Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 27, October 25, 1937 |
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Editorial Offices
Night - PR - 4776
RI - 4111 Sta. 227
SOUTHERN
r
CALIFORNIA
OJAN
United Pr*w
World Wide
News Service Z-42
Volume XXIX
Los Angeles, California, Monday, Oclober 25, 1937
Number 27
Largest
Crowd
Berkeley
Returns
To Classes
AFL, CiO To Meet
Thousands of Trojan rooters were due to return to classes this morning following the Berkeley football excursion, which ,s reported to be the largest exodus of U.S.C. supporters ever make the trip to the University of California.
The weekend was free from tragedy of any kind, except for
i fact that the entire Trojan fr------—-
tbail team was overrun by a «■ ^ \ / C l_l I T C lden Bear-piloted steamroller. nUUVtK H I I b affic claimed no victims on the j
to Berkeley, and. until mid- p 0 | ^ ght last night, no reports had
me in of any accidents on the LAW CONCEPT
REPORTS INDICATE FRONT UNE SHANGHAI DEFENSE BROKEN
BULLETIN
PEIPING. Monday, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Japanese troops are be ii sr withdrawn frcm North China, according to foreigners
arr’vmg' here today from Shanghai via Tientsin. They said tha' “n’n.r* large barges packed with Japanese troops” were moving frcm Tientsin to Taku where they presumably bearded transports.
turn trip.
OOTING SECTIONS VIE
Typical big game spirit prevailed both rooting sections throughout j e game, with the U.S.C. students rrying on a contest with the Cal-:ornianfi. trying to outcheer the jlue and gold section on the north-|ast side of the stadium. The Bears j resented the largest rooting seethe Trojans have ever faced. ! mposed entirely of men. it filled section of seats from the bot-~m of the stadium to the top overflowed along the rows at he top from goal line to goal line. At the end of the game, the horde Bear rooters swarmed from their and massed in front of the ojan supporters. Before cheer | aders started the customary post-bw salutations, the Californians taunted the defeated viistors from j Troy by singing "The Old Gray Mare" and by chanting, “Poor Troy. Poor Troy.”
TROJANS RETORT
Remembering how U.S.C. once rode a California football teem to a 74-0 defeat, the Trojans resorted j Co past achievements by starting a , chant of their own. "Seventy-four !
WINSTON SALEM, N. C., Oct. 24——Police officers no longer can be truthfully painted a? slow-footed, dull-thinking persons but are in fact “the peer of even '.he imaginative investigators of fiction,” J. Edgard Hoover, director of the federal bureau of investigation, told the Association of Law Enforcement Officers of the Carolinas here today.
“In the last few years, we of law enforcement officers of the it is possible to match in actual life anything of a scientific nature which has been dramed about by the fiction writer in relation to crime,-’ Hoover said .
High Court Meets Today
Scottsboro Case,
Power Loans To Be Considered
Today
Uniled Labor Ms Yemenis Csnlral Idea Of Peace Corueience
WASHINGTON. Oct. 24 — (l'.P) —
President William Green tonight informed ti"».r? three American Federation of Labor delegates to labor’s critical peace conference here to-1 of Sncingn;'. and today it was reported the strategic town of morrow that they are bound by no Tazang had been captured and the Chinese front line broken, prior commitments or pledge:" in: The fighting was on the largest * n— „ ■
TRAFFIC SIGNALS INSTALLED ON UNIVERSITY AVENUE
Installation of boulevard stop signs on University avenue at 36th street by police officials Priday afternoon marked another step in me reduction of traffic hazards at the University of Southern California.
At the request of university officials, the police department was persuaded as long ago as December of 1936 to recommend a stop signal at the Student Union comer to relieve the noontime danger of speeding university traffic.
