Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 30, October 29, 1937 |
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Wtofldi Offices
Night - PR - 4776
RI - 4111 Sta 227
I n fi
World Wide
News Service Z-42
Volume XXIX
Los Angeles, California. Friday, Oclober 29, 1937
Number 30
Slogan Prizes Announced
Homecoming Contest Is Opened
CHAIRMAN
The annual homecoming slogan contest for students of the university, conducted under the sponsorship of the university alumni association,
cpens today and will close November 8.
Prize for the winning slogan wiU be two tickets for seat£ on the 50-yard line for the U.C.L.A.-U.S.C. game December 4. The prize is being offered by the alumni association.
JUDGES TO BK ANNOUNCED
The winning slogan will be the one which, m the opinion of the judges, best expresses the spirit and atmosphere of a Trojan homecoming. and the one which they believe is most suitable as a theme for the homecoming program and publicity. Slogans should be as short as possible. Judges for the 1937 contest will be announced next week.
Boxes in which students can place their contributions will be placed at convenient locations in the Student Union before Monday, giving entrants ample opportunity to submit, their slogans.
PART SLOGANS GIVEN
Preparation of the program and publicity literature will awak selection of the slogan.
Slogans which have served hi p^st years include “Man t+ie Walls of Ttoy." 'Back to Beck Troy.”
SMALL SQUAD OF CHINESE FACES 40,000
SHANGHAI Friday, Oct. 29— (i--A lone Chinese flag fluuered ai dawn toda;- high over shell-torn Cnapei, the heart of China's ruined meiroiiolis. a proof that a ‘•doomed’’ battalion ’ of Chinese soldiers was still there in lhe rearing hell of bombs, bullets, and shrapnel.
AU China, figuratively, wa:ched that flag. It has become a symbol of China's heroic resolution to accept annihilation rather lhan Japanese conquest.
A scant 200 remnants of a battalion of ‘Chiang's Own—crack troops of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's eighty-eighth division who have taken an oath never to surrender—held out in a huge three-story warehouse against 40,-000 Japanese.
Legal Croup Has Meeting
Discussion, Dinner, Talk Comprise Program for L. A. Bar Association
Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid was the principal speaker last night at the monthly dinner given by the Los Angeles Bar association in Town and Gown. He spoke on ‘'The New Day in Professional Service.”
The dinner followed a roundtable conference on the “Law of Evidence” which took place during the afternoon. Judges and prominent members of the Bar association discussed interpretations of a 326-page report on the law of evidence, printed by the California Code commission. The report was prepared dur-One hundred members of the ! ing the last year by Clarke B. Whit-Southwestem Archaeological feder- tier, professor of law at Stanford
universitv. James P. McBaine. School
Japanese Endanger Nationals?
MURDER
SUSPECTS' ADMIT CUILT
Foreigners Periled As Nipponese Iniensify Shanghai Offensive
Eight University of Southern California students were questioned for murder this week and four confessed.
In a general psychology classroom demons ration, eight persons , were given letters of instruction.
| Pour told the holders to go to the j j Student Union, and four told the ! ; holders to go to the Old College j I basement, where the'y found a caL- ! I sup-bespattered dummy.
Immediately afterwards they were !
19 >7, h \ Vsittd Pf.i .
SHANGHAI, Friday, Ocl. 29—(U.P)
—Japanese army, navy, and air forces today opened a new offensive , ... on both sides of honor-stricken ^-association tests in whicn they
Shanghai in an effort to win the i *ere given words and told to ans‘
Parley
Potency
Waning
Lewis Admits Failure Of Labor Committees To Reach Agreement
WASHINGTON. Oct. 28— <l.E)— John L. Lewis, chairman of the
Sophs Give DanceTonight
BACKS NAZIS
Committee for Industrial Organiza-| tion, has admitted privately that j peace negotiations with the Ameri-
1 cpmnri nhasp the ha io I wer them with the first-words that can F^oera.Jon of Labor are ‘ all
! wh£h H thf ’ came to their minds. ! over-busted, it was learned to-
| which nas raged around this inter- j
i national city for 76 days. I The four students who had been
J Thousands of foreigners in the! given letters directing them to the j international settlement and the i basement, were found guilty beyond
hight.
