THE TROJAN, Vol. 35, No. 167, September 22, 1944 |
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SC gears for Biruin clash Vol. XXXV Knights stage irst big Troy ally tonight J Determined to get in plenty of practice for their job as looters at t-omorrow’s game, SC students will pack Bovard ,uditorium tonight for the first football rally of the 1944 sea-pn. ' The rally, which is sponsored by the Trojan Knights, will »gin promptly st 7 p.m. when the ietory Bell is brought out on thf ■ape. Previous plans were to bring ip bell down the aisle. but because lis involves such a great engin-*»ring feat. Phil Kirst, Trojan [night president, decided that tiling: it out on the stage would much safer. Coach Jeff Cravath Mill be in-rrifwH for his opinions about the coming gridiron tilt. He Mill [hen introduce each man on the tquad. Bob Thompson, SC's yell king, and 5 assistants, George Wilson and jrvl Arnold, will lead the as-ambled students in the songs and »lls to be used tomorrow in the jliseum. Kirst urged the students to bring today's Trojan to the rally and to the game as it contains all of the tongs and yells of Troy. He also Suggests that freshmen and new Indents learn them as soon as ossihle for the future games, iMusic for the rally will be pro-ided by Paul Martin and his band. (hich will play continuously for 45 |inutes. Dr. Lucien Cailliet w’ll [rect the SC band which will play fore and after Cravath s talk and irtin’s performance. ‘This is the first time since the OMi Bowl game that the students lave had a good chance to exer-their vocal chords,” said "hompson. “We know that the auditorium Mill be jwcked as well the rooting section tomorrow, esides being at the auditorium light, the Victory Bell will also Jfce its appearance at the game to-)!Tow. It was explained by Phil irst that the results of this game ill not affect the possession of the Al. If. however, SC should lose to JLA in their second game. Nov. then the bell would change tnds. The members of the Trojan Lnights rally committee Mho have »ade all the plans for the pre-pime celebration, include Joe jolt, Pete Bagley. Frank McMa-u Bon Forward, Shelly Korn-tdler. Art Nelson. Harry •hmidt, Rex Eagan, Bob Thomp- Im. and Phil Kirst. This should be one of the best lys of the year.” said Kirst. CRAVATH SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TROJAN Trojans given edge in 1944 gridiron battle Hard hitting men of Troy will rip the turf in the coliseum tomorrow afternoon against a background of trainee and civilian rooters as the first football tilt of the season for Troy is held with SC versus UCLA billed as opponents. The Troy T has been heated greatly these past weeks in defense tactics to match the UCLAn pigskin passer, Bob Waterfield, who won tha only game the Bruin have annexed. In 1942, Waterfield pitched tha West wood er* to a 14-7 victory over the Troy team. Oat of th« 11 tussles held b«- Los Angeles, Friday, Sept. 22, 1944 Night phone: RE. 547* No. 167 Rivals swing, sway at dig tomorrow bands serenade at Beverly-Wilshire Victors and vanquished will mingle tomorrow night in an atmosphere of friendly rivalry at the SC-UCLA Cardinal and Blue victory dance a£ the fashionable Beverly-Wilshire hotel. Two swank rooms will be packed with party-goers as is indicated by the early sell-out of bids at both schools. Sixteen hundred persons, 400 couples from PHIL KIRST . . . dance and rtilly man. Registrar's office notice Friday, Sepit. 22, the end of the 12th week of classes, is the last day on which to withdraM' from a course with a mark of “W” if the work is not of passing grade. H. W. Patmore, Registrar. edical students o graduate today Fifty-five graduates of the SC School of Medicine will ceive certificates in special exercises of the 62nd annual mmencement to be held in Hancock hall today, conducted President Rufus B. von KleinSmid. Two women to receive degrees are Ethel Johnson and Mrs. Mildred Wehrly. Receiving commissions in the navy are Charles Baker, Philip Hartley, Craig Williamson, Russell Smith, Frank Morgan Jr., Warren