The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, June 13, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: North Texas Daily / The Campus Chat and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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PAGE TWO
THE CAMPUS CHAT. DENTON. TEXAS, FRIDAY, JUNE 13. 1941
• i
The Campus Chat
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T tapK.«<e :J4"t
Manual AH* HI
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It ftp
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Ka
by Mail
Mitur . - — .
*Ha>al< Miu.r
Nrli Krfttor ... 4 J
HiMirta Kdiutt „„ ***" '
("ohimtut* in,el* AdkHr 1 .*r llidioi
4mi> Hcakr, NiOmw Walker
Mary L Kamp. l.it> Mwnilai Mtart
H*iatn#M Man«|t«r ... ...... -.4PMI*11 J'JInr*
A4v«rti ir.« M«' *K«r ... . JUy Martin
•' C *4. Htmtant and J. D. 11*11 Jr
NaiMan- Willn
Mary W.l.ard
r,.J*a«4all thmly
m mSmm. Ma«-
M. mbor <4 T. <•< Inter uilNTitt, I'nm AmwmMmi
Mnnt .r of to«M*l < • '.< K l"r«
K*vr.,.. • •*( by NalaaMl MvastMoa Xmvtrm. Im.
Unit- 13, 1941
The Editor's Desk
With every firnt edition c f a new editor,
said chump invariably nets forth, in two
column.* or mure, the jmlicy that he ami
his staff « x} ect to follow for the school
year. Thin i« a* good a time an any for me
to tfinmw with the tank.
ProMWy lafore the next ('hat come#
out, one or more persons will either lie
down here or atop me on the campus and
want to know why such and such did not
appear in this paper. Every week until
next spring thin will happen, despite the
fact that right now the editor ia Haying,
and next fail he will repeat, that insofar
a# possible there will be no discrimination
against any person or organization as far
as publishing the news in this paper is
concerned.
Anything that the editor considers to
be newsworthy will be printed. If there
is too much copy turned in and mime sto-
ries have to be left out, which usually is
not the case in the summer. those articles
of the least interest to the majority of the
readers will be left out.
If Hitler invades England or Pappa and
Mamma Dionne have sextuplets you prob-
ably will find no more than a paragraph
or two in this paper about it. The purpoHt-
of the Campus Chat is to publish news
about the college and its students and ex-
students. Men of draft age will no doubt
be very interested in the current t rends of
the war, but they will look to the daily pa-
peri) and their radio for that news.
We will leave all that to the daily news-
papers. Although I suppose that there an*
some on the campus who could qualify as
a good commentator on world events, you
will not find such a column in this news-
paper. If someone cusses labor and sit-
down striken in assembly, we will print
it. If President Roosevelt calls out the ar-
my to end a labor strike, you will have to
read about it in the daily papers.
To make myself monotonous, if I have
not already done so, I repeat that the main
purpose of the Campus Chat, as in the
past, will be to serve North Texas stu-
dents, faculty members, exes, and inter-
ested outsiders with news of this institu-
tion and those things which concern it.
THE GOING WILL HE HOUGH
The new staff faces a year of hard work
if it is to maintain the standards set dur-
ing the last two years by Hay Edwards,
Mary Willard, and Company. Ray, editor
for the two previous years, has brought
the ('hat its first two All-American clas-
sifications as rated by the National Scho-
lastic Press Association in the annals # f
the college-
There may be many mistakes made in
the first few issues. Please bear with us
until we are dry behind the ears.
The Collegiate Digest
: By Associated Collegiate Press j
Within the last decade the world has
been given a brilliant demonstration of
what can Is? done by regimented educa-
tion. The totalitarian powers have taught
us what can happen when school, press,
and radio are all focused on the inculcation
of one series of ideas. It has been with
them an amazingly efficient task. I have
had some apprehension lest, as the emer-
gency sharpens, we might be tempted to
emulate them. The necessity for the de-
feme and the preservation of democracy
is so compelling that it is to some people
hii attractive idea that it might be saved
by drawing up a series of formulas which
could Is* driven into the minds of school
and college students every day between
eleven and twelve. Such attempts, it would
seem to me, miss the whole point at issue:
namely, that there can be no single defini-
tion of democracy, that it is essential that
people who live under it differ in their
ideas and their opinions, and that the aim
of education in a democracy is to open
jjeople'g minds, not to seal them hermetic-
ally once and for all." Harry Woodburn
Chase, Chancellor of New York Univer-
sity. Cautions Against the Easy Road to
Totalitarianism.
