in the south sts and |stay there regardless of how old and | which guarantees longevity in office and elevates scripts and cannot enter cor- {helpless people are standing around | southerners through the seniority rule.
So many pe: | First, and at this time, economic |PUlSOry trainii
By Marvin Walton, If Russia did not want to control a great part of Europe, why did she {attack little Finland (Nov. 30, 1939) and take 16,173 square miles? From | {1154 to 1859 Finland was a part of | Greatest paradox in today's Amerthe kingdom of Sweden, then it be-| ican I suggest to our President, to came an autonomous grand duchy | Russia is that the Soviet governthe five great powers and the 45 smaller powers. |Ple want peace, therefore, let our| ogress and the American people of the Russian empire. In 1917 Fin-| ment should be said to need a new
POLITICAL SCENE—
Succession By Thomas L. Stokes
WASHINGTON, June 26.—This matter of the presidential succession, which President Truman dropped into the lap of congress, isn't a simple and’ easy problem. The President his recommended & ling of suc ‘cession to the speaker of the house and thence to the | president pro tem of the senate as a democratic procedure because these are elective officials, rather than as provided at present to cabinet officers, beginning with secretary of state, who have not been elected. “The principle. is recognized as sound.e But this suggested solutidn has raised some questions—one, at first glance, that the party to which the President does not belong might capture the house in a midterm congressional election—that happened “only so recently as 1930—and the death of a President
party that controlled the administration. This might conceivably cause disturbance and confusion. Moreover, no political party is inclined to look kindly upon losing the presidency by default, as it were, even though it probably would lose the presidency in the next election. Loss of the house in mid-term elections has invariably been followed by loss of the presidency two years later.
Assistant Vice President Proposed THERE ARE also other possible complications. Therefore there seems to be sense in the suggestion embodied in a presidential succession bill introduced some time ago by Rep. Monroney (D. Okla.), for a commission to study the problem to find a permanent solution to replace any temporary method that might be devised. Congress meanwhile could enact a bill that would take care of any contingency that might arise until a permanent method could be enacted, either by congress or through a constitutional amendment. The Monroney bill provides for a line of succession to the speaker of the house, pending a report ‘by the commission and action upon it. As a longtime plan, the Oklahoma congressman hag suggested a novel idea, that is, that not only a vice president but an assistant vice president be chosen who would succeed to the presidency in event both the President and ‘vice president ‘died or were disqualified. This would ‘provide for almost any contingency. This is in line with his general thesis that the solution of, the problem should be well-defined and reflected as far as possible, the will of the people as expressed at a regular, general election. He does not look: favorably upon any solution that would call for special elections which, in the case of a choice of chief executive, might be upsetting.
What If the President Is Ili?
MR. MONRONEY also would have the proposed commission look into other related matters never definitely settled. One is the question of the disability of a President. .Who, for example, should decide whether a President is disabled? This almost became
{should put them on their lap or. a problem in the Woodrow Wilson administration and |let them stand and let someone who is might have been a problem now if President Roose~ ‘has paid fare have the seat. these mothers are so thoughtless; I | think the street car company should |- {have placards throughout the cars,| college system which almost gbecame a serious prob{reminding them to give up the| lem In the case of Texas and other southern states -seat. It is bad enough. for children! in the last election. Another is the decision as to who have paid fare?®to remain| would become President in case both the President | seated but terrible for the younger | and vice president were unable ‘to take
Since | veit had not died but had been incapacitated by illness,
Another is the question of changing the electoral
office on | inauguration day. There is also another question. It is raised by both the high | speakership and presidency of the senate, of south-
Both the present speaker and the president pro tem are from
le are opposing com- | the South. —well, at least they! {will get training and that's more, to other elements in the Democratic party. than the majority of the children I say shame on you, ferage, because of poll taxes and “white” primaries, | parents, for it is disgraceful that a| or both. civilized country as ours is respon-|
sible for turning out such youth. IN WASHINGTON—
“WHY DOES RUSSIA ‘GOBBLE UP NEIGHBORS?” 48 W. 2st st.