Line, and Richard Laue. Army lieutenants receiving de- .raduate lean notice October candidates for the A.M. id other masters* degrees through the Graduate School are asked to >te the folloMing: Sept. 25—Final day to secure fliminary approval of thesis by faculty committees and present ie approval, signed by each com-iltteeman, to the Dean of the Graduate School. Oct. 9—Final day to present sis in final form to faculty imittee. ct. 14—Final day to present is, fully approved, to the Dean the Graduate School. Rockwell D. Hunt, grees are Haig Aijian, Granville Ashcraft, Francis Baker, Chester Bonoff, Norman Brockman, Ed-Mard Brotman, Robert Buffum, Richard Casadv, Lloyd Christensen. David Coleman, Robert Crosby, John Dieterich. James Elliott, Rodger Engel, Neal Fisher, Thomas Gamble Jr., Warfield Garson, Charles Hair. Theodore Haller. Robert Harrington, Charles Johnston. Thomas Kiddie, Ralph Klages, Donald Lagerlof, Mac McCallum, Richard Myers, Gilbert Nunez, George Paxton. Robert Price, Tel-(Continued on Tage Two) Coliseum gates to open, at noon for first game General manager of the Associated Students, Arnold Eddy yesterday released the folloMing information about the SC-UCLA game tomorrow. The Coliseum will open at 12 noon. The SC rooting section will be on the north side of the Coliseum, since the Trojans are the home team. Rooters will enter through tunnels 21 and 22. Seating and direction of students in the rooting section will be under the direction of Trojan Knights and Squires. Opening ceremonies will be conducted by the combined bands of SC and UCLA and the flag raising ceremony Mill take place at 2:10 p.m. The kickoff is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. During the half-time period the SC rooting section will give a series of 14 card stunts under the direction of Bob Thompson, head yell king. The junior varsity will meet the UCLA “B” team at 12:10 p.m. Phil Kirst, Knight president, and Thompson ask the cooperation of students in the rooting section to expedite proper seating. Students wishing to sit in a group mu?t enter the section together because no seats may be saved for late comers. Kirst also requests that rooters follow implicitly the directions for the card stunts. They are diagrammed plainly on a card at each seat. Care must be taken that the directions are not removed from the seat at which they are originally placed. each university, will troop to the festive Copa and Florentine rooms following this grid season's opener in the Coliseum tomorrow afternoon. Late ticket purchasers may inquire at the cashier's desk in the Student Bookstore for bids which might be turned in by individual salesmen. Two bands, Muzzy Marcelino and Paul Martin, both well known to Los Angeles listeners, win accompany those who seek solace for their sorrow as well as the victory dancers. The Trojan Knights, SC junior men’s honorary, are sponsoring the dance in collaboration with the junior and senior classes of UCLA. Together they have arranged that the two dancing rooms of the hotel shall be used exclusively by student football fans on the night of their first grid clash of the season. According to Joe Holt, vice-president of Knights and chairman of the affair, the dance will be sport and no corsages will be worn. JOE HOLT . . bid-happy. Veterans . . . may meet with Prof. Roy L. French, director of the counseling service for veterans, during his office hours in 207 Administration each Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. aid Friday from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Scholarship group issues honor roll Scholarship keys to newly elected members of Phi Kappa Phi, national all-university scholarship society, will be given Oct. 11. Fifteen students are to receive these high scholarship awards in the Doheny art and lecture room at 3:30 p.m. Relatives and friends may be invited to the ceremony and the tea following in the Hall of Nations. Mrs. Zuka P. Omalev, architecture; Alice Allene H a m n e r, commerce; John Edward Grech, commerce; Vera Gloria