"Civilization must find a refuge in
America *, the abolition, except as training
school*, of the universities of totalitarian
Mate*; the tendency of recent education-
al pronouncements in France; the disper-
sion and bombing of universities in Eng-
land mean that nowhere else in the world,
except in this country, can the standard
of freedom, truth and justice Ik* raised.
The American universities are the last re-
source of a world plunging to destruc-
tion."—Dr. Robert M. Hutch ins. Presi-
dent of the University of Chicago, Sees
the American College As the Hope of the
World.
GamfuU P&\<la+ia /</tei
By NaDean* W.lk.r
Dr. and Mrs. Weaver Donate Gifts
f anUi term* itr alta r yaar br <fc« of
tha Ni>rth Taaa* 4tat* Taatlwr, ( otk.« Kxtarvd «• «ar«iwt
< tor* matter Uarambar a. 1*1*. at th* puat fttr. at l*num
Tnai uMlor tJw art at Marrh 3 IffHt
Vernelle Grable'n job ia ana that'*
practically tagged "men only."
She'* the drat and only girt l nc-
ii v<i type operator in tH*- tulles** print
and indeed, girl operator*
am rare awoffc to Is hard to lad
anywhere. V«S H« makes linotype
her hobby a* well as her work. An
English major, the came to the
college in IM9, enrolled in a journ-
alism course, hung around the
print shop, and finding her efflc
ieney and tpeed un a typewriter
transferable to linotype key*, she
divided her interest in publication*
between the editorial and mechan-
ical a pecU Of making a news-
paper.
A juaior from Albany, Ver-
nelle found her hometown in head-
line* thi* week after approximate-
ly half the houses of the town were
washed away in the flood in which
several people were drowned.
Like* Dramatics
In high school Vornelie was In-
terested in dramatics; she went to
State meet one year as a member
of a one-act play caat. The play
"was m original by a local author,
written especially for and about
the group participating in it. ft
took .second place in State, and
was subsequently sold and pub-
lished with pictures and names of
the original cast.
This summer is the first in sev-
eral year* that she has not work-
ed on the Fort Griffin 'Fandangle,'
an annual historical production
that has attracted state-wide at-
tention and publicity. Vernelle was
an actress in the show two sum-
mers, and last year helped with
set designing and publicity work.
Last year's summer experience al-
so included a week of presiding
over the Shackelford County Lead
or while its owner and editor was
away.
On Starrs
Verhelle has been a member of
both the Yucca ami ('.hat staffs,
and says she is interested in any-
thing concerning publications or
writing. Her favorite ambition is
to learn to write as well as Thom-
as Wolfe, her literary idol. Quite
un Thomas Wolfeian in style was
her recent A vesta contribution,
"The Wrong Koad to Glamour,"
wherein her woes us a fat girl try-
ing to slirn up were hilariously
chronicled. In spite of the impres-
sion given, she is not fat she just
likes to exaggerate.
Embarrassing Moment
One of the most embarrassing
moments of her life (probably ex
itggeratetl, Itecause Vernelle doe.*
not embarrass easily) occurred last
year when she attended the open
ing night of a classy (Catherine
Cornell play in Dallas, as a birth-
day celebration. It was a big mo-
ment. and Vernelle was determined
to impress her escort with her
sophistication. She might have
succeeded too, if the borrowed
shot's she was wearing hadn't be-
come unbearably tight during the
perfortnanee. Kicking the offend-
ing footgear off, she settled down
to enjoy Cornell. While Cornell
whs taking her curtain calls. Ver-
nelle was trying vainly to get her
feet, back into the borrowed shoes.
Some time later, while the last of
the first-nighters were departing,
she was still trying still vainly.
And when everybody else was
gone, while her amused escort was
trying to ignore her desperate
predicament and the ushers were
trying to luck up, she finally suc-
ceeded in getting the feet back in
the shoes.
