Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 83, February 21, 1936 |
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”
Editorial Offices
Night • PR-4776 RI-4111, Sta. 227
Volume XXVII
ovel Leap Year Dance Is Planned For February 29
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
United Press World Wide New* Service
Los Angeles, California, Friday, February 21, 1936
Number 83
rojan Social Event To Fete Additional Day
oyer of Town and Gown Selected as Scene of A.S.U.S.C. Dance
Hf’k>. is this the Campus florist p? Well, this is Miss Trojane.
* a<w> send a (gardenia boutonniere Vpe A-3) to Mr. Tom Glumph. Psi Pi house, this evening, and slip a card with my name. Thank ■'Ii; goodbye.”
’’'•“Operator. Prospect 0000. Hello, this you, Tom? Just called to nind you that you have a date
* me this evening ... yes, I’ll , J for you after dinner . . . uh-| h. I managed to borrow the old vin’s car . . . g’bye.”
Added to Program *rhe above hypothetical con versa-‘ms may be the incongruous re-Mt of the A. S. U. S. C. leap year ;nce which has been proposed and anned by Student Body Vice-present Draxy Trengove as a novel ature of the associated students' ,'cial urogram for the year.
The event, unprecedented on the C. campus, is to take place Sat-fj~day evening, February 29. which the extra day of thc year, and 11 be held in the Foyer of Town id Gown, adjacent to Elisazeth n KlelnSmid hall.
•‘Similar Event*"
J; The idea has been suggested by uilar events traditionally occur-ig at other universities during leap ar," said Miss Trengove yesterday,
* nd plans are being made with the Hi sas both of holding a memorably % joyable all-university dance this
yar. and of establishing a prece-nt for future novel entertain-
Thr university social committee assisting Miss Trengove with ar-ngements for entertainment, or-' * estra. and other essential items ^jnnected with the project. Mem-3'rs of the committee in charge of stribution of bids for the l?ap year %nce are being selected “This event is to be the first of revised series of all-university inces,” announced Miss Trengove. ind will be followed by social af-*irs more numerous and novel than ve been held during the first part the year."
Meeting Today Called For Trojan Squires
All Trojon Squires are expect-I ed to attend a major meeting in Room 208, Administration building. at 12:20 today, according to Jaye Brower, president.
“It is especially important tha every Squire be present at tomorrow’s meeting,” stated Brower, “as we intend to discuss both duties for the coming weekend and to arrange a trip to the mountains.”
He further explained that the Squires are to serve at two basketball games and one hockey contest this week, necessitating careful formation of arrangements.
NIS.F. A. Offers Plan To Reduce
*
(Laundry Rates
fe
Joint Dance To Be Held Tonight
Alpha Phi Omegas To Have Semi-Fcrmal Affair With Bruins
tudents Will Sail OnTen-WeekTour
Giteek Houses Will Receive [Questionnaires Asking Their Reactions
Cook, Accused of Hoax in Pole Trip, Thinks History Will Corroborate Claims
Dr. Frederick A. Cook, whose claim to discovery ot the north pole has been disputed by explorers, has appealed to the American Geographical society to investigate it and clear his name. In the following: article, written exclusively for the United Pres*, he sets forth the basis for his belief that this will be done.
By. Dr. Frederick A. Cook
Copyright, 1936, by United Press.
__CHICAGO, Feb. 20. — (UP)—Twenty-eight years ago I
$1-0 Monthly Saving Seen Plac€d a sma11 metal tube containing a flag of the United | y 8 | States on the north pole.
