Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 25, October 24, 1935 |
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Editorial Offices RI-4111, Sta. 227 Night - PR-4776
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
United Pres* World Wide New* Service
Volume XXVII
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, October 24, 1935
Number 25
San Francisco Rally Arranged For Tomorrow
To Speak
Trojan Students, Alumni To Open Festivities At St. Francis
Mohler To Head Speakers
Eames Bishop, Ed Hallock Will Represent S. C.
On Platform
Trojan students and alumni will usher in the weekend festivities at San Francisco with a gigantic rally banquet in the Italian room of the St. Francis hotel Friday evening.
Heading a program of prominent speakers from alumni and student ranks will be h brief talk by On' Mohler. former Trojan all-Coast quarterback and president of the Associated Students. Mohler, who is at present engaged as an assistant coach at S.C., will address those present regnrcing Troy s chancss of victory against California at Berkeley the following day.
others Tq Be Present
Another important speaker will be Bill Hunter director of Trojan athletics. The S.C. student body will be represented on the platform by its president, Eames Bishop. Songs and cheers will be led by Ed Hallock. Trojan yell leader.
Craig Smith, president of the San Francisco Trojan club, is directing plans frtt the banquet and will act as master of ceremonies. Noted northern California alumni who will be in attendance will include Gene Curtis, state supreme court Justice; ^tlly Knowles, president of the College of Pacific; and Francis Merriam, secretary to Governor Merriam.
Entertainment Listed Entertainment during the meal will be furnished by Hal Grayson and his Hotel St. Francis dance orchestra. Grayson graduated from S. C. several years ago.
Cover charge for the affair will be $1.50, It W8« stated yesterday by Louis Gough, executive secretary of' the general alumni association. Reservations may be made today through the general alumni office.
MIt to our hope that every stu-;nt and alumnus of the university lanning to stay in San Francisco lay night MB make a special ffort to attend the rally," Gough -ated
Festivities will begin at 6:30 pjn.
orld Institute To Meet December 14
Dr. Charles E. Martin, professor political science at the Univer-ty of Washington, has been sed director of the 1935 Insti-ute of World Affairs to convene t 8.C., Pasadena, and the River-de Mission Inn, December 14 to it was announced by Dr. Rufus von KlelnSmid, chancellor. National and international au-jties on world affairs will lead slons on “The Ethiopian Cri-“The Collective Means for eservatlon of Peace—Sanctions d Enforcement cf Treaties,” Neutrality and Munitions Con-and "The New Deal Legation and the Constitution.”
In a departure from the usual ocedure of the annual event, pre-an meetings are scheduled for e S.C. campus, Saturday evening, cember 14. on the topic, “The :lems of the Pacific." Appointment of two new mem-to the board of advisers of e institute was announced by Dr. n KleinSmld. Durward Howes, ident, International Executive 'il, Junior Chamber of Com-rce, and former president of the ited States and Los Angeles Ju-or chambers of commerce, and Witt V. Hutchings, assistant of the Riverside Mission were the men named, diversities and colleges of the cific coast and leading authori-on world problems throughout e nation are to participate ln seven-dav Institute, sponsored the Lo6 Angeles University of mational Relations.
tedtyFire- Trojans To Hold Rally at Train
Hundreds Hurt
Damage Totals $1,500,000
As Many Residences, IT • fl I
Sanitarium Fall V ErSlty OQttaQ
Higb-Power Lines Blamed
As Team Departs for Berkeley
M. _____ ______________________________
‘Beat the Bears’
+ + +
Flames Battled on \X ide Front; Sixty La Vina
Patients Saved
I By United Press.
'Dr^ollo^ hll
Of 35 Players To Trek North
Orv Mohler, former all-coast quarterback and A.S.U.S.C. president, will speak at a pre-Cal game alumni rally in San Francisco tomorrow night.
Propelled by gales sweeping down | q ^ t 5 Eleven from Utah-Nevada plateaus, fires I J F - _
Engineers Will Sponsor Dance
California Country Club To Be Scene of Affair On November 1
I swept through southern California's I brueh-covered foothills yesterday de-j stroying more than a hundred t homes.
Miraculously, none was killed, but ; nearly 300 fire-fighters and refu-i gees from the seared area were ! treated for burns and asphyxiation.
Prisoners Escape
Forty-eight county jail prisoners in the sheriff’s honor camp No. 8.
, a few miles from fashionable Mali-j bu Beach, escaped unharmed after ' being trapped by the flames for six hours, the sheriffs office was j informed tonight.
Extreme anxiety was felt for the j group whan it was learned the . blaze had circled Largo and Corral • canyons and hemmed in the camp, for 28 men were burned to death similar circumstances in
At Last Night’s S.C. Student Dinner
Is, Cheer Today Autocade
Speed Through Town Tonight
Cars to Line Up at 7:30, Leaving for Station At 8:10 O’Clock
The California country club has been selected as the site of the | under next all-university dance, which j Griffith park two years ago. the Engineers will sponsor on No- ! Reaches Altadena
vember 1, according to Willis B.
The most disastrous of eight j ,, „ „ . fires broke out shortly after mid- i „ „ „
Stanley, president of the College j niRht in Rubio canvon at the foot , tion. which iasr.»a for fully five
of Engineering. of Mt. Lowe, four miles north of 1 ^ ** ‘
"This will not be a ‘stand-up* i Pasadena, and swept through the
dance, where couples have no place ! ?pper reachss °* Altadena before
■ it was controlled. More than 50
to sit between dances." President J Stanley declared. “We have ar- f ranged to have an extra room j cleared for a lounge, so that there | will be two large lounges in addl- j tion to the porch. The combined space of lounges and dance floor j is larger than that of the Town and Gown foyer.”