Vernelle is virtually a daughter
of the law, for her father was for
several years deputy and officer of
Shackelford County. She has a
sentimental attachment to blue,
and likes fried oysters. Swimming,
going to shows, and walking- es-
pecially when it's raining are her
favorite recreations, and although
linotype and publications work
have kept her too busy for art
courses in the college, her versa-
tile talents and interests extend
to that field also.
Gatekeepers Say
Nearly 2,000 See
Outdoor Shows
Gatekeeper* estimated that a
crowd of nearly 12,000 students
attended the outdoor activities in
the recreation park this week.
Large crowds are attending the
Tuesday and Friday night Iwll-
rootn and square dancing .sessions.
Skating every night on the slab
has drawn many participant*.
The schedule for the summer
activities for the recreation park
went into effect this week. The
park is opened at 6:30 and usually
dosed at 9:30. On Sundays it will
be open from 1:30 to ft p.m. for
tennis. The complete schedule of
activities includes intramural con-
tests, games, swimming, group
play skating, golf, tennis, square
dancing, ballroom dancing, and
dancing on the slab.
Entrance fee for those who are
not students of the college is lfic.
|)r. and Mrs. Clifford S. Weaver of McKinney are shown above be-
side one of the shadow boxes placet! in the reception rooms at Mar-
quis hall to display some of their recent gift* to the college. The pic-
ture was made on May 22, when the Weavers visited the campus on
their tilth wedding anniversary.
Japanese Trampling Cross'
Among Latest Weaver Gifts
A ramous "trampling cross"
which Japanese of the seventeenth
century wore smooth with their
have feet at « time that the Japan
mm were attempting to drive Chris-
tianity from their country by hor-
rible methods of torture is among
recent gifts to the college from
Mrs. <Justine Courson Weaver of
McKinney.
The cross is among the most
interesting in a collection of Mrs.
Weaver's gifts to the college which
have been placed in three shadow
boxes in the walls of the reception
rooms at Marquis hail.
Other Objects Given
Among objects in the boxes are
an old Paisley shawl, bits of lace,
a number of rare fans from Mrs.
Weaver's collection at fans from
many countries, pieces of early
American glass, some Staffords-
shire China, daguerreotype*, and
other souvenirs gathered by Dr.
and Mrs. Weaver during their wide
travels.
The gifts, which are but a few
of the large collection of object*
which Mrs, Weaver has donated
to the college, were dedicated to
the college informally when Dr.
and Mrs. Weaver visited the cam-
pus, May 22, on their forty-second
wedding anniversary. A number of
faculty friends were guests at an
informal tea served in the crystal
room of Marquis hall by Mrs. W.
J. McConnell where they heard
stories by the donors about the
history of some of the gifts.
Story of Cross
The story of the trampling cross
was perhaps the most dramatic of
these. Secured by the Weavers in
Osaka while Dr. Weaver was serv-
ing as missionary for the Disciples
of Christ, the cross is one of those
which Japanese Christians were
forced to walk on by their perse-
cutors when the Japanese were
seeking to drive foreigners and
their religion from the Nipponese
Empire.
The persecution Itegan in 1024
when all foreigners except Dutch
and Chinese were banished from
Japan. All over Japan people were
compelled to trample tin the cross,
and Christians suffered such tor-
ments a* being wrapped in straw
xacks and burned alive. Christians
walked cheerfully to the blood pit
or were flung alive into the open
grave about to be filled up. Many
Japanese Christians fled to other
lands, but those that could not es-
cape took their children in their
arms to death rather than leave
them to be educated in the pai;an
faith.
Other Japanese Items
A namber of other Japanese
items in the shadow l>oxes were
secured during the Weaver's seven
years' missionary service in Ja-
pan. New weR (a their sixties, I>r
and Mrs. Weaver have finished
serving 29 years in the church and
in Texas schools. Married before
they left college at Kureka, HI.,
they graduated in the same college
class and shortly afterwards liegan
their service to their faith.
Amorg the fans in the shadow
boxes is a carved ivory fan from
China, one of carved sandalwood
from India, two beautiful feather
fan*, one coming from Cuba and
a large red satin hand-painted fan
with sandalwood sticks which is
connected with a romance in the
Gustine family. Thi* fan came from
Bayou Sara, one of the ghost cities
of Louisiana, which at one time
was one of the great shipping
cities of the Mississippi River.