The admission was believed to mean that the peace conference of warring labor factions, which
the
recessed in an apparent deadlock
French concession were in grave ! a doubt, but for a final check-up a danger as the contending armies ’ lie-detector which had been bor-fought in houses and streets alont rowed from the police department j yesterday, may not reassemble on , edges of the areas. ! w'as brought in and proved again Th,n‘sriflr aR
Jack Warner, student chairman o-f the committee which is offering its annual prize for the bes-r slogan submitted as a theme for homecoming week.
Archaeology Body To Meet
Southwest Federation Plans Luncheon,
Program for Tomorrow
United States marines. British that the four students were guilty.
infantry regiments, and all units of )__
the slaughter W'hich has lasted all this w'eek, remained constantly on duty.
MARINES A«E READY
Rear-Admiral Harry E. Yarnell. commanding the United States Asiatic squadron; Col. John C Beaumont, marine commander; Consul-, General Clarence Gauss, and other ; American officials feared that American units might be involved at any moment in the fighting just outside the barricades held by the United States defense forces.
of Jurisprudence at the University of California at Berkeley, and Wil- ! liam G. Hale, dean of the School of Law at U.S.C.
Dean Hale presided at the dinner.
•■Troians Trek Twyward. • andi*'** Wl" regUlf 1411
' ThiKiderinp Back with the Thun- ; >" «a£ camPus
, „ j row. Dr. A. O. Bow'den. professor
<*enn® j of anthropology and president of the
Obsei vance of homecoming wiU i lederation, announced yesterday.
be from November 29 to December The ^ program ^ begin
4 thi6 year, ending the aay o the , M R m with a t(mr Qf the ^j which was attended by approxi-iootball game with U.CL.A. m e museum to be conducted mately 245 members of the associ-
coliseum. by Arthur Woodward, ourator of ' ation. He presented a short resume
Student chairman of the home- archa6ology. , of the afternoon conference,
coming committee is Jack warner, A mQUon urp RngJ k. Entertainment was furnished by
and alumni chairman » ^ ^ are ^ ^ featured ^ thp afte,._ members of the U.S.C. School of Wright, president of the Los • nojm prograni ^ ictun Music. Margaret Flintham was
Angeles Bai association. Names of Sacrgd Arrow Ceremony ^ the ■ vocalist She was accompanied by
Cheyenne Indians.” wHI be shown j Teruko Hirashiki. through the courtesy of Mu Alpha ' Accordian selections were offered Nu. honorarv anthropological fra- I ^.V Margaret Heimann and Richard ternity. It was filmed on the Chey- I Bergherm played the vibra-harp. A enne reservation in Oklahoma, and lrurnPet Quartet was composed of is the only one of its type that has > Earl Jones. Gene O Donnek, Bob tr been taken I Fowler, and Al Deffebach.
expenses _ ; ^ I us.c. law students were allowed
~ Dr. F. W. Hoage. director of the
Southwest museum, will speak on
'The Progress of Archaeology in the , . , . _____. ,
Southwest ” a™**™... ! arranged to acquaint attorney.
Loyalist Troops Revolt
Thursday, as scheduled.
LEWIS TELLS McGRADY
The remark was made in a telephone conversation between Lewis and Edward F. McGrady, former assistant secretary of labor, it was reported. Lewis has personally re- j framed from public comment during the joint conferences with the ■ A. F. of L.
Brigade Fires on Own Men Attempting To Abandon Positions
Despite increasing pressure from rank-and-file membership of each group, the prospects of cementing a truce diminished rapidly. William Green, president of the A F. of L., WITH THE NATIONALISTS AT j declined to comment, but appeared SARAGOZZA, Spain, Oct. 28—(l’.E) to be thoroughly pessimistic.
