DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 30, No. 11, October 03, 1938 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
Unft®d Pr«ss Direct- Wire Service Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Editorial Office*
Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night-.PR. 4776
Volume XXX
Los Angeles, California, Monday, October 3, 1938
itain |d Offer lew Plan
Chamb-rlain Presents Gtineral Peace Pad For Approval Today
ION. Monday, Oct. 3—U'.n Minister Neville Chamber-s rxprctpd to offer a gen-,n for European appease-d disarmament when ne ap-"ars 'iorr' thc house of commons rlaylto ask parliament's approval if tl policy of "dealing with die-*:;rs
cBnbcrlnin. lacing a revolt in lis wi conservative party over the .yrrerjt British foreign policy, wasj to have determined to! forward to obtain results while! I is riding the wave of popu-that greeted his return from i last week.
Thel proposals were expected to j )u’« include:
1. Thf question of colonies, in-Judlns. Germany’s demand for re-um Of war lost colonies.
2. Bevision of existing British re-ations throughout Europe, aepend-ng on concessions that will be made
ao-kalled totalitarian states-
^lution to the Spanish war,
, agreement with Germany, id Prance.
iditerranean relations, pre-r including a reviving of the |ltallan agreement. e possibility of a four-power lOtivted bay the ideal of “no ar" which will not be view-d *|th suspicion by the smaller io vert <n by Soviet Russia.
(.B'ganization of these plans in ucb I way that it will fit in with : Iritah >ropo6als already underway or Hdfying the League of Nations
Kt.
“—Siberia in was expected, ac-to informed sources, to lay j the British people a new foreign policy of a scope so j that the informant di-j it as "Wilsonian.”
Hitler Supervises March Into Czechoslovakia s Sudetenland Today
—mi1?1 G^MAN ARMY. BEYREUTH. Bavaria. Oct. 2
pntrv intn tvfnCh » Ad0lf Hitler wil1 make a triumphal 0 Czechosl°vakia's Sudetenland at 10 .f m 1 Monday behind his goose-stepping army of occupation, lt wa.s announced tonight.
The fuehrer, accompanied by his
U.S. Supreme Court Begins Term Today
Late Justice Cardozo’s Successor To Be Appointed Soon
Fr°m Asch- *hich ,ies ■« ^ *'p Eight Justices of the United States of „ Czech penlnsul(( which Jutted
advisers, will go to the Sudeten ' capital'' of Eger and formally proclaim the annexation of the border areas to the German Reich. Just as hr did in entering Vienna last March as the conqueror of Austria. SECOND CONQUEST Hitler, a victor in two bloodless conquests’’ in less than seven months, is expected to cross the new-vanquished Czech frontier near Asch. the home town of Konrad Henlein whom he has appointed Reich commifsioner for the Sudetenland.
Coach USC Sororities Pledge 175; Kappa Delta Heads List Tri-Delts Take Second
Kappa Delta, with 21 pledges, headed the list of new sorority pledges :nnounced yesterday by Dean Pearle Alkin Smith, counselor of women. Delta Delta Delta was second with 20 pledges, while Phi Mu and Alpha Epsilon Phi followed with 16 each.
Following a week of formal rush parties which terminated " f Following a week of formal rush parties which terminated
Supreme court meet at noon to-
penlnsula which jutted
. .. into the Reich, he will proceed If
morrow to open their new 1938-39 mlles inland t0 EKPr thf TO.called
-ri, .i.ii, . i capital of thc Sudeten areas and
t Z e mBSS‘Ve scene of bloodshed and disorders mahogany bench will remain ,a- slnce last May.
cant until President Franklin D. PLAx DIVIDES DISTRICT "",VP l chooses a successor to E nnd Asch are ,n Mnp No 3
« Be!'Ja,min N Car‘ of the German army s occupation
fnii ' i ° t™ j summer and will be taken over by columns flowing a Prolonged Illness. The of Gprman troops which wUI march
most favored candidate for the ln at 7 a m (1 a m EgT) undpr the Place, according to Washington provisions of the Munich peace plan g“P' 's Harvard ■ law professor, which divided the Sudetenland Into Felix Frankfurter. j four dlstrlcU to ^ |n
ADJOURN UNTIL OCT. 16 stages over a 10-day period.