The name of the orchestra, which the Engineers secured through the ; Musical Corporation of America. ; will be released on Monday. Jack Graves and Jerry Feldman are in charge of arrangements for the music, and promise that the orchestra will be a well-known Hollywood organization.
Tickets have been priced at SI.00 per couple, and are on sale by members of the Engineering council, and by Marie Poetker, cashier in the university book store. Charles Faull, ticket chairman, expects to fcla.ee tickets on sale at all fraternities and sororities by the first of next week.
To reach the California country club, one may follow Pico to the Fox studios, and turn left on Motor to Club avenue. The club is located on the latter street.
homes scattered through the canyons. including a two-block area of Altadena. were swept away.
Sixty patients at La Vina sanitarium were rescucd by ambulance drivers as the huge structure fell before the onrush ing flames.
Explosion. Fire Hit L. A. Store
Twelve hundred Trojan students pledged their support to Coach koward Jones and the S.C. football team at a spirited testimonial rally dinner held last night in the men’s gymnasium, as a final campus gesture to the Headman before he took his team tonight to Berkeley ior Saturday’s grid titanic with California’s Golden Bears.
Yesterday afternoon, Coach Jones had named 35 regulars to form the varsity squad, to be called upon to face Coach “Stub” Allison's undefeated California varsity, flushed with hopes for a Rose Bowl bid.
Other varsity players, not named, will leave for the northern fracas tomorrow night with the Trojan rooting section contingent.
Jones neceivcp Ovation Rising before a thunderous ova-min-
utcs, the Trojan grid mentor offered his thanks to the enthusiastic student body for its display of spirited loyalty. Not content to only r,peak to the PC. students. Jones pointed to his varsity players attendance and spurred them with his well-chosen phrases.
“I want the ter.m to appreciate * + *+ * * * *
the soirit sno'^q. here tonight,” he A 1 _ _ | p
&tt1'j?£82X!iiFrom Adams to 28th Street
turned out. I challenge my team j _
with: Are you ready to fight^ are j Starting with a big “T” at the Chi Phi house last night,
Trojan football spirit will reach its climax tonight with the staging of a rally at the Espee railroad station, just before the S. Q varsity grid squad leaves for Berkeley and
Saturday’s game with the University of California eleven. This picture, typical of S. C. train rallies, shows Headman Jones speaking as his 1934 warriors prepared to leave for the Pitt game.
-+-
in
on
Spontaneous Spirit Hits Climax Registrar Sets
* + *+ * + ■¥ + Deadline
By Bob Wood
“On To California r
This was the cry that swept th*. S.C. campus yerterday as thousands of Troy’s students prepared to go north to the big game witn the Golden Bears tt> be played Saturday.
Tonight the longest automobile parade in the history of S.C. will be organized in front of the Student Union to escort the Trojan team to the Southern Pacific station.
Streamers To Be Furnished
Plans as they are formulated show that the parade will be formed at 7:30 this evening. Chris Daniels, manager of the University Book store, announced that Cardinal and Goic* streamers will be furnished for the decoration of the cars.
Patrolled under police escort, furnished by the Los Angeles police department, the parade will start at 8:15. The route to be followed, as designated by the rally committee will be north on University to Jefferson, thence east an Jefferson to Flower, north on Flow-
J you ready to give your all for Troy? j j hundred S. C. students joined one of the most spon-
Tn* studen.s have shown they aie ,, , , * _..
ripped ! y°u: il0W the re^ is UP t0 taneous rallies that has oeen held along fraternity row in
By United Press.
Two heavy explosions through the walls of a downtown!30^’ , , _ , .. ,
drug store last night, wrecking the I n- n]nf 0 £ * »ii™’ interior and setting the building ■ Jcr^ assured them that his tom afirc< 6 ■ “will be fighting for you Saturday
on the gridiron at California.”
Several were reported injured by flying glass, but non was killed. Firemen brought the blaze under control within a half hour.
Drama Workshop Will Present ?iay
e Two Imposters.” latest play
Prominent Students Opine
Prominent stuclcnt leaders or Troy had their say in one of the most striking student testimonial displays in intercollegiate athletic history.
S:id Draxy Trengove, A.S.U.S.C. : vice-president:
“For a long time the women of | S.C. have been at a loss to know j
(Centinnrd O.i I'aw Thr«—j
Botany Classes To
For Failures
French Club, I.R. Group Will Hold Joint Luncheon
Members of the French club. Le Cercle Francais, and the International Relations club will hold a joint luncheon meeting in the main dining room of the Women’s Residence hall at 12:15 today. This will be the first big meeting of the year.
As the principal speaker Father Patrick Brannon, rector of Saint Matthias Episcopal church of Los Angeles, will discuss the present Italo - Ethiopian situation. In a short business meeting plans for the Fifth Pacific International Relations club conference, scheduled for November 1-2 at Claremont will be announced. Pomona. Claremont, and Scripps colleges will take part in the large gathering of International relations students.
For five years a student of international relations in Belgium and Rome, Father Brannon is well versed on the situation that exists In Europe and Africa today. Of late he has talked to many local clubs on existing Fascist
-
‘ The’ Two Imposters, by Tacie Hanna Rew. assistant professor of speech, has been selected as the first vehicle for the j Drama Workshop. It is a college 1 story with football, sorority, and !