The Southern bloc is almost like another party
Southerners, also, are elected on a restricted suf-
Red Radio
By Peter Edson
"WASHINGTON, June 25.—
lack of understanding of
| It has written a charter which improves on Dum- [Whole foreign policy be dedicated,|the wisdom of withholding the tools | land declared her independence on| press agent.
| barton Oaks and the old League of Nations.
instrument for preserving the peace. ! not it will actually preserve the peace, depends on | the individual nations themselves and on the amount | of support which world opinion gives the new or-
fact that world peace cannot be guaranteed by any | set of rules, however good. The Ten Commandments | are mankind's simplest and best code of human | behavior. But they have not stopped crime or vice or corruption. Yet nobody contends they have not been of immense value to the human race. Similarly, the new charter is not going to reform the world. But it does set up new and better international standards to steer by. While not as good as some people hoped for, it\does represent the great- | est common denominator of 50 nations. And, as the | earl indicated, if it is lived up to—and that should be emphasized—it will amount to a forward step in | world progress. | In the opinion of many here, Including Lord | | | |
1
Halifax, the long weeks of discussion over the veto question may turn out to be much less crucial than the efforts to keep the Big Five united. Had they fallen apart nothing else would have mattered.
e Big Five and the Law | MUCH HAS been said about the Big Five being | | “above the law.” That, it is pointed out, is apparent than real. :It is true that the Big Five possess a veto power denied the little 45, but if they | exercise that power unduly, they will simply wreck A gangster is not above the law when he commits a crime and then, with his tommy-.| gun, defies arrest. Either he causes a breakdown in law enforcement at the hands of the police, or makes | bloodshed if the police elect to shoot it out. It is certainly not the intention of the Big Five to set themselves up as a dictatorship to run the world, according to Lord Halifax. On the contrary,
They must be answerable to the world society, the servants of all the peoples. But people should not forget this: Should-one of | the great powers break the established rules—Ilike
league will acquiesce or there will be war, The charter is no international Ten Command- | ments, Even if it were, realists here never cease to warn, it no more prevents all war than law can prevent all crime. Yet as Lord Halifax observed, it does provide an instrument thanks to which international outlawry’ will be harder to get away with. But its efficacy will largely depend-—as does most law enforcement—on world opinion.
To The Point—
WHAT WITH drivers’ license, plates, gafoline and what-not, the motorist finds his road full of tax. ” s . EERE
SOME HOUSEWIVES look at the canning sugar holdup as a rotting trick on homegrown strawberries. il Con a ee
he yf Cai : i {WHAT MAKES going to the dentist so tough: 1s
* di » it =
Nh Vr ig
And | designed and administered to the
when that charter is ratified, the world will have an | purposes of lasting peace. Here is {i ns Whether or |how to do that:
tion we can, and should, exert a {powerful political, economic and | military influence on other nations {same about Germany in that war as| What Lord Halifax strove to drive home was the | to direct their thinking, their desire|q,¢ is the wise way to enforce | {and their internal economy toward | % | peaceful domestic reconstruction. | All nations look to the United States | for financial and material assist- | {ance, or least most of them do. So! TEACH CHILDREN MANNERS”
billions for peaceful reconstruction, | | but one technician, or one blueprint, or | one machine for war.
| enforcing peace.
|deny any aggressor, hostile, bellig-| {erent and over-ambitious foreign|cars and busses. | ndtion' or ruler, any of the tools or| children, of whom no fare has been | are asked to trust you as an materials with which to oppress and paid, on a seat and let grownups, | “1 then give us reasons to trust
make war on other people. Let us' who have heen working, stand. They |
for making war from otHer naand especially from those who have already shown evidence
|Dec. 6. In April, 1918, with the ald {of Germany, the Reds were driven |back to Russia. I am not defending
While the Germans may have invented propaganda, the Russians certaifly perfected it. They got so good at it that they scared everyone half to death,
As the world's most powerful na-| or tne spirit of aggression. The | Gtrmany but stating facts of his-| That in itself eventually caused the Russians to an-
United States and Britain arg in a tory.
position to limit armament and| to deny war materials to aggressors. |
peace. again.
ys 8 “HOMES, SCHOOLS FAILING TO
Oct.” 14,
et our foreign assistance policy be gy Mrs. M., Indianapolis.
not one cent, or one tool! these days?
| dren to respect their elders,
The best and|to be polite.
Mothers put small
Side Glances=By Galbraith
Hitler.
Russia,
{I do in world war II—smash Ger- | many forever, never let her arise
On July 17, 1919, the Finns established a republic, a peace treaty was signed by Russia at Dorpat, 1920. Doesn't Russia beWhere. oh where, are the mothers | 16V€ in keeping her word? In 1940| services spent two million dollars in the U. 8. in They are certainly Russia gobbled up- Lithuania, Lat- | 1944, Russia did not report any such expenditures befalling short in training their chil-| ¥'® and Estonia, but the United] cause she conducted this work through the WashingWhen | States does not recognize them as a | ton embassy and other agencies not subject to regisYes, sir, the American people and 1 was a child, I“was trained not Part of the U. 8. S. R. Why? The : congréss are on record in favor of only in our home but also at school | figures on the size of Russia's army, The school teachers | iF force and navy are not known | | wisest, safest and cheapest way of are also neglecting a very important | © US. Whether it be peace or war, enforcing peace for this nation is to | issue. \1s Russia afrald to tell or would she
It is so édnspicuous on the street | rather keep the world on edge? | Come, Russia, tell us.a few things.