Tomorrow's session will be a mere Hitler, it is understood, will reach formality. Only routine opening riay Asch and Eger by way of either motions and admissions to the bar selp or Badelster, both frontier are on schedule. The Jurists will | towns, then adjourn until October 10 when they will meet for their first decision day.
But they face a long grind in the coming nine months. The most im-
Alan Nichols, coach of the USC debate team, announced the forensic schedule for the coming season yesterday. The opening contest will be at Bakersfield on November 10,
I I, and I 2.
Committees Appointed By Chairmen
ASUSC Heads Name Students lo Three Groups for Coming Year
Orators Make Season Plans
Pi Kappa Delta To Arcjue Against Use Of Federal Funds
Selecting the question, “resolved:
in preference dinner, the Oreek organizations pledged 175 new women. one of the largest pledge classes ln recent years on the Trojan campus.
Final selection of pledges took place Friday evening, when women students accepted invitation from the houses that they favored. Formal pledging took place yesterday on sorority row.
A series of summer parties, teas, weekend outings at the beach and mountains, and other functions characterized the activities of the various houses.
The complete list of sorority pledges:
Alpha Chi Omega—Jackie Comer
The Sudetens have been in control of Eger and Asch for two weeks, seizing the almost solidly German centers from Czech police and authorities before conclusion of the
The Nazi welfare organization on the German side of the old border
portant eases thus far docketed are Munich
a lest by !8 private utility com- ,K«.»ns assist
panics of the constitutionality of EMERGENCY SKUADS ASSIST
the TVA program and Thomas Mooney's latest appeal for release from San Quentin prison. The court s*nd, ™ency *q“*d*‘nt? thf
also mav be called upon to rule f*er dls,rict' 0n. the >leels,
... ; the army units, to care for the
on validity of the new wage-hour , ’ . . _ . .
I populace pauperized by Czech terror."
Graduates Plan ■irst Meeting Wednesday
The Associated Graduate students < tlB university will begin this se-lestefY activities by a meeting Wchlwill be held Wednesday at 2:20 i.m. in 206 Administration.
law.
CONSIDER WAGNER ACT
The tribunal already has been asked to consider several heretofore unsettled aspects of the Wagner act, numerous alleged encroachments on civil rights guaranteed by the federal constitution, and various new principles of taxation
A vastly changed public feeling ^ _ _ surrounds tomorrow's opening ses- y MCA lOTUm sion, as compared with the opening a year ago. At that time, public resentment and ill-feeling engendered by the fight over President With an open forum discussion of Roosevelt's plan to enlarge the: the present European crisis led by court's membership had been fanned | A. Bruce Anthony, economics pro-anew by revelation of Justice Hugo' fessor, as the highlight of the eve-
The Sudeten residents of Eger, Asch and other towns of the region are ararnging wild celebrations to greet Hitler.
Anthony Leads
Tomorrow Night
Appointment of members to three ASUSC committees was made Friday by chairmen of the international relations, greater university, and Student Union committees.
Elmer Hyde, chairman of the in- I ford, Louise Emmons, Georgia Gor-ternational relations committee, an- j don. Margaret Kinsey. Dorothy Renounced the selection of 30 stu- j **nberger, Betty Salet. Betty Ryan, dents to his group. The new mem- | E1^h ^ pi-Ellzabeth Dar.
bers will meet with Hyde at the ] jjng> M^r|Brn Dennis, Darlene Dor-assembly hour tomorrow in the Stu- | lan, Charlaine Hedrick, Veda Gae dent Union social hall. j McCrery, Mary McLoone. Betty
____________________ ______________ I Rupley, Mary Simonson. Elizabeth
FOREIGN STUDENTS GREETED j gmlth Barbarft Sperb, Betty Tall-Prlnciple duty of the committee [ man Erollnda Wents. is the sponsorship of a rece) Jon j Alpha Della Theta—Martha Bae-that the United States should cease , foreign stndents Other af- chle. Shirley Eichenhoffer. June
p,« purposes o, J”,"~«»- '«*'V.T HU"'
stimulating business, members of Pi dents with the campus will also be { JL.nf.