I was the first man to reach that northernmost point. There is no need to tell the world of the controversy which raged around me a scant few weeks* Two months later, with two Eski-after I returned to civilization with mos and two dog teams I reached my report. But a shadow has been cast over me since that fall in 1909
Cleaning Would Be Done f3y Single Company at I Large Discount
j
Trojans Win in Debate Against Hawaii School
S.C. Proves Veto Power of Supreme Court Ought To Be Curtailed
Ijl an endeavour to afford Trojan. sti ’.tents marked savings in laundry1 when Admiral Robert E. Peary ac-
seil ice, the committee of the Na tici.al Student Federation of Amer-
cused me of attempting to hoax the nations which had honored me.
tici.ai otuaent reaerauon oi America} yesterday mailed questionnaires In the months and years that fol-to . campus fraternities and soror- i lowed I was the target of the most itlK seeking their reaction to a vicious campaign of calumny and pl:ih wherel y washing and cleaning' vituperation in history, wci Id be cone on a cooperative1 j said then that time and record
Sailing from New York June 27 the Cunard White Star Olympic, student party sponsored by Mrs. uth Baker Day. German profes-r, will make a 10-week tour of rope.
A week in England and a week the Scandinavian countries will iede a month’s stay in Ger-ny. Se\eral days attendance at Olympic games in Berlin are iuied with other side-trips routhout Germany and central irope-
The tour of the other European untries wili include a week in -itzerland. Interlaken. Geneva, d hiking among the glaciers at usern Following the stay in Titxerland the group will spend fe" dayS in Paris and then sail home on the Aquitania from erbourg August 28.
To the acompaniment of Larry Lee and his orchestra, members of Alpna Phi Omega will dance tonight at 8 o’clock in the Florentine room of the Beverly-Wilshire hotel.
The semi-formal event is being sponsored by the S. C. and U. C L. A. chapters of Aipha Phi Omega national men’s professional service fraternity.
Bids Selling Fast “Bids for the event are going fast," announced Chuck Coe hard, social chairman for the event, yesterday. “Those desiring to make last minute reservations for the dance may do so by seeing me during assembly period today in Dr. Bacon's office.”
Price of the bids has been set at $2.25 per couple.
Those in charge of the affair urge men planning to attend to remember that corsages have been banned.
First Of Series Tonight's dance, marking the beginning of the spring program, will be the first in a series of events to be sponsored this semester by Alpha Phi Omega, according to Bob DeVillibus, newly appointed president of the S. C. chapter. The group is planning to organize a winter sports club, a hiking club, and to foster many other recreational activities. DeVillibus announced.
This is the first dance to be sponsored jointly by s. C.. and U. C. L. A. chapters of the national service group, although they have previously held dinners together.
Officers of the group are enthusiastic over the rapidity with which bids are selling <*nd are confident that tonight’s affair will prove a big success.
ba-fs by one company.
embers of the N.S.F.A. committed a nation-wide collegiate organ-ize'Mon working to improve student livfig conditions, beUeve that this nt? system if carried out, would mtkn an average saving of around $5: per month to fraternity and soi' irity houses.
?,"on-orgs who live on campus wcjhld also be able to benefit by the pltfi, leaders said.
fy means of collective bargaining all laundry work would be done byiine concern insteac of by many diJerent ones, as is row the case. Esfly developments indicate that a reliction of between 30 and 35 per ce H in laundry list rates could be ob' lined, if the plan meets with th; approval of students.
’ urthermore, the concern awarded! the contract prpably would enploy student hei) in handling th{ increased vol-vati; of b'j siness, er«.f .ting more jobs f 0:5 needy persons,
N. 3. F. A- Chair-m;.i Ed Yale pojfited out :?y the increased */olume ofbus-
would bear out my claim. Explorers who followed me into the cold regions of the Arctic have since borne me out.
No life, no land, no icebergs . . .
Those were the words contained in my report. They were positive statements which only the men who came after me could prove.
“It was February 19, 1908. when I left Greenland with 11 men and sledges on the first of the long trek north. An advance party, headed by Adolph Franka. had gone ahead to establish a base.
the pole.
Civilization heard nothing from us for 13 months. In that time men gave us up for dead.
