DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 144, May 25, 1938 |
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Mtorial Office*
RI-4111 Sta. 227
Night--PR. 4776
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
Volume XXIX
Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, May 25, 1938
United Press
World Wide News Service Z-42
Number 144
Film Awards To Be Given
I Awards recognizing outstanding success in motion picture fcting. producing, and directing will be presented at the fifth pnual banquet of the American Institute of Cinematography pmorrow evening in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
Howard Estabrook. screen writer and producer, will serve master of ceremonies for thi *■_
Annual
Appears
Thursday
Distribution Will Begin In 211 Student Union
pnquet. Estabrook is noted for the' treenplay version of David Cop-prfield.' He is vice-president of i be Academy of Motion Picture Irts and Sciences.
I Dr. Lloyd C. Douglas, well-known j lithor, will speak on the topic. I ’ygmalion and the Pictures." He author of the novel and screen ! iccess ‘The Magificent Obses-pn."
|o\ KLEINSMID TO PRESIDE
I Louis B. Mayer, prominent studio kecutive. will also address the pthering. His topic is unannoun-w. Arrangements are being made b broadcast the banquet and proram on a national network Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid di-fcctor of the institute, will pre-de at the formal affair. Other nicers of the cinematography org-pization are Dr. Boris Morkovin psistant director, and Dr. J. Eu-tne Harley, secretary. The insti-|ite is affiliated with U.SC.
Special banquet rates to students hd faculty may be obtained from uv W. D. Crocker in 300 Admin-tration. Admittance to the proram is 50 cents.
[USIC IS OFFERED I The Boris Morros
Assembly To Explain Curriculum
A meeting to explain what opportunities will exist this fall for present freshmen and sophomores in connection with the revised curriculum will be held in Bovard auditorium at 10 o'clock next Friday. It is desired that sophomores and freshmen attend.
ALBERT S. RAUBENHEIMER.
Dean of the College of Letters.
Arts, and Sciences.
Music Hour Is Today
Brahms, Schoenberg Chamber Compositions Offered on Program
Wage-Hour Bill Clears House After Bitter Fight Between Sectional Factions
WASHINGTON, May 24—(U.P.)—The house tonight passed the Roosevelt-supported minimum wage-maximum hour bill after a bitter north-south sectional fight which threatened permanent cleavage of congressional Democratic ranks.
The vote was 314 to 97. It came immediately after a routine motion to recommit, introduc-* — ed by Representative William Lam- gf During Assembly Period bertson. R • Kans.. was beaten down
314 to 96.
Trojan tradition has taken a set- j The president put it at the top back. of his legislative slate and tpld
For the first time in the univer- ' congress bluntly that he would not sity's history, El Rodeo will be is- | countenance sine die adjournment sued one day earlier than the edi- i until it was passed. is p eas e tor announced. News of the rec- on deaf ears until the lecen or ord-breaking decision was broad-iida primary in which Sena or cast last night by Leonard Rosen, Claude Pepper, ardent New’ ea er business manager, who declared i and wage-hour advocate, was over-that distribution of the annual will I whelmingly renominated^ begin during assembly hour Thurs- j HOUSE ORDERS VOTE
The house membership, which killed his original bill be recommitting it, quickly joined a crusade to petition the measure from the pre-
day.
Books will be issued only to persons who present activity books or j
receipts of payment at the ticket , .. .. <• . n
off.ee. 211 Student union. Rosen ! dcmmantjy-sout^hem^ r“les _commit- Senator Pepper
Plane
Crash
Kills 10
Flaming Transport Plunges To Ground Near Cleveland
CLEVELAND, May 24—(I'J!)— A United Air Lines transport plane overdue from Newark, N. J., caught fire in the air over suburban Independence tonight and crashed, kill- X. mg three crew members and seven ^ O 11 I 0 S I passengers.
The crew consisted of Capt. Jamesj ! L. Brandon, La Grange, HI.; co-1 pilot "Bud” Merrifield and Mildred Macek, Milwaukee, hostess.
Seven passengers were aboard and were listed by United as E. H. Veb- | len, Douglas Aircraft Co. employe J of Santa Monica; C. Doty, Boston;
R. C. Lewis, R. P. Morrell, C. F.1
Senior Plans Completed
Fourteen separate events have been included in final plans ; for Senior week, Jaye Brower, senior class president and general chairman of the annual affair, announced last night.
Beginning with baccalaureate services in the coliseum Sunday afternoon and ending with the senior formal dinner
!-------*dance at the Biltmore hotel on Sat-
j - - urdav night, June 4, Senior week
Wampus
Is Close
warned that students wrho have not purchased El Rodeos must first pay the $5 fee at the cashier's window in the university bookstore.
Lost activity books must be recorded with Mrs. Marie Poetker in the bookstore before their owners can receive annuals. No will be made.
this year promises to be the largest and most elaborate ever presented by the graduating class, officials in charge of the week's festivities believe.
Tickets for Senior week social activities are now on sale at the cashier's window in Student Union. Tickets are not necessary for such events as baccalaureate services, but are required for social affairs, such as the senior swing and senior formal at the The Wampus sales contest for the Biltmore hotel.
May issue, the ninth and last of j SPORT DANCE FIRST
the year, will be conducted from the Senior swing, annual sport dance.
