Southern California Daily Trojan, Vol. 21, No. 106, March 20, 1930 |
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CARDS necessary senior* who vote for J..rmanent class presi-! * today tnuit present ! fd.ntUlcatlon card, at th. j polls*
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
D AILY t-9 TROJAN
VOTING HOURS Poll* for the permanent senior class presidential election today wifi be open between 9 a.m., and 3:15 p.m.
Mftfl-CENTBNNIAti VSAB
VOL. XXI.
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, March 20, 1930.
No. 106
trojan pair loses debate
to UTAH 0.
Entire Audience Protests 2 to 1 Decision; Bautzer Rated Best Speaker.
Southern California’s traveling debate team consisting of 1 Captain Gregson Bautzer and Glenn Jones dropped a 2 to 1 decision contest Tuesday evening to the negatives of thc University of Utah.
The telegram received by Ran Ritchey, debate manager, Is as follow:
University of Southern Cal-ifornia, Los Angelea:
Dropped 2 to 1 decision to Utah Tuesday. Entire audience protested deciaion. Jud-gei voted Bautzer first speaker, Jones third. Still fighting even if results are against ut.
Bautzer and Jones Yesterday afternoon, Bautzer and Jones debated the negative team representing the University of Brigham Yoing at Provi, Utah. X telegram Is expected today concerning the outcome of the debate.
Tomorrow evening, the Trojan pair debate in Laramie, Wyoming, where Troy’s speakers oppose the negatives of the University of Wyoming.
Crawford and White Debate Oregon Tonight
While Trojan representatives jre touring the Rocky Mountain itates and competing in six intercollegiate contests the negative team of the University of Oregon will oppose Ames Crawford and Hyrum White, Trojan debaters, tonight in Bovard Auditorium at eight o’clock.
Crawford is the first speaker ol the Southern California team.
Ihe visiting team is composed ot Errol Sloan and Arthur Pot-wln, who will arrive in Los Angeles this afternoon in preparation for the contest tonight.
The debate is on the disarmament question and is a decision contest.
BUSINESS SESSION
Courses and Lectures to Cover Many Important Phases; Many Expected.
For the third consecutive year, the School of Citidenshlp and Public Administration will be held ou the campus this spring. The dates for the session have been Mt for April 14-19.
Under the direction of Emory Olson, co-ordination officer of the University, a schedule of courses has been arranged and lecturers from many corners of the country *111 participate.
Tentative plans include the fol-.lo-’tcg sections: principles of nment, recreation and parks, al assessments, taxation, pub-administration, water supply >urification (under the Braun •ration lectureship), airport iKement, planning and zon-accounting, budgets and fin-personuel in public adminis-on, functional analysis and tmental relations, school !®s’ problems.
ff members and section lead-the various courses in-Dr. William B. Munro of 1 university; L. Deming !* *n. of the Santa Barbara plan-“8 commission; Fred Telford, rector of the Bureau of Public r*onnel Administration of Chi-80. !•. h. Waring, chief engi-.er of the department nf health 2? &f 0hi°; Dr. Jay B. Nash, Ne 0 v°r Physical education, Walk k Un,versity; Dr- Harvey an er Assistant Director of Fin-ftate °f Professor
5 Tucker, assistant the di
TRYOUTS CONTINUE FOR EXTRAVAGANZA
To Hold Speaking and Singing Tests In Bovard Auditorium.
Tryouts for the cast of the Extravaganza will continue this afternoon and tomorrow afternoon, according to W. Ray MacDonld, director. Students who have tried out their voices will report today to read lines for speaking tests, Singers may still try out for preliminary voice tryouts, and the final cast will be announced early next week.
All tryouts will be held in Bovard auditorium beginning at 3:30. Students who intend to sing are asked to bring their own music and accompanist. Those who are to report today are: Ruth Ann Byerley, Stella Cbrisman, Melba Dutcher, Albert Fruchter, Frenchy Flynn, Pauline Foste, Gilbert Ga-gos, Louisne Hoeschtn, Marie Parenteau, Randolph Richards, Bert Tilton, Virginia Wilmot, and "Sparky" Vamvas.
Tryouts are being judged by W. Ray MacDonald, university play director, Max Mellinger, student director of the cast, Jean Maschio, director of the dancing. Bernice and Vincent Palmer authors of the script, and William Miller, manager of university play productions.
Rehearsals for the cast will be gin next week just as soon as the final choice is made. Chorus rehearsals have been going on all week, and will continue each afternoon until two weeks before production date, which is May 1, 2, and 3, when the cast, choruses and orchestra will join forces for intensive practice The choruses are divided into three groups, one for short girls, one for tall, and one for those of medium height. All three groups will gather this afternoon and tomorrow to learn the opening and flnal steps.
Specialties numbers will report in Bovard auditorium at 3:30. Those students are: Betty Henninger, Rowena. Quentin, Gretcher Mayor, Gladys Dalzell, Venice Brain, Laverne Dugas, Helen Clark, Audrey Wallhaus, Herbert Nerbovig, Bill Sunderman, Wayne Barlow, Bill Hale, Milo Harrison, Quentin Reger, and BUI Berming-ham.
Plans Almost Completed For Interfraternity Dance
Finishing Touches Will Be Given To Arrangements For Formal; Affair At Ambassador Tomorrow Promises To Be Outstanding Social Event.
Entertainment, decoration, orchestra, and finance plans for thc Interfraternity formal dance, to be held in the Fiesta room of the Ambassador hotel tomorrow night, virtually are completed, Lewis Gough, general chairman, said yesterday. The “finishing touches" on plans for the Semi-Centennial affair will *bc added today.
With Karl Burtnett’s Mayfair club orchestra playing until 1 a.m., i th Ed warn Everett Horton acting as master of ceremonies, with the Freshman Five presenting songs and stunts between dances, with members of both the social and professional interfraternity councils in attendance, the dance gives full promise of being the outstanding social event of the spring semester.