Judges Vote Unanimously
Arthur Groman Chosen as Best Speaker; North Awarded Second
Stanford To Play Trojan Team for Basketball
By proving that the unlimited veto power of the supreme court has proved injurious and that a We reached the pole April 21, check on such power would be de-1898. It was the middle of April, stable. Arthur Groman and Hom-1909 before we returned to Green- er Bell brought a 3-0 decision in land. * favor of S. C. at last night’s de-
We pushed across 520 miles of bate with the University of Hawaii, ice-covered water to reach the pole Groman and Bell took the affir-and when we finally reached Green- mative side of the question. Reland we still had 800 miles to go to solved: that congress should have reach the first Danish settlement, the power by a two-thirds majority It was August 20, 1909 before I to override decisions of the supreme
started home, going first to Denmark.
Then the blow which Peary instigated fell. I was disgraced and hounded.
Three expeditions have viewed the pole from the air. Thirty men were included in those expeditions. All of them bore out my conclusions.
I believe history will clear my name.
ini i's, it would be
inn;
pcf
Tish Lytle
wants purity
Radicals Destroy Catholic Symbols
Intoxicated Reds Fire on Troops Who Attempted To Save Churches
MADRID. Feb. 20— (UP)—Rioting radicals burned churches, destroyed crosses and trampled holy images in the streets tonight in Spain, age-old defender of the Catholic faith. The reds, intoxicated by political power won in Saturday’s
edi
dirf
nble to omnaand {creatly reduc-, election, fired on troops and Catho-
«H prices f-om the laundries bid-
? for thr contract.
lie youths who attempted to protect churches, newspaper offices
;his plan is not a new one. Yale . an(j political headquarters of the commented, as tt has been working defeated rieht-wine parties, successfully at several universities
in * the east.
Ihe N.SF.A. committee is eom-
defeated right-wing parties.
Parties Riot Inflamed members of the popular front parties—socialists, commun-
pc*?d of Louis Tarleton. Jane Cas-. ists and syndicalists—rioted at Pon self Bob Rothschild, Tish Lytle, and ' tevedra, Cartagena, Bejar, Barce-Bif Berry, [ lona. Castrogenis and Alicante.
The violence spread from the
1
Townsend Denies Candidate Backing
Statement Claims Neither McGroarty Nor Smith Will Be Entered
court declaring acts of congress unconstitutional. Clarence Chang and Bob North spoke for the University of Hawaii on the negative.
Affirmative Argument The affirmative contended the unchecked power of the supreme court to be injurious because of inconsistence of many of its rulings. In addition the S. C. debaters showed that decisions of the courts sometimes perverted the principle of amendments to the constitution. Since congress represents the will of the people, declared the affirmative. it is only logical that congress should be supreme in matters of constitutionality.
Arguing the negative, the Hawaiian team tried to show that congress does not necessarily express the sovereign will of the people. They also contended that history shows that decisions of the court have, ln the vast number of cases, been proved right.
Hawkins Presides Trevor Hawkins presided at the debate. Judges wen' W. H. Head, Venice high school debate coach:
Intelligence Of Ape, Child Found Equal
A three year old chimpanzee and an 18-month old child have equal intelligence, Professor John Todd of the psychology department, said today.
In a labratory test on Wednesday, it was discovered that the chipanzee could scribble with a crayon, place a pellet in a bottle, and arrange three blocks according to size. The chimpanzee accomplished his feats by imitation, while human children respond to spoken instructions.
The chimpanzee also looked for a spoon that fell from the table. He pounded vigorously upon the table when told to squeeze noise from a rubber doll.
By United Press.
The Townsend old age pension organization last night announced under the signature of its founder.
Dr. Townsend, that it will not spon- ' W. D. Root, Jefferson high school sor a third party movement in the debate coach; and Willis T. New-next presidential campaign. 1 ton. Manual Arts high school econ-
The statement said neither Rep.; omics instructor.
