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Show Thursday, jpril THE MURRAY EAGLE U. of U. NEWS Utah Expert Nineteen years of pninstaking, scholarly work were culminated on April 2.1 by Professor B. Roland Lewis at the University of monumental book, Utah when "The Shakespe:i'e Documents," was released from the Oxford University Press. The release date is set for April 23, Shakespeare's birthday. The Lewis book is the first work ever published to include all of the Shakespeare documents, which number 2J7 altogether, hi-- ; STOP and have a Cold Glass of and all reprinted in the work. Most of them appear in much clearer form than the original manuscripts, because of a special filtering process used to screen out blots an stains in the process of photographing the originals. Begun by he Oxford University Press in England, the "Khake-snear- e that's BETTER! -- wre Dneuni'Tits" RAY'S. TAVERN 4780 South State Owned and Operated by ' HAY CRAM v -- f . -- t, J y I - nj, " "' - " rfU,i. JS, ' w , Xim , sleek-lookin- W . - r if.' ft flifiw-- A i IJ. - ,.!-- W oj sixteen or eighteen knows what she is loiiwtt:ini vl goes about tilth a reckless croud. She endures Imlj i'tloucittd uois men u ho ran t make up their minds to go home. She riks the reiun uilh a driver uho is unfit to handle a cur. A'o girl By KATHLEEN NORRIS skl ICT? silk-turban- g, .... . in all their class grades for the whole quarter in order to In- eligible for the honor roll. The winter quarter list was longer than usual by almost Scholarship Record According to James L. Barker, head of the University of Utah modern language department, in the past 15 years no "U" student endorsed by his instructors has applied for a scholarship or fellowship in any other university without being granted it within a year. Quite a record for any department, isn't it? one-fift- h. Range Report Winter ranges throughout Utah are still affording enough feed for cattle, but the old growth is nearly exhausted and the new growth, except in a few localities, is yet too short for grazing. cor "Th.s is T. fi Parents! Insist onlonger Wear and Lasting Fit PATTERNS SMITH and ADAMS (all I's for Free Fstimate! the f.r. t ; Hidden parti tnsVei Poll Parrot wear longer. et v.hieh we, answtr it cejvplvtely. and dv.se-nat- e clearly the part for which she is best fiUe.l Thoses nurses who have n.'t a tiornaiie by now are leiutsted to vend llu-inames and addrr to t!:e Niues Kefiistratinn Pur-ea32 Kxchanr.e Place, lloutn (517. Salt Pake City." 3-46- Ltalbtt in vital fie registration. as a sHn. have teen called upon to perform in the program of National l Uvt" Miss P.ro-ph- y said. "And nati.rally w .vhall want ti measure up to what is expected of us. It is the patriotic duty of rvcrv cradua'.e nirsi to study the !ui ;tio!)ii.tire c.uTfi.lly, COME IN AND SEE OUR BEAUTIFUL Dial H-''- kep thalr hap oad lit Thty tsnder rough, tough punihmnt. t made to play "for koepi"... with carefully lasts. Styles are "grown-upl..Prices are teaionablel Poll-Parro- li ". 1 4' A Pellffrrot r u. Parly petering out? Serve up another round of lc County Farmers Get 5950,543 in Loans f One IiSunnyBrook lake llcrc'i wrve-bocaumiy- a an Utah bottle you're proud guecU our rccogniie it instantly at a truly graml wliinVry. XiME" irA 2Ssr 91 it IW Distillers TroJurU Corp, New York. ,1 V, t Aent live;; .,' tvo T;t iv n m 5'Tnl.fl rei'nvl di hwyrniei-ts eh-e- r s.dt ft in frren the Farm and Utah Pivv k Piodiirt.i i Cre Id as sot iatjon lur l the cah nl.ar ; ear PMil, t.j fenres just rd 'it 2 :;3 - bv P.dwm K. Winij.T .and Smith, si f !) 'ft ii.l t'T "aiu:nn'LAs jts ! coe-it- 1' t KY 5TKMGIIT ttOlRliGN MIllsKF.Y lo hiv-- a" cn 1 t.try-ti- Anbar asaers t ?1. PM'l. th re Pans ouM.andiru for v. As re sin to .fi the cornty. Total lo. !ij made bv j I,,. credit a: ici.ilions in the Mate MIINtt UHII in num! er- -- vlule in r.r.l f, r LA r CEL'S St.5 ':i.;:,';t. the Farm Civ dit district, rrebracim: tiie ?t,ites of California. Utah. Neva hi .and Arizona, there were 7,041 disbursements for $35,180,418. a "Dear SHOE STORE Murrajr . . Itah Soul. Here is a letter some girls might read to advantage thu Sunday U comes from East St. morning Luuis. 