; fraternity atmosphere. Tryouts I _
j started yesterday and will continue Dr. Martin K. Neumeyer was re-! every afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in centiy honored with the disting-Old College Touchstone theater un- uished service award for outrt-jgid-til casting is completed. ; mg sociological research, annually
twenty-one parts to j presented by the judge of the ju-
Dr. Neumeyer Is Honored by Service Award
many years-
Knights, Squires, and men and women in pajamas with
----w overcoats thrown about them to
shield them from the cold air made up the parade that wound from house to house singing and yelling those scngs of Troy that have been heard ’round the world.
Next the Sigma Nu house felt the reverberating effects of S.C. game .jp’rit, with the mob holding a miniature riot in the front rooms of the Portland street fraterniy resl- j dence. Then the assemblage boarded every available automobile to invade the 26 th street “row.”
two-day Trip
There are
The botany depan ment announces that a field trip especially I for general botany classes will be jtaken November 2 ar.d 3. The trip, i which is optional and counts as : two trips fcr these students who have required trips to make, will include visits to the San Jacinto mountains. Colorado aaserf, Paim Springs, and Palm canyon.
Tncse in charge plan that the students taking the trip shouio report- in the herbarium room (269) of Science building and be read} to leave by 8 o’clock. The party plans to reech Palm Springs around 5 o'clock Saturday evening, where they will stay all nigh:. Sunday morning they will continue on
No course in which a student is doing passing work may be dropped after Saturday, October 26, without receiving “F” In the course.
If course is dropped on or before Saturday a grade of “W” will be received.
Theron Clark, registrar, urges all students to heed this warning. as an “F” grade in an unofficially dropped course takes off grade points and cannot be retracted.
All members of the Trojan
Squires are to meet in 206 Administration at assembly period this morning to settle the question of working on the rooting section at California this Saturday was the announcement made by Byron Cavaney, president of the organization.
venile court oi Los Angeles
i to Palm canyon.
Saturday after-study of
to
be cast, under the direction of __________
Peggy Barton and Jane Aibies. N;w j The research, directed by a sub- noon will be spent in a students on campus w;re urged by | committee appointed by the re- the ocean-side life oi the San Ja-Isabel Hanawalt, president of the search committee of Los Angeles j nin?.
: co-ordinating councils, investigated I cinto mountains. Sunday morning i more than 33 salacious journals j and a part of the ai :ernoon will ! and magazines commonly sold to j be given over to study of the vege-i school children. tation on that side of the mountain.
Nelson Cullenward used his ever-subfcle charms, and seemed to have the best luck in persuading the hapless house mothers to let their eirlr, out past hours. Especially so ac the
Trojan Band Will Play at Cal Game
Italians Become S.C. Students ***+ +*** **** Paolinos, of Rome, Enroll at Troy ***+ ***+ * * * * Declare Selves 4Just Americans’
When the “On To Berkeley” caravan pulls out Friday night. Hal Roberts and 120 of his proteges will
uuo nuuid. ^ucviauy ou me i .......
DcGee house, where Cully dragged; be there to •>om m the fun-the &ils out of the house, and then, | The band will leave at 9 o’clock to prevent their re-entry, locked the ! on Friday night and will spend door behind them. ’ I Saturday morning drilling for the
! stunt to be put on before the game | in conjunction with the California Alter the fraternity houses came | band. After the game the boys will the inevitable eats at various off-campus food emporiums. At one, in j 1 particular, a gioup of obscinate Tro- i 1 jans did their best to cooperate by i rending up yells for Scripps and |
Coach Bill Spaulding, as well as j singing the "Stanford Red,” with the loyal Trojans reaching a higher j pitch in their “Fight On” and Coach Howard Jones cheer.
ial Pledge List of S.C Honorary Released
‘uncing its official pledge list, Epsilon Kappa, national honor-physical educaUon fraternity, in the lounge of the Physical tion building Wednesday af-
foUowinr men took the James Sutherland, Norman Gerard Burchard. Dave Sch-Ford Lynch, Norman Forster, ^ Zamperini, Herbert Seltzer, lere Raile, and Captain Doug-Mourat.
^ore Raile. Herbert Seltzer, 0*ptain Douglas Mourat are ^ of the university and members of the local frater-81gma Alpha.
Isabelle Hanawalt
Druma Workshop president
workshop, to try out for the cast, affairs. J At the meeting of workshop Tues-
____ day. Mrs. Rew was present and ex-
| plained the play and the background of the characters.
Two of Mrs. Rew’s other plays have been presented by workshop the past two years. “Hyacinths” won the Santa Ana tournament two years ago, and “Clipped,” a domestic comedy, won the same tournament last year. With these honors, the workshop took “Clipped” into the Festival of Allied Arts, where they placed high.
Y.W.C.A. Begins Canned Goods Drive
Commencing Its annual drive for canned goods, the Y.W.CA. appeals to all students at S.C. to make donations. The groceries will be supplied to poor families at the holiday season. The organization, through the efforts of its social welfare group, supplies one needy family with food the year around.
Barbara Miller, chairman of the group, asked that non-organization students make donations. She said that the sororities generally support the campaign 100 p:r cent and that she hoped others would do the same.
Dr. von Koerber Will Speak at Junior College
Dr. Hans N. von Koerber, head
of the department of oriental studies, wili sp^ak at the forum of Chaffey J.C. Thursday, October 31. at 4 p.m., on “Contending Powers in Asia.”
As four countries, Japan, China. Russia, and England, will be dealt with, ethnological as well as political features will be covered. If time allows the 50-minute talk w?ill be followed by discussions.