Stonier
To Lead
Bankers
Former Vice-President Cf U.S.C. Elected To Managerial Post
Dr. Harold Stonier, alumnus and former vice-president of the Uni-
their efforts to reach a truce with j scale since the bloody Shanghai the Committee for Industrial Or- battle started in mid-August, ganization. General Matsui and his naval col-
! Green's delegates and those rep- league, Vice Admiral Kiyoshi Hase-; resenting the C.I.O. are scheduled gawa said that Nanziang railway to sit together at a council table station, about 10 miles west js. at 10 a.m. tomorrow to discuss Shanghai, would be taken th.\> week j means oi reuniting 7 300.000 Amcri- nnd the Chinese line of Jommuni-can working men and women whose cations to Nanking cut.
( split over organizational methods jjrjtlsHER KILLED has kept the nation's economic. other devel ents of the past .structure m turmoil Ior 23 months- ; 24 h(mr3 jn the g(,nera! chinese.
FINAL INST RI (. TIONS GI1EN Japanese war which started outside I After a secret meeting with the peiping the night of July 7 in-; three-man committee at which the ; civ^ded;
j federation president issurd final in- ^ British soldier, W. McGowan i structions. Green said his followers t^e R0yai ulster Rifles was killed i ‘ earnestly hope and believe that the . a bullet from a Japanese naval negotiations can result in the re- , pjanC( Wften he stepped outside the
barricade in the British defense area of the international settlement to observe Japanese planes firing on a party of British and American horseback riders who had gone into the war area on a sightseeing tour.
A number of American*; and British in the party narrowly escaped, fleeing to roadside shelters as the
storation of a united labor movement.”
C.I.O. Chairman John L. Lewis, informed of Green's statement, declined comment, but indicated he objected to its stipulation that unification of American labor be accomplished under the federation's banner.
LEADERS ARC OPTIMISTIC
Despite an undercurrent of pessi- planes, power-dived over them, ieifl-mism which prevailed in the pri- . jjjg ^ least two horses, vate conversations of labor leaders, '
WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 —<L'.F»— to nothing, seventy-four to noth- The SUpreme court tomorrow prob-****• ’ ably will announce whether it will
Seveial fraternities and sororities accept a third Scottsboro case ap- j t^™riev as “tentative” and on the Berkeley campus entertain- | peal and a second request for a ^Quld reqM convocation of a “un-
both sides issued “hopeful” statements tonight.
Both negotiating committees conferred separately. It was learned the C.I.O. would insist on defining the
Copir-r,':- Z93?- tr Ur.i::d Press. '
SHANGHAI, Monday, Oct. 25—-(U.P.)—Lieut. Gen. Iwane Matsui threw more than 125.000 Japanese soldiers into -a j versity of Southern California, was smashing weekend offensive against Chinese lines northwest elected executive manager of the
' American Bankers’ association by the executive council at the closing session of its convention in Boston recently.
Dr. Stonier was graduated from the university in 1913. He was a member of Phi Alpha and Skull and Dagger here. He did post graduate work at the University of California and at Columbia university. ACTIVE SUPPORTER He has been active in U.S.C. af-| fairs, serving ,as executive secretary of the alumni asscoiation and secretary of the university administration. From 1925 to 1927 he was vice-president of the university.
Dr. Stonier was economics pro-I fessor here from 1915 to 1925 and j was one of the four^ers of the pres-! ent College of Commerce. He is also a member of the Los Angeles Trojan club.
In June, 1928. U.S.C. conferred upon him an honorary degree of Doctor of Business Administration. PROMINENCE ACHIEVED For the last 10 years Dr. Stonier has been education director of the American Bankers’ association, where his work has brought the institute national recognition in the field ot adult education.
With the retirement of Fred N. 1 Shepherd, Dr. Stonier assumes one of the most important posts in or- j ganized banking as executive man- 1 ager of the association, whose mem-
U.S.C. Aided
By Donations
Funds, Books Received Bv University
APPOINTED
YARNELL PROTESTS
The Japanese expressed regrets for the incident but it was believed that Britain would make a formal protest and demand compensation.
Rear Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, commanding the United States Asi-
Budget May Halt Farm Bill
Half-Billion Limit h Challenged By Farm Experts
Dr. Haroid J. Stonier, former vice-prosident of U.SjC., was recently appointed manager of the American Bankers association.