British anger at the Japanese Insurgent dispatches from the, The only chance appeared bo be reached new heights after Brig.- mountainous Zuera sector, 16 miles jf president Roosevelt should inter-Gen. A. P. D. Telfer-Smollet, com- north ot here, described tonight i vene ancj impress upon the peace manding the British army forces j how troops of the famous interna- j committees the urgency of reap-here, was fired on by a Japanese j tional brigade—finest fighting unit ! proachment. tank which was pushing across of the Loyalist armies—turned ma-Soochow creek on the western bor- j chine gun fire on comrades at-ders of the settlement. tempting to abandon their positions.
The insurrection was said to have \ proP°<*? “al"
thew Woll, one of three federation
The British moved additional machine guns and anti-aircraft artillery into their defense lines and continued to open their barricades to Chinese refugees despite a Japanese warning that it was dangerous to do so.
the rest of the committee w'ill be pnnounced next week.
F.D.R. To Tally
►enses Over Weekend
HYDE PARK N. Y.. Oct. 38—<! .}!'
I to attend the round-table discussion which was the second of such meet-
Dr. James Beveridge’s
—President Roosevelt fared tonight top*0 The Achievement of Arch- ■ p weekend of hard work checking : aeological Work in Rome and the | ihe government's financial outlooK Near East. j
for next veer with a view to balan- j A luncheon will precede the af-cing the budget. I ternoon program and will take place
He v ill confer tomorrow night and in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall.
The price will be 50 cents.
Anyone is invlied to attend the federation session, according to Dr. Bowden, who is interested. Today is the last day that reservations ior the luncheon can be made at his office. 3524 Universitv avenue.
with the latest interpretations of
po^ribly through Saturday with Secretary of Treesury Henry Morgen-thpu. Jr. and acting Budget Director Danie’. Bell. They will survey f. icndtrg oians to determine how
ihev nry bf kept within federal tax income.
T'ie - ip item in their deliberations vill b3 how to raise the $600,000,000 reeded to f nance the government's proposed “e /er-normal granary” biil rnd corn lof ns to bolster crop prices
Mr. Roos've.’t lunched with WU! Hays, moving picture industn- czar, •"’.io called to discuss “the motion picture business in general."
Hays seid lhe president was particularly iniewested in cultural and f ducaliana! advantages offered by thc theater, and in the export of American lilnv> to foreign coun-tr.°s
Social caller- during the afternoon '■•ere F cf. and Mrs. Feiix Frcnk-fv.rier. Harwrd university l.’w pro-f?s or r ho is a close presidenuai aa-*» isrr. f. id Mr. r td Mrs. Fulton Our-sler. m'ta/lne eoitor.
Lancers To Vote On Paddon, Rudin For Board Post
COMMANDERS WARNED
The Japanese warned both the American and British commanders at midnight that their new^ offensive was beginning and asked ihat the foreign troops remain behind their defense barricades.
Lieut.-Gen- Iwane Matsui. Japanese commander, and Rear-Admiral Kiyoshi Hasegawa, commanding tiie Third Imperial battle fleet, explained that it was impossible to avoid firing near the Anglo-American defense lines since the retreating Chinese have sought refuge under the very muzzles of the guns of the Anglo-American forces.
F. D. R. BECKONS WOLL
Only indication of such a possib-
been described in detail by prisoners and militiamen who crossed over to the Nationalist lines, across a no-man's-land waist deep w'ith flood waters.
The Nationalist conquest of Gijon and all Asturias province wras said to have demoralized Loyalist forces
negotiators, to the Hyde Park residence of Mr. Roosevelt. It was learned that Mr. Roosevelt invited Woll to meet with him at the suggestion of a “close friend.’’