Kappa Delta, honorary debating j planned, Hyde stated, ing fraternity, last week determined slx members of the greater unl_ their activities for the coming year. ^ versiiy committee were named by Composed of virtually the same Michael MacBan. Promotion of the university principles and adoption
Daily Trojan Holds Staff Meeting Today
8taff members of the Dally Trojan will gather for the second meeting of the year at 2:30 p.m. today In the student senate room, fourth floor of the Student Union-
Beats and assignments will be discussed, and member* of the staff will be given an opportunity to ask questions. This meeting will bring together every student who ia associated with the writing and editing of tbe campus daily.
Attendance at this meeting is compulsory for all staff members. Roll will be taken for student* ln copyreadlng and reporting tlass-
Number 11
members that last year swept the field ln west coast inter-collegiate debates, the team and alumni will gather for their semi-annual smoker Thursday night, October 6 Capt. Thomas Dutcher. in announcing the meeting, to be held at the Phi Kappa Tau house, 904 West 28th street at eight o’clock, added that all men who are interested ln debating will be welcome-
Coach Alan Nichols and Manager William Barton, in releasing the schedule for the coming season, expressed hopes of duplicating their victories of last year, when the USC team took first places at Bakersfield. Pasadena, and the invitational meet at City College, formerly L.A. JC.
Alpha Epsilon Phi—Rhoda Amols, Claire Cohen. Alice Cohn. Frances Elsman. Shirley Felsen, Ruth Carole Friedman. Eleanor Ginsberg, Mildred Goldstein, Adelle Heimberg, Hermina Levy, Ruth Robinson,
of campus improvements are pro- paye Sandock. Felice Schwartz. Syl-Jects of the committee. j va Mae Welser. Beatrice Wolf, Shir-
Regulation of Student Union ac- *ey Woolf-tlvities will be handled by nine Alpha Gamma Delta Katherine members of the Student Union com- Marle Blossom. Martha Lee Brown, mittee appointed by Leonard Man- Joan Dilson, Dora Mae Hale, Vir-del, chairman. I glllla KoPPe. Virginia Montgomery,
j Leota Plummer. June Schumacher, INTERNATIONAL RELA1 IONS Barbara Jane Smith. Nancy Spreck-
New members of international er, Beverly Taylor, Jane Whiting, relations committee are: Harold i Delta Delta Delta—Joyce Arkley, Blanke, J. Philip Buskirk, Marjorie Kathleen Bell, Maxie Lee Bourke, Carter, Charles Colden, Raymond [ Betty Carlson, Mary Jane Clrese, Conger, Gorton Demond, Helen Evelyn Curfman, Jeanne Godshall. Fortner. Dorothy Lou Gillam. Ed- Dorothy Hepp, June Hepp. Betty ward Guerin, Arthur Guy, Shirley I Holden, Jeanne Huffman. Ruby Jor-Hendsch, Ed Hesser, Woodrow Ir- ( gens, Barbara Knight, Dorothy La-win. i Follette, Virginia Lynch, Sylvia
Marcia James, IV.argaret Lewis,
Nash, Thelma Olson. Jacqueline
pron Done, president of the ^ited Graduate students dur-lS§7-38, will conduct the meet-ig. ■ockwell Dennis Hunt, dean f thej flreduate school, is to be the ^Hper.ker.
The ] irpoee of ihis organization I to tai are a cooperative spirit, and e an acquaintanceship with I ly understanding among the j rsduat students. All graduate stu- { entejcf the university, irrespec-j ve of Ihe special school or depart- [ lent In which they are studying, re elk ble to membership
L. Blacks former affiliation with the Ku Klux Klan Feeling aroused by the court bill
ning, the Trojan YMCA will hold Its first meeting of the semester tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the social
fight has now died down, and thej hall of the Student Union,
tribunal has shown a distinct trend toward Judicial approval of New Deal measures.
