Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 119, April 20, 1939 |
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United Press Assn.
Direct Wire Service NAS Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAIL
CALIFORNIA
ROJAN
Editorial Offices
Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night --PR-4776
eace esture ught
gland Invites Hiller e Reply i0 Roosevelt's nt Peace Message
-N April 19—(l'.P>— Orest tonight invited Chancellor Hitler to make a gesture of -1 understanding" on the basis dent Roosevelt's peace ap-ind announced that the Brit-hssador to Berlin soon will to his post.
— secretary Viscount Hall* rto extended the conciliatory to the Fuehrer on the ,fthe latter s 50th birthday, wd that Britain is ready to -te In worldwide economic as proposed by Mr. Roose-iii means of achieving a dur-pa.
VD WANTS PEACE lave no doubt that millions of In all countries trust that his i»e will have a successful out-1 Viscount Halifax told the ul lords.
old that Britain still is anxi-•maintain real peace in the through international col-“ j and is hopeful for a ”re-from the other side.”
Halifax’s statement was rets an invitation to Hitler t conciliatory reply when -r$ before the reichstag on S to answer President Roose-tppeal for at least 10 years
"ON WILL DIM HOPES
dfect. he asked the Fuehrer It dam the door on hopes of peace by any blunt re-of President Roosevelt's
foreign secretary spoke be-Hw house of lords shortly after Minister Neville Chamberlain tee house of commons that Ii willing to consider, in the Par East, in any gen -aggression alignment.
■lain said that the govern-' wuld study the desirability China and other Far countries in the antl-ag-. bloc.
te Relief Roll Be Slashed Economy Act
r MENTO, April 19_<UR)— to 30,000 persons will be oil state relief rolls and "n will be dropped from pRA staff by May 1, State Administrator H. Dewey Announced tonight.
•a said tho economy move Response to a legislative re-®*t he "make every economy 111 the furnishing of un-■*nt relief," so that funds ttulable in January would ;* the balance of the fiscal Wine June 30.
Klief director said the lay-make possible a saving ■imately $900,000.
France Warns Nazis Against Danzig Attack
PARIS, April 19— (l’.P)—Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet late today told the chamber foreign affairs committee that any German attempt to take Danzig by force will result in immediate French armed aid to Poland.
Bonnet denied reports abroad that Poland and Oermany were negotiating on Nazi claims against Danzig, supposedly under a plan whereby Warsaw would consent to giving Danzig the status of a “free German city."
Police Guard French Liner Normandie
Sabotage Is Feared As Ominous Warnings Are Received
German
Offer
Rejected
Rumania Refuses to Join Rome-Berlin Axis;
Will Seek Neutrality
Dr. Weatherby Tells How Dahlia Tubers Will Yield Large Quantities of Inulin
“Man takes all of the products that are prepared by plants for the propagation of their species and utilizes ; them for his own sustenance,” observed Dr. Leroy S. Weatherby, chemistry professor, when he addressed the Wednesday j lecture group yesterday afternoon with regard to research on dahlia tubers.
Trojan Orators To Vie
common sugar and has the possibility of being easily metabolized by
Annual Bowen Award Contest Open To Student Body
Creeks Dance To Two Bands Tonight At Formal
The Oreeks have a word for it—they call lt their annual spring interfratemity formal which is to take place tonight at 9 o'clock.
The affair will be staged ln the Beverly-Wilshire hotel Outstanding student oratorical whlch will assume a collegiate air when the Trojans takg
talent will compete for trophies and possession tonight,
cash awards next month when the . _
W. H Bowen foundation and the j | S lOHlOrrOW Rotary International sponsor an- , . _ nual contests ln extemporaneous Ditch D3V?
Gafencu, it was reported, firmly insisted that Rumania ls determin-Ic ed "in a11 possible circumstances”
rrr, „ 19_ t0 ™intain absolute neutrality.