Writers Vie In Contest
Winning Literary
Competitors
Will Get $10 Prizes
The University of Southern California received monetary gifts total-; ing $34,000 during the last quarterly : period, Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, | president, announced Saturday. The j Edward L. Doheny Jr., Memorial 11-i brary also benefited by gifts of rare volumes.
Special research projects in vari-! ous departments, scholarships, student loans, and fellowship founda-tions will be aided by the donations.
The Currier foundation in public speaking received an additional 58.500 from Ezra N. Currier, oldest living alumnus of U.S.C . bringing Mr. Currie’s gifts to a total of $30,000.
SPECIAL FOUNDATION
Other contributions, in the form of student loans and fellowship foundations, amount to $3,500, ac-j cording to Harry Silke. director of special foundations.
Special research projects in de-; partments of the 24 schools and j colleges at U.S.C., will be furthered ! by donations amounting to $8,300. A gift of $5,000 will supplement other contributions for bacteriological research under the direction of • Dr. John F. Kessel
ed their brothers and steers from decision on the constitutionality of conference” with representation ' atic fleet, made formal represente-
the south with dances Saturday evening. Other Trojans joined Cal- j to municipalities, ifemia men and women in a night of socir.l life at San Francisco hotels and cabarets. Revelry was at the lowest ebb seen in many years follower a Trojan football game in th** bay region.
new deal power loans and grants | from 50 to 100 on each side. j tions to Admiral Kiyoshi Hasegawa,
The success or failure of the par- the Japanese naval commander, re-Interest centers in the Scotts- iey, however, is believed to hinge: garding “numerous instances in boro case because of the presence 0n the question of industrial union- i which Japanese shells, anti-aircraft on the bench of Justice Hugo L. ism. The federation, especially since explosives, shrapnel, and aerial Black, former member of the JT" the Lewis secession in 1935 with 10 bombs, have fallen within the Amer-Klux Klan. Twice, before Black be- j Continued on Page Four ican defense sectqr (on the borders
of the Anglo-American area of the
Inquest Into Northern Train Crash Is Today
TURLOCK. Oct. 24 — (C.P» — Southern Pacific railroad investigators and Stanisiaus county authorities tonight studied wreckage and
Men Debaters To Prepare For Tournament
came a member, the court reversed i
Several trainloads of students re- Alabama state court convictions of (
turned to Los Angeles yesterday. , the nine Negro youths charged with j
:h others arriving early this assaulting two white girls.
morning in time for S o'clock classes. 1 ~ .______ . .
1 The newest appeal is bj Haywood
! Patterson, whose latest trial last
spring resulted in a sentence of 75
j years imprisonment. If accepted by i
! the court, it might provide a basis j
I for a new challenge of Black's right
to pass judgment on it, on the
I ground of prejudice. Two technical
j challenges of Black's right to set
have been overruled.
The new deal power case involves 1
a challenge by the Duke Power •
company, of the public works ad-
ryc-wi ness stories of a train-truck Jninis'ra’1°ns grant and loan policy heduled for Thursday and Friday, crash yesterdav which claimed three 10 Promote municipal electric plants.
Duke asked an injunction against a loan and grant to Greenwood
WASHINGTON. Oct. 24 — W.fc> —
President Roosevelt's budget-balancing hopes for next year stood tonight as one of the biggest prob-
lems in the passage of new farm | trolhn^ _97. P*r cent. of the
The second annual campus-wide literary contest sponsored by Ath-bership includes the executives and ena- national honorary literary so-directors of more than 13,000 banks t ciety, will open today, with judges
legislation as a result of his virtual ultimatum to congress that it must raise new revenue through taxes if the farm pragram costs more than $500,000,000 a year.
Payments for compliance with administration soil conservation
throughout the United States, controlling 97 per cent of the resources of the banks of this country.
standards now cost half a billion international settlement) resulting j dollars a year, in loss of life to some non-combatants and injuries to others.”