The peace committees rested on the harsh exchange of words which
•I
Benito Mussolini, wbo set diplomatic hives to buzzing following his warning to the j worid that Nazi Germany’s | former colonies must be restored to her to insure peace.
Italy Backs Nazi Cause
Mussolini Champions
German Demand
I
For War-Los< Colonies
ROME. Oct. 28 — UvEi — Premier Benito Mussolini's warning to the world at a gigantic Fascist celebration, that there can be no durable peace in Europe until Germany’s _ war-lost colonies are restored. 1 r°le in "Varsity Show.’ Previous to fresh speculation tonight over the i her participation in film work. Mlss
All-U Party To Be Staged In Pasadena
The sophomore class will be host to students from all divisions of the university at its annual dance at the Huntington hotel in Pasadena tonight.
With Col. Manny Prager. featured vocalist with Ben Bernie's band for five years, directing that same band in both “sweet" and "swing” strains, dancing will begin at 8:45 p.m. to allow students sufficient time to reach Pasadena
Heading the list of guests is Johnny Mercer, who will act as master of ceremonies for the evening. Mercer achieved wide-spread recognition over a period of years during which he sang with Paul Whiteman's orchestra. In the years before and after his work with Whiteman, Mercer devoted his efforts to song-writing and lists “Pardon My Southern Accent’’ and “Old King Cole” among his outstanding hits. In addition to his duties as master of ceremonies, Mercer has also promised to do several of his original numbers for which he is noted.
Another entertainer who will take part in the program is Mabel Todd, who recently completed a comedy
Jerry Benjamin, ticket chairman. requests that council members bring all money and unsold tickets for the sophomore danre to him in the Student Union lounge this afternoon at 2:15 o'clock.
Professor Talks on Italy
Frances Paddon and Herman Rudin. candidates for a seat on the Trojan Lancer administrative board, will again be voted on today by non-orgs to break a deadlock resulting from the last election- Polls will be open al 8:30 a.m. and will close at 2:30 p.m. at the Lancer desk in the corridor of the Student Union, John Rose. Lancer elections
Through an error, Evelyn Bard was mentioned yesterday as a candidate for a position on the Lancer administrative board. Instead the name should have been Frances Paddon.
vJRC Committee To Have Lecture
Vrith Mr. Au. matios Tii
Prof. George P Butler of the de-| partment of English literature ul j Chapman college was guest speak-j er at the monthly luncheon meeting of the Sodalitas Classica. classi-; cal language club, yesterday.
His experiences during a recent
irip to Italy w:ere the subject of i--------
Professor Butler's talk. He des- commissioner, announced yesterday, n'ibed scenes in Rome and pic- j Frances Paddon is a member of ' lured Italian life today
that lhe thing which most im- ary society, co-chairman and cap pressed him was the general mili- , lain of the Lancer women’s basket-tary aspect of ali Italy. j ball team, and archery manager.
Prcfes or Butler also mentioned Rudin is on the Lancer bonfire and | the classical background of the I membership committees.
country and described some recent i ________
! excavations ai Rome of buildings !
| dating from ancient tim .>■ D L’ I 4»
Miss Rum W. Brown, head of the j
parking lot
j classical languages department, and
Tokyo Executives Do Missionary Work
SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 28— <l'.P» — Half a dozen of Japan's most prominent citizens headed east across the continent tonight assigned so “missionary work” to expound to America and the world the Japanese stand in the undeclared war with China.
A miniature who’s who of Tokyo, the business executives moved under unofficial sponsorship of the foreign office to clarify Japan’s position abroad “without propaganda.”
Japan is not fighting for an acre of territory in North China but for “peace that will insure Japanese commercial expansion and fair trade,” they told the United Press.
on the Aragon front and many of j broke UP three days of negotiations.
them attempted to flee from the.-
front line positions around Zuera.