II 7 T" U)nght OT- Gafen™' wh° "“1 80 from Ber-^ 7 rf"*56 ? frmed Iln London and Paris after wit-guards aboard the giant luxury nesslng a displav of Germanv.s
liner Normandie after receiving armed strength Thursday in cele-warnings that the vessel would be bration of Hitler.s birthday> was sald destroyed in the same manner as have explalned that the mllltary the liner Paris, which was gutted pledges glven to Rumanla by Brl. and sunk by a mysterious fire early tain and Prance do not constltute today‘ ! Rumanian
It was reported that a time bomb Reich, had been discovered aboard the PLANS FOR CELEBRATION Normandie, successor to the Paris The birthday celebrations, which as the flagship of the French line, will continue through Thursday, POLICE WARNED OF PLOT j temporarily overshadowed prepar-
Minister of Merchant Marine ! ations for iHtler's reichstag answer Louis De Chappedelaine announced ■ on ^8 to President Roosevelt’s that the Surete Nationale—France's j peace appeal but there was no de-
Dr. Weatherby explained the manner in which plants build up BERLIN, April 19—(U.R)—A dis- j and store their food material for cordant note was struck tonight at the nourishing of the young plant diabetic patients. The value of lev-the start of a gala holiday celebrat- j when it begins to grow'. ulose for this purpose is now being
ing Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's 50th Some plants, such as the dahlia, tested by research students who birthday w'hen lt was reported that store their food materials ln the | fppd the dahlia sugar to rats made Rumania had firmly rejected Nazi roots or tubers in the form of a j diabetic through the removal of efforts to bring her solidly into the different kind of starch from that their pancreas, orbit of the Rome-Berlin axis, | found ln com. This product is I ur weatherby illustrated his talk Rumanian Foreign Minister Ori- I called inulin, he remarked. with samples of dahlia tubers in
gore Gafencu, in Berlin for consul- The purpose of investigations clumps containing about SO tubers,
tations with Hitler and Foreign undertaken here, by Dr. Weatherby, j and individual tubers weighing as j pd at ac bv the W H Bowen
Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop. | Is to extrect the inulin starch from much as one and one-half pounds FoundHtlorli ,hlf PVPnt' is open to I row "have been ^ec'eVv^'bTvar-was understood to have resisted j the tubers and hydrollze it over each. He also demonstrated sam- ! the entire student body Subjects Ribbentrop’s attempts to commit into the sugar known as levulose pies of the extracted inulin ln var- j for (hp orntjons wlll ^ selPCtPd from Rumania to the policies of Germany j or fructose. This sugar is twice j ious degrees of purification and of current evtnts articles found ln and Italy. j as sweet as common sugar and ls {the syrup and levulose sugar made | guch periodical* as Time News
RUMANIA TO REMAIN NEUTRAL I similar in taste to honey, he said, from the tubers. He feels that this 1 ’
It is his belief that it could be j industry would compete favorably used ln many ways ln preference to I with sugar beet production.
speech and oratory.
Thc annual Bowen extemporane- Offirialc is sneaklne contest will be con- Jay
| ous speaking contest, will be conducted on May 2 and 4 Establlsh-
Week, and Current History.
Inquiries as to whether or not there will be a Ditch day tomor-
hostility toward the
mm, uie ouieic ^auunaie—rranees ------ ------------ ----— Hiecnasinn rnrriprt nn hv fivp
Scotland Yard—had been warned f crease in Nazi bitterness toward the lng s carried on by llv
ocouana xara naa Deen warned | ls c professors, a student, and Dr.
Rufus B. von KleinSmid.
in advance that a sabotage outrage Western powers.
had been plotted against the 79,-280-ton Normandie.
Instead of the Normandie, the 34,570-ton Paris was destroyed by
Goebbels whipped the people to [ new anger by describing Hitler as
the one man who had defeated the substantiated this opinion. "It is western democracies in their efforts \ possible that if we stand by nnd to "build conflagration centsrs (do nothing, the totalitarian nations
Strong Foreign Policy Urged at Peace Forum
Immediate action to block nations on the warpath, as proposed by Dr. Eugene Harley of the political science department, was the student body consensus at the round-table peace assembly in Bovard auditorium yesterday.