ag, Before June 22, 1941, Russia had a treaty with “skunk Hitler” and| they seized the German radio network. Radio Berlin, everything was cozy. On Sept. 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland, on Sept. 17, 1939, invaded by Russia. Prior to June 22, 1941, in our country the big job for the Communists was to sabotage our help to France and Great Britain, but due to the alertness of our F. B. I. and other law enforcements, sabotage suffered a great blow. Then a little before June 22, Russia felt the cold claw of “skunk Hitler,” a plea was sent out to us for lend lease, which was done by our government. Our supplies went pouring into Russia for fense against Nazi Germany. Hitler drove deep into Russia. He hit Stalingrad and there he was hit with the might of Russia's war ma-
chine. He drove for Moscow but by this time “good old Uncle Sam's” | conflicts, economic rivalry and colonial expansion.
| |supplies turned the tide against| J, S. Wants to Understand USSR I will admit the Russians
fought hard, but who wouldn't in defense of his home? Clubs and rocks were no match against Hite ler's armor, but Uncle Sam's supplies were more than a match. It spelled defeat for Germany. Now that that has passed, why don't you trust the U. 8. A, Russia? We gave you supplies. We
oo DAIRY THOUGHT. And, - behold, there are last + which shall be first, and there are
I was not old enough to re-| nounce abandonment of their program to promote member world war I, but I feel the |
world communism through the Comintern.
and the U. 8. 8. R. frequently finds itself in the American dog house because its policies are misunderstood in this country or are not satisfactorily explained by Moscow. Retiring Attorney General Biddle, in making a report to congress on foreign government propaganda activities in the United States, declared that while the British information
tration. Whatever the media, the effect seems to have been negative, :
Russian Radio on the Beam BUT THE Russians are still no slouches on their public relations in Europe. They do a tremendous job through Moscow radio, operating much as the British Broadcasting corporation does in beaging programs in all known languages to all parts of the world. The day after the Red armies moved into Berlin
with the most powerful transmitter in Europe, blankets westetn Europe. Moscow has given the manufacture of radio receivers a high priority and the formation of radie listening groups has been promoted in all the Russian-occupied areas of eastern Europe. . Moscow itself has announced there are over five million of these radio listening posts—loud speakers in centers where there is no other means of spreading information and where the people meet to hear the news that Moscow wants them to hear. An analysis of monitored Russian tadio programs since V-E day gives a pretty good line on what the Soviet has been trying to put over. Briefly, the dominant note Is anti-Fascism. That's what they fought the war for. Russian radio socks Fascist tendencies wherever they raise their head. Positively, it plugs the need for future international co-operation and a post-war world based on more democracy in political, economic and social flelds—a end to armed
1941, when
her de-
THIS LINE is cayried so far as to declare that if present éfforts to te a world peace organization fail, arfother world security organization will sven« tually - be” created. But in general there has been an expression of confidence that the San Francisco conference of the United Nations would succeed. '
that out in Rome. :
“American people it has a lot of ‘propaganda explain. ig to do. That doesn't mean by Earl ,
Li
would elevate to the White House a man not of the
But now the circle seems to have been completed
There is unquestionably a strong American desire to understand the Russians better, and there is no desire on the part“of the American armed forces to trust you will try and repay it, ht Russia. Even Senator Wheeler and party found 4
But if the Soviet government wants to be under= stood and sympathized with by the majority of the
nd |
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MIS a miscell ton Wall bride-to-married | Among club are 1 dames R. \ Gordon Tc Minses Jea Alford, “An Miss T ter, Minn,,
Wedc Follos Churc
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Fleaka sang.
"Entel The bride father, wore a. fitted bod four-tigred 1 was held by laced with pe gardenias-an Her attend geline Caito, dames John Mary Cather Shea and Mi maids, and J flower girl.
Wed:
Their pink fitted lace bo with lace n They carried with blue. The brideg Gus Caito, be Salvadore ar Mr. Boehle 2 The wedd! Bluff Crest a her going-av wore a whit white accessc The couple the bride's fi
Servicer
Musical
Mrs. Frede ceived a lette the comman pital ship in kit gift of m kit was fina club of Sign sorority. Mrs. Sterl] man of the ed’ fund ca sponsored by) tion of Musi pitals depart music clubs’ department. Contributic Mrs. Sterli Woodruff Pl
Sorority A social n 8 p. m. tome coln by Gam Tau sorority Mrs. John H Phillips, Mis Ellen Isgrigg
[I —
28
on