Not once since the president proposed his court plan has the tribunal ruled against the administration in a major case, beginning with the Wagner act tests.
-adio Series tagins Today
The radiu department of the unl-^■vill be on the air this week * 18 niimtes daily until Friday. N^fcldleston, head of the radio ^^Beut, announced and lias ibinitLd a program for the week Bh a ide variety of attractions.
'Warns are scheduled a.s ^^Wy College broadcasts, and radio station KRKD from 3 45 p.m. each day. The today with Ernest A Rwajii, fellow in history, speaking rtBMt abject "If s in History."
scheduled oroadca.s!s are: ^W>V, World Events; Wednes-Alr ls Flf'( ; Thursday, Dramatics;" Friday, “Mu-
Architects Plan First All-U Dance
Friday Night Ball
To Have Bohemian Motif
Oflering its first all-university dance of the year, the College of Architecture will present a "Hobo-hemian Ball ’ Friday evening October 7 Under the direction of Clint Ternstrom, the aflair will be strictly Informal and feature the music of Bud Pa.ks and his campus band. Ternstrom wished it to be known that, while costumes arc not com-pulsory, suits will be prohibited
Open to all students, the meeting wil! serve to show the various activities of the organization, one of which is the Friday afternejon student-faculty hour, which Anthony's discussion will illustrate.
Up to the minute headline news will be taken into consideration frntn tiie economic aspect, declared Boo Matzke, president of the *’Y."
Information about two other divisions of the "Y" program will be presented ln short talks by Alex Troffey and George Moody. Trofley wlll tell of the sports competition planned for the coming year, and Moody will describe the deputation work
Other parts of the four-fold purpose of the Trojan "Y,” embracing, spiritual, intellectual, soclal, and re-! creational aspects of life, will be illustrated during the course of the evening, Matzke announced
The office of the YMCA will also be on display, as it opens on the social hall. In it, the "Y" plans to have magazines and other mu.^rialj
Phyllis Robinson. Barbara Swerk-rup. Helen Wilmans.
Delta Zeta — Catherine Eckert, Continued on Page Two
„ . , „ . Bob Matzke. Fred May, Leah Me- I Sherman, Carol Warren, Marjorie
Opening with a contest at Bakers- Danj Brucc Q.Ncal cl|mde Rors , Cowell, field on November 10, 11. and 12. Q, shivp) Wrmlcl| shapffel. I DelU Gamma-Charleen Acker, the squad next journies up the ^ TarleU)n MarJorle Twomey, ^ncy Eliott, Roberta Grant R1U coast, where it will participate ln Murie, von Der Ahe B111 Warden McDonald, Ouidltta Pagliano, Mar-
a three-day contest at Tacoma on an residents of the Chinese. Jap- “ Pa*'iano' R«’rd»n
November 21, 22 and 23- January phuipplne> and Latin-Amer- “
13 and 14 will find the team «t|lcanclubs City college, after which it goes to
Linfield an February 17 and 18, The! UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE debaters plan to travel to Denver, I Greater university committee but, as yet, the date for the meet-1 members are: Paul Biederman. Ce-ing has not been set. The oratory cile Hallingby, John Olson, Bar-and extemporaneous contests atjbara Morton, Pat Reilly, and Lloyd Pasadena on the 25th wlll close the Wright.
activities for February, | Sludent Un,on commlltee mem.
Closing their fall season, the de- bers include: Bill Baker, Jack Car-bators will engage in a three-day i low, Dwight Curtiss, Peggy Fitz-local tournament in Pasadena, be- gerald, Geraldine Johnson, Jack j WASHINGTON Oce 2— <t/J!t — ginning on March 24 and ending Naye. Ralph Sarli, Frank Scott, and T(le NRl|0ntt] A.sstKiation of Manu-
Forum Series Will Open
Dr. Helsel Selects ''The Human Paradox"
As Lecture Topic
Dr, Paul Helsel’* lecture "The Human Paradox.” tomorrow at 4; IS p.m. ln Bowne hall. Mudd Memorial hall of Philosophy will officially open the 17th philosophy forum, a series of lectures and discussions devoted to the subject "Philosophic Aspects of Life.”
