Trains Crash In Iowa; Roosevelt Porirail is Approved -Associated Press Photos Two men were killed and six others seriously injured when two Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pa- cific ,trains collided headon, 10 miles north of Dubuque, Ia. A fireman and an engineer died in the crash of a freight and a passenger locomotive. The crash is shown here. Austria Is Run By 'Gangsters,' Says Onderdonk Calls Heimwehr A Group Of 'Professional Killers, lReactionary PeasanIs' Austria would never have suffered its recent troubles if men like Mus- solini and Hitler had not shown that a small gang could take over a gov- ernment and run it as they wished, Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk said in a lecture yesterday in Natural Science Auditorium. Dr. Onderdonk maintained that the present "illegal" Austrian gov- ernment under Dollfuss is composed of "mercenary, bloodthirsty gang- sters, worse than any we have in our American cities." "The methods of the Nazis and the Heimwehr are those of the trenches," he said. "Gov- ernment leaders were schooled in militarism during the last war, Doll- fuss himself having spent 3t months at war." Dr. Onderdonk called the Heim- wehr a gang of "professional killers, peasants who have been well pre- pared for years. These reactionary, conservative peasants have a great hatred of the liberal, enlightened aims of people in cities," he said. "Forty-one per cent of the Austrian population is made up of Social Democrats. These were the people who rebelled against a government of gangsters, ruling by national law in- stead of constitutional right. "The Nazi government has hypno- tized and terrorized the populace through control of newspapers, mo- tion picturesand the radio," he con- tinued. "The social democrats and republicans were forced into fighting these Nazis." At the conclusion of his lecture Dr. Onderdonk said that "the time has come when we, as human be- ings, should see that there is some protection given to people oppressed, as are the Austrian Social Democrats, by ruthless governments of force." suspicious. Demand that he give a satisfying definition. If every speak- er who tries to impress us were chal- lenged to express himself in simple English, so that even we know pre- cisely what he means, these meet- ings would be more profitable. And perhaps the next ones w o u 1 d be shorter." With the comment, "It's perfectly grand," Mrs. Franklin D. Roose- velt approved this official portrait of her husband which is to hang permanently in the White House. She inspected the painting by which posterity will know the thirty-second President of the United States while on a visit to New York. It is the work of Ellen Emmet Rand. Professor Advises Educators To 'Lay Off The Fancy Words' I CLEVELAND, 0., March 9- "Lay, off the fancy words!" This was the advice given educa- tors here for the annual convention of the National Education Associa- tion, by Prof. Thomas W. Briggs -of Teachers College, Columbia Univer- sity. Unless you know the meaning of "integrated personality," "inclusive thinking," "dynamic," "adverse com- pensation," "frame of reference," "life situation," and such, don't say it, advised Dr. Briggs. Such phrases, he said, were origi- nally coined by someone who used them to give emphasis or color to an idea, but imitators with little or no conception of their exact meaning have worn them out, he said. "There is a remedy sincerity pro- vides," he said. "Use it at these meetings whenever you hear a speak- er utter a phrase of which you are I t'. f, Men and women say They Satisfy ~ .*... il