The insurrectionists were des- 1 pn A C if pfl cribed as men of the 124th mixed HJIVCU
Loyalist brigade, including many i Anarchists from Barcelona and the j Catalonian countryside
The international brigade, holding positions m the second line, sought to drive the militiamen back to their trenches and opened fire with machine guns, the dispatches said. A bitter battle was fought and the international 11th brigade took refuge in the headquarters of the Loyalist general staff.
The Anarchists were reported bo have attacked the building with trench mortars, and the fighting continued until the Loyalist high command agreed to withdraw a portion of the troops holding the Aragon front lines.
To Hand in Security Blanks
According to the employment bureau a large number of men have not complied with the Daily Trojan announcement concerning their social security numbers. The following must hand their social security blanks or numbers today in order to be able to work tomorrow, employment officers said yesterday.
S. Rose, T. Sorrenson, R. Sorren-son. W. Olwin. J. McGram. R. Staley, R. Zimmerman, D Wright, H. Bennett, R. Perrine. S. Perrine, R. Hauserman, R. Taylor. N. Brockman, R. Jeffreys, J. Fay. F. Campbell, H. Brown, I. Shevelew. S Bud-arz, D. Leavans. E. Jewel. A. Boggs.
next thrust of the Rome-Berlin
axis.
Diplomats professed to see behind
Todd acquired fame with Al Pearce's
gang.”
A last minute announcement laat
II Duce's words the signal for a new i night disclosed that Tommy Won-Italo-German campaign aimed at ! der. baM-room dancer who uses a Britain and France. II Duce looked saw-dust dummy as a partner, ha*
Former Daily Editor Takes News Bureau Job
Tom Lawless, editor of the Daily Trojan in 1935-36. yesterday began work as assistant to Franklin B Skeele. director of the U.S.C. news | G. Frank, C.
bureau. Lawless fills a position va- J- H . . „ _.. ^
: Goldfield, S. Silliphant. R. Eddy. r. cated by John Morley. who succeed-; Eddy B Na?h c Kennedyi L Nel.
ed Matt Barr as assistant director son D Snyder. G. Sheldon, and H.
of student publications. j Gardner.
out on 700.000 black shirts assembled from all Italy for Fascism's 15th birthday as he gave his warning.
Return of Germany's colonies in North-Central Africa — at a time when Mussolini and Fuehrer Adolf Hitler have forced an almost unconditional surrender of the other powers in the Spanish crisis— would mean a Nazi-Fascist encirclement of strategic British and French colonial possessions, diplomats asserted.
given his consent to attend. Wonder became known in local circles when he filled an engagement of several weeks with a local hotel.
According to Fred May, sophomore class president, a door prize will be given through the courtesy of the Mary Ellen Shoppe, local clothing concern. May added that dresB for the occasion wHI be sport, with corsages banned.
To reach the hotel, drive out North Broadway to Huntington Drive; turn left on Huntington
Thundering shouts of “viva II [ Drive, keeping on left-hand side of Duce!” rolled over Olympic stad- I railroad tracks; continue on Hunt-
ium and down from nearby Monte Mario as II DUce spoke In Berlin his demand for restoration of the German colonies so that “a great nation shall regain its place in the African sun,” was jubilantly greeted.
“It is new proof of the firmness
Continued on Page FW
U.S.C. Students Named Delegates To I.R. Meeting
Fourteen students from the Los Angeles University of International | delegates from Nationalist Spain Relations and the political science and Nazi Germany—the high rank- department were tentatively named ing leaders of Europe's Fascist bloc 1 yesterday as delegates fromU.S C.to
H. Lash. S. Saul. C. Bean. F. Col- and effectiveness of the Rome-Ber-lin6, F. Fleming. L. Fyan. E Thurs- ! lin axis,” said the authoritative ton, H. Poux, L. Zehren, G. Good- | Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung. rich. F. McLaughlin, E. Odel, G. Behind Mussolini as he spoke were
Shivel. H. Davis.
H. Larry, W Claphan. G. Taylor,
Franklin. B. LeDuc,
Porter, B Walk, M.
that has defied the rest of Europe to turn it from its course.