By Jack Pegues
In the family of the brothers Paolino, S.C. professional students, 103 per cent Americanism prevails —that is, to the point of speaking the language, anyway. For, although four tongues, (count ’em) French, Italian, Greek and Latin, are household utilises, only the boys’ mother uses English fluently.
The brothers. Dante, Virgil, and Leonidos, enrolled at Troy two weeks ago following nearly 15 years study in Italian elementary and preparatory schools.
They are living with their parents, Dr. and Mrs. Luigi Paolino, 1075 Leighton avenue.
Dante, 22, is a sophomore in the College of Commerce and Business j Administration. His first year was spent in the University of Rome.
Virgil. 21, transfered from the University of Naples’ law school and enrolled here a junior In the School of Law.
Leonidos, 20, Is a junior In the School of Medicine. He also studied two years at the University of Rome.
Prior to their Italian college careers, the Paolinos were eight years i in the College of the Nobles, Rome,
absorbing the culture of classical study.
The brothers were at first taciturn regarding Mussolini. II Duce, they said laconically, but significantly. is loved and unchallenged in Italy today.
“We are not Fascisti, not Communists — just American citizens,” declared Virgil, most loquatious of the trio.
Chatty despite his dialectic limitations, the youthful Pittsburgh Italian then enlarged upon these generalities.
Annexation of Ethiopia by Italy will benefit the peoples of both nations, he pointed out, in that “Ethiopians need Italy's civilization and Italy needs Ethiopia’s resources.”
All Italy, Virgil maintained, ls back of Mussolini in this venture. The people wanted war several years ago in retribution for Treaty of Versailles injustices. Mussolini, himself, b:gan ^reparations for this conflict in 1924.
Asked how long Italy could withstand pressure of League sanctions, the youth declared flatly that self sufficiency could be maintained for three years. He opined, however, that Italy would not want for outside help with France, Germany, Austria and ^ther Baulkan states sympathetic to her cause.
Coach Jones appeared visably Impressed with the demonstration at the student rally dinner earlier in the evening. Those nearer to thc Head Man said that he could scarcely express his feelings after the display of Trojan loyalty, and said that he had never seen such a manifestation of wholehearted support.
Social Workers Will Meet Here
Dr. Melvin J. Vincent of the School of Social Work will be guest speaker at a conference of social workers from Orange, Imperial, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties, to be held at the Hotel San Clemente October 26 and 27. His talk. “Personality and the Social Situation,” will be a part of the Sunday program.
The conference has been called by the alumni of the Riverside training school, SERA.
Trojan Band
on a toot'
be taken to San Francisco and will leave for home at 1 o’clock Sunday morning.
Director Roberts urges that all members who are on the list for the trip attend the rehearsal at 2 pm. this afternoon in the Coliseum. The time will be spent in preparation for the drill tbat the Trojan band is to present between halves. Anyone who is not present at the rehearsal will not be allowed to make the trip.
er to Wp.shington, east on Washington to Central, and north on | cental to the Southern Padfle station.
Hallock To Lead
At the station a rally under to direction of Ed Hallock, head yell king, and has two assistants, will bo held with the favorite songs and yells of Troy used to fir* the spirit of the team as they board tha train.
Last night the real Trojan spirt* was shown as the members of the fraternities and sororities Joined tn what was the most enthusiasts rally ever to be put on by Trojan students.
Starting at the Chi Phi house, tbs fire that put the Trojan warhorsa up on his lefts again swept up through the houses and ended at the Phi Psi honte.
Spontaneous Spirit
The spirit that manifested IBM* at the banquet last night carried over to this larger and more spoo-aneous rally. At the Phi Psi house, yells and songs that made the name of Troy a nation-wide symbol were Joined by an indefinite number oi students.
Today as a large number of students move on the way to Berkeley by auto, train, and plane, there will be shown to the people of California that the Trojan is still alive and fighting.
‘Buy Them Now Or Never/ Orders Marie
Exhibit To Honor Bible
The Huntington library has arranged a small exhibition in commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the Coverdale Bible, the first Bible printed In English. The exhibition will consist of early Bibles and other works of Miles Coverdale. the translator. The exhibit will be shown from November 1 to December #0.
Only 25 mpu’s rooting section tickets and approximately 60 wo-sen’s section tickets for the California game remain, so that the supply Is not expected to last beyond noon today, according to the cashier. Marie Poetker.
• A check up by the cashier’s office shows that the ticket sale for the rooting section, both men and women, has passed the 1000 mark, assurinsc S.C. of a good sized rooting scction with which to spur on the team.
Reserved s?*\t tickets at $2.50 can still be obtained at the ticket window In the University Book store.
Town, Gown To Present Foyer
Formal presentation of the Foyer of Town and Gown will be made by Mrs. R. B. von KlelnSmid. president of the Town and Gown organization, with response by members of th* S.C. board of trustees faculty and student body tomorrow night 3t the “name plate banquet” in the. Foyer building.
Four hundred reservations have been sent in for the banquet which will begin the season's activities. Among the guests will be many of Los Angeles* mK prominent representatives of social, educaUonal, and club circles ,
Dedicated a? the hearthstone ot S.C., the Town and Gown organization has raised the funds for ths Foyer building for student and community use.
S.C. Dames To Entertain Trojan Wives at Musical
The wives of all married students are invited tn a meeting of the S.C. Dames at 2 pm. today in the Y.W.CA. building, announced Mrs. Edward A. Northam, corresponding secretary. A musical program has been arranged by Mrs. Henry R. Schieman.