Dr. Helsel, assistant professor of i philosophy, ls ln the first of eight I speakers who will be included ln the series. The lectures will run a week | apart, every Thursday until No- j vember 22 They will be open with- 1 out charge to members of the facul- | ty, students, and f -lends of the university.
Following Dr. Paul Helsel’s lec- | ture, Dr. Herbert L. Searles will i speak on the "Trends Toward The-istlc Naturalism,” and on October | 18. Louis J. Hopkins will talk on "The Philosophy of an Evolution- [ 1st.” Dr. Wilbur H Long will de- | liver the fourth and fifth lectures, j on October 25, "Diabolism,” and “The Feminine Principle of Life” on November 1.
Founders
Honored
Tuesday
Ex-President Whit®
Will Preside,-
Mario Chamlee To Sing
Those who established the *mal Methodist academy which has sin re grown into one of the largest universities ln the west will be honored tomorrow during assembly period when USC celebrates Its S8th annual Pounders’ day.
Members of tl ' families to whotr tribute wlll be paid by President Rufus B. von Kleinanid will alt in attendance as the 25 faculty members who have served the university for a quarter of a century or more march down the aisle, attired In academic robes, to open the program.
WHITE TO PRESIDE
Oeorge W. White, president of USC the year following the graduation of the first fifty students, will preside at the assembly.
He wlll Introduce Mrs Charlei Swlgget! and Mrs. John S. Mal-com. daughters of Oeorge Finley Bovard; Mrs. William Armstrong and Mrs. Marion B. Shlbley, daughters of Marion M Bovard: the widow of William S. Bovard; and Mrs. Gilbert S. Bovard. widow of William S. Bovard’* son.
Two other honored guests will be Ezra N- Currier and Dr. Lulu T. Ells. Mr. Currier ls a graduate of the earliest class to be represented, and Dr. Ellis ls a member of the class of 1888.
CHAMLEE TO SING
Mario Chamlee, USC alumnus and Metropolitan opera singer, will sing on the program .and Archibald Sessions will play the organ.
Dr. Laird J. Stabler, dean of the College of Pharmacy, heads the list of 25 professors who have been members of the Trojan faculty for 25 years or more. Stabler came to USC ln 1894.
Manufacturers Demand Names Of Nazi Aides
on the 26th.
Ruth Woiman.
facurers tonight demanded that the house committee investigating un-American activities reveal the names of "high Industrialists" reputedly aiding Fascist and Nazi movement* to avoid casting a slur on all American business men.
| President Charles R. Hook wrote Rrp Martin Dies, D., Tex., committee chairman, that his organization wants the ’ fullest” Inquiry Into testimony by John C. Metcalfe, UNION CITY, N. J., Oct. 2—(U P,)—A hostile crowd 10- j committee investigator, that evl-
Sudetenland Celebration Broken Up
* * * +
Mob Slones Building, Forcing Frilz Kuhn To Leave * * + *
Volks Bund Leader Foregoes Speech
V.„pv P4llc of interest to students whjch may
Barney Oldfields Valley Pa k mQ_
club will be the sc-ne of the afian. u,uu u ■ .
fcom the Office Of the l^sident
:der u> observe Founders’ all-university assembly Is lor 9:65 a.m. tomorrow. The V schedule will govern 1,11 I lie morning; a m H»45
1- a m Asm mb y.
H 11 35 i
B- von KleinSmid
Fit; utcnl
where thc entire second floor will be devoted to dancing. Refreshments and a spscial Bohemian quartet will be found between dances on the ground iloor. According to the dance committee, 100 bales of hay have been secured to lend atmosphere to the club.
Bids will go on sale Tuesday morning. They may be obtained from the cashier ln the 31udent Union, at the Art Pantry in the Architecture building, or Irom a rep-
ments.