Alpha Gamma Delta Leads Sororities In Race for Sales Cup
Lickel, John Bostruen, and J. R.
cn naa reiusea to repurl it. | I Mnffptt nf five nf thp na« I uc wimuciea irom uie oenior swing, annual sport uanut
It was brought to the floor yester-j vote a" ame"^t J^nT^he Wengers'"ere n<* *™>wn immediate- pati° of the Student Union build* wil1 be*in the week s soc,al actiV day under a limitation of debate j tive Mary Norton, removing me j | mg this mormng W1th the 13 cam- ities. Arrangements are being com
rule and was opened for amend- ! time-and-one-half pay piovision or j _ ments today. ; over-time year round for the diary
Bolstered by the personal prest- industry, and for any 12 weeks in ige of Roosevelt, the administration a year for canneries processing sea-
. , forces, with support from scattered j sonal or perishable farm products, c arge ^locs. turned back threats of op- This embraces dairy products, cot-ponents to “amend the bill to ton ginning, processing of cotton At the annual El Rodeo banquet death" and passed it in substanti-last night the yearbook staff pre- | ally the original form, sented Clint Ternstrom, editor, with AMENDMENT ACCEPTED a gift. Keys for three years’ service were given Eugenia Rowland.
seed, fresh fish, seafoods, vegetables, and fruits, and slaughtering and dressing of poultry and livestock.
The major fight centered on an OTHER CHANGES ACCEPTED amendment by Representative Har- ; An amendment by Representative
nuartet will' t ®ra*ims and Schoenberg are the Louise Brant, Lorine English, and ry g Coffee to exempt from over-1 Charles Kramer, exempting child s rinrinp thp w° com posers wiose woi's ma -e Muriel Faeder; and Ternstrom and time provisions industries which motion picture stars from the bill's
process, produce, handle, and dis-1 provisions was approved by voice . ,
was ognition and that their features
WEATHER REPORTED GOOD
The plane left Newark airport at 7:30 p.m. (E.S.T.) and was due to make its first stop at Cleveland at 10:15. Los Angeles was its ul timate destination.
Weather conditions in the area at the time of the accident were reported good.
Six bodies were recovered within one hour after the crash, but were not identified immediately.
Spectators on the scene said the victims were scorched beyond rec-
lay musical interludes during the j up lhe program of this afternoon's Rosen were awarded editor's and
aV^one^'of tie maior 'studios 1 °U 91 c ^ °£lock in business managers trophies. tribute livestock, poultry, farm, and i vote. Accepted unanimously ..._
id hnnoL, m™^ Ol thJ ^ auditorium. Schoenberg has Although Ternstrom announced diarv products. It was defeated 152 an amendment by Representative j „
tu,.u«. He wi . m^Sr ol IS f Tlt Z ****> -vearbM)lt »°uld to 122 Robert Rosser, to bring railroad G'KLS ™MES _
is&an Care orchestra before the e e 0 pr composers ec mque be out Friday, the annuals were The farm bloc won a partial vie- w-orkers, not provided for under the ^wo hved nearby said
1 ° comP°sl lon returned by thc binders earlier than tory a short time later, however, railway labor act. within scope of ^ad heard a terrific roar
solution. His father was conduc of the orchestra Members of
The first number played will be was anticipated. Rosen is in charge i when the house accepted by voice the wrage-hour measure.
, . _ . the Quintet in F Minor for piano of the distribution.
»re John Pennington. and strlngs by jolianries Grahms. Thirty-six hundred copies of the--
It is in four movements, allegro, book have been printed, but Tern- ^
andante con moto, scherzo and strom believes there may be a short- German Press Denounces
the countrv.
st violin; Jack Pepper, second jlin; Phil Kahgan. viola; and lexander Borisoff. cello.
[Th* institute sponsors several ler activities, such as the cinema nation forums, the commit-on international relations, and le Cinema Progress magazine.
PRIMS ARE EXPLAINED fThe forums are made up of in-ructors of motion picture appie-Ltion or audio-visual education t public schools, students in the Ipartment of cinematography, and Ihers interested in the arts and ■ences of motion pictures. Among lose who have addressed the for-is this vear are Frank Butler, lank Tuttle. John W. Harknder, Quintet. In writing it. he showed of aviation?
finale. The piece by Arnold Scho- because of the large number enberg is ‘•Transfigured Night," of activity books sold this year and sextet for strings. the increased call for copies from
•Transfigured Night.” the piece pnnters and Publishers throughout which established Schoenberg as one of the foremost contemporary! j composers, shows the essentials of ;his style although it was written when he was a young man. It was composed when he was still much under the influence of Brahms and i shows the reverence he always has for the great master.
All the essentials of Brahms'
Aviation Experts Will Address Joint Banquet
Are you interested in how much
Anglo-French Intrigue
PRAGUE. May 24 —(U.P.)—German press warnings of war and bitter denunciation of Great Britain and France for playing a “dangerous game of intrigue” tonight spiked the Czechoslovak crisis with new dangers as peace negotiations in Prague were interrupted suddenly.
The inspired German press re-*—-
leased a torrent of accusations based \ ■ I r\ r T on alleged frontier violations and JUnK Uay I 3QS demanded that Czechoslovakia with-
A1I uir rvxrmiai* ui uianms Are you interested in how much ‘ A „ _ j.
musical style may be found in this chance you would have in the field draw troops moved. UP to the Ger- Are UiSmDUteCl
kd Joseph Schildkraut. rhe swards of recognition to be rented tomorrow at the banquet 11 be in the form of d’plomas of Ihievement and honorary mem-|rships in the American Institute Cinematography for 1938.
Five speakers, four of whom are
authorities on aviation, will speak ..""T r’.....° o _
* v 7 dissolve some of the optimism of
man-Czech border in warlike array over the weekend.
The deepening tension, serving to
To Aiding Croups
"With the distribution of all-U
his characteristic indifference to his medium. The music was planned as a quartet, written as a sex- tonight at the annua, ^ . T
tet. rewritten as a sonate for two of A]pha Eta Rho. national aviation the past 24 hours, appeared as Kon- Jmtk day tags on campus nearly pianos, and finally rewritten again fraternitv and the National Aero- Henlein. German mmonty lead- completed and with cooperation
for the combination of piano and nautical association on the subject er’ Pra?ue for his home at promised by more than 50 per cent
string quartet. ..The opportunities for Youth in °sch' the c°ntacted. organizations, the
Of the Brahms piece, it has been Aviation ” The barquet will be in CONFERENCE CANCELLED success of the drive to raise money said that if it were as easy to fam- the Foyer of Town and Gowti at 7 ‘ His departure cancelled another for the proposed new Religious
iliarize the public with good cham- 0-ci0ck‘ scheduled conference with Premier Center building seems almost as-
ber music as it is to present good Men invjted tQ k are Dr lMilan Hodza. set for today, to seek sured-" declared Gene Zechmeister.