Interfraternity council officers and committee chairmen for thc formal were being congratulated yesterday following the announca-ment that the Freshman Five had been secured to appear at the dance. The New Yorkers’ fame for appearances in Vincent Lopez’s New Yory night club, the Casa Lopez; in the Schubert production of “Artists and Models;” in the Music Box Revue; on the Keith and Orpheum vaudeville circuits; and as Brunswick recording artists preceded them to the coast. The Freshman Five has just finished the musical features Sue Carroll’s latest picture, “Three Flights Up.”
Curtis Dungan’s decorations committee will work today and tomorrow in completing the decorating of the Fiesta room. Fratern Tty banners and special decorations emphasizing the Semi-Centennial theme will be used.
In keeping with the custom at all-university affairs, corsages will be banned.
ALL-U RALLY IS HELD BY LAW SCHOOL
Dr. Mount Holds Hyp-n o t i c Demonstration; Awards Made.
of the school of Citizen-
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shin . . ,tl‘™ °r utti
g “ Public Administration the 1 f' James M PAffner, also Scho„?SB‘,8taDt Sector of the JWmlnistr«HiUlen*hlp aBd Pub,lc
of th“ ' a,‘on al s- C.; Earl Hill, R. uU|.' faculty; Dr. Osman tion here°f *** Sch001 of educa-
Zoology Professor Will Give Address At Meeting Tonight
Dr. Bruce M. Harrison, professor of zoology, will address the Men’s Faculty club at their meeting tomorrow night in the club room, 301 Student Union. “Recent Research in Embryology” will be the topic of the address.
Dr. Osman R. Hull, vice-president of the club, will preside at the meeting. Doctor Harrison will accompany his talk by demonstrations in the method of preparing embryo models to illustrate the parts discussed. He will emphasize the origin and the development of the vetebrate skull and one of the pharynx. His remarks will be based upon discoveries made in the laboratory of embryology here and upon work he accomplished before coming to this university.
An informal discussion will follow the lecture, when the club members will be given an opportunity to ask questions of Doctor Harrison concerning his remarks. Refreshments will follow.
Six Pledges Are Elected
Beta Alpha Psi, National Accounting Fraternity, Will Hold Initiation.
Maurice Cashion, Wilber Garrett, Melvin Jensen, Harry Kufus, Frank Porter, and H. L. Waegele have been pledged by Beta Alpha Psi, national accounting fraternity, and will be initiated at a dinner at 6 p.m., this evening in the Pollyanna tea room.
H. Dean Campbell, of the College of Commerce accounting faculty, will be toastmaster at the banquet. Rex Ragan, also an accounting professor and head of the accounting firm of Rex Ragan and company, will speak on "The California Franchise Tax.” Other professors who will be present include F. W. Woodbridge, one of the national grand counsellors of Beta Alpha Psi and author of an accounting text, and two guests, Dean Ried L. McClung of the College of Commerce and Dean Fiske of Santa Ana Junior College.
ALPHA DELTA SIGMA
Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, will hold a luncheon meeting at the Cottage Tea Room, this Friday noon. All actives and pledges are urged to be present.
Mme. Sturkow Rider To Play at Recital
Mme. Sturkow Rider, who has played with the New York, Chi-graph in aFaosissay (alshrdluhrd cago, Minneapolis, Russian and New York Kaltenborn symphonies will give a demonstration of the use of the piano with the phonograph in a recital in the College of Music recital hall at 12:10 today.
Edna Schinnerer will play Reverie (Debussey); Adelaide Steward will play Prelude and Fugue in D flat (Bach); and Helen Matson will play Intermezzo in E flat (Brahms) also on the piano program.
Climaxing with a demonstration of hypnosis performer on a Trojan student, by Dr. George H. Mount of the Southern California department of psychology, the first all-university law assembly took place during chapel hour yesterday in 302 law building.
The first part of the program was under the direction of Ray Hatfield. Oilber Royse, lately associated with Warner Brothers and Paramount studios, gave several vocal selections. Tap dancing by Royse also featured the program.
During the second part of the assembly Dr. Mount discussed the subject, “Abnormal Psychology and its Relation to Criminal Law.” In his talk he cited the fact that psychology was used by the lawyer whether he wanted to or not. Psychology, according to Mount, goes hand in hand with the cause of crime, the prevention of crime, and the detection of the crimi-Suggesticn was referred to as being perfectly normal for some people and abnormal others. It was in the demonstration of suggestion that Dr. Mount performed a sincere and convincing instance of hypnotism on Miss Dorothy Graham.
Awards of two twenty-dollar checks were made to Charlotte Neely and to Abram Klein for having the highest scholarship of the first semester law freshman class by Dean Justin Miller, who was in charge of the second half of the program.
BOYS ARE GUESTS AT T MEETING
With boys from all par** or Los Angeles as guests, tho Y. M C. A. council meeting last night carried out a program for “prep” school organizations sponsored by the “Y”. !An attendance of iuore than 100 was the feature of the evening, with entertainment furnished almost entirely by visiting boys.
Harold Wagner, secretary of the committee in charge of pre-college Y. M. C. A. work, discussed his problems with the group iu the main speech of the evening. Roy Maginnis, advisor of one of the boys’ groups spoke on “The Real Thrill of Being a Boy Club Leader.” Response on behalf of the boys was made by Bert Mattie-son of the Florence Avenue United Presbyterian comrade club.
Members of the Plymouth Congregational pioneer club recently organized an orchestra which piay-ed throughout the evening, and the comrate group of the same church presented the induction ritual. Demonstrations of club work were made by members of the Hollywood Presbyterian comrades. Melvin Harter was master of ceremonies.
To The Editor
Rapid Transit, Michigan, March 19: (To the Editor of the Daily Troan): Street car strap hangers have developed vicious peeves over the slowness of this city’s car service. It seems that members of this army of hangrs-on find that they get to work, just in time to meet themselves starting back for home. By the time a street car reaches the end of the line, postmen and city officials find themselves in line for an old-age pension.