Music, entertainment, and refreshments will be included among the features of Ihe evening, the president of the organization promised.
Rhodes Petitions Due November 5
Applications for participation in the Rhodes scholarships contest
resentative in etch of the fre- must be in the hands of the state ternity houses, sr.id Ternstrom A committee of selection by November ■series of novel announcement* has 5 The Rhode* trust annually b;Tn posted in the various hou..!*. | a vard* 32 grans of $2009 yearly lor two years’ study at Oxford unl-
dcnce indicates top-notch industrialists are 1 jacking the movement*, and that lt "might be weir to look further into the matter.
■The board of directors formally directed that I urge upon you the fullest Investigation of these charges .so that the names of those giving financial support or moral encouragement to such alien movements can be identified before the public.” Hook wrote. “We do not be- j
PLANES COLLIDE
MANILA. Mondty. Oct. 3—— Two single-seat army pursuit planes collided in mid-fir during a mock "dOg-figIU" hear Paete Laguna. One plane plunged to the earth, the pilot parachuting to safety The other
versity.
etuci::U» wishing information . hould s D Prank B x.er p o-fe soi of Emu h, who is in charge cl th? cont'3t 011 this campus In his office al 314 Budge. Two students chosen from each state are
pilot managed to land his pl.neat ! entered mthe district *on^lrom
Nichols field de-spite the damaged win#,
which four *tudenU scholarship*.
night threw stones at Fritz Kuhn, national leader of the German-American Volks Bund, and broke out windows in the organization’s headquarters where 400 members tried to hold a meeting celebrating German occupation of the Sudetenland. ♦-
About 2000 persons gathered out- bodyguard As he stepped from the , ,, . . , , . , , door, a mad yell arose from the side the hall and twice tried to cr0W£j
storm the building while Kuhn was „KU1 hlm „ one volce shouled inside They were driven back by gnd lh# thregt was ulcen Up by Bund member* and Union City I ^ ^ m
polRf' Someone ln the mob threw a „fve thgt u u iufflclenl ^ gtop
Finally Kuhn was persuaded by itone and soon the air was full of wRh anegaUons ,gainit ‘certain Police Commissioner Ht.ry *. Little missiles Kuhn stood on the porch „ indu#lrUlllU.. Thu must ln. to abandon his efforti1 ot speak and of Ule buliding. with his hand up- evltably ^ , reflectlon upon aU ln. he left the building. Stones thrown raised in a Nazi salute dustriallsls "
at him as he departed did not hit PollCB advanced on the crowd ! _____ _
Mm. with nightsticks and the bodyguaru
The crowd outside the building rushed Kuhn to his automobile. Troian Business Staff was made up of representatives of jn tiie meantime an effigy of
War Veterans, lhe American Lea- chancellor Hitler and a iiuge swas- Holds Meeting Today gue for Peace and Democracy, the utca were burning in the street.
International Workers’ order the- After Kuhn left the building Ro- Calling a meeting of the busl-j Czechoslovak so es of Hudson bj.,-, ko.--ibeig former county com- ness staff for 10 o'clock In 21k Uu-county, and the Rcl White, and mf,nrl ,. 0, Uu. Veura(u 0, foreign dent Union today, Don Sweeney, Blue Shirts, a lo.al organization es- w#r§ moutued lhe and lm„ business manager of the Daily Tro-
tabllshed 10 combat activities of plored Uie group ^ depart peace- J»»- announced thal a number of foreign minorities In Union City. {ully The demonstrations continued, important quesUon* will be dlscu**- , Commissioner Little quieted the however, and the crowd did not ed-mob and told them that he had break up ior another hour. | Sweeney ask* that 010 members
persuaded Kuhn not to talk A few As far as could be learned no one and any interested new sludent* be minutes later, Kuhn appeared 011 was injured tn the melee nor were prompt. Important material will be j the porch surrounded by a police j any arrests made by police. 1 discussed at the meeting. [
Chinese Victors Over Nipponese
Drastic Loiiei
Suffered by Invader!