John Stephen McGroarty, Califor- 5 Groman was selected by the jud-nia poet-democrat, nor Gomer ges as the best speaker of the eve-Smith of Oklahoma City, vice- ning. North was awarded second president of the old age organiza- place, tion, would be interested as presi- At the beginning of the program
vrown
Riv«| Quintets At | Now Tied Fi Cage Lead
'% —
Coach & »arry Alters Styl« To F git-Breaking Type F<> Crucial Game
Condon Wanted By Bruno Staff
Calls ‘Jafsie’ To Help Save Murderer
Tlie bo f e for the leadership of the south in division of the Pacific Coast cor- 'ence will be held Friday and Satur iy nights ln the Olympic audi i; ium when Coach Sam Barry st -~s his defending champions. tl Trojans, against John Bunn's inford Indians. Both j quintets *' now tied for first place with six tories and three losses.
In the t series Stanford defeat* ed S. C. t *ice, but this week Coach Barry ha; altered his style of plav from the oi l slow breaking type, to a fast brej^in/ style. The attack was altered in order to take ad van -I tage of the fast playing of the high-scoring Jerry Gracin. Southern California forward, who has been Troy’s leading point-maker in the last four
__encounter? Barry believes that by
, . . /—i • r n i hurrying i p the play that Gracin s
Hauptmann Chin Counsel spee<i an(j elusiveness will be utilized to its full extent.
I S. C. must take both games from the Indian -, if they hope to take
--undisputed possession of first place
TRENTON. N. J, Feb. 20~aiB— position. If they split, and Csli-Counsel for Bruno Richard Haupt- fomia wins both of its matches
- - »• St’WStfSSfSE
don tonight to return to the United way
States and help save their client from the electric chair.
C. Lloyd Fisher, chief attorney for the convicted murderer of the Lindbergh baby, said the defense had newsreel film in which Jafsie —who passed $50,000 ransom across
Jerry Gracin, Trojan forward, failed to practice yesterday be* cause of > slight infection in hfc foot. It to• reported, however, tjtet he would be able to participate in tonight’s game against Stanford.
Staniord will come south with s
Klirmesse Festival Plans Announced
Picture Proofs Are Due Today
All proofs for the 1936 El Rodeo must be turned in not later than today, said Chuck Archibald, editor of the yearly publication. Archibald emphasized ihat proofs should be returned to Gibbon, campus photographer, and not brought to his office.
Tlie following organizations have been requested to turn in a list of all their members and their respec-\ 17*11 T> t>1 1! tive presidents: Phi Delta Chi.
Will oe 1 laveu Sigma Beta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa.
7 Delta Psi Kappa. Mu Phi Epsilon. Trojan Knights, and all professional interfratemity councils.
ushkin Story
/ mouncement of one of the most elaborate spring festivals ever staged f >y Town and Gown, the annual Ke'nesse Internationale to take pk.e on the S. C. campus March 7, J as made yesterday by the or-gav zation’s president, Mrs. Rufus B. . on KleirSmid.
Parting at 6 p. m., a banquet in th«. foyer of Town and Gown will bn; g representative leaders in social j- club, and civic groups whose reflective tables will be decorated
mainland to the Canary islands, where martial law was proclaimed after radicals began a general strike.
Woman Stabbed To Death
It was impossible to estimate total casualties since the nation went to the polls Sunday, but it was certain more than a dozen persons have been killed and several hundred wounded or injured.
One of those killed today was a woman who was stabbed to death in a clash when s butcher's son refused to salute a red flag in a procession of radicals. The marchers boxed the boys' ears and their father, enraged, stabbed at parad-ers. The butcher, Antonio Depablo, and seven of his relatives were arrested.
dential candidates.
Smith said dispatches from Tulsa, Okla., that he would enter primaries in that state were “badly advised.”
“I have no such Intention." he said. He was one of the signers of the statement issued today.
The statement, signed by Dr. Townsend, Smith, and Robert E. Clements, secretary of the organization. was issued after a lengthy conference. It said: *
“Newspaper stories have been written to give the impression congressman John Stephen McGroarty was entering a delegation in the California presidential primaries, backed by the Townsend movement.
a bowl was presented to S. C by a Hawaiian representative to serve to perpetuate mutual good will between the two institutions. Following the debate the Hawaiian speakers placed leis around the necks of members of the S. C. team.