Hostesses for the day will be: Mesdames L. G. Manning, Frank Doig, and Victor L. Martins.
^
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 25, October 24, 1935 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 25, October 24, 1935. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | Editorial Offices RI-4111, Sta. 227 Night - PR-4776 SOUTHERN DAILY CALIFORNIA TROJAN United Pres* World Wide New* Service Volume XXVII Los Angeles, California, Thursday, October 24, 1935 Number 25 San Francisco Rally Arranged For Tomorrow To Speak Trojan Students, Alumni To Open Festivities At St. Francis Mohler To Head Speakers Eames Bishop, Ed Hallock Will Represent S. C. On Platform Trojan students and alumni will usher in the weekend festivities at San Francisco with a gigantic rally banquet in the Italian room of the St. Francis hotel Friday evening. Heading a program of prominent speakers from alumni and student ranks will be h brief talk by On' Mohler. former Trojan all-Coast quarterback and president of the Associated Students. Mohler, who is at present engaged as an assistant coach at S.C., will address those present regnrcing Troy s chancss of victory against California at Berkeley the following day. others Tq Be Present Another important speaker will be Bill Hunter director of Trojan athletics. The S.C. student body will be represented on the platform by its president, Eames Bishop. Songs and cheers will be led by Ed Hallock. Trojan yell leader. Craig Smith, president of the San Francisco Trojan club, is directing plans frtt the banquet and will act as master of ceremonies. Noted northern California alumni who will be in attendance will include Gene Curtis, state supreme court Justice; ^tlly Knowles, president of the College of Pacific; and Francis Merriam, secretary to Governor Merriam. Entertainment Listed Entertainment during the meal will be furnished by Hal Grayson and his Hotel St. Francis dance orchestra. Grayson graduated from S. C. several years ago. Cover charge for the affair will be $1.50, It W8« stated yesterday by Louis Gough, executive secretary of' the general alumni association. Reservations may be made today through the general alumni office. MIt to our hope that every stu-;nt and alumnus of the university lanning to stay in San Francisco lay night MB make a special ffort to attend the rally" Gough -ated Festivities will begin at 6:30 pjn. orld Institute To Meet December 14 Dr. Charles E. Martin, professor political science at the Univer-ty of Washington, has been sed director of the 1935 Insti-ute of World Affairs to convene t 8.C., Pasadena, and the River-de Mission Inn, December 14 to it was announced by Dr. Rufus von KlelnSmid, chancellor. National and international au-jties on world affairs will lead slons on “The Ethiopian Cri-“The Collective Means for eservatlon of Peace—Sanctions d Enforcement cf Treaties,” Neutrality and Munitions Con-and "The New Deal Legation and the Constitution.” In a departure from the usual ocedure of the annual event, pre-an meetings are scheduled for e S.C. campus, Saturday evening, cember 14. on the topic, “The :lems of the Pacific." Appointment of two new mem-to the board of advisers of e institute was announced by Dr. n KleinSmld. Durward Howes, ident, International Executive 'il, Junior Chamber of Com-rce, and former president of the ited States and Los Angeles Ju-or chambers of commerce, and Witt V. Hutchings, assistant of the Riverside Mission were the men named, diversities and colleges of the cific coast and leading authori-on world problems throughout e nation are to participate ln seven-dav Institute, sponsored the Lo6 Angeles University of mational Relations. tedtyFire- Trojans To Hold Rally at Train Hundreds Hurt Damage Totals $1,500,000 As Many Residences, IT • fl I Sanitarium Fall V ErSlty OQttaQ Higb-Power Lines Blamed As Team Departs for Berkeley M. _____ ______________________________ ‘Beat the Bears’ + + + Flames Battled on \X ide Front; Sixty La Vina Patients Saved I By United Press. 'Dr^ollo^ hll Of 35 Players To Trek North Orv Mohler, former all-coast quarterback and A.S.U.S.C. president, will speak at a pre-Cal game alumni rally in San Francisco tomorrow night. Propelled by gales sweeping down q ^ t 5 Eleven from Utah-Nevada plateaus, fires I J F - _ Engineers Will Sponsor Dance California Country Club To Be Scene of Affair On November 1 I swept through southern California's I brueh-covered foothills yesterday de-j stroying more than a hundred t homes. Miraculously, none was killed, but ; nearly 300 fire-fighters and refu-i gees from the seared area were ! treated for burns and asphyxiation. Prisoners Escape Forty-eight county jail prisoners in the sheriff’s honor camp No. 8. , a few miles from fashionable Mali-j bu Beach, escaped unharmed after ' being trapped by the flames for six hours, the sheriffs office was j informed tonight. Extreme anxiety was felt for the j group whan it was learned the . blaze had circled Largo and Corral • canyons and hemmed in the camp, for 28 men were burned to death similar circumstances in At Last Night’s S.C. Student Dinner Is, Cheer Today Autocade Speed Through Town Tonight Cars to Line Up at 7:30, Leaving for Station At 8:10 O’Clock The California country club has been selected as the site of the under next all-university dance, which j Griffith park two years ago. the Engineers will sponsor on No- ! Reaches Altadena vember 1, according to Willis B. The most disastrous of eight j ,, „ „ . fires broke out shortly after mid- i „ „ „ Stanley, president of the College j niRht in Rubio canvon at the foot , tion. which iasr.»a for fully five of Engineering. of Mt. Lowe, four miles north of 1 ^ ** ‘ "This will not be a ‘stand-up* i Pasadena, and swept through the dance, where couples have no place ! ?pper reachss °* Altadena before ■ it was controlled. More than 50 to sit between dances." President J Stanley declared. “We have ar- f ranged to have an extra room j cleared for a lounge, so that there will be two large lounges in addl- j tion to the porch. The combined space of lounges and dance floor j is larger than that of