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Show Clerk Makes Change In May Pre-induction Call E. B. Dalley. clerk of the Iron County Selective Service board, has found it necessary to make some changes in his orders for men to report during May, this time in the list of men to be sent in for pre-induction physical examinations. ex-aminations. Two of the men he had sent orders to report on May 21, were found to be members of the ROTC unit at the Branch Agricultural, college. Since ROTC members are not eligible for duty under Selective Se-lective Service there is no reason rea-son to send them in for physical examinations, the Clerk reports. The two men who had been or-, dered to report are Donald Milne and Blaine Lund, both of Cedar City. A third man, Gaylen Berry cf Kanarraville, has appealed a change in his classification from 2 C (agricultural deferrment) to 1-A, and therefore cannot be ordered or-dered to report until action on the appeal is taken. The May call was for 10 men, and since the clerk had sent orders for 11 men to report for examination, ex-amination, it was necessary to order only two other men to report re-port to fill the May quota from Iron County. The two men ordered or-dered to report, both from Paro-wan, Paro-wan, are Garon Oral Heap and Raynor Neil Kaminska. The men who will report for induction on the same day will include the 10 men reported last week, Jrel Bauel and David Bent-ley, Bent-ley, both volunteers; James Con-die, Con-die, Carlyle Hunter, Austin Mun-son, Mun-son, Douglas Maxwell and Gayle Adams, all of Cedar City; Donald C. Lowder, Joseph O. Holyoak, and Jos. L. Winter,, all of Paro-wan. extent prisoners of what is said and written about us, particularly particu-larly as it ' is this that results in our being typed and pigeonholed pigeon-holed in the Hollywood sense of the word, and naturally we resent this. I felt that one way for an instrumentalist, in-strumentalist, an interpreter, to avoid' this menace of being typed and pigeonholed was to be aware of what one's composing contemporaries were doing and to put one's shoulder,- however feeble, to the wheel In the propagation pro-pagation of their works. There is another guiding principle prin-ciple that I now discern in myself. my-self. I. have, always believed, in the concepts of cooperation a& tion concepts, which the German Ger-man . language, expresses in a group of words beginning with the prefix "mit" (meaning "with"): Mitfuhlen, to- feel with someone; mitarbeiten, to collab' orate; mitleiden, to sympathize in . someone's plight or: sorrow; and so on. To write a . letter without imagining the recipient, to listen to someone talk without with-out imagining the detours of his or other thoughts, or Imagining his or her reticences, is to do all these things imperfectly. For this reason, I often admonish, ad-monish, myself to be intelligible auuvc an. ociause 1 ixxi iiiai to cultivate an accent or mannerism, manner-ism, whether in speech or music, an accept that is an obstacle to the listener, is like condoning in oneself a handwriting that is a hardship on the recipient of the letter. Perhaps it, all amounts to this: That I believe in some self-imposed form of taxation to repay in part bounties received. This might take the form of the Biblical Bib-lical precept whereby the reaper was enjoined to leave a tenth of the harvest in the field for widows and orphans. Gifts of money are not the answer only gifts of oneself, of one's time, imagination, compassion, advice will do. This tithe we who have many things to be graeful for we owe this tithe to our fellow humans to those who constitute consti-tute our sounding board. |