N N COLLEGIATE DIGEST BOOK OF THE WEEK A Logical Thriller ... Murder In Bermuda. By Wil- loughby Sharp. Claude Kendall. $2.00. The finding of a body of a beau- tiful young girl on a main high- way. on the serene island of Ber- mudais the occasion which sets in motion the adroit, speculative ac- tivities of the efficient Hamilton police force. With only a dress- maker's label, a bunch of lilies and an empty scabbard as clues, the author skillfully goes on to plot a novel in which surprise follows surprise with engaging regularity and we find before us a story which has a welcome freshness and orig- inality. From the outset the story moves forward at a rapid pace, employ- ing short, brisk chapters, each one of which brings a new complex of situations or new discoveries to light. The dialogue and charac- ters are very convincing and the few dull moments that do occur are lost thought of by reason of the inevitability with which the new dilemma arises at the end of every chapter. Willoughby Sharp makes use of current notoriety given to the crimes of kidnaping, rum running, and blackmailing and weaves it into his central theme. He creates numerous difficulties and then dis- penses logically and gracefully with each in its order, leaving the reader alternately perturbed and satisfied. The author utilizes all the long- accepted conventions of the mnys- tery story, but he does so with such ingenuity and creates such a welter of involved circumstances that we are almost entirely una- ware of his technical trickery. Af-' ter allowing us to suspect various people, the guilt is finally fastened on the person who is ostensibly least concerned with the charac- ters in the book. The pleasant variation from the general mystery story is the man- ner in which the various police -of- ficers working upon the case help each other and together see the thing through, so that in this story, instead of the one stero- typed super sleuth very nobly car- rying on, we have the small group solve their froblem by their coop- erative efforts. Mr. Sharp, who is a Harvard graduate, and a young retired member of the New York Stock Exchange, now a resident of Ber- muda, has a good bit more to offer us than the average writer of mur- der stories. He unravels his sinis- ter tale in fine literary style and writes vividly of a background he knows very well. In his school days Mr. Sharp was a prolific contributor to the pulp magazines. The leisurely life in Bermuda appears to have given him a chance to revert to his boyhood hobby. He has al- ready lodged the manuscript of another mystery, The Murder of the Honest Broker, with his pub- lisher. "GET ACQUAINT- ED" was the order given by Miss Kath- leen Coffman to the men and women at Washington S t a t e College, w h en she was the chairman in c h a r g e of arrange- ments for the annual "open house" night at the western insti- tution. THE LAWYERS LIVE HERE. An aerial view of the Law Quadrangle at the University of Michigan showing the Lawyers Club in the foreground with the legal research library to the right of the center. BETWEEN SCRIMMAGES Head' Coach "Reggie" Root and Captain Bob Lassiter of Yale University watch the team go through some light practice. The Yalemen are work- ing hard "pointing" for the annual Yale-Har- vard classic. Wide World Photo DASHING LINES make the two frocks shown here attractive t o t h e popular co-ed that must look chic at all times, whether it be in the class-. room or the tea- room. The frock shown at the left is a smart model for fabric or color con- trast, and is very easy to make with its :dashing sleeves and bow neckline.. Slim, exciting lines point up the moded" detail of the dia- phragm and th e flattering bouffant sleeves of the mod- el shown at the right. The h ig h line across the neck and the slashed de- tail of the b ac k make this m o d el particularly attrac- tive. HONORING ONE of the recovery program's leaders, the University of Cincinna an honorary degree to Col. Henry M. Waite, public works administrator. Ab4 Dr. Herman Schneider, engineering dean; Dr. Raymond Walters, president of1 and Col. Waite. NEW EXECUTIVES assume offices in leading colleges in the United State: Curtis Nash, left, heading the University of Toledo, and Dr. Bancroft Beatley, hey Simmons College. Dr. Beatley is one of the youngest college presidents in the' SIe port a C y 9W. U~fleiro a&c r MARKS: POOR, FAIR, GOOD, OR EXCELLENT SUBJECT .DoiibkcDw~: l£xr' itrafQ odcma (4tO/etr 4Ufl 4 Iroefi co~~. _ . _ mak lhr mimream'xcd Zr t/ Gtitke a414 h~tt lmhli btck Plot conaciiadamrfinK d t~xoi// o~ u 1etr s he d Strt 1 t on J b nd _ .i f ° Qa ldqtrl oG c rrrlk ro/ zdc of mvcom'6m t ktw irat a~~oook. )ntted, hfz0a'rntlrcft ow &V frkfl t fdkn . ltA;di/q the 1MC& h1 td1ikeh . to nod/ t tflfietl /ip9 ~~ hi//stonh*'f6i#mqu . (wh a cft rc the(/xk i' a! q/r ete qoo wholfg at', /4ehdu~aMee 'itch 9WrDth 9as3Prt'fa b1l00uNikoifi h ork 1/oT rrhi ot -aie fl o . w'br o, ttaknl io/f isf* m lll iamd4 # tcls r an AdutfkC terr rt~i oal&,. / cunrkpd tiaj/(d eor. rmldtec2aw PATTERNS MAY BE ORDERED from 114 S. Carroll St;, Madison, Wis. Enclose stamps, coins, money order or check for 20 cents for each pat- tern and cost of mailing. Please in- dicate pattern number and size on order. SHIES" WERE FRESHEST at the end of the annual brawl between the freshmen and sopho- at the Los Angeles Junior College. The field was made muddy, and the tug-of-war very slip- wuhen firemen flooded the grounds in anticipation of the war. The tug-of-war was won by the ear men.