Piano music or good songs, this Homer stewart> research engineer a means of solving the Czecho- ! chairman of the drive yesterday,
quintet would be a popular classic. at Cal 7^; a W. Stainback, pilot Slovak government’s dispute with Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega,
- _________ ........... When afkea why he liked the of umt(?d Airlines; Arthur E. Ray- 3.500.000 members of the German the campaign to collect old rags,
yieam, was declared the !one melodic skips which are char- mond, vice-president of encineer- minority wrhieh brought middle Eur- PaPer*-.bottles, and clothes, and to
the Ames cup frosh de- scicristic of hLs composition st\le. jng at Douglas Aircraft company; ope to the verge of war Saturday turn t ~m over to the committee
Schoenberg replied. It is probably Kenvon J. Scudder. probation offi- when two German farmers w^ere u^111 eis- representing sororities,
because I admire Brahms so much cer ot ^ Angeles county; andVhot and killed and Prague called fraternities faculty clubs, Lancers,
and because his music also had jimmy Griffin, aviation writer of 70.000 army reserves to the colors. H6 „ Sigma, Knights,
wide skip>s. Aeronews. Reports that Germany w'as mov- and Squires, is being conducted all
------- Earl pjji] faculty director of Al-[ing troops toward the 1.315-mile'wee ' ,inaI ay of the dfivc is
TRAIN DYNAMITED pha Eta Rho. and W. W. McCul- stretch of the frontier wrere uncon- neTXTt a ur ay.
SAN LUIS POTOSI. Mexico. May lough are in charge of the program, firmed tonight in Prague. Univeisity maintenance trucks
will pick up the material from des-
>n Wins ^ Cup
member of the fresh-
“7-ontest yesterday. In the \competition, Bol.on was vic-over his teammate and colieapuf. Goraon Wright. ;dges of the finals were mem-i of Dr Roy L. Thompson's
eshman English class. A silver
fdne cup. donated by Neil Ames. 24—'l.P1—A train en route to Tam- Proicscor Hill will award prizes to MINISTERS SUMMONED
is Angeles attorney and former Pico was dynamited by rebels 55 four members of the fraternity for Hodza summoned the British and
|S C. debated, will be given Bolt- miles east of San Luis Potosi. kill- outsianding work in the field of French ministers • and informed
ing the fireman, it was reported to- aviation during the oast year. {them of his preliminary meeting
ignated points. The entire amount of material gathered will be sold to raise cash for the building fund. Zcchmeister further explained:
As colleagues on the freshman night anc: authorities had essert- Names of the students to be honor- with Henlein and later convened f j ,
uad this vear, Bolton and Wright Pd that General Saturnino Cedil- ed will not be revealed until the the inner council of the cabinet r ) students and faculty members
Ic* . , _ , , . rPQ 1170 inot tnAiifrh f
bre successful in a number of 10 s Agrarian revolt had b?en re- awards are made.
[bates and two tournaments Bill duced scattered guerrilla fight- Twelve new pledges will be form-
jgge was manager of the Ames in6 ally initiated into Alpha Et aRho.
In test._____
kPAKESE DENY EXECUTIONS [rOKYO, May 24—(f.P*—The war Ifice formally denied to Sir Rob-L. Craigie, British ambassador. |at Japanese had executed prison-tt Amoy, China, as reported in ^patches from London
omorrow s f)rgan Program
Archibald Sessions, university t-ganist. will present the foiiow-kg program tomorrow during tie assembly period in Bovard kiditonum.
\agto Irons tbe Sixlh
Organ Symphony ................ U"rder
Wider first came into promince when he succeeded Cesar [rank as professor of organ t the Paris Conservatoire. De-leaaed last year. Wider became nown as one of the mo6t pro-fic of modem composers for the rgan. as well as the foremost french organist of his day.
* Mountain Sketches_______ Cloiey
Ckiw Ifells \~1lgeJ tmks m the MbontfgAt M* de Concert ...................... Bonnet
Japanese Motorized Legions Roll Toward Hankow
... • t , , . , realize that though the amount of
which was informed by the premier . . ., XJ~ , , „
^ I- , junk they contrjbute may be small,
that further consultations will be ___.. . ,, 4
• , , . , ,, the combined efforts of all will
carried out with members of the „. „ . . , . . , J *
„ . * ! raise a lot of material and the m-
Sudeten German parliamentary , ,,
____Hun terest caused off campus may re-
committee.
No date for the next meeting of Henlein and Hodza has been fixed.
The spokesman of Henlein's Sudeten German party denied that the “peace” conversations between Hen-
_ syy \ ▼ * s. Ilein and Hodza had collapsed.
SHANGHAI (Wednesday) May 25 (U.P.) Japans motor- 1 ,-once contact between our party
ized legions, gathering momentum ss they advanced, rolled leader and the premier had been
westward over the bloody battlefields of Honan province to- established, and conversations start-
day toward Hankow, the temporary Chinese capital. ed. Henlein's presence in Prague
Japanese reports said that the city of Lanfeng, known as was not necessary,” he said, refer- j Honoring two professors of the
"the gateway to the west," had been +-—-—-1 rta« to last night’s meeting between mechanical divisl™ of the colleee
46th and 88th Chinese divisions— the two, ecnamcai aivision oi tne oonege
occupied alter !our days of fighting “e lncluding Mme o[ the _
suit in contributions from organizations capable or offering service.” Brown Drug company will award two prizes to the two organizations turning in their money first.