Davidoff, commerce; Luella Bell Hill, education; John Fulton Donan, engineering; Harry E. Schmidt, engineering; Donald E. Eckdahl, engineering; Evelyn Corby, government; Jean Holwerda, Patricia M. Wiese, Ruth Augusta Byers, Carrie B. Immel, Lila L. Brier, and Fredda G. Trowl, Letters, Arts and Sciences, are the students elected. New members are asked to report to Dr. Florence R. Scott or Dr. Francis Christensen, professors of English, as soon as possible. Get on the ball . . . don’t be different, sing the songs and yell the yells that everyone else does. In other words, keep your copy of today’s Trojan and bring it along Mlth you to the rally tonight. At the rally Trojans will practice songs and yells which are to be used to send our men on to victory in tomorrow’s game. tween them two squads sitvee 1929, SC has won seren, UCLA ha* taken one and three have been tied. So, tomorrow as both teams meet for the 12th time. If will be a question of whether SC has a Hardy’er team or whether the Bruins can spout with Waterfield. With an expected crowd of 00.000, the Coliseum will yield a good shew to these spectators, because nerer before have the Troy and UCLA teams been a* they are now. The war has taken a lot away from both squads, but then again it has brought together other material which might be considered better. SC will feature a starting lineup of entirely trainee men, and so will the Westwood team . with a possible exception of Waterfield. who is a discharge from the service. SC’s squad also can boast of two sets of brothers, the Callanan duo and the Hardy doubles. All four are in the NROTC; and all have one letter on the Trojan varsity, with Jim Hardy having two letters. The Troy ball packers will feature trick plays off the T. with Hardy the ball handler on all of the plays with running and passing worked out to a T. Coach Jeff Cravath has especially been concentrating this week on the running attack of the Trojans, and no doubt the workouts have done the squad a host of good in preparing for the trouble they will encounter tomorrow. Jerry Shipkey will be the starting fullback for the UCLAns, and it is irony that he should be playing against the team that he played on last season. Cal Rossi, another SC transfer, will stari at right halfback. Jack Boyd will be another of the Westwood big guns. He played left half on the ’43 Bruin team and Js a very fast and tricky runner. Bob (Continued on Page Fire) Starting lineup TROJANS VS. BRUINS Los Angeles coliseum, Saturday, Sept. 23, 1944 81 TROJANS Hardy, D. 190 LE 175 BRUINS Sheller 44 71 Ferraro 235 LT 183 Boom 31 65 Stall 210 LG 210 Watts 45 52 Antles 200 C 215 Paul 57 60 McGinn 195 RG 190 Simmons 49 78 Romer 210 RT 190 Vannatta 10 88 Callanan, J. 185 RE 215 Tausheck 2 21 Hardy, J. (C) 180 Q 190 Waterfield 7 38 Callanan, G. 165 LH 165 Boyd 20 33 Gray 190’ RH 175 Rossi 16 43 Whitehead 190 F 205 Shipkey 46 TROY ROSTER 12 Murphy, q; 15 Dreblow. hr; 19 Laughren, q; 21 J. Hardy, q ; 23 Schlegel, lh; 24 Morris, lh; 27 Burnside, lh; 31 Manning, rh; 32 Roitsch. rh; 33 Gray, rh; 38 G. Callanan, lh; 40 Thomas, f; 43 Whitehead, f; 44 West, f; 49 Fade, f; 50 Davis, c; 51 Fortney, c; 52 Antles. c; 58 Pickard, lg; 60 McGinn, rg; 61 Crittenden, lg; 62 Lavelle rg; 63 Wall, rg; 64 Venn, rg; 65 Stall, lg; 67 Curtis, lg; 69 Hesse, lg; 71 Ferraro, lt; 72 Sanders, lt; 74 Audet, rt; 75 Smith, lt; 78 Romer, rt-re; 79 Pehar, rt; 80 McKinney, re; 81 D. Hardy, le; 82 MacLachlan, re; 83 Lloyd, le; 84 Musick, rt; 85 Lund, le; 88 J. Callanan, re; 89 Salata, le. BRUIN ROSTER 2 Tauscheck. re; 3 Phillips, f; 6 King, re; 7 Waterfield, q; • Hayden, lt; 9 West, rh; 10 Vanatta. rt; 11 Myers, f; 16 Rossi rh; 18 Lee, c; 19 Hansen, re; 20 Boyd, lh; 22 Graham, re; 23 Putnam, rg; 24 Kiefer rg; 27 Wheeler, le; 29 Svensgaard, rg; 30 Palmer, q; 31 Boom, lt; 32 Roesch, lh; 33 Young, re; 34 Blower, le; 35 Keefer, lg; 38 Lindblom. rh; 40 Asher, rt; 41. Witt, f; 44 Sheller, le; 45 Watts, lg; 46 Shipkey, f; 47 McCabe, lt; 48 Russell, rg; 49 Simons, rg; 50 Woods, Ig-c; 55 Biddle, lh; 57 Paul, c; 60 Childers, c.
