THE MICHIGAN DAILY Women Should f The Home, Ale -Associated Press Photo Leopold III, newly crowned Belgian King, is shown taking his oath before both houses of Parliament at Brussels. Leopold, son of the late King Albert, ascended to the throne following his father's accidental death last week. By SIGRID ARNE WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 26 - (P)-Hitler and Mussolini are quite right when they say that women should come back into the home, as- serts Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, world-fa- mous anthropologist and member of the Smithsonian Institute staff. "Furthermore, the sooner Ameri- can women give up their jobs and return to their traditional duties - home, husband, and children - the sooner they will find happiness," he says, "and the sooner they will give back to our national. life something of the old stability." Dr. Hrdlicka's conclusions are based on his years of research into the rise and fall of races and the slow evolution of human beings. He is white-haired now, gentle aid in discussion insistent that life should be happy. Womian Is Pivot "The longer I live," he says, "the more I am convinced that woman is the pivot of all human relationships, and when she fails in that duty the entire structure fails. "I do not insist that women should not, and connot, work, and work well, outside their homes. But first they should have their homes, husbands and children. Then there should be room for outside work. "But it should be work which comes naturally--all those forms that consist of 'grooming' the human race, such as nursing, teaching, working in the arts, making clothes and furnishings for the home. "I shall not name the work for which I believe them unfitted. That would be 'calling names.' But every- one has seen the woman who 'dries up' on a job, gets old and irritable, driving herself through, some false idea about 'doing things.' "We seem to ignore that nature created two different beings when it created men and women. Co-Education A Sin "This should be remembered by educators. Co-education is a ridicu- lous fad, based on false reasoning. It is a sin against youth. "Teachers are not the only ones in the wrong. Parents are often just' as guilty. They want their children to support them so they place thea emphasis on the wrong things. They a1 w a y s unconsciously want their daughters to go out and earn their' living., "Another handicap right now isj the terrible modern yearning for Come Back Into ?s Hrdiicka Says comfort. Women want fewer chil- dren because they fear the pain of child birth and the hard work of rearing them. Men fear the respon- sibility of supporting them. "But comfort is not happiness. It is stagnation, degeneration, the loss of strength. 'These opinions may sound pessi- mistic. Not at all. Through the ages the human race always has swung back and forth from one excess to another. But Mother Nature is a harsh mother. Each transgression of her laws is punished. Sees Another Change "When enough people have been punished often enough in a particu- lar social trend, then the pendulum swings back again. "Maybe both Hitler and Musso-- lini felt this when they issued orders to the women citizens of their na- tions to return to their homes and children. But both of them make the mistake of believing that human beings can be changed through de- cree. "We could swing them safely and sanely back to the old, correct bal- ance of the sexes through the right kind of education for the young. But that is a long process. First we must train teachers correctly. They must train children. And when those children themselves become parents, we begin to arrive at the goal. But it takes two generations. "Meanwhile, Mother Nature main- tains the balance in a more severe manner - through punishment." Paris Only Smiles At Pretender rT Throne PARIS, Feb. 26-(AP)--A mysterious new pretender to the French throne introduced himself to amused Paris- ians through the medium of posters today. -One Theodebold Ascaris Merovee, claiming descent from, Clovis and the good King Dagobert, threw his mythical crown in the ring against the Duc de Guise and Prince Louis Napoleon, over the signature of the "Merovingian party,". Harking back to the middle ages when "kings were kings," he disputes' the claims of such "upstarts" as the Bourbons and Napoleons. The post- ers neglected to announce when and where the new pretender would make a personal debut. -Assocated Press Photo Frank D. Chase of Cbicago wa named civil works administrator fo: Illinois as a result of a shakeup that followed the resignation of Robert J. Dunham from the post. Stavisky Inquiry Begins In France PARIS, Feb. 26 - (P) -Parlia- mentary inquiries into the Stavisky banking scandal opened today in a fog of unsolved mysteries involving dead witnesses and disappearing papers. Two committees began an inves- tigation of the Bayonne pawnshop bond frauds and the fatal anti-gov- ernment rioting which developed partly as a result of indignation at charges that high officials were in- volved. . Detectives still sought some clue to the slayers of Judge Albert Prince. He is believed to have known the in- side story of Serge Stavisky, who founded the Bayonne institution in which investors lost $40,000,000. Stavisky killed himself as police closed in after the collapse. PRINTING-Reasonable Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown -206 North Main Next to Main Post 01ic4 Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER Named Administrator Baxter Leaves For Six-Month European Trip Pathology Professor Is To Conduct Research Study On Forest Fungi Prof. Dow V. Baxter, Associate Professor of Forest Pathology, left Sunday for Europe on a six-month sabbatical leave from the University under grant from the National Re- search Council for an individual re- search project on the forest fungi of northern Europe. Professor Baxter, who will be gone until early August, will spend most of his time in Stockholm, Sweden, where there is an extensive collec- tion of fungi in the national mu- seum, but he expects to visit Denmark as well. He has made an extensive study of forest fungi in the lake states and has carried on his study in Alaska during the last two summers. While in Europe he hopes to continue some comparisons of the forest fungi of northern Europe with that which he has studied in the forest regions of North America. At the University the professor has carried on a study of the locations of areas infected by Chestnut blight, and he also carried on some pioneer work in Michigan some years ago on the white pine blister rust. Pro- fessor Baxter, who sails from New York on March 7, will be accom- panied on the trip by Justice Cline. a University student. Kentucky mountain men and wom- en walk 30 miles of steep rocky mountain roads to attend school, bar- ter sorghum, molasses, slabs of bacon, and other produce to help pay for their education. DANCING EVERY NIGHT Except Monday at PREKETEIS GARDENS above The Sugar Bowl No Cover Charge 109 and 111 S. Main St. E TURKISH TOBACCOS . one reason } t4k' taste In Turkey too, only the finest tobaccos are selected for Lucky Strike-the mild- est leaves, the most delicate, the most aromatic. Lucky Strike is the world's larg- est userof fine Turkish tobaccos. Then these tender, delicate Turkish leaves are blended (, with choice tobaccos from our own South- land-to make your Lucky Strike a ciga- rette that is fully packed-so round, so firm -free from loose ends. That's why Luckies Lucky Strike presents The Metropolitan Opera taste better, smoother. 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