The remedy for this problem is simple. This city should install an underground, high-pressure, rapid-transit tube system, modelled after the tube system used by department stores in making change. These tubes would be laid all over like gas mains. Customers would be shot through these two miles a minute in cushioned man-sized containers.
House-owners who feel a slight earthquake now and then needn’t get worried. It would merely be a fat man shooting through. Trouble would pop up when a passenger forgets to buzz the stop signal and finds himself landing in Vladivostok. Siberia, instead of Broadway at Eighth. Inventory would consist in tearing up all there underground tubes once a year in order to find the passengers who were lost in transit.
Yours for puncture-proof tubes,
MORRIE CHAIN.
Honor Group Initiates Six
Discussion For Prospective Members Of Mortar Board Held at Meeting.
Initiation of six alumnae members of Torch and Tassell into Mortar Board, senior women’s honorary, was held Tuesday evening preceding a meeting of the organization held in the council rooms of the Student Union.
At the business meeting plans were considered for inviting several junior college students and the deans of the colleges to attend the junior class play on March 28 as guests of Mortar Board. This invitiation i* given as part of the program planned by Mortar Board for orienting prospective S. C. students with the campus.
A report on the students eligible for Mortar Board this spring was made by Miss Betty Ferris, chairman of investigations. The discussion of prospective members will continue until the latter part of the semester when the selection w’il lbe made.
Poll Taken On Dry Law In Princeton
College Newspaper Sponsors Ballot Among Students on Prohibition.
Princeton, N. J., March 19.-ONS) — Princeton University students will express themselves on the prohibition question next Monday in a poll to be taken by the Daily Princetonian, student newspaper.
The ballot is one of a series now being taken by tw’enty-five leading American college and university journals led by the Harvard Crimson.
It asks four questions: Do you ever drfnk? Do you ever get drunk? Why don’t you drink? Do you favor the present law, strict enforcement, modification, or total repeal?
To the question, “Why don’t you drink?” the undergraduate must answer that he can’t get liquor, his family objects to drinking, or that he does not like the stuff.
Prohibition Ballots Hit By Taft
Washington. March 19.*(INS) — Speaking before the House Judiciary committee, Horace D. Taft, brother of the late Chief Justice and head of the Taft Preparatory school of Watertown, Conn., condemned that attitude of some college students toward prohibition. He ridiculed all straw* votes, particularly those at Yale and Williams, saying wets always rushed to vote and the drys did not.
There probably is more drinking at Yale than before prohibition but there is not as much drunkenness and it is much easier to enforce discipline, he said.
He characterized the Yale straw vote of 5 to 1 wet as proof that most of the students, sons of wealthy people, “believe in the doctrine of the higher lawlessness.”
SWIGHTERT WILL SPEAK
T. E. Swightert, manager of production for the Shell Oil company, will speak on the various phases of oil production, to engineering students at 11:25 this morning.
EVENING COMMERCE CLASSES PLANNED
University College Courses Will Begin In Transportation Building, March 24
Nearly forty evening classes in*fic management, and commercial
COMMITTEE MEETS TODAY
Organization committee will meet at 4 o’clock today in room 203 of the Student Union. Lucille Huebner, Jane Lawson, Herb Pratt, and Ralph Flynn are expected to be present.
Representatives of campus organizations wishing information recognition charters or other data are asked to meet.
Committee members will have | a picture taken for El Rodeo.
commerce and business administration will be organized at University College in the Transportation building, Seventh and Los Angeles streets, starting March 24.
Investments, in charge of Professor J. L. Leonard will deal with classes of stocks and bonds, analysis of current security flota-
tive analysis of government, mu-cipal, industrial, railroad, and public utility bonds and stocks. Dr. Leonard will also conduct a course in money and banking.
Accounting will be taught in seven separate courses, including beginning, advanced, and cost accounting, income tax law, and procedure, California franchise and state taxes, report writing and C. P. A. problems. Trade aud Transportation classes include practical exerting and importing, traf-
avlation.
Under the auspices of the School of Merchandising, classes will be organized in advertising, salesmanship, store operation, store Organization, psychology of retailing, and retail credits and collections.
Real Estate classes will include real estate conveyancing, real es-tate law, advanced real estate appraisals, and real estate sales practice.
In addition, commerce classes in business law. air law, bnsiness organization. apartment house management, building and property management, business correspondent*, and public speaking will be organized.
Enrollments for these late afternoon and evening classes are now being taken on the thirteenth floor of the Transportation building.
APRIL 9 IS DATE OF CLUB BANQUET
Pledging and initiating of 13 new members to the Press club will take place on Wednesday evening, April 9, instead of April 2, as has been previously announced, according to Elinor Wilhoit, president of the organization. This ceremony will be followed by a banquet, the traditional method of pledging and initiating new members to the club. At this time pledges are requested to submit 500-word satirical essays on members of the club.
Through the efforts of Prof. Marc Goodnow, of the department of journalism, Tom Curran and George Beale, members of the Los ‘Angeles United Press bureau, will speak at the banquet.
The proposed members are: Mary Alice Parent, Alice Doty, Ruth Ann Byerly, Peggy Kraus, Francis Schulte, Ted Hawkins, John MoCoy, Mulvey White, Lewis Gough, John Dorfner, John Morley, Morton Morehouse, and Stanley Ewens.
Press club is a journalism organization for those students who have worked on student publications for a year or more.
SENIORS TO ELECT PERMANENT PRESIDENT FOR CLASS TODAY
Fourth Year Students Of All Colleges Will Go To Polls From 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.; Pharmacists To Vote On Constitution.
Election of thc permanent all-senior class president for 1930 will b£ made today when the polls open at 9 a. m. and remain open until 3:15 p. m. Voting will take place at the polls situated in the various campus colleges.