1 tion with a clinic in try i2 town. Since our nrnrr 3;?, deed for two yens la! rer family has lived in U: s c ".; met Tom here. I have r.r.c back to the rl.iro where i f try a girl, nor se n 1 ai-.- ciates there. I went w.Ui'J.f crowd, as I sec now. ar.d I to leave it all bihm.-- rrc, "In that old givup. in t. less days, was a :: an I Larry. He war, a r ;!). d.r -- lent sort of fellow. oWcr seven years than the rtit coarse and n;.-y- . tut -' and we all kr.vw he was t: This man. if Tj.ii access tering offer he has just will be my husbjr.d' itrr..-perior and close s'S 'C.j "I was never, in the king our rclati, iv.ii.r r-- tstant, this mail's were always a. re ' if t i" on certain wee-- :l t: r ( ''-- '; hotels In the I i r.m or cabin body's at 18, able to M ' 1 : !,,! nf very different ' ' w'f tragedy of It i" loved Larry. V- .- .'i wanted to go aim w.'Jt -' Fears t Mv j i m--.'- t . ! v "My husbant! 5 :,:ol ! .' this. It was Important. It ' forgotten in the r I'ltC ' t h ' being a bclnve i s Tom Is proud, A way; he j rf'ft know It and '.' -i !..- -. with my place . It is not imp "H.' '' ; 10 i- - ' about; It has lives now. t v l.r;t "But at the l I move stralfc'h.i I?' borhood not only ,.f llM :.:? will Instantly u ,., irr" past, but per ha; ,e ',"' whthat group, " W what was ' : a ! " coarse man. spected by h charm or In n days 1 found it his masterful w.' .'if "I am Iryi-- : ' f, to accept tin r iV ' and ditui Ls i ' is 1 writing to ' ! d nt Norris, bt-- Too Much Freedom Harmful. But there IS barm in giving youth too much freedom. The harm is that no girl of Sixteen or Eighteen knows what she is losing or Jeopardizing when she goes about with a rcckltss crowd. She is completely Incapable of judging how she will feel a few years later, how this group of men and women will Impress her. Even if she stops short of actual improprieties with men, she has to face Infinite dangers. She sees men she hears stories and drunlc; phrases thai should never reach her ears; she endures the stupid dewomen and lays of men who can't make up their minds to go home, or gn anywhere, but who remain drowsily drinking and dancing hours after all pleasure has gone out of the occasion. She risks the return home with a driver who Is unfit to handle a car. Mul Pay Some Price. Many a girl quite Innocently Invites danger and fright and harm to herself In this way. She may apparently encapc actual Injury, she may not have to fare the world with fatherhss child In her arms; although even that Victorian situation Is not as unusual as today's girls would hke to think But ne girl gets oft scot free after a few young years of rccklosnrns and license Her manner, sprerh. standards, personally are all sftccted; other women realize t' it the minuic !arj meet her. For the yminc years are very important years. It Is In them that we lay the foundation for the future And rittrnlnt and fineness and discrimination and self control In those years bear Inevitable fruit. T girl who drht erately makes herself lawless and Common at eighteen Is gait g miraculously to emerge from cheapening associations and find hirself admirable at 23, clean ft speech, clean of mind, clean of Mrs. writes Anna, "and hjve ried for five years to the firr In the world. We have a da of three and are cxpcc'.;:.j baby in midsummer. Tr.is problem. Went U ilh Wrong trout "My husband is a djci.r, younger than I lie was n offered a ver advantag:. bad!" it v The date has mailed 183ti quesiionnaires, of which f()0 ni' a i nnan-wciepnd the a .ociation is anxious to ... WHAT PKICK I ItllKlHiM Duct nwthrr hme In inn you re goinii, uilh uhnm.tni long you inti'tid tu be Does the oijeri In lult hum dime-dance nichl cluL? . my the does and win hilt it'. Kathleen .Vorn'v hu a dilnni rml her roi on the suhjeel, cusuon of the tiled Uto Haul dam has on )iun uomm. who are