Paisley Shawl
The portion of the Paisley shawl
in one of the bones was given to
Mrs. Weaver by an elderly woman
who before her death lived in the
home for the aged in Dallas many
years ago and who has been im-
mortalized by Mrs. Weaver in her
book, "Towed In," a collection of
stories from the homes for the
aged.
Mrs. Weaver's other gifts to the
college are housed in the State
Historical Collection in the college
museum and in the browsing room
of the college library. They in-
clude some 2.000 rare children's
books in the browsing room, and
the collection of early American
glass,, Staffordshire and China,
antl 400 dolls from 52 countries,
all of which are to be found in the
museum.
Summer Staff
Continued from page 1
Mis* Ktila Reno; C. B. Tate; and
H. D. Shepherd.
Chemistry: W. N. Masters, di-
rector; J. L. Carrico; Miss Addie
Mae Curbo; L. P. Floyd; James
Spurlock, T. A. Willard; and Gil-
bert Wilson.
Economics and sociology: Jack
Johnson, director; Sam Mar ton; R.
L. Con rod; Ross Compton; J. L.
I>iiflot; C. A. Davis; and Bul-
lock Hyder.
English and Journalism
English and Journalism: Floyd
Stovall, director; E. C. Brodie;
Miss Nellie Clevelnd; E. S. Clif-
ton; Edith L. Clark; F. M. Dar-
nall; Miss Virginia Haile; J. M.
Logue; B. E. Looney; Waldo Mc-
Neir; Miss Mary Patchell; A. M.
Sampley; Miss Bessie Shook; Miss
Mamie Smith; Miss Mary Sweet;
M. P. Wells; Cecil Shnford; Miss
Sue Taylor; and Ray Edwards.
Foreign Languages: Mis* Ruby
Smith, director; Henry Dannelley;
J. N. Brown; Virginia Calloway;
J. R. Smiley: and P. E. McDonald.
Education: G. A. Odam, direc-
tor; J. E. Blair; lferl Benney;
Harold Brenholtz; V, Y. Craig;
Alex Dickie; Mi** Nellie Griffiths;
Sid Hamilton; A. G. Koenig; R.
L. Marquis, Jr.; Carl Matthews;
Miss Carolyn McMullan; L. A.
Sharp; J, L. Webb; Miss Epsie
Young; George Crutsinger; Max
Huebner; Frederick Eby; J. B.
Roberts; Wilson Little; George
Mecham; A. H. Word; and Bowen
Evans.
Geography
Geography: J. R. Swenson, di-
rector; Miss Mary Jo Cowling;
Walter Hansen; Miss Reba Wood-
nrff; and Hie. A. W. Witon.
Government: J. W. Pendei .i
rector; S. B. McAlister; C. N,
Fortenberry; and Joe Ray.
History: L. W. Newton, direc-
tor; C. A. Bridges; J. L. Kings-
bury; Miss Anna Powell; and Miss
Cora B. Wilson.
Home Economics: Miss Florence
Scoular, director; Miss Marjorie
Acheson; Mis* Jessie Acker; Miss
Rosaline lvey; Miss Editha Lu-
ecke; Miss Mamie Mutt; Mis# My-
ra S-well; Miss LuelU Williams;
and Miss Muriel Williams.
Industrial Art*: S. A. Black-
turn. director; Wayne Adams; C.
C. Davis; Harold Farmer; and J,
Museum Relics Are
Good Teaching Aid
Says Dr. Kingsbury
The relies of muaeum can turn
teacher in social sciences and con-
nect the ordinary grammar grade
or high school student with the
past a* no history book or learn-
ed lecture can do, Dr. J. L. Kings-
bury, curator of the State Histori-
cal Collection at the Teachers Col-
lege, believes.
To prove hi* theory to teachers
of social sciences, school princi-
pals, and anyone else interested,
Dr. Kingsbury has inaugurated a
series of weekly lectures to be giv-
en at the college each Thursday
afternoon at 4 o'clock in which
exhibits from the NTSTC museum
to pictorialise the drama of Amer-
ican history.
Spoke Thursday
Speaking on "A Pioneer Goes
from South Carolina to Tennessee
and builds a Frontier Home" in
his first lecture Thursday evening,
June 12, Dr, Kingsbury brought
in relics from the historical col-
lection to illustrate the journey,
the establishment of a home on the
frontier, the furnishing of the cab-
in. the making of clothing, hunt-
ing, sickness, and the library of
the pioneer.