JAPAN HOLDS KEY CITY
Two Chinese civilians were killed and several injured when Japanese
Stanford Dean To Lecture Here Tomorrow
OTHER GIFTS
Other gifts include $2,000 from the Rockerfeller foundation for research in biochemistry; $500 from Town and Sown; $1,500 from Dr. ready to accept contributions of Edwin D. Starbuck. chairman of thr original manuscripts in the fields Institute of Character Research ar
of the essay, short story, and:U S C ’ and $100° for research b^’ noetrv !the zoolo&y department in connec-
A box tor manuscripts wiu be! ‘'°n ™th specinwtK from th. G. marked and wiU be placed m the Allan Hancock expeditions.
foyer of the Student Union. The contest is open to any students in the university excepting active members of Athena. Members of Clionian, Quill club, and past contestants in the Appoliad are not Dr. Jacob Hugh Jackson, dean of barred, the graduate school of business at j Rules of the contest, according to Stanford university, will address Audrey Adams, chairman of the
Alumni contributions during the last fiscal year amounted to $26,000.
Food Shortage Forces Andorra
When the projected ever-normal granary plan, which is backed by
the president and Secretary of Agri- owuuuru university, wm aumess Audrey Adams, cnairman 01 tne ■_ . • ■ _ culture Henry A Wallace, was pre- students of the College of Com- competition, are as follows: Only I O AlQ iTanCO sented last May. Earl C. Smith, vice-: merce tomorrow morning at 10:25 original unpublished manuscripts
president of the American Farm
will serve as practice for the varsity debate squad in preparation for the first tournament of the year at Bakersfield on November 11, 12, and 13.
The first part of the week is to be spent in constructive speeches and rebuttals, with consultations
naval planes bombed and machine Bureau aSf;ociation estimated it
could be operated at an everage of $372,000,000 a year.
Intra-squad debates this week gunned Namsha Station, 70 miles
from Hongkong, Sunday afternoon. Foreign military attaches were
convinced that the key city of Ta-
in Touchstone theater. Recently returned to
LA VIELLA. Andorra, Oct. 24—
I are acceptable. Short stories must
the coast ^ less than 1.000 words, essays ^’“TwAnd^a. no b^ertl^n
from a lecture tour in Texas and from 500 to 1.000, and poems of s. «
i other southem states. Dr. Jackson any length. Entries must be typed ° Jwhe SDan'
That figure, however, ha* been will discuss present-day business 0n one side of staidard sized paper, j fj! or^r
challanged by other farm experts ■ conditions and business knowledge, j and an envelope containing the:
zang was entirely in Japanese hands , - - ... „ 1---------------- --------- ----------o--|anu an v—1 a «,fArvation thrpat
and that the Japanese were con- who program will re- j Author of several bookkeeping and writer s true name must be at- ,
tinuing their attack towards the 1 quire S700-000-000 annua.ly, whue auditing books, the Stanford dean ’ tached. Since contributions will not i The Andorran president. Pere
Chenju district where the big radio ! “ in Los An*eles for a meeting of t* judged by name, a nom de plume Torres, a leathery-faced farmer who
much as 3i,ooo,ooo,uuu- unaer mx. j the KiwamS International organi- must be used on the manuscript draws seven dollars a year, sent a
lives.
A11 inquest will be held probably Mcndav or Tuesday into the deaths ccunly- South Carolina, for a plant
According to Coach Alan Nichols, the outcome of these intra-squad debates will have a bearing mi the selection of teams to represent U.
telegraph installation for communication with the United States i6 located.
of A. L. Ford, of Oakland, fireman °n the Saluda river at Buzzards gc ^ thg Bakersfield tourney. Six on the Fresno Fiver train, and Verne 1 KO°6t-
Norton and Frank Lopez. Turlock men cremated in the truck.
Normal trnn service was restored by emergency wrecking crews
The case had reached the high tribunal a year ago, but wa.s sent back for retrial on purely technical grounds set forth in a lengthy opin-
teams will probably be sent north,
he said.