Object Description
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Title | THE TROJAN, Vol. 35, No. 167, September 22, 1944 |
Full text | SC gears for Biruin clash Vol. XXXV Knights stage irst big Troy ally tonight J Determined to get in plenty of practice for their job as looters at t-omorrow’s game, SC students will pack Bovard ,uditorium tonight for the first football rally of the 1944 sea-pn. ' The rally, which is sponsored by the Trojan Knights, will »gin promptly st 7 p.m. when the ietory Bell is brought out on thf ■ape. Previous plans were to bring ip bell down the aisle. but because lis involves such a great engin-*»ring feat. Phil Kirst, Trojan [night president, decided that tiling: it out on the stage would much safer. Coach Jeff Cravath Mill be in-rrifwH for his opinions about the coming gridiron tilt. He Mill [hen introduce each man on the tquad. Bob Thompson, SC's yell king, and 5 assistants, George Wilson and jrvl Arnold, will lead the as-ambled students in the songs and »lls to be used tomorrow in the jliseum. Kirst urged the students to bring today's Trojan to the rally and to the game as it contains all of the tongs and yells of Troy. He also Suggests that freshmen and new Indents learn them as soon as ossihle for the future games, iMusic for the rally will be pro-ided by Paul Martin and his band. (hich will play continuously for 45 |inutes. Dr. Lucien Cailliet w’ll [rect the SC band which will play fore and after Cravath s talk and irtin’s performance. ‘This is the first time since the OMi Bowl game that the students lave had a good chance to exer-their vocal chords,” said "hompson. “We know that the auditorium Mill be jwcked as well the rooting section tomorrow, esides being at the auditorium light, the Victory Bell will also Jfce its appearance at the game to-)!Tow. It was explained by Phil irst that the results of this game ill not affect the possession of the Al. If. however, SC should lose to JLA in their second game. Nov. then the bell would change tnds. The members of the Trojan Lnights rally committee Mho have »ade all the plans for the pre-pime celebration, include Joe jolt, Pete Bagley. Frank McMa-u Bon Forward, Shelly Korn-tdler. Art Nelson. Harry •hmidt, Rex Eagan, Bob Thomp- Im. and Phil Kirst. This should be one of the best lys of the year.” said Kirst. CRAVATH SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TROJAN Trojans given edge in 1944 gridiron battle Hard hitting men of Troy will rip the turf in the coliseum tomorrow afternoon against a background of trainee and civilian rooters as the first football tilt of the season for Troy is held with SC versus UCLA billed as opponents. The Troy T has been heated greatly these past weeks in defense tactics to match the UCLAn pigskin passer, Bob Waterfield, who won tha only game the Bruin have annexed. In 1942, Waterfield pitched tha West wood er* to a 14-7 victory over the Troy team. Oat of th« 11 tussles held b«- Los Angeles, Friday, Sept. 22, 1944 Night phone: RE. 547* No. 167 Rivals swing, sway at dig tomorrow bands serenade at Beverly-Wilshire Victors and vanquished will mingle tomorrow night in an atmosphere of friendly rivalry at the SC-UCLA Cardinal and Blue victory dance a£ the fashionable Beverly-Wilshire hotel. Two swank rooms will be packed with party-goers as is indicated by the early sell-out of bids at both schools. Sixteen hundred persons, 400 couples from PHIL KIRST . . . dance and rtilly man. Registrar's office notice Friday, Sepit. 22, the end of the 12th week of classes, is the last day on which to withdraM' from a course with a mark of “W” if the work is not of passing grade. H. W. Patmore, Registrar. edical students o graduate today Fifty-five graduates of the SC School of Medicine will ceive certificates in special exercises of the 62nd annual mmencement to be held in Hancock hall today, conducted President Rufus B. von KleinSmid. Two women to receive degrees are Ethel Johnson and Mrs. Mildred Wehrly. Receiving commissions in the navy are Charles Baker, Philip Hartley, Craig Williamson, Russell Smith, Frank Morgan Jr., Warren Line, and Richard