Two Professors To Be Honored
over their homes and had looked out to see the ship afire in midair One motor was thrown forward, clear of the 'plane.
Police of suburban Parma and Parma heights poked through the wreckage in an effort to recover bodies.
Another spectator said that the pilot apparently had been seeking a place to make an emergency land ing and had thrown down flares. Flares were found on the ground nearby after crash.
OIL BURNS
He said that oil in one motor apparently was burning in midair and that the ship’s gas tank exploded when the plane struck the ground.
Bodies were laid out on the ground alongside the wreckage and ambulances from Independence began removing them.
Cunningham To Manage YMCA Croups
pus sororities participating, George pleted for a 10-piece orchestra to
Cook, the magazine’s sales man- play at the affair. Al Gordon, chair-
ager. announced yesterday. man of the dance, states, and the Since last fail when it first 1 dance will be held at the Los An-
caught the attention of the cam- geles Breakfast club. Arrangements
pus. the sales contest has been a are also being made to have the
pitched battle between two soror- dance broadcast.
Girls scheduled to sell in tbe Wampus contest today are asked to report to the patio of the Student Union after 9 a.m.
ities, Alpha Gamma Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha. These houses have monopolized the lead ih the race for the Wampus cup, annual award to the sorority selling the greatest number of copies during the year's contests.
Tuesday has been set as Joe College day. with a full day of activity, including egg and spoop races, ping-pong, horseshoe, and swimming contests. derby spectacles, and a barbecue dinner-dance at the Uplifter's ranch. Nick Pappas, chairman of Joe College day. announces. SENIORS TO PLAY PRANKS Seniors will inaugurate the special day’s program at assembly period Tuesday, invading the campus dressed in costumes ana playing
At present, Alpha Gamma Delta , , leads by the narrow margin of 14 gMto™ .P«P>» f» Umtefgfytotw
copies, with Zeta Tau Alpha second and last year's cup winner, ■ Kappa Delta, in third position. The standings of other participating sororities are:
The evening barbecue at the Uplifter's ranch will be served at 7 o’clock. Dancing will follow the dinner.
Wednesday will be featured by
Alpha Chi Omega, fourth; Kappa j “\pr“e"t*“°n «”‘°r
Alpha Theta. fifth; Delta Delta S <wl for “ ' h v *U' Delta, sixth; Delta Zeta. seventh; cast Thursday, activities
Phi Mu. runner-up in last year s wiUl a senior awards as-
contest, eighth: Delta Gamma. femMy m Bovard auditorium Dr. ninth; Alpha Epsilon Phi. tenth; Ruft* B. vor. KlemSmid presiding. P. Beta Phi. eleventh; Alpha Delta At„th's Br°'f fates, seniors
Pi. twelfth; and Alpha Delta t^. 1 will be given awards for their out-ta. thirteenth.
, standing work, j scholastic.
both social and
IVY DAY CEREMONIES
Included on Thursday's program j will be the Ivy day ceremonies at j 11:30 a.m. in Old College. Sterling Smith, chairman of the event, stated Contained in the May Wampus yesterday. At 3 p.m., members of will be the highly-touted Senior the graduating class and their par-Primer. rated by the editors as the ents will meet at the home of Dr.
Senior Primer Featured
successor to the Rate Your Sorority Chart.” The primer will tell graduating seniors what they should know' before they embark on their intended careers.
Jerry Wald, top-rate Warner Brothers scenario writer, and former editor of his college humor mag-
Continued on pajre four
Ransome Hall To Head Council
Names of men to fill appointive offices of the Trojan YMCA for next year were released last night by Bob Matzke. president of the organization.
Floyd Cunningham was appointed to the office of executive secretary.
Cunningham's duties will cover committee and executive activities.
Cunningham is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon social fraternity, a Squire, former vice-president and program chairman of the “Y.”
Office of financial chairman will Ad Nauseum. be directed by Bob Frye as a re- culture page suit of his appointment last night. iignts of the May Wampus. Frye was chairman of the commit- 1
Ransome Hall. Sigma Nu. will azine, will be the guest writer o succeecj John Olhasso as president the month. He has written a iaueh- of thg Men's council next semester, able yarn, titled the Perfect Citi- ^ was announced yesterday. New
zen- . secretary is Bill Broomfield. Phi
In addition to Wald's story, there Kappa ^ who ^ feplace Jac(?
is "Some of Them Came Back, by Warner
A treasurer will be elected later.
Some of Them Came Back.” by Craig Dorman, a philosophical piece.- Al Gordon completes his final Nite Spots column, and Bill Zima has contributed several stories.
The usual cartoon feature. Moo-ley the Monk, editorial comment,
Five other men were appointed to the council oy Henry Flynn. A.S. US.C president-elect.
Senior members for next year are Sam Schwartz, non-org, and Mar-, vin Moffie. Zeta Beta Tau. Junior and the Wampus c0lincilmen inciude Bob Hawkins, complete the high-
tee for student-faculty hours and AUSTRIAN ARRESTED a member of the Internationa MEXICO CITY, May 24— <U.E>— Night committee. Andres Gomez Unga. native of
Bob Yoeman was aPP™-£ : Hermanstat. Austria, was arrested
man of the International Relations ton-ght fay Iederal agents on charges
committee. Yoeman rornmit of manufacturing airplane
of the International Night commit-1 ^ ^ ^
tee last year.
for the Cedillo.
that was described as "bloodier than the battle of Suchow.”
finest trained soldiers in all China— had fled from Lanfeng. leaving While Japanese columns slashed more than 2.000 dead on the battle-their way westward along the Lung- fields outside the city.
Hai railroad, advancing toward the point where the railroad tracks and
Observers believed the coincident mass movement of Japanese troops
j of Engineering, Thomas Eyre and
—-i Sidney Duncan, the American So-
ciety of Mechanical Engineers will
Final Religion Assembly gather at a dinner tonight at the
Casa de Rosas at 6:30 o'clock.