the Town and Gown foyer.” The name of the orchestra, which the Engineers secured through the ; Musical Corporation of America. ; will be released on Monday. Jack Graves and Jerry Feldman are in charge of arrangements for the music, and promise that the orchestra will be a well-known Hollywood organization. Tickets have been priced at SI.00 per couple, and are on sale by members of the Engineering council, and by Marie Poetker, cashier in the university book store. Charles Faull, ticket chairman, expects to fcla.ee tickets on sale at all fraternities and sororities by the first of next week. To reach the California country club, one may follow Pico to the Fox studios, and turn left on Motor to Club avenue. The club is located on the latter street. homes scattered through the canyons. including a two-block area of Altadena. were swept away. Sixty patients at La Vina sanitarium were rescucd by ambulance drivers as the huge structure fell before the onrush ing flames. Explosion. Fire Hit L. A. Store Twelve hundred Trojan students pledged their support to Coach koward Jones and the S.C. football team at a spirited testimonial rally dinner held last night in the men’s gymnasium, as a final campus gesture to the Headman before he took his team tonight to Berkeley ior Saturday’s grid titanic with California’s Golden Bears. Yesterday afternoon, Coach Jones had named 35 regulars to form the varsity squad, to be called upon to face Coach “Stub” Allison's undefeated California varsity, flushed with hopes for a Rose Bowl bid. Other varsity players, not named, will leave for the northern fracas tomorrow night with the Trojan rooting section contingent. Jones neceivcp Ovation Rising before a thunderous ova-min- utcs, the Trojan grid mentor offered his thanks to the enthusiastic student body for its display of spirited loyalty. Not content to only r,peak to the PC. students. Jones pointed to his varsity players attendance and spurred them with his well-chosen phrases. “I want the ter.m to appreciate * + *+ * * * * the soirit sno'^q. here tonight,” he A 1 _ _ p &tt1'j?£82X!iiFrom Adams to 28th Street turned out. I challenge my team j _ with: Are you ready to fight^ are j Starting with a big “T” at the Chi Phi house last night, Trojan football spirit will reach its climax tonight with the staging of a rally at the Espee railroad station, just before the S. Q varsity grid squad leaves for Berkeley and Saturday’s game with the University of California eleven. This picture, typical of S. C. train rallies, shows Headman Jones speaking as his 1934 warriors prepared to leave for the Pitt game. -+- in on Spontaneous Spirit Hits Climax Registrar Sets * + *+ * + ■¥ + Deadline By Bob Wood “On To California r This was the cry that swept th*. S.C. campus yerterday as thousands of Troy’s students prepared to go north to the big game witn the Golden Bears tt> be played Saturday. Tonight the longest automobile parade in the history of S.C. will be organized in front of the Student Union to escort the Trojan team to the Southern Pacific station. Streamers To Be Furnished Plans as they are formulated show that the parade will be formed at 7:30 this evening. Chris Daniels, manager of the University Book store, announced that Cardinal and Goic* streamers will be furnished for the decoration of the cars. Patrolled under police escort, furnished by the Los Angeles police department, the parade will start at 8:15. The route to be followed, as designated by the rally committee will be north on University to Jefferson, thence east an Jefferson to Flower, north on Flow- J you ready to give your all for Troy? j j hundred S. C. students joined one of the most spon- Tn* studen.s have shown they aie ,, , , * _.. ripped ! y°u: il0W the re^ is UP t0 taneous rallies that has oeen held along fraternity row in By United Press. Two heavy explosions through the walls of a downtown!30^’ , , _ , .. , drug store last night, wrecking the I n- n]nf 0 £ * »ii™’ interior and setting the building ■ Jcr^ assured them that his tom afirc< 6 ■ “will be fighting for you Saturday on the gridiron at California.” Several were reported injured by flying glass, but non was killed. Firemen brought the blaze under control within a half hour. Drama Workshop Will Present ?iay e Two Imposters.” latest play Prominent Students Opine Prominent stuclcnt leaders or Troy had their say in one of the most striking student testimonial displays in intercollegiate athletic history. S:id Draxy Trengove, A.S.U.S.C. : vice-president: “For a long time the women of S.C. have been at a loss to know j (Centinnrd O.i I'aw Thr«—j Botany Classes To For Failures French Club, I.R. Group Will Hold Joint Luncheon Members of the French club. Le Cercle Francais, and the International Relations club will hold a joint luncheon meeting in the main dining room of the Women’s Residence hall at 12:15 today. This will be the first big meeting of the year. As the principal speaker Father Patrick Brannon, rector of Saint Matthias Episcopal church of Los Angeles, will discuss the present Italo - Ethiopian situation. In a short business meeting plans for the Fifth Pacific International Relations club conference, scheduled for November 1-2 at Claremont will be announced. Pomona. Claremont, and Scripps colleges will take part in the large gathering of International relations students. For five years a student of international relations in Belgium and Rome, Father Brannon is well versed on the situation that exists In Europe and Africa today. Of late he has talked to many local clubs on existing Fascist - ‘ The’ Two Imposters, by Tacie Hanna Rew. assistant professor of speech, has been selected as the first vehicle for the j Drama Workshop. It is a college 1 story with football, sorority, and ! ; fraternity atmosphere. Tryouts I _ j started yesterday and will continue Dr. Martin K. Neumeyer was re-! every afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in centiy honored with the disting-Old College Touchstone theater un- uished service award for outrt-jgid-til casting is completed. ; mg sociological research, annually twenty-one parts