In connection with the election, the College of Pharmacy will vote on a new constitution and will select the college treasurer. Candidates for the money position are David Tessenhoitx and Kennlth Vickery. Students being voted on for the all-smlor election are Arthur Neelley, Wei-ley Wilson, and Clifford Raveile. IDENTIFICATION CARDS It Is absolutely necessary that all seniors voting, show their Identification cards before getting a ballot, stated Art Langton, election commissioner. Each Identification card must give the name of the student, his classification and the college to which he belongs. Vottng will be open to all seniors receiving degrees in June.
No electioneering is to be doo.e within fifty feet of the polls, stated Langton. Amazons and Knights will be on hand to enforce this regulation.
COLLEGES HAVE BOOTHS Votes may be cast ln the election booths situated ln the different colleges. They are established In front of the administration building, in Bridge • hall, College of Dentistry down town, College of Commerce, College of Pharmacy, and in the School of Archl* lecture.
Students not classified to vote In any of these places, are asked to use the polls of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences in front of the administration building.
“Since the all-senior class president will have charge of all future business of the class, lt ls necessary that careful consideration be given the election,’* said Langton. "We urge all students eligible, to vote.
Through an error In yesterday’s Trojan, the name of Wesley Wilson was omitted from the list of candidates for the senior presi-dency.
W. S. 6. A. WILL HOLD NOMINATIONS TODAY
Women To Be Excused From 9 O’clock Classes At 9:35 For Assembly.
Nominations for officers of the Women’s Self-Government association will be made this morning at a special all-university women’s assembly to be held in Bovard auditorium at 9:35. Nine o’clock classes will be held as usual but women will be excused at 9:30 .
Candidates will be nominated for the offices of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer. Many petitions have been filed In the W. S. G. A. office and keen competition is expected. All nominees must have a 1.3 average and can not be on probation. The president must also have served one year on the W. S. G. A. cabinet.
At 10 o’clock, a program will be broadcast over KEJK. Dr. Mary Sinclair Crawford, dean of women will speak on “Women’s Contributions to the Campus.” and The Trojan Trio, composed of Eloise Jones, Peggy Binkley, and Eunice Erikson, member of the women’s glee-club will sing several songs. Their numbers include. “My Rosita” by DuPont, “Goin’ Home” by Dvorak, and "Italian Street Song” by Victor Herbert.
Doris Tennant, president of the Women’s Self-Government association. will preside, and members of the W. S. G. A. cabinet for this year will be introduced from the stage. The present cabinet is composed of: Miss Tennant, president; Lucille Huebner, vice-president; James Lawson, secretary; Virginia Monosmith, treasurer; Grace Wright, social chairman; Mary Alice Parent, downtown publicity manager; Marion Johnston, campus publicity manager; Bobby Loftus, president of Amazons; Florence Waechter, president of W. A. A.; Beth Tibbot, president of Y. W. C. A.; Erma Willis, president of Social Pan-Hellenic; Miriam Brownset-ter vice-president of social Pan-Hellenic, Ruth Goldman, jus-(Continued on Page Six)
Oxy Is Next Foe Of Women Debaters In Dual Contest Today
Members
MUNICIPAL JUDGE WILLBEHONORED
National Political Science Honorary To Initiate Judge Charles E. Haas.
of the women's debate squad will meet Occidental College in a dual debate today at 3:30 o’clock in Porter hall in the Law building. The question will be Resolved: That social sororities and fraternities are detrimental to the American colleges and universities.
Bonnie Jean Lockwood, who served as manager of the squad last year in a successful series of j mate of President Hoover at the debates, will preside as chairman. ! latter institution. He is also
Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science honorary fraternity, will bestow honorary membership upon Judge Charles E. Haas of the municipal court of Los Angeles, this afternoon at 5:30, ln the President's suite. The Initiation will be followed by a banquet at the Mary Louise tea rooms. Judge Haas will be the speaker for the eveneing.
Judge Haas was selected tor honorary membership in Pi Sigma Alpha, in recognition of hla distinguished and constructive service as a public servant and his high scholarship average while ln college, and in appreciation of his continued and sincere interest in students activities and conditions.
FRIEND OF HOOVER Judge Haas is a graduate of George Washington and Stanford universities, nd was a college-
De Rivera Accorded High Military Honors
Madrid, March il).(INS)—The sad roll of muffled drums greeted the return to his homeland today of Primo De Rivera, dead dictator.
An imposing array of mourners lined the platform of north sta-
ing as the train bearing the body of the Captain-General rolled to a standstill.
The chimes of a nearby church pealed a funeral song, punctuated by the slow booming of saluting artillery.
Great crowds ot citiienry, silently awaited outside the station while a military detachment re- Pasadena moved the flag-draped coffin from Whittier College.
Occidental's affirmative team debates the negative side and is upheld by Fern Pierson and Val Robertson, while Helen Peterson, manager, and Lucile Reed, captain, will travel to Occidental college as the affirmative team for S. C.
This ls the second debate of the season, the first being a nondecision contest held last Tuesday with Glendale Junior College. Val Robertson as a negative speaker and Helen Peterson of the affirmative side both took part.
Other colleges and universiUes who are scheduled for debates Include University of California at Los Angeles and at Berkeley, Redlands, Utah, Wyoming, Stanford, Junior College, and Cecily Hilton,
its special coach and carried lt into the station to lay in state until noon in an improvised chapel.
Marian Richardson, Doris Rutherford, and Francis Strathren compose the remainder of the squad.
member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
He has been actively identified with public service and governmental agencies from the time he served his apprenticeship In the state department while attending George Washington university, until the present time. For the past four >ears be has been judge of the municipal court. During his residence in Los Angeles, Haas bas occupied the position, of deputy city attorney of Los Angeles, special counsel for the county of Los Angeles, in addition to having spent some years in the private practice of law.
