Show 8 — STUDENT 1961 FEBRUARY 24 LIFE V Books Things istoric Move! Discussed more due to absence than to presence of mind Unless I let On the night of February 19 him get close enough to swing I was visited by ghosts again of the sword I shall never hit the dead in then tombs shaland him Vogel thought and if I charred blockhouses — Jima on Iwo foxholes let him get that close I shall low thousands of U S Marines cov- panic As he tightened his fingering the black sands for yards er on the trigger he saw from and yards under stiffened pon- the corner of his eyt another chos— Bill Hamilton with the surge of movemem and swung hole where his face had been sideways his aim still outDick Himes bleeding to death stretched lie fired Missed he in the rain Joe Carradine cut thought mortar on in half by a Arquebus Fired A huge fellow clumsy in the road to the Third Airfield Willie Marsanico blown into thick wrinkled riding boots obscene pieces in the wilder- with a broad dark face came on as if untouchness of stone vve called the — the all and ed and then fell over with a “Meatgrinder” shout Simlest surprised cut-of- f Ghosts Return ultaneously a musket bellowed The 5th Marine Division the again from the fork of a tree Ilashmark division they called and the shot crasned among Smoke drifted it since it was composed of leaves the trees the acrid smell only two categones — and paratroops — took Iw'O of burnt powder tilled Vogel’s Jima According to the legend nostrils a body crashed back one leg General Rockney held muster among undergrowth and a in a telphone booth after the kicking spasmodically island was secured The ghosts nuge reverberating thunder told returned— every year they re- Vogel that a double arquebus turn on the anniversary of had been fired thiough the emIwo has been pty barrel for Iwo Muskets banged and recompared favorably with Gettysburg — check the casualty coiled all around him The horseman was trying to list and you know why to for turn and ride back but the something Looking horse reared its big eyes read I opened J B Pick’s fine novel The Last Valley rolling a musket roared and Brown Little the horse fell back on its published by and Company of Boston I haunches fighting the air with its front hooves the rid- opened it at random and read: er twisted his body and kick“A horse crashed toward ed himself free of the stirrups him looking huge and difficult as he fell to control among the trees the The horse keeled over siderider bent low in the saddle to ways the rider underneath A man blundered from amavoid branches More men came running one with a nak- ong the trees towards them a ed broad-blade- d sword in his musket banged from the fork hand Vogel knelt behind the of a tree and the man tripped stump and held his pistol at and stumbled above the horse One of the peasants stood arm’s length aiming with a calm which seemed to him Atr tho hrvrlv nf n fVnat rmri Patrick Bv Dr John 320-m- SUSAN SUNADA a loyal USU supporter takes a break from ISO men's her daily work In the’ background are more than shirts “I just try to do a motherly job” she explains Local USU Booster Gains Friendships Through Work By Carol Byington ays open for students at any time of the day Susan calls her business a modernizing of the old fashioned Chinese laundry She also handles all g the shirts from 1 Hour w 'Life Feature Editor If anyone should ever be named an honorary Aggie a maybe it should be Susan beFour years ago Susan Sun-act- Mar-tinizin- laundry working day for average gan renting rooms to students Susan Sunada would be from 9 of the university She felt sor- pm to 10 pm Since her busry for the boys w'm had to do iness has grown so fast in the past couple of years she is their own laundry so she limited to washing and ironing her services An vol-unteer- Business Expands It started as a taor to out of town students and now has grown into a more than full time laundry business Thiough her work Susan has become acquainted with many students and they in turn has e taken an interest in her unique service and hospitality Her laundry is iu the basement of her home and is al- - Newman Club Sponsors Annual Dinner The Nev'man Club will hold their annual spaghetti dinner at the New'man Center Sunday February 26 from 4 to 7 p in just shirts Prompt Service Susan boasts a hand finish on every shirt 2 day service starch when requested and every shirt is put on a hanger When she says two day service she means it if a shirt is brought in at 10 p ni one night it will be ready at 4 pm two days later Right now' a list on