to j presented by the judge of the ju- Dr. Neumeyer Is Honored by Service Award many years- Knights, Squires, and men and women in pajamas with ----w overcoats thrown about them to shield them from the cold air made up the parade that wound from house to house singing and yelling those scngs of Troy that have been heard ’round the world. Next the Sigma Nu house felt the reverberating effects of S.C. game .jp’rit, with the mob holding a miniature riot in the front rooms of the Portland street fraterniy resl- j dence. Then the assemblage boarded every available automobile to invade the 26 th street “row.” two-day Trip There are The botany depan ment announces that a field trip especially I for general botany classes will be jtaken November 2 ar.d 3. The trip, i which is optional and counts as : two trips fcr these students who have required trips to make, will include visits to the San Jacinto mountains. Colorado aaserf, Paim Springs, and Palm canyon. Tncse in charge plan that the students taking the trip shouio report- in the herbarium room (269) of Science building and be read} to leave by 8 o’clock. The party plans to reech Palm Springs around 5 o'clock Saturday evening, where they will stay all nigh:. Sunday morning they will continue on No course in which a student is doing passing work may be dropped after Saturday, October 26, without receiving “F” In the course. If course is dropped on or before Saturday a grade of “W” will be received. Theron Clark, registrar, urges all students to heed this warning. as an “F” grade in an unofficially dropped course takes off grade points and cannot be retracted. All members of the Trojan Squires are to meet in 206 Administration at assembly period this morning to settle the question of working on the rooting section at California this Saturday was the announcement made by Byron Cavaney, president of the organization. venile court oi Los Angeles i to Palm canyon. Saturday after-study of to be cast, under the direction of __________ Peggy Barton and Jane Aibies. N;w j The research, directed by a sub- noon will be spent in a students on campus w;re urged by committee appointed by the re- the ocean-side life oi the San Ja-Isabel Hanawalt, president of the search committee of Los Angeles j nin?. : co-ordinating councils, investigated I cinto mountains. Sunday morning i more than 33 salacious journals j and a part of the ai :ernoon will ! and magazines commonly sold to j be given over to study of the vege-i school children. tation on that side of the mountain. Nelson Cullenward used his ever-subfcle charms, and seemed to have the best luck in persuading the hapless house mothers to let their eirlr, out past hours. Especially so ac the Trojan Band Will Play at Cal Game Italians Become S.C. Students ***+ +*** **** Paolinos, of Rome, Enroll at Troy ***+ ***+ * * * * Declare Selves 4Just Americans’ When the “On To Berkeley” caravan pulls out Friday night. Hal Roberts and 120 of his proteges will uuo nuuid. ^ucviauy ou me i ....... DcGee house, where Cully dragged; be there to •>om m the fun-the &ils out of the house, and then, The band will leave at 9 o’clock to prevent their re-entry, locked the ! on Friday night and will spend door behind them. ’ I Saturday morning drilling for the ! stunt to be put on before the game in conjunction with the California Alter the fraternity houses came band. After the game the boys will the inevitable eats at various off-campus food emporiums. At one, in j 1 particular, a gioup of obscinate Tro- i 1 jans did their best to cooperate by i rending up yells for Scripps and Coach Bill Spaulding, as well as j singing the "Stanford Red,” with the loyal Trojans reaching a higher j pitch in their “Fight On” and Coach Howard Jones cheer. ial Pledge List of S.C Honorary Released ‘uncing its official pledge list, Epsilon Kappa, national honor-physical educaUon fraternity, in the lounge of the Physical tion building Wednesday af- foUowinr men took the James Sutherland, Norman Gerard Burchard. Dave Sch-Ford Lynch, Norman Forster, ^ Zamperini, Herbert Seltzer, lere Raile, and Captain Doug-Mourat. ^ore Raile. Herbert Seltzer, 0*ptain Douglas Mourat are ^ of the university and members of the local frater-81gma Alpha. Isabelle Hanawalt Druma Workshop president workshop, to try out for the cast, affairs. J At the meeting of workshop Tues- ____ day. Mrs. Rew was present and ex- plained the play and the background of the characters. Two of Mrs. Rew’s other plays have been presented by workshop the past two years. “Hyacinths” won the Santa Ana tournament two years ago, and “Clipped,” a domestic comedy, won the same tournament last year. With these honors, the workshop took “Clipped” into the Festival of Allied Arts, where they placed high. Y.W.C.A. Begins Canned Goods Drive Commencing Its annual drive for canned goods, the Y.W.CA. appeals to all students at S.C. to make donations. The groceries will be supplied to poor families at the holiday season. The organization, through the efforts of its social welfare group, supplies one needy family with food the year around. Barbara Miller, chairman of the group, asked that non-organization students make donations. She said that the sororities generally support the campaign 100 p:r cent and that she hoped others would do the same. Dr. von Koerber Will Speak at Junior College Dr. Hans N. von Koerber, head of the department of oriental studies, wili sp^ak at the forum of Chaffey J.C. Thursday, October 31. at 4 p.m., on “Contending Powers in Asia.” As four countries, Japan, China. Russia, and England, will be dealt with, ethnological as well as political features will be covered. If time allows the 50-minute talk w?ill be followed by discussions. By Jack Pegues In the family of the brothers Paolino, S.C. professional students, 103 per cent Americanism prevails —that is, to the point of speaking the language, anyway. For, although four tongues, (count ’em) French, Italian, Greek and Latin, are household utilises, only the boys’ mother uses English fluently. The brothers. Dante, Virgil, and Leonidos, enrolled at Troy two weeks ago following nearly 15 years study in Italian elementary and preparatory schools. They are living with their parents, Dr. and Mrs. Luigi Paolino, 1075 Leighton avenue. Dante, 22, is a sophomore in the College of Commerce and Business j Administration. His first year was spent in the University of Rome. Virgil. 