MEMBERSHIP Pi Sigma Alpha chooses its members from those students majoring ln political science who have displayed the greatest in-terest and who have consistently maintained a high average of scho-(Continued on Page Six)
Object Description
Description
| Title | Southern California Daily Trojan, Vol. 21, No. 106, March 20, 1930 |
| Description | Southern California Daily Trojan, Vol. 21, No. 106, March 20, 1930. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | CARDS necessary senior* who vote for J..rmanent class presi-! * today tnuit present ! fd.ntUlcatlon card, at th. j polls* SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA D AILY t-9 TROJAN VOTING HOURS Poll* for the permanent senior class presidential election today wifi be open between 9 a.m., and 3:15 p.m. Mftfl-CENTBNNIAti VSAB VOL. XXI. Los Angeles, California, Thursday, March 20, 1930. No. 106 trojan pair loses debate to UTAH 0. Entire Audience Protests 2 to 1 Decision; Bautzer Rated Best Speaker. Southern California’s traveling debate team consisting of 1 Captain Gregson Bautzer and Glenn Jones dropped a 2 to 1 decision contest Tuesday evening to the negatives of thc University of Utah. The telegram received by Ran Ritchey, debate manager, Is as follow: University of Southern Cal-ifornia, Los Angelea: Dropped 2 to 1 decision to Utah Tuesday. Entire audience protested deciaion. Jud-gei voted Bautzer first speaker, Jones third. Still fighting even if results are against ut. Bautzer and Jones Yesterday afternoon, Bautzer and Jones debated the negative team representing the University of Brigham Yoing at Provi, Utah. X telegram Is expected today concerning the outcome of the debate. Tomorrow evening, the Trojan pair debate in Laramie, Wyoming, where Troy’s speakers oppose the negatives of the University of Wyoming. Crawford and White Debate Oregon Tonight While Trojan representatives jre touring the Rocky Mountain itates and competing in six intercollegiate contests the negative team of the University of Oregon will oppose Ames Crawford and Hyrum White, Trojan debaters, tonight in Bovard Auditorium at eight o’clock. Crawford is the first speaker ol the Southern California team. Ihe visiting team is composed ot Errol Sloan and Arthur Pot-wln, who will arrive in Los Angeles this afternoon in preparation for the contest tonight. The debate is on the disarmament question and is a decision contest. BUSINESS SESSION Courses and Lectures to Cover Many Important Phases; Many Expected. For the third consecutive year, the School of Citidenshlp and Public Administration will be held ou the campus this spring. The dates for the session have been Mt for April 14-19. Under the direction of Emory Olson, co-ordination officer of the University, a schedule of courses has been arranged and lecturers from many corners of the country *111 participate. Tentative plans include the fol-.lo-’tcg sections: principles of nment, recreation and parks, al assessments, taxation, pub-administration, water supply >urification (under the Braun •ration lectureship), airport iKement, planning and zon-accounting, budgets and fin-personuel in public adminis-on, functional analysis and tmental relations, school !®s’ problems. ff members and section lead-the various courses in-Dr. William B. Munro of 1 university; L. Deming !* *n. of the Santa Barbara plan-“8 commission; Fred Telford, rector of the Bureau of Public r*onnel Administration of Chi-80. !•. h. Waring, chief engi-.er of the department nf health 2? &f 0hi°; Dr. Jay B. Nash, Ne 0 v°r Physical education, Walk k Un,versity; Dr- Harvey an er Assistant Director of Fin-ftate °f Professor 5 Tucker, assistant the di TRYOUTS CONTINUE FOR EXTRAVAGANZA To Hold Speaking and Singing Tests In Bovard Auditorium. Tryouts for the cast of the Extravaganza will continue this afternoon and tomorrow afternoon, according to W. Ray MacDonld, director. Students who have tried out their voices will report today to read lines for speaking tests, Singers may still try out for preliminary voice tryouts, and the final cast will be announced early next week. All tryouts will be held in Bovard auditorium beginning at 3:30. Students who intend to sing are asked to bring their own music and accompanist. Those who are to report today are: Ruth Ann Byerley, Stella Cbrisman, Melba Dutcher, Albert Fruchter, Frenchy Flynn, Pauline Foste, Gilbert Ga-gos, Louisne Hoeschtn, Marie Parenteau, Randolph Richards, Bert Tilton, Virginia Wilmot, and "Sparky" Vamvas. Tryouts are being judged by W. Ray MacDonald, university play director, Max Mellinger, student director of the cast, Jean Maschio, director of the dancing. Bernice and Vincent Palmer authors of the script, and William Miller, manager of university play productions. Rehearsals for the cast will be gin next week just as soon as the final choice is made. Chorus rehearsals have been going on all week, and will continue each afternoon until two weeks before production date, which is May 1, 2, and 3, when the cast, choruses and orchestra will join forces for intensive practice The choruses are divided into three groups, one for short girls, one for tall, and one for those of medium height. All three groups will gather this afternoon and tomorrow to learn the opening and flnal steps. Specialties numbers will report in Bovard auditorium at 3:30. Those students are: Betty Henninger, Rowena. Quentin, Gretcher Mayor, Gladys Dalzell, Venice Brain, Laverne Dugas, Helen Clark, Audrey Wallhaus, Herbert Nerbovig, Bill Sunderman, Wayne Barlow, Bill Hale, Milo Harrison, Quentin Reger, and BUI Berming-ham. Plans Almost Completed For Interfraternity Dance Finishing Touches Will Be Given To Arrangements For Formal; Affair At Ambassador Tomorrow Promises To Be Outstanding Social Event. Entertainment, decoration, orchestra, and finance plans for thc Interfraternity formal dance, to be held in the Fiesta room of the Ambassador hotel tomorrow night, virtually are completed, Lewis Gough, general chairman, said yesterday. The “finishing touches" on plans for the Semi-Centennial affair will *bc added today. With Karl Burtnett’s Mayfair club orchestra playing until 1 a.m., i th Ed warn Everett Horton acting as master of ceremonies, with the Freshman Five presenting songs and stunts between dances, with members of both the social and professional interfraternity councils in attendance, the dance gives full promise of being the outstanding social event of the spring semester. Interfraternity council officers and committee chairmen for thc formal were being congratulated yesterday following the announca-ment that the Freshman Five had been secured to appear at the dance. The New Yorkers’ fame for