Debating on the question, “Re-
British Soldier Killed by Airman
Copyright. 1917, b\ United Press.
SHANGHAI. Monday, Oct. 25 — <l'.P> — A British soldier was killed.
Roosevelt’s economy older, t h i s j ^tion. in which he is the chairman itself.
The truck was carried for 200 feet , by Chief Justice Evans Hughes.
after being struck by the train. -------------
Railroad officials said it was stalled on the tracks in the Turlock business district.
The truck and 1.500 gallons of gasoline caught 011 fire, igniting telephone poles and railroad ties along the right-of-way. The fire
would require new taxes raising S200.000.000 to $500,000,000 a year.
In the face of the known disinclination of congress to raise taxes in a campaign year, the house agriculture committee presumably will 1 gtanf0rd faculty staff since 1926. w seek to keep the program within the , A(. the present time, he is also a ; November 19. at 6 p.m.
half-billion limit. . member of the Palo Alto board of .___
......—-— : education. His publications include
sohed: that the National laboi re- and the lives of at least 14 other temblor ROCKS SEWARD -Bookkeeping and Business Knowl-'
SEWARD. Alaska. Oct. 34-<U.P>- ed«e ” “Auditing Problems.” “Audit-
delegation to Generalissimo Fran-
of the committee on business Three prizes of $10 each will be cisco Franco informing him that standards. presented the winners in each di- 5.200 Andorran* are his supporters
Dr. Jackson has taught at vision the day of Hi-Jinks. and the —providing he sends them food. Oregon. Minnesota, and Harvard E>ajiy Trojan will announce the j Each Winter the little republic, universities, and has been on the names of successful contestants. nestling in the Pyrenees peaks along
The contest will close Friday, the Franco-Spanish frontier, is isolated when winter snows block the
Annual Taxi Day Announced
Taxi day. annual opportunity for
spread to the locomotive, burning car-driving Trojans to turn pro-
Ford fatally, and injuring Engineer fessional. is scheduled for Decem-
aul Runyan less seriously. ber 2. Kay Young. Amazon and
The locomotive and baggage car member of the YWCA cabinet .has
overturned and four passenger been appointed chairman ot the
coaches were derailed None of the affair, announced Ellen Holt. WS-
passengers, including many football GA president, yesterday,
fans going to the U.S.C.-California Taxi day is sponsored annually game at Berkeley, were injured.
lations board should be empowered foreigners, including nine Ameri-
to enforce arbitration in all indus- cans, gravely endangered when Jap- 1 '-••• Working Papers —Their Prep-
trial disputes.” four teams will anese naval flyers machine-gunned ! An earthquake rocked Seward early . and Content» and numer-
swing into action this afternoon. a border area of the Shanghai in- today, rattling dishes and knocking ;__________
Sterling Livingston and Maurice At- j ternational settlement on Sunday kinson take the floor at 2:30 up- afternoon, it was revealed today-holding the affirmative side, and j _
will be opposed by Dave Goldberg j ” and Tom Dutcher on the negative 1 side of the question.
At 4 o'clock. Arthur Guy and |
Fred Hall take ihe affirmative side \ against Robert Crawford and Clif- ; ford Royston.
articles off shelves. Other minor shocks followed for about an hour.
ous magazine articles.
Forum To Hear Baptist Views
Schiller Services Are Tomorrow
Memorial services in honor of'
by the WSGA. A collection of antiquated vehicles is turned into taxis for the convenience of those holding 10-cent tickets, and che
Troy, Indians To Have Air Meet
- j mountain passes. Usually there is I but one road open, leading to Bar-| celona, Spain.