Awards wil be given to those students who have submitted the best papers on lectures which have been
Of Semester Is Today
Roy Beight, popular singer and
«* Yellow river converge and par- was designed £°™ leafr wU1 ,*ta* J A presented at previous meetings of
&lip] porh nthpr as fftr ac Trpp ’ nnH cpvprol rrfhor hptfpr ..
&llel each other as far west as the Shensi border, other Japanese troops were reported crossing the Yellow ri'er from the north.
This
mass crossing, if it is successful. would place additional Japanese oolumns in position to deal a.terriJlc banking blow at the crack divisions of Generalissimo Chianc *_
Kai-Sheks treating al^e tW° mP°rt&nt nnwa^
the Lung-Hat
to flank the retreating Chinese at Kaifeng. the last major outpost between the Japanese advance columns and the walled city of Chengchow. where the Lung-Hai and Pei-ping-Hankow railroads intersect.
Occupation of this junction would give the Japanese control at the
k.
m AipaaaM mlMacr i^porti mid the
Mods fci north China, and would enable them to dominate all railroad traffic flowing north
Tree” and several other better known pieces, this morning at 9:55 o'clock in Bovard auditorium. Archibald Sessions, university organist, will accompany Beight on the organ.
Dr. Carl Sumner Knopf, dean of the School of Religion, will speak briefly on the subject, -Vacation Adventures."
Hi is morning's assembly marks the last religious gathering of the
the society.
Professors Eyre and Duncan will address the group during the evening. and Charles Engle, president of the organization, will preside.
F.D.R. ADVISER DIES ITHACA. N. Y., May 24 — (U.E)— Dr. George F. Warren, former monetary adviser to President Roosevelt and one of the nation’s best known authorities on finances.
1 died today at 64,
Alumni To Honor Classes Of 1888, 1913 at Luncheon
More than 650 alumni and graduating seniors will meet at the annual Alumni Commencement luncheon in Foyer of Town and Gown, Saturday, June 4, Lewis Gough, executive director of the general alumni association, announces.
Graduates of the classes of 1888 and 1913 will be honored
at the luncheon.’he states, cele-*-^--— -
brating the 25th and 50th anniver- Sociation. president of the Southern saries of the graduates. Dr. Lula California Businessmen’s associa-Talbot Ellis, graduate of the class tlon president of the Las Angeles of 1888. will attend the luncheon, chamber of commerce, and presi-representing her class. Representa- 0j the Southern Californians,
tives of the 1924 class will also ad- : incorporated dress the group.
Dr Rufus B. von KleinSmid will Seniors desiring to attend the be the main speaker at the lunch- Saturday luncheon are requested to
Sigma Chi; Merle Morris, Sigma Alpha Epsilon: and Jimmy Roberts. Phi Sigma Kappa. New members will be introduced to outgoing councilmen at breakfast in Aeneas hall Saturday* moming at 7:30 o'clock.
The Men's council is a student bombs disciplinary committee which has Saturnino power to summon, try. and punish men for infractions of campus rules. The counsellor of men and the president of the student body are ex-officio members of the cofcmcil.
eon meeting.
The Asa V. Call Alumni Achievement trophy, awarded annually to the alumnus who has brought most fame to U.S.C. will be presented to Byron C. Hanna, graduate of the School of Law. elass of ’10, who has been, during the past year, president of the general alumni as-
get their tickets before Thursday,; June 2, and may do so by presenting their senior week books at the! cashier’s window in Student Union. Tickets are 25 cents for graduating seniors.
Dr. Carl Howson, president of the general alumni association, will preside at the banquet.
FOUNTAIN PENS
<W to'IB.
SHEAFFER PARKER EVERSHARP CONKLIN WATERMAN EXPERT REPAIRING
HEADQUARTERS
NchwabacherFrey
736 So.BDWY.MA.l6U
Object Description
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| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 144, May 25, 1938 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 144, May 25, 1938. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
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Mtorial Office* RI-4111 Sta. 227 Night--PR. 4776 SOUTHERN DAILY CALIFORNIA Volume XXIX Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, May 25, 1938 United Press World Wide News Service Z-42 Number 144 Film Awards To Be Given I Awards recognizing outstanding success in motion picture fcting. producing, and directing will be presented at the fifth pnual banquet of the American Institute of Cinematography pmorrow evening in the Foyer of Town and Gown. Howard Estabrook. screen writer and producer, will serve master of ceremonies for thi *■_ Annual Appears Thursday Distribution Will Begin In 211 Student Union pnquet. Estabrook is noted for the' treenplay version of David Cop-prfield.' He is vice-president of i be Academy of Motion Picture Irts and Sciences. I Dr. Lloyd C. Douglas, well-known j lithor, will speak on the topic. I ’ygmalion and the Pictures." He author of the novel and screen ! iccess ‘The Magificent Obses-pn." o\ KLEINSMID TO PRESIDE I Louis B. Mayer, prominent studio kecutive. will also address the pthering. His topic is unannoun-w. Arrangements are being made b broadcast the banquet and proram on a national network Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid di-fcctor of the institute, will pre-de at the formal affair. Other nicers of the cinematography org-pization are Dr. Boris Morkovin psistant director, and Dr. J. Eu-tne Harley, secretary. The insti- ite is affiliated with U.SC. Special banquet rates to students hd faculty may be obtained from uv W. D. Crocker in 300 Admin-tration. Admittance to the proram is 50 cents. [USIC IS OFFERED I The Boris Morros Assembly To Explain Curriculum A meeting to explain what opportunities will exist this fall for present freshmen and sophomores in connection with the revised curriculum will be held in Bovard auditorium at 10 o'clock next Friday. It is desired that sophomores and freshmen attend. ALBERT S. RAUBENHEIMER. Dean of the College of Letters. Arts, and Sciences. Music Hour Is Today Brahms, Schoenberg Chamber Compositions Offered on Program Wage-Hour Bill Clears House After Bitter Fight Between Sectional Factions WASHINGTON, May 24—(U.P.)