Laue. Army lieutenants receiving de- .raduate lean notice October candidates for the A.M. id other masters* degrees through the Graduate School are asked to >te the folloMing: Sept. 25—Final day to secure fliminary approval of thesis by faculty committees and present ie approval, signed by each com-iltteeman, to the Dean of the Graduate School. Oct. 9—Final day to present sis in final form to faculty imittee. ct. 14—Final day to present is, fully approved, to the Dean the Graduate School. Rockwell D. Hunt, grees are Haig Aijian, Granville Ashcraft, Francis Baker, Chester Bonoff, Norman Brockman, Ed-Mard Brotman, Robert Buffum, Richard Casadv, Lloyd Christensen. David Coleman, Robert Crosby, John Dieterich. James Elliott, Rodger Engel, Neal Fisher, Thomas Gamble Jr., Warfield Garson, Charles Hair. Theodore Haller. Robert Harrington, Charles Johnston. Thomas Kiddie, Ralph Klages, Donald Lagerlof, Mac McCallum, Richard Myers, Gilbert Nunez, George Paxton. Robert Price, Tel-(Continued on Tage Two) Coliseum gates to open, at noon for first game General manager of the Associated Students, Arnold Eddy yesterday released the folloMing information about the SC-UCLA game tomorrow. The Coliseum will open at 12 noon. The SC rooting section will be on the north side of the Coliseum, since the Trojans are the home team. Rooters will enter through tunnels 21 and 22. Seating and direction of students in the rooting section will be under the direction of Trojan Knights and Squires. Opening ceremonies will be conducted by the combined bands of SC and UCLA and the flag raising ceremony Mill take place at 2:10 p.m. The kickoff is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. During the half-time period the SC rooting section will give a series of 14 card stunts under the direction of Bob Thompson, head yell king. The junior varsity will meet the UCLA “B” team at 12:10 p.m. Phil Kirst, Knight president, and Thompson ask the cooperation of students in the rooting section to expedite proper seating. Students wishing to sit in a group mu?t enter the section together because no seats may be saved for late comers. Kirst also requests that rooters follow implicitly the directions for the card stunts. They are diagrammed plainly on a card at each seat. Care must be taken that the directions are not removed from the seat at which they are originally placed. each university, will troop to the festive Copa and Florentine rooms following this grid season's opener in the Coliseum tomorrow afternoon. Late ticket purchasers may inquire at the cashier's desk in the Student Bookstore for bids which might be turned in by individual salesmen. Two bands, Muzzy Marcelino and Paul Martin, both well known to Los Angeles listeners, win accompany those who seek solace for their sorrow as well as the victory dancers. The Trojan Knights, SC junior men’s honorary, are sponsoring the dance in collaboration with the junior and senior classes of UCLA. Together they have arranged that the two dancing rooms of the hotel shall be used exclusively by student football fans on the night of their first grid clash of the season. According to Joe Holt, vice-president of Knights and chairman of the affair, the dance will be sport and no corsages will be worn. JOE HOLT . . bid-happy. Veterans . . . may meet with Prof. Roy L. French, director of the counseling service for veterans, during his office hours in 207 Administration each Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. aid Friday from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Scholarship group issues honor roll Scholarship keys to newly elected members of Phi Kappa Phi, national all-university scholarship society, will be given Oct. 11. Fifteen students are to receive these high scholarship awards in the Doheny art and lecture room at 3:30 p.m. Relatives and friends may be invited to the ceremony and the tea following in the Hall of Nations. Mrs. Zuka P. Omalev, architecture; Alice Allene H a m n e r, commerce; John Edward Grech, commerce; Vera Gloria Davidoff, commerce; Luella Bell Hill, education; John Fulton Donan, engineering; Harry