I The Catalonians (rf Barcelona, I pre-occupied with the war. have I failed to send the customary winter “The Message and Program of, food stores this year, however, and the Baptist church in the Modern' Andorra's “valleys council.” or par-World" will be the theme for a liament, refused to ask the French lecture by Dr. Ralph Walker, pas- j government for aid because of the tor of the Temple Baptist church. I continued presence of French gen-at the religious forum today. ! darmes on the Andorran soil.
j The general theme. “Building a France claimed the right to post Successful competitors m the ra- ; Better World with organized Re- gendarmes because a Franco-Span-dio announcing and script writing I ligion>>- wilI ^ viewed with the | teh protectorate has existed since , .. ,. 1 auditions which have been conduct- j pr0gram (rf the Baptist church in >u. hqvs of Charlemaene
The Vulture, annual Sigma Delta Chi publication, will ed during the past two weeks were 1 mind
appear Wednesday, dispensing “dirt” on the activities of Tro- announced yesterday by Jack Herz- . According to Dr. Walker, his lec- j jans at the California game. With Bud Colegrove as editor, j berg, continuity editor of the divi- ture ^ be a study of the crisis in, .
the paper will also expose campus politics, fraternity and sor- sion of radio at Southern California. the modem struggle between ma- OenatOT Jailed Ol'itV life, and Will announce Sigma Delta Chi's selection Of The successful aspirants wejre Bill terjaj goods and personalities. He the three four-star coeds on the ■ . 1
VULTURE TO REPLACE DAILY TROJAN
Radio Tryout Winners Named
U.S.C. campus.
One blonde, one redhead, and one
Stanford university's national col-drivers are obliged to take their i iegiate air meet, champions will
passengers to any reasonable des- i again engage the U.S.C. aeronauii- j brunette, selected for their beauty, tination around campus. ! cal enthusiasts November 6. accord- popularity, and campus activity,
Prizes are awarded each year to ;n^ an announcement irom Bob w|jj ^e named the outstanding wo-Dr. Ferdinand Canning Scott' those who sell tfcmost tickets and president of the local chap- men Colegrove promises a novelty
Schiller, late professor of phil06- to the driver ^10 takes in the '"^r °- A:pha Eta Rho, professional in that students will be able to ephy. and Miss Eva L. Fitch, late largest number of passengers.
librarian of the Hoose Library- of I —___
Philosophy. will be conducted
Tuesday at 4:15 pm. in the Biowne: TUjrtw Persons Missina room. Mudd Memorial hall of!1™1 V reri°ni> W-^ing philosophy. Dr. Rufus B. von j After Ship Bums KleinSmid will preside and mem-! H
bers of the School of Philosophy faculty will participate in the exercises.
Dr. 8chiller, whose death occurred last summer, was professor emeritus of the School of Philosophy. He w as the author of many books and magarin# articles.
M1* wa* librarian here
«ntu t*>« tlm* of her
ta** mmmer.
avia:ion fraternity The meet, which Ls scheduled for the same day as the football game between the Trojans and the Indians. marks the second time within the past year that the two institutions have met in an aerial contest.
LONDON. Monday. Oct. 25 — a'.P>! Last semester the Trojans flew to
An exchange telegraph dispatch from Hong Kong today reported that 30 persons were missing after fire forced abandonment erf the British steamer Kaitangata. ,
It was believed some passengers were among the missing.
The ship *ent out an SOS »t midnight. between Hong Kong and Hai-Iphona Fmneto lodo-Ohina
Lhe nor: hern campus for the contest, but were defeated.
Devine, who is cooperating with Prof. Earl W. Hill, lecturer in commercial aviation, stressed the fact that any student who can pilot an airplane and who would be interested in the meet, should go to ill Old College tor information and Instructions.
study both sides of the question of this ysar.
Tuesday s Organ Program
Figge, Clementine Casmire. George j al^ discuss whether it is pos- |n RuSSia Voelger. Joanne McElroy, and Joyce 1 s^je to substitute sociology for the
Ciacona ....................................Pachelbel
Pachelbel was one of the most
reputed organists of the ancient
German school. He was bom in
, , , . 1653 at Nuremberg, and was or-Active members and pledges of | g£mized ^ at thg
St. Sebald.
Ailringer.
Herzberg said that auditions will be continued till Wednesday, but will definitely be closed at that time. He says that several persons whose auditions have been completed have not yet been judged, but that he expects there will be several more successful students.
tions.