Advertising In Gay Nineties Described
in |itematicnal colors. The banquet npfppri loin
haf itself will be brilliant with flags iuviwwu J V/til
Blackstonians
flags of < iany na ions.
ri ie Kerm‘*sse, at 8 o’clock in Bo-vaili Auditorium, will Include a pro-grsla of festive costume-dances by outstanding artists of the Southland. Fo»c dances of the early American Thi ans, natives of Guatemala, Japan (. Russia, France, and Spain will
Blackstonian, pre - legal honor society, held its regular initiation Thursday evening. February 20, at the Hollywood Roosevelt hotel. Two . . „ . . . . , distinguished men who became
be ^ followed by interpretations of honorary members of the organiz-
V
ff]
Scotland,
Featuring one of the most famous ort stories written by Alexander akin, of Russian literary fame, e School of Speech radio drama ries today offers an adaptation of Snow Storm” on KNX at 3:15
President Calls Assembly
The members of the cast have n selected from Mrs. Tacie Han- I _ _ " . Rew’s class in radio speech, and £*Qf | UCSQ.Ct\ story was adapted for radio by rothy Brown Fox of the play-iting class.
A number of unusual sound ef-have been worked out by udent technicians to provide an >here background for the un-lding of the play.
actors in Career Choice To Be Campbell Subject
•Factors to be Considered in 'sing a Vocation” will be the ■ of a talk by Dr. William G. pbell at 1:30 p. m. today on atlon KHJ. Tliis Ls one of a series f vocational guidance programs der the direction of Dr. Francis -nn. counselor of men. which be presented over the air Friday afternoon.
Official Announcement from Office of President
The president will welcome new students and d’scuss items of practical application to the campus in the first general assembly of the second semester. The assembly is called far Tuesday. February 25, at 9:45 a. m. v The following class schedule will be observed:
Tuesday, February 25 8:00 a. m. to 8:45 a. :n.
8:55 a. m. to 9:40 a. m.
9:45 a. m. to 10:30 a. m. (Assembly'
10:35 a. m. to 11:25 a. m.
11:30 a. m. to 12:15 a. m.
R. B. von KleinSmid
peoples of Cuba, ico, and Italy.
/ nong ths artist* will be Robert Bel of the Paris opera company. Ncf-na Gou d. Soo Young, and Mijfiame De Silvia with special fett'ares by *he verse speaking choir of J5 C., Be .let de Russe, Fanchon anj Marco, and Scottish bag-pipe dancers.
ation are Federal Judge Paul J. McCormick and Walter L. Bowers, president of the S. C. Law Alumni association.
Initiates, who were selected on the basis of high scholarship in pre-legal studies, included Elbert Berry, George Hill, Max Deutz, Al-den Jackson, Fred Comad, Elden Towner.
Moliere’s Plays To Be Given by Federal Group
Moliere’s “School for Wives" with its companion piece “The Criticism of the School for Wives” will be presented in Bovard Auditorium February 27, 28. and 29 as the second in a series of plays professionally produced by the federal theatre project.
The play is a seventeenth century satire of May and December marriage, with its inevitable consequences, and follows last month’s government-sponsored play. “The Knight of the Burning Pestle” also produced in Bovard by professional actors.
“School for Wives” under the direction of Jerome Corey, supervisor of the educational group of the federal theatre project, will be giv-! en in three acts and an elipogue.
“Advertising in the Local Paper of Fifty Years Ago” was the topic on which Charles F. Maguire, assistant secretary of the Evening Herald publishing company and former local advertising manager of the newspaper, spoke on last night at a dinner meeting of Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising fraternity.
The affair was held at 5 p. m. at the William Penn hotel. 2208 W. Eighth street, and prior to the dinner 10 neophytes and one assoc -late, Braun S. McPherson, advertising manager of the Bi o a d w a y department store, were formally initiated.