Dr. Harley’s commentary, “Time for serious and substantial action has arrived; let us find f............
Business Girl Contest Open To Seniors
foreign policy for the United States,” was greeted by the only marked applause during the morn-
Edward Jones, varsity debater,
SPEECH LENGTH LIMITED
Speeches will be a maximum of eight minutes in length, with five minutes being the minimum. Each student will have one hour to prepare the question he selects Elimination contests will take | place on May 2 and finals on May [ 4. Faculty members wlll serve as Judges. Further information about | the contest may be secured from | the debate manager ln 221 Student Union.
Winners of last year’s contest according to placement were Maurice Atkinson, William Barton, and Betty Eberhard.
ORATORY TOPIC NAMED
"The Contribution of Rotary International to World Peace" will be the topic for student orations on May 11 ln a contest sponsored by Rotary International.
Speeches are to be limited to ten minutes In length with a maximum oi 100 words being allotted for In a search for the ideal business j quoted material. Three prizes will
scribed as "a clear cut case of for eign sabotage.”
Naval authorities pointed out
ious university administrative offices.
These offices announce that classes will continue as on any other day. Professors who have examinations scheduled for tomorrow will give them and any student who ls not present will be treated as though he had cut the exam at any other time, according to administrative officials.
Architects Will Hold Art Show
Work To Ba Displayed In Exhibit Room Starting Wednesday
Architectural works of all kinds will be Included tn the first annual a 11-student'! architectural show at S.C. which Is to be presented next week ln the College of Architecture exhibit room. They wlll be on display from Wednesday April 28, to
fire in what the French press de- around Germany which they could will become so strong that they will | girl of 1939, the College of Com- j be awarded the winner, *25 being __
lgnite at wll, order w keep Ger_ ’ultimately invade the United merce announces a contest, open to glven for f!rst plac,: »io for sec- sa7urda7 AprlVw. 'The”show'1* to many in check." States," he pointed out. _ senior commerce majors, for the Rnd; and for third. The ad-1
The birthday celebration started POLYZOIDES OBSERVES i ^T^selectton farr^rwiUi^lt od- re'nf* o"! **
that ln event of war the Paris could at 7 p.m. when Nazi party leaders On the other hand, Adamantios t>ortunitie-s for a good position foi- 1 0 f ry n
have been converted into a troop J ]ed by Rudolf Hess, deputy chief of Th. Polyzoides, lecturer in inter- j ,owin_ „ra(i,,„tion as woll as for transport while the Normandie | the party, congratulated Hitler in national relations, observed, “There j „w„,h tn he made at the Colleee could be made into an aircraft car- the enormous Mosaic hall of the i Is nothing ln Europe, politically or
rier.
LINER IS LONGEST SHIP
The Normandie is the longest passenger ship afloat and is less than 500 tons smaller that the Queen Mary.
The burned out and overturned Paris lay smoking in the Le Havre basin tonight, her half submerged hulk appearing like a dead whale.
Minister De Chappedelaine said that as result of the mysterious | p>inai tryouts for "Tartuffe,” sen warnings, the force of mobile guards )or play wU1 be conducted this aft-aboard the Normandie had been tripled.
new chancellory, floodlit by batteries of searchlights.
