Page 7 Phone KU 376 University Daily Kansan Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be processed at a later date during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journals bldg, not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c DRESSMAKING: alterations, formals. DRESSMAKING: owns. Ola Smith. Mass. phone 683- 4-26 Miss. phone 683- 4-26 TYPING: Prompt service on all kinds of typing. Neat and accurate. Phone 211M, Mrs. Ehrman. tf BUSINESS SERVICE STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.1199 Mass. TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1396M. MWF-ff BEYERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, bv the six-pack or case. Crushed Ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 618 Vt. FYPING WANTED. Prompt. accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 1517R. Mrs. Livingston. tt JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are ours too! Grant's is a wonderful for fun, fun, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf RADIO and TV service. Daily service on all makes. Most complete stock radio in this area. Bowman Radio and TV, 826 Vermont. Phone #1 for prompt service. MISCELLANEOUS CONOCO SERVICE—B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission Conoco Service, 19th and Massachusetts. TRANSPORTATION ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship lines. For business or pleasure trip call Miss Rose Gieseman at the office (8th floor) of theineraries and reservations. 8th and mass. sts. Phone 30. tf RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wichita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 3101J evenings. MTW-u HELP WANTED BOY'S CAMP COUNSELORS. Men students with camp experience or special talents and training, interested in summer camp position. Apply at Robinson Gym. Room 305, or call city 3196 for appointment. 4-28 HELP! E.E. needs Dietzen slide rule lost latter part of last week. I live in K.C. so call 4217R here with information. Reward. 4-28 FOR SALE LOST NEW RETINA 1A camera with all ae- lenses in 1426M, after 4m. 4-2 for Larry. USED REMINGTON Portable typewriter, used with a 1407 Kentucky, 4-36 student. See at 1407 Kentucky. FINE 37. OLDS 8. R. and H. Also good tires. Would be interested in taking typewriter for part payment. Phone 425J 25jens. WHITE DINNER jacket. Size 44 long used only 4 times. Also '41 Olds Hydromatic with 48 motor. Good running car Phone 1942M. 5-1 Families of Hitler, Nazi Bosses Once in Glory, Now Live in Shame Eight years ago this week Adolf Hitler's dreams of a "1,000-year-Reich" crashed to destruction in the blazing ruins of Berlin. Hitler and his chief Nazi enmenchmen are dead of their families. In the follow-up interviews with Unified Press manager for Germany, Joseph W. Griggs, tells what has happened to some of them. Hounded for eight years by their names, the Hitlers, the Goerings, the Bormanns, the Ribbertrops, and others have tried to bury the past in self-chosen obscurity. Frankfurt —(U.P.)—The families of Adolph Hitler and the others of Germany's fallen Nazi bosses who once basked in their glory now live in the shadow of shame. Most have succeeded in becoming post-war Germany's forgotten men and women. Few Germans are aware, for instance, that Hitler's brother and sister still are alive. Stripped of their former wealth, most of them live in stark poverty, shunning the limelight, and refusing publicity or interviews. Thousands of Germans are surprised that they still live on in Germany. Hitler's brother Alois was, like Hitler himself, the son of the second of their father's three marriages. Even when Hitler was alive and in power, Alois was something of an embarrassment to him and kept out of sight. Hitler set him up in a restaurant in Berlin. But Alois took no part in the social or political life of the Third Reich. Today Alois is a wasted, elderly man. He lives the life of a recluse in Hamburg. He has changed his name from Hitler to Hiller. He keeps his door firmly barred to newsmen and photographers. The sister, Mrs. Paula Hitler-Wold, now 57-years-old, was child of Hitler's father's third marriage. As far back as 1923 Paula—unmarried although she calls herself "frau" or Debate Team Loses Round One of 16 teams to be eligible for final competitive debate, Oval Swander, business senior, and Don Hopkins, special student in law, won decisions from the Universities of West Virginia, Alabama, Florida, and Mount Mercy college of Pittsburg, Pa, losing to West Point, Oklahoma State college, and the Universities of Vermont and Miami, Fla. After winning four debates and losing four in seeded rounds, the University debate team was defeated in the first qualifying round in the West Point Invitational debate tournament held April 23-25. Miami university won the 34-team tournament. Teams competing placed among the top four in wins and losses in regional districts. KU was a representative of district nine. "Mrs."—tacked the hyphenated name Wold" onto the name Hitler to keep herself out of the limelight, at her brother's request. Until the end of the war she lived in seclusion in Vienna on an allowance from Adolf. Then she moved to Berchtesgaden in the Bavarian alps. Frau Maragarethe Himmer, 59-year-old widow of the notorious S.S. and gestapo chieftain, Heinrich Himmer, also has had her troubles in the Bavarian courts. Her few acquaintances say she is penniless, except for public assistance and small sums sent occasionally by relatives and former friends. Last year she made a fruitless effort to get the Bavarian courts to recognize her claim to a share of the Nazi fuher's sizeable fortune and personal effects, all of which were seized by the Bavarian government after the war. She failed, largely because she could offer no positive proof of Hitler's death. Early this year she lost an appeal before the Munich denazification court and remained classified as a major offender under the denazification law. That meant that her personal property, worth about 45,-000 Deutschmarks ($10,700), remains impounded. Frau Himmler lives in retirement in a tiny Munich apartment with her blonde daughter Gudrun, now 23. Gudrun is a seamstress in a dressmaking shop. A denazification court which acquitted her admonished her to 'live a life worthy of a German citizen and atone for the crimes of your father.' She has refused the advice of friends to change her name. "You cannot begin a new life with a lie," she says. The once