The following j Trojans were inia-' ted, according to Tom Be ckwith. oresident of the fraternity: B i 11 Charles Maguire Ross, Bob Ben- ...adspeaker singer, Ed Abbot, C. W. Van Hom, Pack Grider, John Eaton, Chuck Carr, Paul Donavan, Don McKel-lar, and Don McAllister.
In 1932 Maguire was presi dent of the Los Angeles Advertising club.
a cemetery wall said Hauptmann sqUa(j of piayers fresh from an un-undoubtedly had accomplices. expected 63-30 loss to the third place
c^*ndon California Bears. With such cage
At the Flemington trial Condon luminanes as Hank Luisetti. divison testified all his negotiations were scoring leader; Art Stoefen, snd with one man—Hauptmann. Howell Turner, the Redmen will
Fisher s appeal to Condon came prove to be a hard aggregation to at a time when Gov. Harold G. stCp.
Hoffman—shaken by the withdraw- Tq Ed Oram, Troy's choice for al of Samuel Leibowitz, New York all-conferencs guard honors will gc lawyer, from the case—was corsid- the task o< stopping Luisetti. In ering sending a letter to Condon the last se ies Luisetti, with nis asking him to return. Condon is questionable charging tactics, rang on a vacation in Panama. up 30 point- x> nose the Trojans o*r
Hoffman has four specific ques- of the leagm leadership.
tions he wants to ask Condon. All — -
of them are based on the theory that Hauptmann had accomplices.
Fisher joined in Hoffman’s appeal today by saying: *
Fisher Appeals ‘‘If I were John Condon and I knew the defense contended my story was shot full of holes I would take the first boat or plane back to this country. It would be on my conscience.”
Hational Brotherhood Day Will Be Observed Sunday
♦ *
SC. Students Will Cooperate With Radio Speeches on Tolerance'
\ -
1|\ a move to promote
stat ding and cooperation
oetoi
under-among
Pr ’-.estants, Catholics and Jews as Arf rican citizens. National Bro-thtihood day will be observed Sun- 1 da | as a climax to National Broth* iliood wtek which is being ac-clfif ned on tne campuses and in the ch-jl-ches and synagogues through- [ ou tthe country.
C. students, in harmony with ; ] a •’ ition-wide schedule, will speak on i •tolerance,” over the week-end in vx» Angrles churches and syn-i agfj ues. It .s estimated that more thj*i 72 S. C. students will take pail in the peech-making.
nVie principle meeting to be held Sunday is ir the form of a “Youth Ur ierstandir g Meeting” and is to be f.eld in the auditorium of Royce | hi at U. C L. A. The subjects of the] talks to >e given are, “What It i Me, ns to b* a Protestant Today.”
! “V." at it M^ans to be a Catholic, I To iy,” and “What it Means to be
a Jew Today.”
Brotherhood week was inaugurated in 1934 by the national conference of Jews and Christians.
t
Church’s Pendleton
. .. has no controversies
They selected. as their slogan, “Make America Safe for Differences.” The emphasis has been at institutions of higher learning and through religious conferences it has well-developed organizations at U. C. L. A., L. A. J. C., and S. C.
The organization distinctly does not aim at any sort of church union nor does it engage in any religious controversy, according to its president, Ellen F. Pendelton. It emphasises that social and com-znunity tasks are of common concern and calls for cooperation in them. It proclaims that Protestants, Catholics and Jews in their beliefs and rituals may be separate in themselves but should be united in the common undertakings that good citizenship demands.
During the past two years Brotherhood day has stressed the words and example of George Washington as a foremost advocate
of making America safe for differences. The emphasis this year, however, will be on the contributions which Jefferson, Adams, Madison, with Lord Baltimore, Roger Williams and other colonial and revolutionary leaders have made to the American tradition of civil and religious liberty.
The religious conferences and meetings that have been arranged were through a committee of 100, consisting of prominent civic, religious, social and industrial citi zens of this community.