Final Tryouts For Tartuffe' Will BeToday
economically, to Justify our partici-i pation in war. We should look to other fields for Interests while Europe ls looking the other way.”
| Dr. Clayton D. Carus, professor of foreign trade, summed up the I situation with the opinion, "The 1 world will only be happy when Franco’s widow tells Stalin on his
Choir Croup To Make Spring Tour
a Plans English arch's Visit
1Wa- Ont, April 19— (l’.P)—
* Canadian cabinet, mem-te privy council of Can-
tk.,. *7 *x'cab‘net ministers
* w'v« wil! be Invited to Oeorpc VI and Queen
* A lum'heon at Quebec “ * the day they arrive
• month's tour of Canada “lm«d here tonight.
wlnCtme,lt was made ln . Wer disclosing detail* of I? MM’Ptlo., at Quebec and hr>i .„^>sl"or' of the govern-ii, Lhf Canadlan mln-^ and queen are
topus fonizations
L Tad«y
11 P m . aocial ij^ent Union.
I 5.30 pm WAA
Xtil um(J!dUh 20 pm, 322
K|M 12 20 pm -1 i^^mid hall.
^'0c‘»ulir *“• 8lUdent
^morrow ^ -6 pm Clll>a
e Adam* at Hoover
Carter Will Give Character Sketch At Baptist Meet
Speaking to members of the Rog-
of Commerce banquet on May 5.
Dean Reid L. McClung, acting as Judge, requests appllcakte to submit letters, seeking a Job as secretary, to him before 3 p.m. on April 26. From these letters, the winner wlll be selected.
The banquet, an annual affair honoring business men of southern California, ls ln charge of Dick deathbed that Hitler was assassin- Halpern, He will be assisted by | tlo'n"Vnd northern California'fH-ated while attending Mussolini s Robert Herton, new president of funeral.” the college; Willard Askew, ln
BUSS PARTICIPATES I charge of publicity; Warren Hewitt,
Upon the question oi whether I contacts; Dick Bertlne, award*; and | veiled economic reasons are behind George Cook, Esther Morrison, Bill j the present drive* for territory, Dr. ; Waters, Dona Bray, Jean Frampton, I Claude Buss, of *he international j and Ed Harding.
relations department, offered "Econ-| It will be held at 8 30 in the]
The University A Cappella choir will begin it* spring tour to the Golden Gate International exposl-
be held ln conjunction with the Apolliad competition of architecture student*.
DEADLINE ANNOUNCED
Glen Luken*, assistant professor of fine arts, announced that all architecture entrie* ln the Apolliad must be turned ln not later than Monday. April 34. All entries will be Included ln the show, along with other work done by itudent* Independently which conform* to the rules of the Apolliad.
The faculty Jury, which will make the selection, ls to be composed of Arthur C. Weatherhead, dean of the College of Architecture and Fine Art*; Mlss Amy W. McClelland, associate professor of fine art*; Olen
Williams club on Dr. John Car- ; presented in Bovard auditorium dur-ver, the Rev. William K. Carter, ; Ing the first week of June will be general missionary for the Negro an all-unlverslty production, and all people ln southern California, will students with a 1.0 average are ellg-present another ln the club's series ' ible for parts.
of modern contemporary character There are 12 characters in the sketches tode.v at the weekly lunch- play, eight men and four women, eon in 322 Student Union at 12:20 The title lead, Tartuffe, an eccles-p m lastical gentleman, represent* hypo-
Dr Carver'* noble experiments in crUy. He Is supported by Madame the field of science, especiaUy in Pemello. a domineering old- ash-the creation of by-products from | |°hed typej*’ person whojilttp-peanuts, will be stressed.
ernoon at 3:30 o’clock in Touchstone theater.
Although a large number of aspirants for roles have already tried out, no parts have been cast. All j omically speaking, colonies may not Foyer of Town and Gown students who appear this afternoon j he|p but they are good emotion will receive the same consideration j buiiders and potent talking points ln as those who were tested previous- j arouslng national hatreds, which ly, Harry Eddy, Play Productions j eventually lead to war.”
Dr. Harley drew from first-hand Information gathered during recent travels in Europe to show that the Continued on, Page Four
manager, announces.
