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Ave. Monthly Settlements— or 12-Pay Plan F at Eleventh THE EVENING STAR, Broadway Rallies to Support Of Iowa Co-Ed, Under Fire HELOISE MARTIN, Shown today as she read some of the offers of daneing engage=- ments she has received. BY the Assoelated Press. DES MOINES, Iowa, March 12.—A New York show producer informed Drake University today that Heloise Martin, the “affair of honor” co-ed who forsook Broadway for a college education, is “one girl unspoiied by Broadway.” Moreover, Broadway sought to in- duce the dark-haired dancer to return to the night clubs and stage with offers of engagements—even a movie test. Fair Heloise's undergraduate career took a sensational turn when Ernest Bergmann, 200-pound foot ball player, punched a student editor who he claimed inscribed “Today's hot tip” be- neath a picture of the Martin charms. No sooner had the excitement sub- sided than a magazine hit the campus with pictures showing Heloise in the midst of matutinal ablutions. Heloise declared a costume she wore for a shower scene had been ‘“re- touched out of it.” The campus was agog until Dr. D W. Morehouse, president of Drake, a denominational school, said Heloise had not been disciplined and would not be. “I haven't made up my mind yet,” Heloise said. ant to think the whole thing over.” “Of all the telegrams I've received, this is the best, don't you think?” and Heloise dug out a telegram signed, “Kay Parsons.” *She manages the Showboat, a float- —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. iSng night club on the Hudson River. I worked for her before.” ‘The wire read: “Heloise dear: Have sent following wire to dean of women (Drake’s Carrie Cubbage): ‘Heloise Martin is a good girl. All the time she danced on the Showboat she never did anything out of the way. She is one girl unspoiled by Broadway.’ If anything goes wrong, come back to the Showboat.” “And here's one from Joe Moss, manager of the Hollywood Restaurant in New York,” said Heloise, who danced there with a Rudy Vallee revue in 1935 Of the Broadway offers, Lieut. Ora L. Martin, retired naval officer and father of the 20-year-old dancing co-ed, said “She ought to go. I don't like the | idea of her staying here after all this.” ' VALUED RELIC HUNTED BORDENTOWN, N. J, March 12 (P, —Bordentown’s four-man police force searched today for a 900-year- old Chinese incense burner, relic of the splendor maintained here a cen- tury ago by Joseph Bonaparte, exiled King of Spain | . Residents expressed fear the burner i had gone the uncharted way of other bric-a-brac installed when the brother | of the banished Napoleon took refuge in America after the Battle of Water- loo and built an elaborate estate here. "TGet Acquaint?l?flh the “Modern” Mode ] You go “head-first” into fashion when you wear a Exclusively at The Mode 40.C. SCHOOLS PAPERS HONORED High Schools and Teachers’ College Listed in Awards. Three Washington high achools— Eastern, McKinley and Central—and Wilson Teachers’ College were in- cluded today in the list of schools throughout the country receiving honor awards for publications en- tered in the annual grading compe- tition of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. For its magazine, the Review, en- tered in the class for schools of 2,500 to 5,000 enrollment, Central shared first place. with Hughes High of Cin- cinnati. The Eastern, newspaper of Eastern High, placed second along with sev- eral others in the 2,500-t0-5,000 en- WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1937. & fourth-place award in the same class for the Tech Life. In the class for newspapers of schools of education, Wilson’s news- paper, Wilson Spectacles, was awarded & third place. The Nationwide awards were an- nounced in an Associated Press dis- patch from New York. Entries were received, according to Director Joseph M. Murphy of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. from 959 newspapers and magazines representing schools in 47 Btates. Murphy explained that the judges compared each paper with those in its own class, the class being deter- mined by the type of school, number of students and type of publication. In many cases several awards were made in each class. A two-day program of discussions on school problems and the broader aspects of journalism marked the an- nual convention of the association. — ! B “Greedy” Slot Machine. COLUMBUS, Ohio (#)—Trying to fish a couple of extra kernels out of a penny-in-the-slot device, Sam Sha- mansky, 14, got his finger caught. For 45 minutes he tugged to get loose. Fi- nally some one called the police. They took the machine apart, freed rollment class for senior high school | Sam. 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