+ + U.S.C. Organizations + +
Men's Faculty
Gamma Alpha Chi
Stray Greeks
Gamma Alpha Chi, women’s pio- j The Stray Greeks will hold their
Minister Will Speak at Forum
the annual Pacific Southwest conference of International Relations clubs at the University of Redlands on November 5 and 6.
The students chosen at a luncheon meeting of the International Relations club yesterday were Mary Louise Hair, president of the organization; Jose Antonio Caceres. treasurer; Fritzi Martin, secretary; Elmer Hyde. Robert Ryan, Mario Tartag-lia. C!aude Ross. George B. Scofield. Richard Sih. Leah J. McDaniel, Harold Weeks. Boris Soso, Emil Sady. and Armand Fitzer, graduate.
The Rev. H C. Noble, minister of the Presbyterian church at Downey, will be the guest speaker at the weekly religious forum Monday at 4 p.m. in Bowen room. Mudd hall.
The general theme for the discussion will be “Organized Religion j Dr j EUgene Harley, head of the Building a Better World. ’ The political science department, will ac-
Th. Poi 7.0- j pre.-.dent of Sodalitas Classica. pre-recenc Wil- aided at the meeting in Elisa bon :
1 a..:stccvn institute of human reis- \on KleinSmid hall.
i.e.:s vh.ch he attended, members [___________
cthe iacuity who comprise the ad- j
w:.y commit.ee to the University ! ASUSC ComrpitW lis’gizvs conference will lunch in V'°",rr ‘T'ee
:-2? Student Union at noon today. \A/jJ| Meet Today > ?m'jsrs of the advisory commit-
The Men's Faculty club will have a stag session this evening begin- iessional advertising sorority, pled- annual Hallowe’en steak fry and He said j the WAA board and Clionian liter- | ning with dinner in the main dining j ged thirteen girls last Wednesday ' dance tomorrow afternoon and eve-
room of the Student Union. Dr. evening. The ceremony, held at lhe ning at Switzer’s mountain lodge. i _
John G. Hill of the School of Re- Kappa Delta house, was followed by! AU fraternity men who are not af-1 speaker will present his views of thc I company the group as faculty ad
ligion will show motion pictures of dinner at Caldwell’s. j filiated with a local house are also j subject with the program of the j vjson
his trip to Alaska lr.st summer. In addition to the pledging cere- invited to attend the party. Presbyterian church as the basis foi ( Scofield will be the leader of the
The pictures are entirely in na- monv. a special initiation was con- ! tural color and portray many dif- ducted for Annabelie Burns, Prof. German ferent aspects of America’s last Ada Holme, and Virginia Frye j
frontier. Colorful wdld flowers, gla- i Graves | Members of the German club w'ill
ciers. the breaking up of the ice on j The new pledges are Hazel Bour-
the Yukon, and Indian life are | get. Virginia Fisher. Sally Ford, Lu- t p m tocjay before driving io the shown. General discussions w ill fo’.- | cille Foster low the motion pictures. ! Liggitt, Jane Mauerhan
Workers Named
lecture.
include Dr. Francis M Bacon, irm.an; Dr. Bruce Anthony. Dr. -Ib :rc Rs jbcnheimer. Dr. Robert rc en^ill. Dr. Frank Baxter, Dr. W. Ealientine Henley. Mr. Adamatios Th. Polyzoides, Dr. Clinton Thienes. Mr- Theron Clark. Dr. John Smallman, Dr Wilbur Long. Dr. Car] Knopf, Prof Catherine Beers. Prof. Coyde Dalzeil. Dean Mary Sinclair rawford, and Dean Pearie Aricen-US.
There will be a meeting of the alluniversity social committee today at 10 a.m. in 201 Student Union, according to Caroline Everington. A.S. U.S.C. vice-president. Attendance is <x*npiiteo«y for member
The committee kiciMdeet Betty 'fene Bartholomew, Shtrtejr Roths-ch**d, Lorine English. Burbr Gold-smith. FVwd Cunningham, BH1 Thompson, and B* flood.