appearances in Vincent Lopez’s New Yory night club, the Casa Lopez; in the Schubert production of “Artists and Models;” in the Music Box Revue; on the Keith and Orpheum vaudeville circuits; and as Brunswick recording artists preceded them to the coast. The Freshman Five has just finished the musical features Sue Carroll’s latest picture, “Three Flights Up.” Curtis Dungan’s decorations committee will work today and tomorrow in completing the decorating of the Fiesta room. Fratern Tty banners and special decorations emphasizing the Semi-Centennial theme will be used. In keeping with the custom at all-university affairs, corsages will be banned. ALL-U RALLY IS HELD BY LAW SCHOOL Dr. Mount Holds Hyp-n o t i c Demonstration; Awards Made. of the school of Citizen- fector shin . . ,tl‘™ °r utti g “ Public Administration the 1 f' James M PAffner, also Scho„?SB‘,8taDt Sector of the JWmlnistr«HiUlen*hlp aBd Pub,lc of th“ ' a,‘on al s- C.; Earl Hill, R. uU .' faculty; Dr. Osman tion here°f *** Sch001 of educa- Zoology Professor Will Give Address At Meeting Tonight Dr. Bruce M. Harrison, professor of zoology, will address the Men’s Faculty club at their meeting tomorrow night in the club room, 301 Student Union. “Recent Research in Embryology” will be the topic of the address. Dr. Osman R. Hull, vice-president of the club, will preside at the meeting. Doctor Harrison will accompany his talk by demonstrations in the method of preparing embryo models to illustrate the parts discussed. He will emphasize the origin and the development of the vetebrate skull and one of the pharynx. His remarks will be based upon discoveries made in the laboratory of embryology here and upon work he accomplished before coming to this university. An informal discussion will follow the lecture, when the club members will be given an opportunity to ask questions of Doctor Harrison concerning his remarks. Refreshments will follow. Six Pledges Are Elected Beta Alpha Psi, National Accounting Fraternity, Will Hold Initiation. Maurice Cashion, Wilber Garrett, Melvin Jensen, Harry Kufus, Frank Porter, and H. L. Waegele have been pledged by Beta Alpha Psi, national accounting fraternity, and will be initiated at a dinner at 6 p.m., this evening in the Pollyanna tea room. H. Dean Campbell, of the College of Commerce accounting faculty, will be toastmaster at the banquet. Rex Ragan, also an accounting professor and head of the accounting firm of Rex Ragan and company, will speak on "The California Franchise Tax.” Other professors who will be present include F. W. Woodbridge, one of the national grand counsellors of Beta Alpha Psi and author of an accounting text, and two guests, Dean Ried L. McClung of the College of Commerce and Dean Fiske of Santa Ana Junior College. ALPHA DELTA SIGMA Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, will hold a luncheon meeting at the Cottage Tea Room, this Friday noon. All actives and pledges are urged to be present. Mme. Sturkow Rider To Play at Recital Mme. Sturkow Rider, who has played with the New York, Chi-graph in aFaosissay (alshrdluhrd cago, Minneapolis, Russian and New York Kaltenborn symphonies will give a demonstration of the use of the piano with the phonograph in a recital in the College of Music recital hall at 12:10 today. Edna Schinnerer will play Reverie (Debussey); Adelaide Steward will play Prelude and Fugue in D flat (Bach); and Helen Matson will play Intermezzo in E flat (Brahms) also on the piano program. Climaxing with a demonstration of hypnosis performer on a Trojan student, by Dr. George H. Mount of the Southern California department of psychology, the first all-university law assembly took place during chapel hour yesterday in 302 law building. The first part of the program was under the direction of Ray Hatfield. Oilber Royse, lately associated with Warner Brothers and Paramount studios, gave several vocal selections. Tap dancing by Royse also featured the program. During the second part of the assembly Dr. Mount discussed the subject, “Abnormal Psychology and its Relation to Criminal Law.” In his talk he cited the fact that psychology was used by the lawyer whether he wanted to or not. Psychology, according to Mount, goes hand in hand with the cause of crime, the prevention of crime, and the detection of the crimi-Suggesticn was referred to as being perfectly normal for some people and abnormal others. It was in the demonstration of suggestion that Dr. Mount performed a sincere and convincing instance of hypnotism on Miss Dorothy Graham. Awards of two twenty-dollar checks were made to Charlotte Neely and to Abram Klein for having the highest scholarship of the first semester law freshman class by Dean Justin Miller, who was in charge of the second half of the program. BOYS ARE GUESTS AT T MEETING With boys from all par** or Los Angeles as guests, tho Y. M C. A. council meeting last night carried out a program for “prep” school organizations sponsored by the “Y”. !An attendance of iuore than 100 was the feature of the evening, with entertainment furnished almost entirely by visiting boys. Harold Wagner, secretary of the committee in charge of pre-college Y. M. C. A. work, discussed his problems with the group iu the main speech of the evening. Roy Maginnis, advisor of one of the boys’ groups spoke on “The Real Thrill of Being a Boy Club Leader.” Response on behalf of the boys was made by Bert Mattie-son of the Florence Avenue United Presbyterian comrade club. Members of the Plymouth Congregational pioneer club recently organized an orchestra which piay-ed throughout the evening, and the comrate group of the same church presented the induction ritual. Demonstrations of club work were made by members of the Hollywood Presbyterian comrades. Melvin Harter was master of ceremonies. To The Editor Rapid Transit, Michigan, March 19: (To the Editor of the Daily Troan): Street car strap hangers have developed vicious peeves over the slowness of this city’s car service. It seems that members of this army of hangrs-on find that they get to work, just in time to meet themselves starting back for home. By the time a street car reaches the end of the line, postmen and city officials find themselves in line for an old-age pension. The remedy for this problem is simple. This city should install an underground, high-pressure, rapid-transit tube system, modelled after the tube system used by department stores in making change. These tubes would be laid all over like gas mains. Customers would be shot through these two miles a minute in cushioned man-sized containers. House-owners who feel a slight earthquake now and then needn’t get worried. It would merely be a fat man