—The house tonight passed the Roosevelt-supported minimum wage-maximum hour bill after a bitter north-south sectional fight which threatened permanent cleavage of congressional Democratic ranks. The vote was 314 to 97. It came immediately after a routine motion to recommit, introduc-* — ed by Representative William Lam- gf During Assembly Period bertson. R • Kans.. was beaten down 314 to 96. Trojan tradition has taken a set- j The president put it at the top back. of his legislative slate and tpld For the first time in the univer- ' congress bluntly that he would not sity's history, El Rodeo will be is- countenance sine die adjournment sued one day earlier than the edi- i until it was passed. is p eas e tor announced. News of the rec- on deaf ears until the lecen or ord-breaking decision was broad-iida primary in which Sena or cast last night by Leonard Rosen, Claude Pepper, ardent New’ ea er business manager, who declared i and wage-hour advocate, was over-that distribution of the annual will I whelmingly renominated^ begin during assembly hour Thurs- j HOUSE ORDERS VOTE The house membership, which killed his original bill be recommitting it, quickly joined a crusade to petition the measure from the pre- day. Books will be issued only to persons who present activity books or j receipts of payment at the ticket , .. .. <• . n off.ee. 211 Student union. Rosen ! dcmmantjy-sout^hem^ r“les _commit- Senator Pepper Plane Crash Kills 10 Flaming Transport Plunges To Ground Near Cleveland CLEVELAND, May 24—(I'J!)— A United Air Lines transport plane overdue from Newark, N. J., caught fire in the air over suburban Independence tonight and crashed, kill- X. mg three crew members and seven ^ O 11 I 0 S I passengers. The crew consisted of Capt. Jamesj ! L. Brandon, La Grange, HI.; co-1 pilot "Bud” Merrifield and Mildred Macek, Milwaukee, hostess. Seven passengers were aboard and were listed by United as E. H. Veb- len, Douglas Aircraft Co. employe J of Santa Monica; C. Doty, Boston; R. C. Lewis, R. P. Morrell, C. F.1 Senior Plans Completed Fourteen separate events have been included in final plans ; for Senior week, Jaye Brower, senior class president and general chairman of the annual affair, announced last night. Beginning with baccalaureate services in the coliseum Sunday afternoon and ending with the senior formal dinner !-------*dance at the Biltmore hotel on Sat- j - - urdav night, June 4, Senior week Wampus Is Close warned that students wrho have not purchased El Rodeos must first pay the $5 fee at the cashier's window in the university bookstore. Lost activity books must be recorded with Mrs. Marie Poetker in the bookstore before their owners can receive annuals. No will be made. this year promises to be the largest and most elaborate ever presented by the graduating class, officials in charge of the week's festivities believe. Tickets for Senior week social activities are now on sale at the cashier's window in Student Union. Tickets are not necessary for such events as baccalaureate services, but are required for social affairs, such as the senior swing and senior formal at the The Wampus sales contest for the Biltmore hotel. May issue, the ninth and last of j SPORT DANCE FIRST the year, will be conducted from the Senior swing, annual sport dance. Alpha Gamma Delta Leads Sororities In Race for Sales Cup Lickel, John Bostruen, and J. R. cn naa reiusea to repurl it. I Mnffptt nf five nf thp na« I uc wimuciea irom uie oenior swing, annual sport uanut It was brought to the floor yester-j vote a" ame"^t J^nT^he Wengers'"ere n<* *™>wn immediate- pati° of the Student Union build* wil1 be*in the week s soc,al actiV day under a limitation of debate j tive Mary Norton, removing me j mg this mormng W1th the 13 cam- ities. Arrangements are being com rule and was opened for amend- ! time-and-one-half pay piovision or j _ ments today. ; over-time year round for the diary Bolstered by the personal prest- industry, and for any 12 weeks in ige of Roosevelt, the administration a year for canneries processing sea- . , forces, with support from scattered j sonal or perishable farm products, c arge ^locs. turned back threats of op- This embraces dairy products, cot-ponents to “amend the bill to ton ginning, processing of cotton At the annual El Rodeo banquet death" and passed it in substanti-last night the yearbook staff pre- ally the original form, sented Clint Ternstrom, editor, with AMENDMENT ACCEPTED a gift. Keys for three years’ service were given Eugenia Rowland. seed, fresh fish, seafoods, vegetables, and fruits, and slaughtering and dressing of poultry and livestock. The major fight centered on an OTHER CHANGES ACCEPTED amendment by Representative Har- ; An amendment by Representative nuartet will' t ®ra*ims and Schoenberg are the Louise Brant, Lorine English, and ry g Coffee to exempt from over-1 Charles Kramer, exempting child s rinrinp thp w° com posers wiose woi's ma -e Muriel Faeder; and Ternstrom and time provisions industries which motion picture stars from the bill's process, produce, handle, and dis-1 provisions was approved by voice . , was ognition and that their features WEATHER REPORTED GOOD The plane left Newark airport at 7:30 p.m. (E.S.T.) and was due to make its first stop at Cleveland at 10:15. Los Angeles was its ul timate destination. Weather conditions in the area at the time of the accident were reported good. Six bodies were recovered within one hour after the crash, but were not identified immediately. Spectators on the scene said the victims were scorched beyond rec- lay musical interludes during the j up lhe program of this afternoon's Rosen were awarded editor's and aV^one^'of tie maior 'studios 1 °U 91 c ^ °£lock in business managers trophies. tribute livestock, poultry, farm, and i vote. Accepted unanimously ..._ id hnnoL, m™^ Ol thJ ^ auditorium. Schoenberg has Although Ternstrom announced diarv products. It was defeated 152 an amendment by Representative j „ tu,.u«. He wi . m^Sr ol IS f Tlt Z ****> -vearbM)lt »°uld to 122 Robert Rosser, to bring railroad G'KLS ™MES _ is&an Care orchestra before the e e 0 pr composers ec mque be out Friday, the annuals were The farm bloc won a partial vie- w-orkers, not provided for under the ^wo hved nearby said 1 ° comP°sl lon returned by thc binders earlier than tory a short time later, however, railway labor act. within scope of ^ad heard a terrific roar solution. His father was conduc of the orchestra Members of The first number played will be was anticipated. Rosen is in charge i when the house accepted by voice the wrage-hour measure. , . _ . the Quintet in F Minor for piano of the distribution. »re John Pennington. and strlngs by jolianries Grahms. Thirty-six hundred copies of the-- It is in four movements, allegro, book have been printed, but Tern- ^ andante con moto, scherzo and strom believes there may be a short- German Press Denounces the countrv. st violin; Jack Pepper, second jlin; Phil Kahgan. viola; and lexander Borisoff. cello. [Th* institute sponsors several ler activities, such as the cinema nation forums, the commit-on international relations, and le Cinema Progress magazine. PRIMS ARE EXPLAINED fThe forums are made up of in-ructors of motion picture appie-Ltion or audio-visual education t public schools, students in the Ipartment of cinematography, and Ihers interested in the arts and ■ences of motion pictures. Among lose who have addressed the for-is this vear are Frank Butler, lank Tuttle. John W. Harknder, Quintet. In writing it. he showed of aviation? finale. The piece by Arnold Scho- because of the large number enberg is ‘•Transfigured Night" of activity books sold this year and sextet for strings. the increased call for copies from •Transfigured Night.” the piece pnnters and Publishers throughout which established Schoenberg as one of the foremost contemporary! j composers, shows the essentials of ;his style although it was written when he was a young man. It was composed when he was still much under the influence of Brahms and i shows the reverence he always has for the great master. All the essentials of Brahms' Aviation Experts Will Address Joint Banquet Are you interested in how much Anglo-French Intrigue PRAGUE. May 24 —(U.P.)—German press warnings of war and bitter denunciation of Great Britain and France for playing a “dangerous game of intrigue” tonight spiked the Czechoslovak crisis with new dangers as peace negotiations in Prague were interrupted suddenly. The inspired German press re-*—- leased a torrent of accusations based \ ■ I r\ r T on alleged frontier violations and JUnK Uay I 3QS demanded that Czechoslovakia with- A1I uir rvxrmiai* ui uianms Are you interested in how much ‘ A „ _ j. musical style may be found in this chance you would have in the field draw troops moved. UP to the Ger- Are UiSmDUteCl kd Joseph Schildkraut. rhe swards of recognition to be rented tomorrow at the banquet 11 be in the form of d’plomas of Ihievement and honorary mem- rships in the American Institute Cinematography for 1938. Five speakers, four of whom are authorities on aviation, will speak ..""T r’.....° o _ * v 7 dissolve some of the optimism of man-Czech border in warlike array over the weekend. The deepening tension, serving to To Aiding Croups "With the distribution of all-U his characteristic indifference to his medium. The music was planned as a quartet, written as a sex- tonight at the annua, ^ . T tet. rewritten as a sonate for two of A]pha Eta Rho. national aviation the past 24 hours, appeared as Kon- Jmtk day tags on campus nearly pianos, and finally rewritten again fraternitv and the National Aero- Henlein. German mmonty lead- completed and with cooperation for the combination of piano and nautical association on the subject er’ Pra?ue for his home at promised by more than 50 per cent string quartet. ..The opportunities for Youth in °sch' the c°ntacted. organizations, the Of the Brahms piece, it has been Aviation ” The barquet will be in CONFERENCE CANCELLED success of the drive to raise money said that if it were as easy to fam- the Foyer of Town and Gowti at 7 ‘ His departure cancelled another for the proposed new Religious iliarize the public with good cham- 0-ci0ck‘ scheduled conference with Premier Center building seems almost as- ber music as it is to present good Men invjted tQ k are Dr lMilan Hodza. set for today, to seek sured-" declared Gene Zechmeister. Piano music or good songs, this Homer stewart> research engineer a means of solving the Czecho- ! chairman of the drive yesterday, quintet would be a popular classic. at Cal 7^; a W. Stainback, pilot Slovak government’s dispute with Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, - _________ ........... When afkea why he liked the of umt(?d Airlines; Arthur E. Ray- 3.500.000 members of the German the campaign to collect old rags, yieam, was declared the !one melodic skips which are char- mond, vice-president of encineer- minority wrhieh brought middle Eur- PaPer*-.bottles, and clothes, and to the Ames cup frosh de- scicristic of hLs composition st\le. jng at Douglas Aircraft company; ope to the verge of war Saturday turn t ~m over to the committee Schoenberg replied. It is probably Kenvon J. Scudder. probation offi- when two German farmers w^ere u^111 eis- representing sororities, because I admire Brahms so much cer ot ^ Angeles county; andVhot and killed and Prague called fraternities faculty clubs, Lancers, and because his music also had jimmy Griffin, aviation writer of 70.000 army reserves to the colors. H6 „ Sigma, Knights, wide skip>s. Aeronews. Reports that Germany w'as mov- and Squires, is being conducted all ------- Earl pjji] faculty director of Al-[ing troops toward the 1.315-mile'wee ' ,inaI ay of the dfivc is TRAIN DYNAMITED pha Eta Rho. and W. W. McCul- stretch of the frontier wrere uncon- neTXTt a ur ay. SAN LUIS POTOSI. Mexico. May lough are in charge of the program, firmed tonight in Prague. Univeisity maintenance trucks will pick up the material from des- >n Wins ^ Cup member of the fresh- “7-ontest yesterday. In the \competition, Bol.on was vic-over his teammate and colieapuf. Goraon