In southern California, the University Religious Conference, a state corporation, represents the national organization in the task of promoting fellowship and under standing. All meetings sponsored by this group and by the groups men tioned above are open free of charge to the university students and to people’s groups of all denomin ations and sects-
Contef I Opens for Smi isonian Post
An open for the p ator in t.* tion is ai
>mpetitlve examination don of associate cur-Smithsonian Institu-unced by the United
Fisher s statement indicated that states civ service commission
the entire energy of the defense fiw f. _ „
between now and the time Haunt -' PP ,s f°r the position
nim L which is i the ircheology depart-
mann is due to be executed will be---* —^ ^_____
concentrated on trying to bring
ment and be on file
iys $32f'0 a year, mufS ..dth the United States
Youthful Hikers Located in Jail
Condon back to this country and civ„ ^ : comml3slon at Wash have him answer questions. | lngton D not lh,n M,r.
ch 16, 193«
Duties c; the person selected will inclut independent research j in the arc ology division, installation of e.d'oits, and preparation of I texts and ;'’bel in addition to ser-
------, ving as at'ing curator in the ab-
YUMA, Ariz. Feb. 18—<Ci!)— The ie Foetker, :ashier. adventures of Earl Goodwin and Person? f-opiying must be citizen-Fred Goodwin, brothers of 19 and of the U. who have not reached 14 years of age. were ended tonight, their 45tb I rthday on the date tha'. as their parents rescued them from the receivu g of applications closer
the city jail. -----
They were picked up today by Mexican immigration officers 10 rlrt/'lr^v f'i 1 f- r I miles north of the Gulf of Califor- * A ill x V/
nia, following the start of a hike to T) f I 11 .
South America, from their home in De I l-dCl at V t3*m* Bakersfield. Calif.
Starting with $35. they ended the trip “broke.” Most of the money, and most of their possessions, too, they had traded to Mexicans for tortillas and beans, they said.
Delinquent Cards Will Bring $3 Late Fee
Issuing its annual warning to S. C. students, the registrar’s office yesterday announced that all permanent class cards must be turned into the office within one week of the date stamped on the card.
Theron Clark, university registrar, stated in the warning that the signature of all the student’s professors must be obtained on the card before it is turned in to the office.
A late fee of $3 will be charged all students that fail to comply with this part of the registration procedure.
The ie< ockey gnme between S. C. and !.*■> ola has been scheduled for 9:30 ” ; i. Saturday, giving fans the oppcr' nity of attending both basketbaU nd hockey games, Ed. Hallock nounced today.
Trojan lights and Squires are reserving section for S. C. students on • west side of the rink opposite >.e entrance.
To pre’$ .it delay in obtaining tickets a r the Polar Palace, the cashier’s 1 fice in the Student Union has t »;ets on sale today for 25 cents, wil i presentation of identification c \ d.
S. C.-Lc 'ola Ice Hockey Ticke s Are Now on Sale
Tickets or the S. C.-Loyola ice-hockey ga ies at the Polar Palace Saturday light are now available for 25 cen s at the University book store wind )W, announces Mrs. Marie Poetkner, cashier.
General admission tickets anc reserve seit tickets for the S. C Stanford basketball game at the Olmpic auditorium Friday and Saturday nigiit are also available for 75 cent ftccordir* to °oet-
ker.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 83, February 21, 1936 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 27, No. 83, February 21, 1936. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
” Editorial Offices Night • PR-4776 RI-4111, Sta. 227 Volume XXVII ovel Leap Year Dance Is Planned For February 29 CALIFORNIA TROJAN United Press World Wide New* Service Los Angeles, California, Friday, February 21, 1936 Number 83 rojan Social Event To Fete Additional Day oyer of Town and Gown Selected as Scene of A.S.U.S.C. Dance Hf’k>. is this the Campus florist p? Well, this is Miss Trojane. * a |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1936-02-21~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1114/uschist-dt-1936-02-21~001.tif |
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