The two-act comedy which will be
Episcopal Club Elects Officers at Meeting
Engineers To See Film Of Desert Field Trip
... , . ,, ,. copal convention at UCLA on April Motion picture* of the desert field ^ discussed
trip taken during the Easter vaca- ™ will De ai*cu**ea.
tlon will be shown when members j INVESTIGATION IS PLANNED
of the Chemistry Engineer* club ! WASHINGTON, April 19—U Hi—
New officers of the Episcopal club will be elected tomorrow when members of the organization gather at 12:20 p.m. ln 322 Student Union day, May 1, a stop-over In Fresno for a luncheon meeting. ; has been arranged to enable the
Bud Colegrove, president ol the chorus to sing before the Rotary group, announces that plans for the j club. Soloists with the choir are annual state Intercollegiate Epls-
! day, April 28.
Traveling by t’us, the first stop will be made at San Luis Obispo J Lukens; Allan Gould, visiting ln-where the chorus will give a con- | structor ln design; and Prof. Paul ! cert Friday night. Hunter, Ix>s Angeles architect and
The choir wlll arrive at Uie ex- visiting member of faculty, position grounds on Treasure Island DEPARTMENTS REPRESENTED ln time Saturday to take part in The following departments are to the "Los Angeles Days” program, be represented ln the all-»tudent’s and march ln the parade. J show; architecture, painting, design,
A number of concert* will t* 'ceramic*. Jewelry, and sculpture, given Saturday and Sunday ln the various auditorium* on Treasure Island. These recitals will be broadcast over a nation-wide hook-up..
Publisher
Threatened
By United Preu
George Palmer Putnam, book publisher and husband of the late Amelia Earhart, turned over to the district attorney's office tonight letter threatening him with vengeance lf he persisted in publishing an anti-Nazi book, entitled “the man who killed Hitler.”
The letter, written in Oerman. was received today, according to
meet tnis afternoon at 12:30 o'clock ln 308 Science, according to Hal Dornsife, president.
Students Intending to attend the
Assistant Attorney General Thurman W. Arnold disclosed today that the Justice department ls undertaking an extensive Investigation of
proves of the youth of her day "Tartuffe," as lt is to be given here, is a revision of Moliere's 17th centurv drama, and has never been presented on the American stage meeting are asked by the president the outdoor advertising industry on The S prooduction wlll be the ln- ! to bring their lunches. Election of the Pacific coast because of com-itial performance of the play in offloes wlll be conducted at the plainU that the anti-trust laws are this country. meeting. ‘ being violated.
Roy W. Howard Back from Europe;
; Believes War Is Not Yet Imminent
NEW YORK April 19 U'.P> — Roy Edouard Daladier of France, busi- ularly in hi* antl-Semitac campaign
Winners in the competition wlll be announced May 6, at which time awards are to be made Ouest critics who have been Invited to at-, tend the presentation of award* are Returning to Lo* ***•}? \ Roland McKinney, new director of
the Los Angeles museum; Prof. Paul Hunter; Reginald Poland, director of San Diego museum of fine arts;
_ ...... . . and Henry Lion, well-known Lo*
Clara Speer, Russel Halllger. Iris AngelM .c^tor.
Lewi*, and William von Klipstein,_________________
Compositions by Benjamin Ed- j wards, A Cappella conductor, and ■ Peasant and His Oxen," ‘'Exalta-tlon," and "Music ot Life," will be among the numbers rendered by the choir.
S.C. Professor To Lecture At Compton
"Some Problems of Youth Counseling” will be the topic of Dr, D. Welty Lefever, assistant professor of education at B.C., when he addresses a group of Junior college administrators at the southern Cal-
Harbor Trip Planned Saturday By I.R. Croup
Student* Interested ki attending the free harbor trip being *por.-aored by the Univeraity International Relation* club, are a*ked te meet in 300 Administration, chapel hour today, or ln front of Tommy Trojan, Saturday noon, a4 12:30 o'clock.
Fifty ctudent* oan be accommodated on the trip. A boat ha* been provided by the Los Angeles harbor commission to take the student*
Music for the occasion will be furnished by Dick Barrie's Beverly-Wilshire hotel orchestra and the band of Vido Musso, famed saxophone player who was formerly with Benny Goodman.