shooting through. Trouble would pop up when a passenger forgets to buzz the stop signal and finds himself landing in Vladivostok. Siberia, instead of Broadway at Eighth. Inventory would consist in tearing up all there underground tubes once a year in order to find the passengers who were lost in transit. Yours for puncture-proof tubes, MORRIE CHAIN. Honor Group Initiates Six Discussion For Prospective Members Of Mortar Board Held at Meeting. Initiation of six alumnae members of Torch and Tassell into Mortar Board, senior women’s honorary, was held Tuesday evening preceding a meeting of the organization held in the council rooms of the Student Union. At the business meeting plans were considered for inviting several junior college students and the deans of the colleges to attend the junior class play on March 28 as guests of Mortar Board. This invitiation i* given as part of the program planned by Mortar Board for orienting prospective S. C. students with the campus. A report on the students eligible for Mortar Board this spring was made by Miss Betty Ferris, chairman of investigations. The discussion of prospective members will continue until the latter part of the semester when the selection w’il lbe made. Poll Taken On Dry Law In Princeton College Newspaper Sponsors Ballot Among Students on Prohibition. Princeton, N. J., March 19.-ONS) — Princeton University students will express themselves on the prohibition question next Monday in a poll to be taken by the Daily Princetonian, student newspaper. The ballot is one of a series now being taken by tw’enty-five leading American college and university journals led by the Harvard Crimson. It asks four questions: Do you ever drfnk? Do you ever get drunk? Why don’t you drink? Do you favor the present law, strict enforcement, modification, or total repeal? To the question, “Why don’t you drink?” the undergraduate must answer that he can’t get liquor, his family objects to drinking, or that he does not like the stuff. Prohibition Ballots Hit By Taft Washington. March 19.*(INS) — Speaking before the House Judiciary committee, Horace D. Taft, brother of the late Chief Justice and head of the Taft Preparatory school of Watertown, Conn., condemned that attitude of some college students toward prohibition. He ridiculed all straw* votes, particularly those at Yale and Williams, saying wets always rushed to vote and the drys did not. There probably is more drinking at Yale than before prohibition but there is not as much drunkenness and it is much easier to enforce discipline, he said. He characterized the Yale straw vote of 5 to 1 wet as proof that most of the students, sons of wealthy people, “believe in the doctrine of the higher lawlessness.” SWIGHTERT WILL SPEAK T. E. Swightert, manager of production for the Shell Oil company, will speak on the various phases of oil production, to engineering students at 11:25 this morning. EVENING COMMERCE CLASSES PLANNED University College Courses Will Begin In Transportation Building, March 24 Nearly forty evening classes in*fic management, and commercial COMMITTEE MEETS TODAY Organization committee will meet at 4 o’clock today in room 203 of the Student Union. Lucille Huebner, Jane Lawson, Herb Pratt, and Ralph Flynn are expected to be present. Representatives of campus organizations wishing information recognition charters or other data are asked to meet. Committee members will have a picture taken for El Rodeo. commerce and business administration will be organized at University College in the Transportation building, Seventh and Los Angeles streets, starting March 24. Investments, in charge of Professor J. L. Leonard will deal with classes of stocks and bonds, analysis of current security flota- tive analysis of government, mu-cipal, industrial, railroad, and public utility bonds and stocks. Dr. Leonard will also conduct a course in money and banking. Accounting will be taught in seven separate courses, including beginning, advanced, and cost accounting, income tax law, and procedure, California franchise and state taxes, report writing and C. P. A. problems. Trade aud Transportation classes include practical exerting and importing, traf- avlation. Under the auspices of the School of Merchandising, classes will be organized in advertising, salesmanship, store operation, store Organization, psychology of retailing, and retail credits and collections. Real Estate classes will include real estate conveyancing, real es-tate law, advanced real estate appraisals, and real estate sales practice. In addition, commerce classes in business law. air law, bnsiness organization. apartment house management, building and property management, business correspondent*, and public speaking will be organized. Enrollments for these late afternoon and evening classes are now being taken on the thirteenth floor of the Transportation building. APRIL 9 IS DATE OF CLUB BANQUET Pledging and initiating of 13 new members to the Press club will take place on Wednesday evening, April 9, instead of April 2, as has been previously announced, according to Elinor Wilhoit, president of the organization. This ceremony will be followed by a banquet, the traditional method of pledging and initiating new members to the club. At this time pledges are requested to submit 500-word satirical essays on members of the club. Through the efforts of Prof. Marc Goodnow, of the department of journalism, Tom Curran and George Beale, members of the Los ‘Angeles United Press bureau, will speak at the banquet. The proposed members are: Mary Alice Parent, Alice Doty, Ruth Ann Byerly, Peggy Kraus, Francis Schulte, Ted Hawkins, John MoCoy, Mulvey White, Lewis Gough, John Dorfner, John Morley, Morton Morehouse, and Stanley Ewens. Press club is a journalism organization for those students who have worked on student publications for a year or more. SENIORS TO ELECT PERMANENT PRESIDENT FOR CLASS TODAY Fourth Year Students Of All Colleges Will Go To Polls From 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.; Pharmacists To Vote On Constitution. Election of thc permanent all-senior class president for 1930 will b£ made today when the polls open at 9 a. m. and remain open until 3:15 p. m. Voting will take place at the polls situated in the various campus colleges. In connection with the election, the College of Pharmacy will vote on a new constitution and will select the college treasurer. Candidates for the money position are David Tessenhoitx and Kennlth Vickery. Students being voted on for the all-smlor election are Arthur Neelley, Wei-ley Wilson, and Clifford Raveile. IDENTIFICATION CARDS It Is absolutely necessary that all seniors voting, show