Parking lot workers for the U C (■L.A.-California game tomorrow, as Latin-American
i released by Leo Adams, graduate j
J manager, are as follows: j Latin-American club members
Men report to Eddie Oram at 9:30 Wiu gather at a luncheon today at t _ Tfirtnlia a.m. behind Mudd hail: K. Watson, 112:3o at the Casa de Rosas. Stu-D. Olson. dents without transportation are to
Men report to Eddie Oram at, meet at the comer of the Student 11:30 a.m. behind Mudd hall: R. union.
Dale. C. Anderson. B Remsen. J.
Reynolds. K. Olson. M. Ruckenbrod, i Cosmopolitan C. Dolde, A. Ronander. J. Hanson,
Cosmopolitan and Trojan Philip- | Pi Lambda Theta pine club members will hear Dr.
John E. Harley, professor of political science, at a joint luncheon meeting this noon at 1-8:1* >n Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall- Nonmembers of the clubs are particularly invited io attend.
: round-taBle discussion on dictator-Sponsored by the Scnool of Re- ; sftjp ancj democracy, Dr. Harley an-ligion under the direction of Dean , nounced yesterday. The delegation Carl Sumner Knopf, these discus- {rom u s c has lected to tafle „ sions have been favorably received 1 „haro„ _f thjs toDic Five maior gather m front of Bridge hall at j in the pa£t by students and on international problems
p.m. ,o«a\. befoie a:nmg <o ihe | professors Thev will continue weeic- ; have selected for round-table
ly on Mondays during the semester i discussion at the conference.
n
Mary Gilmore, Florence }lonie 0f or Erwin T. Mohme, 3733
: Fioiesta wav wheie tnej will havejan£j wjjj introduce several leaders
Platke. Carolyn Towner. Marjorie j H,liowe>n na,.,v to take the ulace ! uie T „*«
virffinio v r.n™, wP.k anH a H*Uow e en pa. to take the p ace rehglous fields t0 the u.s.c cam-.
F. Burke, R. Robinson. G. Cutler, R. Moore. B. Kirmse, G- Carter, J. Garrett. E. Shuey. W. Lindsay.
J. Ortffm. H Fortes, B. Watt;, if. GddfiekL 8. Silliphant, R. Biddy, 7. Eddy. B Hash. C. Kennedy L. Nelson. D. 8nyd«r, O. Sheldon, and H. Gamine*
Virginia Schrey, Georgia Wells, and of their reguiar bi-monthly meeting.! j Evelyn Weydt. j -pjle program f0r tjie evening will j
I include songs rendered in German, I ; games of German origin, and the serving of German foods, includi’is ! Members of La Tertulia, Spanish the celebrated “Schwarzbrot.” or club, will meet in Elisabeth von pumpernickel, and 'Apfelkuchen.” KleinSmid hall Monday at 12:30 o'clock for their weekly luncheon. Wesley
Trojan Methodist, students will celebrate the spirit of Hallowe’en at their annual Wesley club party at the University Methodist church tonight. The entertainment will begin at 7:30 p.m„ according to Omar Hartzler, president. Refreshments wrtH be served later in the evening.
pus.
Myer Seeks
Dr. Campbell To Speak Cheer Leaders
On Radio Program
Dr. Mildred Struble wii! speak on her visits to German universities at the opening dinner of the Southern California alumnae chapter of Pi Lambda Theta today at 6:30 p.m. «
Dr. W. G. Campbell, professor of education at U.S.C.. will speak tonight on the weekly radio program of the Japanese Cultural Broadcasting society. His topic will be “Trade Relations Between the United States and the Orient.”
The program, which will be presented over station KRKD from 8:15 to S:30 p m., will also inoktde various maeicftf feaS^rea.