Miniature models of the Ohio
River steamboat and flat huut. the
covered wagon, were displayed
along with a wagon wheel, travel-
ler, hub, and ox yokes to illustrate
the journey. A model log cabin
and the various instruments used
in the planting process by the pi-
oneer -the broad and brush axes,
grindstone, crude plows, hoes and
picks, mauls and wedges were
introduded.
Early Pioneers
Attempting to give his audience
a glimpse into the home of an
early pioneer, Dr. Kingsbury dis-
played the household equipment
which the pioneer was likely to
bring along with him on the jour-
ney as the candle molds and sticks,
pewter pots and pitchers, creek
jugs, and the furnishings which
he made on the spot as chairs,
washboards, churns, and bread
boards.
The crude machines for weav-
ing and spinning clothes, hunting
equipment, and home-made reme-
dies for sickness, including the
mad stone cure for mad dog bite,
the bleeder, and the lancet were
displayed.
Audience Sees Books
Members of the audience were
allowed to thumb through books
dating back to 1801, read letters
dating back to 1818 and newspa-
pers printed in 1773. Spellers, dic-
tionaries, readers, grammars, and
books on religion, history, geog-
raphy, and mathematics were in
the group.
The lecture series follows:
June 19, "The Settling of Tex-
as"; June 26, "The Civil War";
July 3, "The Long Drive," (cat-
tle industry); July 10, "Evolution
of Domestic Lighting in Ameri-
ca"; July 17, "A Unit on Travel
by Land and Sea"; July 24, "The
Museum as an Aid in Teaching
Geography"; July 31, "The Ameri-
can Indian"; August 7, "The
World War"; August 14, "The Ev-
olution of Warfare."
D. Hall.
Library Service
Library Service: W. S. Hoole,
director; R. R. Douglass; Miss
Anna II. Heyer; Kenneth Hunt;
and Mrs. George Medders.
Mathematics: E. H. Hanson, di-
rector; Amos Barksdale; Miss Ma-
ry Ruth Cook; J. V. Cooke; Geo.
Copp; and L. E. Bush.
Music: W. C. Bain, director;
Mis* Mary Anderson; C. H. Fin-
ney; Floyd Graham; Miss Gladys
Kelso; Frank McKinley; Miss Lil-
lian Par rill; Harry Pat-shall; Roy
Will; Earle Connette; Clel Silvey;
Arthur Borgen; Mrs. Elois El-
liott; and Miss Ouida Clemen*.
Physical Education
Physical Education: T. J. Fouts,
director; Miss Donnie Cotteral;
Miss Betiiah Harris*; Miss Edith
Kubeck; Henry Shands; Jack Sis-
co; C. C. Sportsman; Jerry Don.
nelly; Francis Stroup; Miss Faye
Thompson; and Miss Dorothy My-
ers.
Physics: L. L. Miller, director;
Fred Connell; William Tittle; and
Joseph Morgan.
Speech: Mrs. Olive Johnson, di-
rector; Miss Lois Boli; and Mrs.
Myrtle Hardy.
Demonstration School: G. H.
Holloman, principal; Mis* Anna
Alford; Miss Velma Smith; Miss
Ruth Orr; Miss Eva Stapelton;
Miss Florence Cullin; Mrs. Lula
Shumaker; Mrs. Phoebe Misell;
Miss Ann Bradley; Mrs. Margie
Stafford; Mi** Anne Bookman;
Miss Eleanor Rayne; Miss Doro-
thy Babb; Andrew Swenson; Mrs.
Mabel Criddle; L. R. Golson; A.
S. Keith; John Faggard; H. G.
Rylander; W. A. Cooper; and
Guy Bush.
Sam Houston School: Francis
Jones; Miss Jewel Cox; and Mrs.
Ina Louise Williams.
Junior and Senior High Schools:
Mis* Eulah McElroy. A. O. Cal-
houn; Dan McAlister. Genelia
Lewis; Elliott Smith; Mrs. Harry
Ray; Miss Faye Coconaugher; Ot-
is Roerk; Miss Cara Boswell; Mrs.