TWO ROOMS TO BE USED Dancing will be confined to the Florentine and the Oold rooms with the two orchestras alternating between the room*.
Floor show entertainment for tonight will be kept a surprise. Ed Ernst and Barton Alford, co-chairmen, said, revealing only that the entertainment would feature a well-known dance team and two prominent vocalists.
SHAW TO ATTEND As an added attraction. Artie Shaw, one of the country's leading band leaders and clarinet players, promised to sit in on a "Jam session” with Vido Musso between dances.
"The Goodyear blimp will not be with us today,"’ Wally Mansfield and Bill Alnley, directors of publicity apologized.
PLANE WILL APPEAR "In place of the blimp,” said the publlclat*, "Vic ‘Jimmy Allen' Mll-lner, the only flying member of the Flying iquadron, will fly an airplane over the campu* today at assembly period.”
His mission, they explained, will be to drop a large number of envelopes, five of which will contain the free bids to the formal. Trojans ln possession of them tonight wlll be admitted to th« danoe without charge.
KNIGHTS TO BE ANNOUNCED Bill Walk, general chairman for the dance, promised that new members of the Trojan Knights, Blue Key, and Sigma Slgma will be announced during the evening as a part of the program.
In a final atatement, Walk em-phaalzed that no one would be allowed to wear a corsage, according to a univeraity cuatom.
Mine Strikes May Halt Coal Industry
By LinHed Prtu
Possibility ot a nation-wide work stoppage In the soft coal Industry was seen Wednesday night ln announcements by state presidents of the United Mine Workers of America that John L. Lewis, national president of the union, ha* ordered members In the outlying district* to walk out May 4 lf the new contract for the Appalachian field na* not been drawn up by that time.
Such action would halt the mining of soft coal In 13 states outside the rich Appalachian district where a work stoppage of almost three week* already has brought warnings from many sides of a crippling coal shortage ln the near future.
HAILORK GO ON STRIKE
SAN FRANCISCO. April 19—
—Members of the Sailors Union of the Pacific, an independent union of west coa*t deckhands, walked off their ihlpa in four Pacific coaat port* today ln a demonstration protesting purported government plans to disregard the union hiring halls ln manning ships operated by the federal maritime commission.
Kamakura
liner.
Maru, large Japanese
W Howard of the Scripp* Howard j ness men and the man on the | This feeling, Howard said, could ifornia Junior College association
newsDaoers returned to the United street, foresaw two possible avenues j not help but transmit Itself event- j spring conference to be held at around the harbor. The feature of
Statet today aboard the French of peace. ually to Mussolini himself. Compton Junior college this Satur- ] the trip wlll be th* vlslttng of the
Putnam who said he had It trans- ne Ue p*ance, believing after First wa* President Roosevelt's Additionally, Mussolini actually ls day.
la ted before consulting chief district 1 nrgl.hand *Crutuiy of affairs ln cffer of meditation. He described believed more desirous of furthering The theme of the conference will
-------- ------“,K" Kl*in , ign capitals that there will be is at "soundly based but added the internal improvement program ^ .xhe junior College and the
no wai in Europe this year ‘If lt fails the failure can be necessary to hu dictatorship than Community.” Biuce A. Findlay, «u- Mu Aloha Nu Field TriD
He emphasized however, that be- largely attributed to the recent in assuming colonies which may in pervisor of visual education for th* ! K
attorney investigator, oJi.n Klein The note warned that "if you have any regard for your own safety, slop publication of this book at once.”