Wright. ;dges of the finals were mem-i of Dr Roy L. Thompson's eshman English class. A silver fdne cup. donated by Neil Ames. 24—'l.P1—A train en route to Tam- Proicscor Hill will award prizes to MINISTERS SUMMONED is Angeles attorney and former Pico was dynamited by rebels 55 four members of the fraternity for Hodza summoned the British and S C. debated, will be given Bolt- miles east of San Luis Potosi. kill- outsianding work in the field of French ministers • and informed ing the fireman, it was reported to- aviation during the oast year. {them of his preliminary meeting ignated points. The entire amount of material gathered will be sold to raise cash for the building fund. Zcchmeister further explained: As colleagues on the freshman night anc: authorities had essert- Names of the students to be honor- with Henlein and later convened f j , uad this vear, Bolton and Wright Pd that General Saturnino Cedil- ed will not be revealed until the the inner council of the cabinet r ) students and faculty members Ic* . , _ , , . rPQ 1170 inot tnAiifrh f bre successful in a number of 10 s Agrarian revolt had b?en re- awards are made. [bates and two tournaments Bill duced scattered guerrilla fight- Twelve new pledges will be form- jgge was manager of the Ames in6 ally initiated into Alpha Et aRho. In test._____ kPAKESE DENY EXECUTIONS [rOKYO, May 24—(f.P*—The war Ifice formally denied to Sir Rob-L. Craigie, British ambassador. at Japanese had executed prison-tt Amoy, China, as reported in ^patches from London omorrow s f)rgan Program Archibald Sessions, university t-ganist. will present the foiiow-kg program tomorrow during tie assembly period in Bovard kiditonum. \agto Irons tbe Sixlh Organ Symphony ................ U"rder Wider first came into promince when he succeeded Cesar [rank as professor of organ t the Paris Conservatoire. De-leaaed last year. Wider became nown as one of the mo6t pro-fic of modem composers for the rgan. as well as the foremost french organist of his day. * Mountain Sketches_______ Cloiey Ckiw Ifells \~1lgeJ tmks m the MbontfgAt M* de Concert ...................... Bonnet Japanese Motorized Legions Roll Toward Hankow ... • t , , . , realize that though the amount of which was informed by the premier . . ., XJ~ , , „ ^ I- , junk they contrjbute may be small, that further consultations will be ___.. . ,, 4 • , , . , ,, the combined efforts of all will carried out with members of the „. „ . . , . . , J * „ . * ! raise a lot of material and the m- Sudeten German parliamentary , ,, ____Hun terest caused off campus may re- committee. No date for the next meeting of Henlein and Hodza has been fixed. The spokesman of Henlein's Sudeten German party denied that the “peace” conversations between Hen- _ syy \ ▼ * s. Ilein and Hodza had collapsed. SHANGHAI (Wednesday) May 25 (U.P.) Japans motor- 1 ,-once contact between our party ized legions, gathering momentum ss they advanced, rolled leader and the premier had been westward over the bloody battlefields of Honan province to- established, and conversations start- day toward Hankow, the temporary Chinese capital. ed. Henlein's presence in Prague Japanese reports said that the city of Lanfeng, known as was not necessary,” he said, refer- j Honoring two professors of the "the gateway to the west" had been +-—-—-1 rta« to last night’s meeting between mechanical divisl™ of the colleee 46th and 88th Chinese divisions— the two, ecnamcai aivision oi tne oonege occupied alter !our days of fighting “e lncluding Mme o[ the _ suit in contributions from organizations capable or offering service.” Brown Drug company will award two prizes to the two organizations turning in their money first. Two Professors To Be Honored over their homes and had looked out to see the ship afire in midair One motor was thrown forward, clear of the 'plane. Police of suburban Parma and Parma heights poked through the wreckage in an effort to recover bodies. Another spectator said that the pilot apparently had been seeking a place to make an emergency land ing and had thrown down flares. Flares were found on the ground nearby after crash. OIL BURNS He said that oil in one motor apparently was burning in midair and that the ship’s gas tank exploded when the plane struck the ground. Bodies were laid out on the ground alongside the wreckage and ambulances from Independence began removing them. Cunningham To Manage YMCA Croups pus sororities participating, George pleted for a 10-piece orchestra to Cook, the magazine’s sales man- play at the affair. Al Gordon, chair- ager. announced yesterday. man of the dance, states, and the Since last fail when it first 1 dance will be held at the Los An- caught the attention of the cam- geles Breakfast club. Arrangements pus. the sales contest has been a are also being made to have the pitched battle between two soror- dance broadcast. Girls scheduled to sell in tbe Wampus contest today are asked to report to the patio of the Student Union after 9 a.m. ities, Alpha Gamma Delta and Zeta Tau Alpha. These houses have monopolized the lead ih the race for the Wampus cup, annual award to the sorority selling the greatest number of copies during the year's contests. Tuesday has been set as Joe College day. with a full day of activity, including egg and spoop races, ping-pong, horseshoe, and swimming contests. derby spectacles, and a barbecue dinner-dance at the Uplifter's ranch. Nick Pappas, chairman of Joe College day. announces. SENIORS TO PLAY PRANKS Seniors will inaugurate the special day’s program at assembly period Tuesday, invading the campus dressed in costumes ana playing At present, Alpha Gamma Delta , , leads by the narrow margin of 14 gMto™ .P«P>» f» Umtefgfytotw copies, with Zeta Tau Alpha second and last year's cup winner, ■ Kappa Delta, in third position. The standings of other participating sororities are: The evening barbecue at the Uplifter's ranch will be served at 7 o’clock. Dancing will follow the dinner. Wednesday will be featured by Alpha Chi Omega, fourth; Kappa j “\pr“e"t*“°n «”‘°r Alpha Theta. fifth; Delta Delta S |
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