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Page 16 text:
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WATCH THAT PROPELLER! KAPPAS DARN FOR EUROPEAN REFUGEES, BRITISH SOLDIERS In the early part of the year it was becoming evident that Colorado students were not overly interested m national defense as a body. Few signed up for the voluntary military training program. However on two other fronts the work of defense was gaining favor, these being the CAA flying program for men and the Red Cross knittmg and nursrg program for women. Firlt enrollment in the CAA totaled 30 men and later increased rapidly. Evidence of pro- British support was the knitting school, which produced many a sock and cap for RAh fliers. HELL! IT CAN ' T EVEN JUMP THE FENCE ENGINEERS LEARN HOW TO BE DRAFTED BY INDUSTRY C. A. A. PILOT TWO, PLEASE
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Page 15 text:
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GRINDS PREPARE FOR ALL OUT ACADEMIC OFFENSE SEE ENLARGEMENT, PAGE 39 DUNCAN CLARK AND THE TABLOID During the one-day registration there are a dozen things to sign one ' s name to — church preference, Artists ' Series, Little Theatre, and that $1.50 per quarter subscription to the COLORADAn! From the fieldhouse students go to Macky to have their pictures taken (convict style with numbers), and pay their fees. Getting acquainted with new roommates, finding keys to closed closets, and looking up prospective dates occupy what is left of the crowded opening days of school. ENGINEERS DO HAVE NECKTIES SPUR TREATS WYOMING FOOTBALLERS BARBARIAN CHAPTER ROOM
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Page 17 text:
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October 16, 1940, was the day of the first peace-time draft for America and an irregular holiday for C. U. students. Twelve hundred and fifty draftees from the Univer- sity lined up in the Men ' s gymna- sium to declare their existence; few were conscientious objectors, and evidently none evaded the call. Anti-war handbills in the vicinity of the gymnasium deterred none. What the draft in this year of 1 940 meant to Colorado men is unpre- dictable from a personal stand- point. As on other questions, cam- pus discussion is rarely political, despite the numerous and un- founded allegations of Communist activity. To some the draft means an escape; to others, a disruption of plans, and to still others, the nasty culmination of a world prob- lem which World War I succeeded only in aggravating. DRAFT REGISTRATION . . . MUCH GLOOM DR. FRITZ, SELECTIVE SERVICE OFFICIAL —MORTON MORTGAGES HIS LIFE — DK. ALEXANDER, OFFICIAL FROSTY COX IS SAFE . . HE HAS A FAMILY — POOR WATTS ... NO FLAT FEET, PAST 21, WEIGHS OVER 105 AND IS OVER FIVE FEET TALL
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