States To Confer
the national professional journalism fraternity comprise the staff of the
publication, which appears each, 7 no Chora: Prelude<......................Bach\
year on the Wednesday following! Ich ruf zu dir. Herr Jesu Qn [_ab0r Legislation the “northern" game—this year, ; Christ Puer natus in Bethlehem. 1 a
California. Subordinate staff pos- i F,naie jrom Second Organ Sonata
itions will be filled by John Golay. Warren Burns, and Dick Bean.
The Vulture sells for 15 cents per copw. fraternity members appearing in novel costumes to aet as salesmen.
The wtK repieo? Mw Wed-
nefcday issue of bh« DaSy Trojan.
............................Henry .M. Dunham
Henry M. Dunham was. for over fifty years, head of the Organ Department of the New England conservatory of music. His organ writings has been likened io thet of Rheinberger.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 24 — 'C.H'— Representatives of 45 states will attend a three-day conference on state labor legislation beginning here tomorrow.
Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins will open the conference with a discussion of progress in legislation and problems of administering
laws.
gospel or to bring the gospel di- : MOSCOW. Monday. Oct. 25 — <l,Pi rectly into social evolution, giving! “State Senator John Phillips of spiritual power to modem inafcitu-, Banning. Calif ., was arrested at
| Kiev and held in jail for one hour by Soviet police on charges of il-legaly using a camera, he reported on his arrival in Moscow last night.
Phillips, who represents Riverside county in the California senate, was released after questioning and showing his credentials.
The Californian, enroute to Berlin, on a short tour of Europe, said that when he arrived in Kiev he inquired what photographs he was permitted to take and followed the instructions given him by Tourist Bureau officials.
Nagley Needs Writer* For New Magazine
Students interested in feature and editorial writing or advertising work on the new magazine. CaUfornia Collegiate, are requested by Prof. Frank Negley. associate professor of merchandising, to meet him in 117 Old College today at 2:30 p.m.
The magazine will contain articles of special interest to college students and will feature U.S.C., U. CLA, Pomona. Occidental. Whittier, and other southem California schools in the first iswe.
He said he was arrested when a Russian, acting under instructions published m newspapers to report anyone seen photographing, informed pofcee that he was talcing picture* of a itreet iwrw,
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 27, October 25, 1937 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 29, No. 27, October 25, 1937. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
Editorial Offices Night - PR - 4776 RI - 4111 Sta. 227 SOUTHERN r CALIFORNIA OJAN United Pr*w World Wide News Service Z-42 Volume XXIX Los Angeles, California, Monday, Oclober 25, 1937 Number 27 Largest Crowd Berkeley Returns To Classes AFL, CiO To Meet Thousands of Trojan rooters were due to return to classes this morning following the Berkeley football excursion, which ,s reported to be the largest exodus of U.S.C. supporters ever make the trip to the University of California. The weekend was free from tragedy of any kind, except for i fact that the entire Trojan fr------—- tbail team was overrun by a «■ ^ \ / C l_l I T C lden Bear-piloted steamroller. nUUVtK H I I b affic claimed no victims on the j to Berkeley, and. until mid- p 0 ^ ght last night, no reports had me in of any accidents on the LAW CONCEPT REPORTS INDICATE FRONT UNE SHANGHAI DEFENSE BROKEN BULLETIN PEIPING. Monday, Oct. 25—(U.P.)—Japanese troops are be ii sr withdrawn frcm North China, according to foreigners arr’vmg' here today from Shanghai via Tientsin. They said tha' “n’n.r* large barges packed with Japanese troops” were moving frcm Tientsin to Taku where they presumably bearded transports. turn trip. OOTING SECTIONS VIE Typical big game spirit prevailed both rooting sections throughout j e game, with the U.S.C. students rrying on a contest with the Cal-:ornianfi. trying to outcheer the jlue and gold section on the north- ast side of the stadium. The Bears j resented the largest rooting seethe Trojans have ever faced. ! mposed entirely of men. it filled section of seats from the bot-~m of the stadium to the top