FATHER TO KETIRN BODY
FORT WORTH. Tex , April 19—
caust* of the 'many unpredictable well-merited, but nonetheless 111-ad- the end prove a liability. Howard IjOS Angeles city schools, wlll be To Lake Mojave Plftnned
'actors the biggest of w*lch U vised, barrage of American denun- tald. the principal speaker for th* lunch- i
Phaiuellor Adolf Hitler " his opin- elation of Hitler. Dictators do nol The crtdlt* necessary, he said, eon and general session. | A field trip to pleistocene Lake
inn was subject to change "within dare lose too much lace at home " could be provided through the Unit- ----------------- ----- Mohave, Saturday and Sunday, Is
94 hours and thal not even the The second was Italy * need for ed States, but more likely through KIKE SWEEPS NORTHWEST j planned by Mu Alpha Nu under
ti.n—o. nail —..... -- informed Europeans could say credit* wilh which to extend her Great Britain or Fiance. Automat- PORTLAND, Ore. April 1*— U'tfi the guidance of Charles A Amsden
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, arrived late s coming internal improvement program ically they would serve to weaken —Brush and forest fires swept of the Southwest museum, the archtoday by plane from Washmgton ahet le |>||fa<t wUh BnUah itfcUan* generally, he said. "haW the Rome-Berlin axis lie said, through the Pacific northwest eology department announces, en route to Mexico to return the ho Neville Chamber- me Germans and have the feeling adding that he believed Fiance and states tonight, takmg two lives and The group plans lo meet in front bodies of his son and a compan- Minister Joachim Von lhat Premier Benito Mussolini u England would be willing t« enter causing extensive darn***, chiefly ot Sludent Umon Saturday al 7:50 lon who were kUled in an airplane lain, ror g premier ' taking order* ’ from Hitler, paruc- | wio *uch a program. > to brush and second growth Umber. I ajn. crash yesterday. , iiiownirop ui 1
Today's Organ Program
Prof. Arotolbald Sessions'* organ recital today will include th* following selections:
Totm* m F mt/or ....................
TTiis toccata W on* of th* finest ot the big preludlal movement* of Bach. Like the Dorian work, tt haa none of the brilliance ot rhapsodical quality we usually associate with the title. Instead there ls aa Immense and unflagging vigor, a spacious design, and a power of development that even Bach himself rarely. U ever, exceeded.
El Amur .................... dt fed I*
Pl'btlMJU’S in t PjHiomimt (Latter two excerpt* ar* taken from the Spanish composer s lam. ous ballot "Wedding by Witchcraft.")
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 119, April 20, 1939 |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
United Press Assn. Direct Wire Service NAS Z-42 SOUTHERN DAIL CALIFORNIA ROJAN Editorial Offices Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night --PR-4776 eace esture ught gland Invites Hiller e Reply i0 Roosevelt's nt Peace Message -N April 19—(l'.P>— Orest tonight invited Chancellor Hitler to make a gesture of -1 understanding" on the basis dent Roosevelt's peace ap-ind announced that the Brit-hssador to Berlin soon will to his post. — secretary Viscount Hall* rto extended the conciliatory to the Fuehrer on the ,fthe latter s 50th birthday, wd that Britain is ready to -te In worldwide economic as proposed by Mr. Roose-iii means of achieving a dur-pa. VD WANTS PEACE lave no doubt that millions of In all countries trust that his i»e will have a successful out-1 Viscount Halifax told the ul lords. old that Britain still is anxi-•maintain real peace in the through international col-“ j and is hopeful for a ”re-from the other side.” Halifax’s statement was rets an invitation to Hitler t conciliatory reply when -r$ before the reichstag on S to answer President Roose-tppeal for at least 10 years "ON WILL DIM HOPES dfect. he asked the Fuehrer It dam the door on hopes of peace by any blunt re-of President Roosevelt's foreign secretary spoke be-Hw house of lords shortly after Minister Neville Chamberlain tee house of commons that Ii willing to consider, in the Par East, in any gen -aggression alignment. ■lain said that the govern-' wuld study the desirability China and other Far countries in the antl-ag-. bloc. te Relief Roll Be Slashed Economy Act r MENTO, April 19_ |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1939-04-20~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1182/uschist-dt-1939-04-20~001.tif |
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