their Identification cards before getting a ballot, stated Art Langton, election commissioner. Each Identification card must give the name of the student, his classification and the college to which he belongs. Vottng will be open to all seniors receiving degrees in June. No electioneering is to be doo.e within fifty feet of the polls, stated Langton. Amazons and Knights will be on hand to enforce this regulation. COLLEGES HAVE BOOTHS Votes may be cast ln the election booths situated ln the different colleges. They are established In front of the administration building, in Bridge • hall, College of Dentistry down town, College of Commerce, College of Pharmacy, and in the School of Archl* lecture. Students not classified to vote In any of these places, are asked to use the polls of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences in front of the administration building. “Since the all-senior class president will have charge of all future business of the class, lt ls necessary that careful consideration be given the election,’* said Langton. "We urge all students eligible, to vote. Through an error In yesterday’s Trojan, the name of Wesley Wilson was omitted from the list of candidates for the senior presi-dency. W. S. 6. A. WILL HOLD NOMINATIONS TODAY Women To Be Excused From 9 O’clock Classes At 9:35 For Assembly. Nominations for officers of the Women’s Self-Government association will be made this morning at a special all-university women’s assembly to be held in Bovard auditorium at 9:35. Nine o’clock classes will be held as usual but women will be excused at 9:30 . Candidates will be nominated for the offices of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer. Many petitions have been filed In the W. S. G. A. office and keen competition is expected. All nominees must have a 1.3 average and can not be on probation. The president must also have served one year on the W. S. G. A. cabinet. At 10 o’clock, a program will be broadcast over KEJK. Dr. Mary Sinclair Crawford, dean of women will speak on “Women’s Contributions to the Campus.” and The Trojan Trio, composed of Eloise Jones, Peggy Binkley, and Eunice Erikson, member of the women’s glee-club will sing several songs. Their numbers include. “My Rosita” by DuPont, “Goin’ Home” by Dvorak, and "Italian Street Song” by Victor Herbert. Doris Tennant, president of the Women’s Self-Government association. will preside, and members of the W. S. G. A. cabinet for this year will be introduced from the stage. The present cabinet is composed of: Miss Tennant, president; Lucille Huebner, vice-president; James Lawson, secretary; Virginia Monosmith, treasurer; Grace Wright, social chairman; Mary Alice Parent, downtown publicity manager; Marion Johnston, campus publicity manager; Bobby Loftus, president of Amazons; Florence Waechter, president of W. A. A.; Beth Tibbot, president of Y. W. C. A.; Erma Willis, president of Social Pan-Hellenic; Miriam Brownset-ter vice-president of social Pan-Hellenic, Ruth Goldman, jus-(Continued on Page Six) Oxy Is Next Foe Of Women Debaters In Dual Contest Today Members MUNICIPAL JUDGE WILLBEHONORED National Political Science Honorary To Initiate Judge Charles E. Haas. of the women's debate squad will meet Occidental College in a dual debate today at 3:30 o’clock in Porter hall in the Law building. The question will be Resolved: That social sororities and fraternities are detrimental to the American colleges and universities. Bonnie Jean Lockwood, who served as manager of the squad last year in a successful series of j mate of President Hoover at the debates, will preside as chairman. ! latter institution. He is also Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science honorary fraternity, will bestow honorary membership upon Judge Charles E. Haas of the municipal court of Los Angeles, this afternoon at 5:30, ln the President's suite. The Initiation will be followed by a banquet at the Mary Louise tea rooms. Judge Haas will be the speaker for the eveneing. Judge Haas was selected tor honorary membership in Pi Sigma Alpha, in recognition of hla distinguished and constructive service as a public servant and his high scholarship average while ln college, and in appreciation of his continued and sincere interest in students activities and conditions. FRIEND OF HOOVER Judge Haas is a graduate of George Washington and Stanford universities, nd was a college- De Rivera Accorded High Military Honors Madrid, March il).(INS)—The sad roll of muffled drums greeted the return to his homeland today of Primo De Rivera, dead dictator. An imposing array of mourners lined the platform of north sta- ing as the train bearing the body of the Captain-General rolled to a standstill. The chimes of a nearby church pealed a funeral song, punctuated by the slow booming of saluting artillery. Great crowds ot citiienry, silently awaited outside the station while a military detachment re- Pasadena moved the flag-draped coffin from Whittier College. Occidental's affirmative team debates the negative side and is upheld by Fern Pierson and Val Robertson, while Helen Peterson, manager, and Lucile Reed, captain, will travel to Occidental college as the affirmative team for S. C. This ls the second debate of the season, the first being a nondecision contest held last Tuesday with Glendale Junior College. Val Robertson as a negative speaker and Helen Peterson of the affirmative side both took part. Other colleges and universiUes who are scheduled for debates Include University of California at Los Angeles and at Berkeley, Redlands, Utah, Wyoming, Stanford, Junior College, and Cecily Hilton, its special coach and carried lt into the station to lay in state until noon in an improvised chapel. Marian Richardson, Doris Rutherford, and Francis Strathren compose the remainder of the squad. member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. He has been actively identified with public service and governmental agencies from the time he served his apprenticeship In the state department while attending George Washington university, until the present time. For the past four >ears be has been judge of the municipal court. During his residence in Los Angeles, Haas bas occupied the position, of deputy city attorney of Los Angeles, special counsel for the county of Los Angeles, in addition to having spent some years in the private practice of law. MEMBERSHIP Pi Sigma Alpha chooses its members from those students majoring ln political science who have displayed the greatest in-terest and who have consistently maintained a high average of scho-(Continued on Page Six) |
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