overflowed along the rows at he top from goal line to goal line. At the end of the game, the horde Bear rooters swarmed from their and massed in front of the ojan supporters. Before cheer aders started the customary post-bw salutations, the Californians taunted the defeated viistors from j Troy by singing "The Old Gray Mare" and by chanting, “Poor Troy. Poor Troy.” TROJANS RETORT Remembering how U.S.C. once rode a California football teem to a 74-0 defeat, the Trojans resorted j Co past achievements by starting a , chant of their own. "Seventy-four ! WINSTON SALEM, N. C., Oct. 24——Police officers no longer can be truthfully painted a? slow-footed, dull-thinking persons but are in fact “the peer of even '.he imaginative investigators of fiction,” J. Edgard Hoover, director of the federal bureau of investigation, told the Association of Law Enforcement Officers of the Carolinas here today. “In the last few years, we of law enforcement officers of the it is possible to match in actual life anything of a scientific nature which has been dramed about by the fiction writer in relation to crime,-’ Hoover said . High Court Meets Today Scottsboro Case, Power Loans To Be Considered Today Uniled Labor Ms Yemenis Csnlral Idea Of Peace Corueience WASHINGTON. Oct. 24 — (l'.P) — President William Green tonight informed ti"».r? three American Federation of Labor delegates to labor’s critical peace conference here to-1 of Sncingn;'. and today it was reported the strategic town of morrow that they are bound by no Tazang had been captured and the Chinese front line broken, prior commitments or pledge:" in: The fighting was on the largest * n— „ ■ TRAFFIC SIGNALS INSTALLED ON UNIVERSITY AVENUE Installation of boulevard stop signs on University avenue at 36th street by police officials Priday afternoon marked another step in me reduction of traffic hazards at the University of Southern California. At the request of university officials, the police department was persuaded as long ago as December of 1936 to recommend a stop signal at the Student Union comer to relieve the noontime danger of speeding university traffic. Stonier To Lead Bankers Former Vice-President Cf U.S.C. Elected To Managerial Post Dr. Harold Stonier, alumnus and former vice-president of the Uni- their efforts to reach a truce with j scale since the bloody Shanghai the Committee for Industrial Or- battle started in mid-August, ganization. General Matsui and his naval col- ! Green's delegates and those rep- league, Vice Admiral Kiyoshi Hase-; resenting the C.I.O. are scheduled gawa said that Nanziang railway to sit together at a council table station, about 10 miles west js. at 10 a.m. tomorrow to discuss Shanghai, would be taken th.\> week j means oi reuniting 7 300.000 Amcri- nnd the Chinese line of Jommuni-can working men and women whose cations to Nanking cut. ( split over organizational methods jjrjtlsHER KILLED has kept the nation's economic. other devel ents of the past .structure m turmoil Ior 23 months- ; 24 h(mr3 jn the g(,nera! chinese. FINAL INST RI (. TIONS GI1EN Japanese war which started outside I After a secret meeting with the peiping the night of July 7 in-; three-man committee at which the ; civ^ded; j federation president issurd final in- ^ British soldier, W. McGowan i structions. Green said his followers t^e R0yai ulster Rifles was killed i ‘ earnestly hope and believe that the . a bullet from a Japanese naval negotiations can result in the re- , pjanC( Wften he stepped outside the barricade in the British defense area of the international settlement to observe Japanese planes firing on a party of British and American horseback riders who had gone into the war area on a sightseeing tour. A number of American*; and British in the party narrowly escaped, fleeing to roadside shelters as the storation of a united labor movement.” C.I.O. Chairman John L. Lewis, informed of Green's statement, declined comment, but indicated he objected to its stipulation that unification of American labor be accomplished under the federation's banner. LEADERS ARC OPTIMISTIC Despite an undercurrent of pessi- planes, power-dived over them, ieifl-mism which prevailed in the pri- . jjjg ^ least two horses, vate conversations of labor leaders, ' WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 — |
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