E. Schmidt, engineering; Donald E. Eckdahl, engineering; Evelyn Corby, government; Jean Holwerda, Patricia M. Wiese, Ruth Augusta Byers, Carrie B. Immel, Lila L. Brier, and Fredda G. Trowl, Letters, Arts and Sciences, are the students elected. New members are asked to report to Dr. Florence R. Scott or Dr. Francis Christensen, professors of English, as soon as possible. Get on the ball . . . don’t be different, sing the songs and yell the yells that everyone else does. In other words, keep your copy of today’s Trojan and bring it along Mlth you to the rally tonight. At the rally Trojans will practice songs and yells which are to be used to send our men on to victory in tomorrow’s game. tween them two squads sitvee 1929, SC has won seren, UCLA ha* taken one and three have been tied. So, tomorrow as both teams meet for the 12th time. If will be a question of whether SC has a Hardy’er team or whether the Bruins can spout with Waterfield. With an expected crowd of 00.000, the Coliseum will yield a good shew to these spectators, because nerer before have the Troy and UCLA teams been a* they are now. The war has taken a lot away from both squads, but then again it has brought together other material which might be considered better. SC will feature a starting lineup of entirely trainee men, and so will the Westwood team . with a possible exception of Waterfield. who is a discharge from the service. SC’s squad also can boast of two sets of brothers, the Callanan duo and the Hardy doubles. All four are in the NROTC; and all have one letter on the Trojan varsity, with Jim Hardy having two letters. The Troy ball packers will feature trick plays off the T. with Hardy the ball handler on all of the plays with running and passing worked out to a T. Coach Jeff Cravath has especially been concentrating this week on the running attack of the Trojans, and no doubt the workouts have done the squad a host of good in preparing for the trouble they will encounter tomorrow. Jerry Shipkey will be the starting fullback for the UCLAns, and it is irony that he should be playing against the team that he played on last season. Cal Rossi, another SC transfer, will stari at right halfback. Jack Boyd will be another of the Westwood big guns. He played left half on the ’43 Bruin team and Js a very fast and tricky runner. Bob (Continued on Page Fire) Starting lineup TROJANS VS. BRUINS Los Angeles coliseum, Saturday, Sept. 23, 1944 81 TROJANS Hardy, D. 190 LE 175 BRUINS Sheller 44 71 Ferraro 235 LT 183 Boom 31 65 Stall 210 LG 210 Watts 45 52 Antles 200 C 215 Paul 57 60 McGinn 195 RG 190 Simmons 49 78 Romer 210 RT 190 Vannatta 10 88 Callanan, J. 185 RE 215 Tausheck 2 21 Hardy, J. (C) 180 Q 190 Waterfield 7 38 Callanan, G. 165 LH 165 Boyd 20 33 Gray 190’ RH 175 Rossi 16 43 Whitehead 190 F 205 Shipkey 46 TROY ROSTER 12 Murphy, q; 15 Dreblow. hr; 19 Laughren, q; 21 J. Hardy, q ; 23 Schlegel, lh; 24 Morris, lh; 27 Burnside, lh; 31 Manning, rh; 32 Roitsch. rh; 33 Gray, rh; 38 G. Callanan, lh; 40 Thomas, f; 43 Whitehead, f; 44 West, f; 49 Fade, f; 50 Davis, c; 51 Fortney, c; 52 Antles. c; 58 Pickard, lg; 60 McGinn, rg; 61 Crittenden, lg; 62 Lavelle rg; 63 Wall, rg; 64 Venn, rg; 65 Stall, lg; 67 Curtis, lg; 69 Hesse, lg; 71 Ferraro, lt; 72 Sanders, lt; 74 Audet, rt; 75 Smith, lt; 78 Romer, rt-re; 79 Pehar, rt; 80 McKinney, re; 81 D. Hardy, le; 82 MacLachlan, re; 83 Lloyd, le; 84 Musick, rt; 85 Lund, le; 88 J. Callanan, re; 89 Salata, le. BRUIN ROSTER 2 Tauscheck. re; 3 Phillips, f; 6 King, re; 7 Waterfield, q; • Hayden, lt; 9 West, rh; 10 Vanatta. rt; 11 Myers, f; 16 Rossi rh; 18 Lee, c; 19 Hansen, re; 20 Boyd, lh; 22 Graham, re; 23 Putnam, rg; 24 Kiefer rg; 27 Wheeler, le; 29 Svensgaard, rg; 30 Palmer, q; 31 Boom, lt; 32 Roesch, lh; 33 Young, re; 34 Blower, le; 35 Keefer, lg; 38 Lindblom. rh; 40 Asher, rt; 41. Witt, f; 44 Sheller, le; 45 Watts, lg; 46 Shipkey, f; 47 McCabe, lt; 48 Russell, rg; 49 Simons, rg; 50 Woods, Ig-c; 55 Biddle, lh; 57 Paul, c; 60 Childers, c. |
Filename | uschist-dt-1944-09-22~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1236/uschist-dt-1944-09-22~001.tif |