21, transfered from the University of Naples’ law school and enrolled here a junior In the School of Law. Leonidos, 20, Is a junior In the School of Medicine. He also studied two years at the University of Rome. Prior to their Italian college careers, the Paolinos were eight years i in the College of the Nobles, Rome, absorbing the culture of classical study. The brothers were at first taciturn regarding Mussolini. II Duce, they said laconically, but significantly. is loved and unchallenged in Italy today. “We are not Fascisti, not Communists — just American citizens,” declared Virgil, most loquatious of the trio. Chatty despite his dialectic limitations, the youthful Pittsburgh Italian then enlarged upon these generalities. Annexation of Ethiopia by Italy will benefit the peoples of both nations, he pointed out, in that “Ethiopians need Italy's civilization and Italy needs Ethiopia’s resources.” All Italy, Virgil maintained, ls back of Mussolini in this venture. The people wanted war several years ago in retribution for Treaty of Versailles injustices. Mussolini, himself, b:gan ^reparations for this conflict in 1924. Asked how long Italy could withstand pressure of League sanctions, the youth declared flatly that self sufficiency could be maintained for three years. He opined, however, that Italy would not want for outside help with France, Germany, Austria and ^ther Baulkan states sympathetic to her cause. Coach Jones appeared visably Impressed with the demonstration at the student rally dinner earlier in the evening. Those nearer to thc Head Man said that he could scarcely express his feelings after the display of Trojan loyalty, and said that he had never seen such a manifestation of wholehearted support. Social Workers Will Meet Here Dr. Melvin J. Vincent of the School of Social Work will be guest speaker at a conference of social workers from Orange, Imperial, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties, to be held at the Hotel San Clemente October 26 and 27. His talk. “Personality and the Social Situation,” will be a part of the Sunday program. The conference has been called by the alumni of the Riverside training school, SERA. Trojan Band on a toot' be taken to San Francisco and will leave for home at 1 o’clock Sunday morning. Director Roberts urges that all members who are on the list for the trip attend the rehearsal at 2 pm. this afternoon in the Coliseum. The time will be spent in preparation for the drill tbat the Trojan band is to present between halves. Anyone who is not present at the rehearsal will not be allowed to make the trip. er to Wp.shington, east on Washington to Central, and north on cental to the Southern Padfle station. Hallock To Lead At the station a rally under to direction of Ed Hallock, head yell king, and has two assistants, will bo held with the favorite songs and yells of Troy used to fir* the spirit of the team as they board tha train. Last night the real Trojan spirt* was shown as the members of the fraternities and sororities Joined tn what was the most enthusiasts rally ever to be put on by Trojan students. Starting at the Chi Phi house, tbs fire that put the Trojan warhorsa up on his lefts again swept up through the houses and ended at the Phi Psi honte. Spontaneous Spirit The spirit that manifested IBM* at the banquet last night carried over to this larger and more spoo-aneous rally. At the Phi Psi house, yells and songs that made the name of Troy a nation-wide symbol were Joined by an indefinite number oi students. Today as a large number of students move on the way to Berkeley by auto, train, and plane, there will be shown to the people of California that the Trojan is still alive and fighting. ‘Buy Them Now Or Never/ Orders Marie Exhibit To Honor Bible The Huntington library has arranged a small exhibition in commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the Coverdale Bible, the first Bible printed In English. The exhibition will consist of early Bibles and other works of Miles Coverdale. the translator. The exhibit will be shown from November 1 to December #0. Only 25 mpu’s rooting section tickets and approximately 60 wo-sen’s section tickets for the California game remain, so that the supply Is not expected to last beyond noon today, according to the cashier. Marie Poetker. • A check up by the cashier’s office shows that the ticket sale for the rooting section, both men and women, has passed the 1000 mark, assurinsc S.C. of a good sized rooting scction with which to spur on the team. Reserved s?*\t tickets at $2.50 can still be obtained at the ticket window In the University Book store. Town, Gown To Present Foyer Formal presentation of the Foyer of Town and Gown will be made by Mrs. R. B. von KlelnSmid. president of the Town and Gown organization, with response by members of th* S.C. board of trustees faculty and student body tomorrow night 3t the “name plate banquet” in the. Foyer building. Four hundred reservations have been sent in for the banquet which will begin the season's activities. Among the guests will be many of Los Angeles* mK prominent representatives of social, educaUonal, and club circles , Dedicated a? the hearthstone ot S.C., the Town and Gown organization has raised the funds for ths Foyer building for student and community use. S.C. Dames To Entertain Trojan Wives at Musical The wives of all married students are invited tn a meeting of the S.C. Dames at 2 pm. today in the Y.W.CA. building, announced Mrs. Edward A. Northam, corresponding secretary. A musical program has been arranged by Mrs. Henry R. Schieman. Hostesses for the day will be: Mesdames L. G. Manning, Frank Doig, and Victor L. Martins. ^ |
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Post a Comment for Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 25, October 24, 1935