buxom, bejeweled, fun-loving Emmy Goering, widow of the pudgy field Marshal Hermann, is another Nazi widow who has sought and found obscurity. The erstwhile actress—former unofficial "first lady" of Hitler's Reich—moved to a drab Munich apartment a year after her husband cheated the gallows by swallowing a poison capsule. Early last year she won a five-year legal battle in a Wiesbaden German court to get her wealthy relatives to accept her 32-year-old son, Rudolf, as director of the million-dollar champagne firm of Henkell & Co. The claim was based on a 1942 contract signed by her uncle, Otto Henkell, promising to take Rudolf into the firm at the age of 21. Under the court ruling, he must be taken into the firm by Jan. 1, 1954, and made a director and shareholder two years later. "There is no one at home, madam has just left on a trip." More fortunate than the other Naza widows is Frau Annaliese von Ribbentrop. Martin Bormann, Jr., 22-year-old son of Hitler's former deputy, has found obscurity as a Roman Catholic monk. Emmy made one of her rare public appearances recently when she attended Edda's confirmation in a Munich church. Her door is heavily barred and her maid invariably tells callers: Young Bormann, whose father's fate still remains a major mystery, entered the Mission Congregation of the Fathers of the Holy Heart at Federain monastery, near Villach, Austria, two years ago. He is described by his superiors as 'a very earnest and pious student.' Emmy Goering, now fat and fifty-ish, also has failed in getting her confiscated property released by the Bavarian state. She and her daughter Edda, 14, share their small apartment with a maid who looks after them. He took his vows early this year and plans to go as a missionary to India. "Bwana Devil" Read the Kansan Want-Ads. Now • Shows 7:15-9:00 3-DIMENSION Blood Drive Pledging Starts Today in Union Feature: 8:05-9:59 Always a Color Cartoon Students may register today and tomorrow in the Union lobby for donations to the Red Cross bloodmobile which will be at the Community building Wednesday and Thursday. Flick Picks Rv JERRY KNUDSON THE SINNERS (Patee)—This is French film, produced by Julien Duivier, is surprisingly frank, often brutal, in its treatment of conditions in a girls' reformatory. Although obviously heavily censored, it touches on the problem of perversion in a one-sex society—a theme that has always been strictly taboo on the American stage and screen. SMALL TOWN GIRL (Granada) —Jane Powell is hardy our conception of a small town girl (we never heard a church choir sound so beautiful), but she is according to Hollywood musical standards. Farley Granger is a rich New York playboy who gets pinched in an upstate town for speeding, gets 30 days, and falls in love with the judge's daughter (Miss Powell). All the dream ingredients. The portrayal of a deprived head mistress is shocking. In a foreword to the film Mr. Duvivier states that the conditions are not taken from any case histories, but are dedicated "to all those who have had unhappy childhoods." We feel that his direction is honest and sincere (and incisive in showing the hopelessness stamped on the girl's faces) rather than exploiting the situations for commercial reasons—regardless how the film has been promoted. Well worth seeing. Chill Wills, add the burke, and S. Z. Sakall add the homey touches. Bobby Van emerges as a new male dancer of considerable talent. The chief production number has Ann Miller dancing among orchestra instruments sticking through holes in the floor. Canadians Demand Terrorist Protection Appledale, B.C.—(U.P.)—Outraged Slocan Valley residents threatened a "shooting war" today if the Canadian government does not give them police protection against the first and dynamite raids of the fanatical Doukhobors. More than 100 citizens decided at a mass meeting last night to give the government one more week to act in the crisis. Previously, they had planned to resort to guns last midnight to drive out the radical religious sect. ine meeting came on the heels of the 24th fire set in a recent wave of terrorism and violence in the fearfilled valley. HURRY! ENDS TONITE ADULTS ONLY! "THE SINNERS" Emotional Secrets Women Only Whisper About. STARTS TUESDAY Matinee Tuesday 2:30 A HOWLING HOLIDAY! MARJORIE MAIN PERCY KILBRIDE Registration can be made today and tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m. Hours of donations will be noon to 6 p.m. Wednesday and 9 a.m. to noon and 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday. Although this is not a student drive, the Red Cross is making appointments with students in answer to the large number who had to be turned away during last February's bloodmobile drive. To qualify as a blood donor one must be 21 or over, except minors 18 or over who are either married or have a signed permit from their parents. So far only 200 registrations have been made to fill the Lawrence quota of 400. Mrs. R. C. Mills, chairman of KU registration, said it is hoped the University registrations will fill out the quota. Students unable to register as donors at the booth in the Union may register by calling Mrs. Stanley Hipp at the Red Cross office in the Community building, phone 405. Professor Speaks On Atomic Tie-in A tie-in between the newly developed realm of atomic energy and the celestial universe was discussed by Dr. L. W. Seagondollar, assistant professor of physics, at a meeting of the Kansas City Astronomers club Saturday. "There is a similarity between the motion of planets in their orbits and the orbits of electrons around the nucleus. They are not actually related," he said. In his lecture entitled "The Relation of Atoms to the Solar System", Dr. Seagondollar showed that while man-made A-bmobs are weak compared with violent disturbances in the solar system, both originate at the same atomic source. Physicists Attend Meeting Dr. Seagondollar has been with the University since 1947. He has done research in nuclear physics, and with the help of assistants, has built a Van-de-Graaff generator on the campus. Six members of the physics department are in Washington this week attending a meeting of the American Physical society. Research papers will be presented by Ralph Krone, Max Dresden, and graduate student Martin Gutzwiller. Others attending are Daniel Ling, Everitt Lothrop, and J. D. Stranathan, head of the department. Mat. 2:30-Eve 7:00-9:00 Features 3:00-7:00-3:93 E X T R A "BASKETBALL HIGHLIGHTS OF "53"