Aspirants to yell-leader position will meet for tryouts and instructions in 324 Student Union at 9:55 a.m. today. Bob Myer. chief of the cheer-directing staff, announced yesterday.
It is Myer's plan to add to the number of yell leaders to handle more efficiently Troy's enlarged rooting department. The assembly of noisy hopefnls for poets on the staff should meeefl oapeGie addi-he said.
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| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 30, October 29, 1937 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 30, October 29, 1937. |
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Wtofldi Offices Night - PR - 4776 RI - 4111 Sta 227 I n fi World Wide News Service Z-42 Volume XXIX Los Angeles, California. Friday, Oclober 29, 1937 Number 30 Slogan Prizes Announced Homecoming Contest Is Opened CHAIRMAN The annual homecoming slogan contest for students of the university, conducted under the sponsorship of the university alumni association, cpens today and will close November 8. Prize for the winning slogan wiU be two tickets for seat£ on the 50-yard line for the U.C.L.A.-U.S.C. game December 4. The prize is being offered by the alumni association. JUDGES TO BK ANNOUNCED The winning slogan will be the one which, m the opinion of the judges, best expresses the spirit and atmosphere of a Trojan homecoming. and the one which they believe is most suitable as a theme for the homecoming program and publicity. Slogans should be as short as possible. Judges for the 1937 contest will be announced next week. Boxes in which students can place their contributions will be placed at convenient locations in the Student Union before Monday, giving entrants ample opportunity to submit, their slogans. PART SLOGANS GIVEN Preparation of the program and publicity literature will awak selection of the slogan. Slogans which have served hi p^st years include “Man t+ie Walls of Ttoy." 'Back to Beck Troy.” SMALL SQUAD OF CHINESE FACES 40,000 SHANGHAI Friday, Oct. 29— (i--A lone Chinese flag fluuered ai dawn toda;- high over shell-torn Cnapei, the heart of China's ruined meiroiiolis. a proof that a ‘•doomed’’ battalion ’ of Chinese soldiers was still there in lhe rearing hell of bombs, bullets, and shrapnel. AU China, figuratively, wa:ched that flag. It has become a symbol of China's heroic resolution to accept annihilation rather lhan Japanese conquest. A scant 200 remnants of a battalion of ‘Chiang's Own—crack troops of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's eighty-eighth division who have taken an oath never to surrender—held out in a huge three-story warehouse against 40,-000 Japanese. Legal Croup Has Meeting Discussion, Dinner, Talk Comprise Program for L. A. Bar Association Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid was the principal speaker last night at the monthly dinner given by the Los Angeles Bar association in Town and Gown. He spoke on ‘'The New Day in Professional Service.” The dinner followed a roundtable conference on the “Law of Evidence” which took place during the afternoon. Judges and prominent members of the Bar association discussed interpretations of a 326-page report on the law of evidence, printed by the California Code commission. The report was prepared dur-One hundred members of the ! ing the last year by Clarke B. Whit-Southwestem Archaeological feder- tier, professor of law at Stanford universitv. James P. McBaine. School Japanese Endanger Nationals? MURDER SUSPECTS' ADMIT CUILT Foreigners Periled As Nipponese Iniensify Shanghai Offensive Eight University of Southern California students were questioned for murder this week and four confessed. In a general psychology classroom demons ration, eight persons , were given letters of instruction. Pour told the holders to go to the j j Student Union, and four told the ! ; holders to go to the Old College j I basement, where the'y found a caL- ! I sup-bespattered dummy. Immediately afterwards they were ! 19 >7, h \ Vsittd Pf.i . SHANGHAI, Friday, Ocl. 29—(U.P) —Japanese army, navy, and air forces today opened a new offensive , ... on both sides of honor-stricken ^-association tests in whicn they Shanghai in an effort to win the i *ere given words and told to ans‘ Parley Potency Waning Lewis Admits Failure Of Labor Committees To Reach Agreement WASHINGTON. Oct. 28— |
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