Beatrice Carpenter; Mrs. Mabel
Simmons; and J. L. Burks.
Ed (itorial) Wards
By RAY EDWARDS
A HANGOVER...
As ia the case in many tfood things,
there has to be a hangover. Publications
had a good year last year, but now ia all
and I am the hangover.
The editor feller has to labor pretty
hard and his girl is out of town, so I just
couldn't leave all that work and worry on
him at the same time.
There is another old-timer on the staff
this summer. Randall Seely, school teach-
er from Joy, is back as the sports staff for
t he summer.
Seely has been dabbling in journalism
around the college for some time, and it
looks as if he might come in pretty handy
this summer as there are no other sports
writers.
By the way, if any prospective report-
ers are hanging around, the editor would
appreciate having you around the office
for the summer.
DAD'S DAY . . .
I wish the guys who sell Father's Day
cards or whoever started this Father's
Day businesa had called it Dad's Day.
That way, Dad might have felt included
in the celebration himself, but any time
or:e of his too numerous offsprings calls
him "Father," Dad is liable to look be-
hind himself for a fellow with his collar
turned backwards.
The name is just too formal. It sounds
as if it were invented for people who wear
neckties or who wear sox that match.
In fact, it is not at all times by any
means that Dad will be caught wearing
socks.
He escaped from Arkansas and came to
Texas some time ago. He grew up in a
family that made its own soap and pulled
its own teeth, so I'm not going to make
the mistake of shipping off a bunch of
neckties to him for next Sunday.
If I really wanted to make him happy,
I'd go about it in a way that varies much
from the usual routine.
Karly Sunday morning -before the
preacher got up I would sneak out in
the Chinaberry growth in which Dad
sleeps and wake him up. We'd pile into the
old Chevy with George Duke and 01' Bob,
the dog.
Some time before the sun appeared we
would be deep in the tall ash, oak, and elm
timber down on Pilot Creek. And before
the sun had been up too long Dad would
have killed about a dozen squirrels while
George and 1 gaped around trying to wake
up.
As usual. Dad would probably shoot a
squirrel that George was trying to draw
a bead on, paving the way for an argu-
ment all the way home.
Assuming that they could refrain from
getting into a quarrel and wrecking the
car, we would get home up in the morn-
ing and dress the game. Then we would
turn the business over to Ma from there
on out.
Ma would brew up a batch of squirrel
stew and some of her cornbread to go with
it. She's awful good at making squirrel
stew, but when it comes to making corn-
bread, that woman i.s the best from the
Mason-Dixon Line both ways.
While she was doing all that, Dad would
be out rounding up the rest of the family
for dinner -that comes at 12 around
Frognot.
Sitting at the head of the long table
that was made before the kids ail got
scattered like a bunch of turkeys in a hail
storm, he would lap up the squirrel stew
with his special soup spoon and rattle off
at the mouth at the same time.
After consuming three times too much
of the stew, he would then sneak off to
snooze a couple of hours in his Chinaberry
grove and then be ready to stroll over
his fields and figure out what to do the
next day.
Nope, I don't think I will send Dad a
necktie Sunday despite the fact that a fel-
low offered to loan me fifteen cents for
the price. He's the type of fellow who gets
so much kick out of eating squirrel stew,
fishing with worms, or scaring stray dogs
that he doesn't have time to fiddle with
such trifles.
BLOW. HORN. BLOW . . .
At times it appears that the creator
really double-crossed man after all
He made a lovely world with an abun-
dance of pretty trimmings. He made man,
he made the day, and he made the night,
and he made lovely woman for man to
dream about at night.
He did all that.
But while he was off making something
else, man made automobiles, and for these
automobiles man made horns. Not ordi-
nary horns like steers—worse than that.
Not just horns that drunks blow on New
Years, but horns that recite everything
from "Good Night, Ladies," to "God Bless
America."
And so why did the creator create man
at all if man has to waste his life away
listening to those horns? Above all, why
did he create lovely woman for lowly man
to dream about at night and then turn his
back and let some nut invent a musical
air raid alarm to wake him?
% I mi
*
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,
afHv
kMb
'IMS?.
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Thomason, John. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, June 13, 1941, newspaper, June 13, 1941; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth313259/m1/2/?q=%22~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.