kept at GIRLS by strict rule and obliged to obey pretty severe rules of conduct in the matters of dances and dates and late hours, are the luckiest girls after all. They may not see it at 18, but ten years and fifteen years later they see it. And it is then, in happy young wifehood and motherhood, with their own potential responsibilities coming along, that they turn to the older woman with an affectionate laugh and begin to repay the debt they owe her for guarding their girlhood. "Mother was a Gorgon!" they say proudly. "Nancy and I couldn't get Mother away with ANYTHING! had to know all about boys before they could even take us to movies." But of course Sixteen and Eighteen don't see this, and if they possibly can they escape from home control. "Good heavens," they mutter, as ihey curl up their shining locks and paint their young mouths, "what's the harm of dancing? What's the harm in one cocktail! I never took too much to drink In my life and neither did Nancy! You'd think from the way Mother and Dad talk that we were going right to the said today. t ussi eiatmn THEY'RE BUILT FOR BEAUTY AND SERVICE EASY TO INSTALL AND REMOVE... AND , . . PRICED VERY LOW 225 Edison Street ,rr p Ix-wi- s EQUIP YOUR HOME THIS SUMMER WITH OUR DISTINCTIVELY DESIGNED AWNINGS QUART ! J I'-ns- KKNTt WNU Service . , ' : The Utah Nursing Council on is distributing National D to ;il graduate and regisMvd nursed in Ul:ih to t !. mtrrbcr of nurses available for military or civilian : national emerduty in c;'so gency. Mis Marie Hmohy. president of t'e Ul ih Si.ite Nurses I - V Underway For Naiional Defense 1K8!) J . (Bel! Syndicate- Census Of Nurses Since V trans- Hindu student at the University of Utah is seeking members for a swing band which he proposes to lea. So far he has many applicants for spots in the orchestra, and the enterprise promises interesting results. "Song of India" would make a swell theme song, at that. Honor Students Winter quarter is conducive to god studying at the "U," it was revealed by the registrar of the slate university, who named 3G5 students on the quarterly "honor roll." Stuc'.ents must maintain an average between "A" and "B" at- Sav- . The Luckiest Girls in Tmv ferred to the Stanford University Press when the war bean. Without the aid of an internal icnal committee, the books would have sold for S?.0 nr set but $35 is to be the market price as a result of the lan;e contributions. Subscriptions for the set were arranged for over five years ago, when the work bruan going to nrtss, and practically every major university in the world sub scribed for at least one set. Professor Lewis owns original copies of all the Shakespeare documents, many of which he obtained during his years of study and research in the Shakespeare repositories of England and Europe. The university expert and two others are the only persons in America qualified to translate the old English forms of the Shakesneare originals. The- fact that Professor is an acclaimed international figure in his line is evidenced by a quotation from a London University authority: ". . . it is the most scholarly work of its kind in several generations." B. Roland Lewis is a resident of Salt Lake City, and received training at Harvard. He has been with the University of Utah for 25 years and is now working on a new biography of Shakespeare which will appear within several yearss. s Art Exhibit An exhibit of 141 paintings by Edwin Evans, former head of the University of Utah art department, is being held at the "U" from April 20 to May 1. Admission is free and the people of the state are invited to attend the exhibit. Swinr Band A 4 Kathleen Norris I - Beer rIn The Old Days 24, 1. ' 1 A- ' , . 1 : ' n- j ! -i would be w;r f rslly to Larry, his board of "I" , Invitation? And she ct" a telegraphic a' l" Fief Itie l What I Jm' her old town, a'1 h k "!f ' r ll,!' ! the dimmihHV ili Larry that Involved or lea; a ' ''' if- ' conrcntrali'''' Into her life f f-- and aitni bcity. getfulnrss of tbc 1 3 P'1 f i |