her wall 42 male customers wanting starch shirts and 32 As for the without starch size of shirts she has ironed Susan says a certain football player’s size 18 almost arowns the hanger it is on The longest sleeve comes from a basketball player — shows size 38 m black-bearde- rs D-D- Money control - - - d beat at the spiead corpse a sharpened stave his staring madly pounding twlc senseless body to a puiD broken bones and flesh TlI stake caught among the'bra cnes of a tree The peasant wrenched at it Peasant Hit A musket roared the peasant gave a hoarse scream and sat i down heavily holding his fa with both hands and rockmg his big body back and forwaid As Vogel went by the peasant looked up with beseeching eyes and gave a loud questioning 9 moan” Good Lord I thought: -tnis is war — the real thing — staring balefully at me from the pages as I ripped hurriedly on through them But what war? Here peasants broadswords - s with ease! inches USU Readies Radio Show mono-gramme- English-s- CHECKWAY costs you ju't a dime whenever you write a check NO minimum balance is required in your account! NO other charges of any kind We even supply you with postage paid envelopes for making deposits by mail For systematic control of your money — We aKo mail your bank statement to you periodically — a complete record of your financial transactions — together with cancelled checks which are legal proof of payment come In and open a CHECKWAY account V five-minu- te d t ! OTDTO lint Security QHIElTn? ayrcrTTi Fret Security Book of Utah N A Fleet Security Bonk ef Rock Srin Mtrnbtr Federal Deport Inwronct Corpora!’ Bank el Idaho N A mu- double arquebuses men lighting with sharpened staves in a nightmare wood Historic Novel Questioned The Last Valley was a historical novel 1 decided or was it? The dripping forest filled with naked dead men and in the the caw ing carrior-birdtrees were soon as real to me as my memories of the volcanic sands of Iwo Jima Near the end of the book Vogel spoke to a dying captain lying at his side: “It was not for nothing Captain This was not for nothing It there’s a place called truth The whole I’m it in now war was for nothing nothing at all But this lying here on the stones under the stars is not for nothing don’t you agree?" The Captain did not answer-- he was dead— and so was Vthe ogel shortly which delighted concludes villagers— and yet J B Pick “The dead are not easy to forget” skets In 3 years of business Susan Sunada boasts no bad checks or trouble from any students Almost all of her business comes from male students and she doesn’t ever intend to raise her prices Sometimes she does have to w'ait until the first of the month to get paid from the students due to pay dav but she has never been let down An Italian from Ely Nevada will conduct and be head chef for the occasion in which the public is invited to attend Price for the dinner is $100 for adults and 50c for children jet under twelve Those tickets Campus Near By Susan Sunada lives east of will at cost the door bought $125 Tickets may be purchas- the college with her husband ed from any members of the who is a commercial artist for Scar’s They have 3 children Newman Club or call SK twin girls and a boy Since her husband is an athletic fan they both attend all Aggie football and basketball games They can be seen welcoming or bidding goodbye to the team at the airUSU has been invited to proport at certain times duce and record a Susan launders all the d program for broadcast over the Aggie football team Voice of America and its shirts free She even baked peaking outlets cookies for the team once but Tentatively a theme of “Utah the coaches said they would State University — Its Place have to wait to eat them until in the World” has been chosen the end of the season due to It will be produced and record- training rules ed under the direction of Art Gallery Grows Any customer whose picture Higbee extension service ra has appeared in the paper is dio-Tspecialist Rey Barnes honored on the Susan Sunada KUSU producer-directo- r and gallery in the hall leading to the KUSU radio staff And she laundry room A series of letters her has collected an assortquite to home featuring foreign stu- ment of pictures and articles dents will also be reproduced “It boosts ego at the invitation of the Voice of to see theirmy customer’s picture” she exAmerica for broadcast to stu- plains dents’ homelands George A All in all Susan Sunada is an Meyer foreign student advisor Aggie fan and a loyis cooperating in the program al supporter of the school Mere |