SHANGHAI. Monday, Oct 3—<U.P> —Chinese military dispatches today reported a "great Chinese victory" southeast of Hankow ln which an estimated 10,000 Japanese soldier* were killed ln a three day bhttle.
The dispatches said that 50,000 Chinese Infantrymen under Oentral Chang Fa-Kwei, famed "ironsides" commander, encircled a main column of the Invading Japanese under Lieut. Oen. Shunroko Hata and mowed them dexwn with machine guns.
The Japanese were caught on the Yangsln highway, 75 miles southeast of Hankow, along which they were striking to the Hankow-Can-ton railway, south of the provisional capital.
Japanese claimed a victory to the northward where they said 30.000 Chinese were killed ln the great battle which ended ln their occupation of the Tienklachan forts on the south bank of the Yangtse river last week.
Program Card Warning Issued
Last warning has been Issued by Theron Clark, registrar, concerning the necessity erf turning ln perman-et program cards.
The regulsUons slate that every student must secure the signature of the InsUuctor for each course In which he Is registered and return the card to 157 Administration within seven days from the date of tuition payment.
Since students will not be permitted to enter a new course after the third week of school, Registrar Clark remind* them that the deadline ls Saturday, October «>.
NYA Workers Asked To Report For Assignments
Students who have received NYA assignments should start to work Immediately, Mrs. Watt, director of NYA funds, announced today. Information concerning NYA assignments may be obtained ln 207 Administration liy students who do nol know where they have been assigned to work.
The names of project directors and projects are being released to NYA workers ln order that they may put ln their hours before thc end of the first pay roH period. October 8.
Typed assignments confirming the appointment* will be sent to all NYA students as soon as they have been checked. Date* for time reports for trie month are: September 17 and 24, October 1 and I.
Wednesday Faculty Tea Honors Library Majors
Student* in the School of Llbrsrj Service will be guests of the faculty at tea on Wednesday afternoon from 3 to 5 o’clock. Prominent librarians ln Los Angeles aru. either communities have been asked tc attend
Among the honored guests will b Dr. Albert S. Raubenheimer. dea of the College of Letter*, Art*, anf Science*, and member* of the library school advisory board.
FOUNTAIN PEN
HEADQUARTERS
Sett^em SHEAFFER PARKER EVERSHARP WATERMAN CONKLIN Pens from SfPtofHJ. Munc\
CREW KES(TED
NEW YORK, Oct 2—ll'.tf)— The S. S. American Banker rescued the crew and skipper of the schooner American Pioneer today, according to a Mdio aiarlne report, after the schooner caught fire 400 miles east ot Cape Cod.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 30, No. 11, October 03, 1938 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 30, No. 11, October 03, 1938. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
Unft®d Pr«ss Direct- Wire Service Z-42 SOUTHERN DAILY CALIFORNIA TROJAN Editorial Office* Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night-.PR. 4776 Volume XXX Los Angeles, California, Monday, October 3, 1938 itain d Offer lew Plan Chamb-rlain Presents Gtineral Peace Pad For Approval Today ION. Monday, Oct. 3—U'.n Minister Neville Chamber-s rxprctpd to offer a gen-,n for European appease-d disarmament when ne ap-"ars 'iorr' thc house of commons rlaylto ask parliament's approval if tl policy of "dealing with die-*:;rs cBnbcrlnin. lacing a revolt in lis wi conservative party over the .yrrerjt British foreign policy, wasj to have determined to! forward to obtain results while! I is riding the wave of popu-that greeted his return from i last week. Thel proposals were expected to j )u’« include: 1. Thf question of colonies, in-Judlns. Germany’s demand for re-um Of war lost colonies. 2. Bevision of existing British re-ations throughout Europe, aepend-ng on concessions that will be made ao-kalled totalitarian states- ^lution to the Spanish war, , agreement with Germany, id Prance. iditerranean relations, pre-r including a reviving of the ltallan agreement. e possibility of a four-power lOtivted bay the ideal of “no ar" which will not be view-d * th suspicion by the smaller io vert |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1938-10-03~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1183/uschist-dt-1938-10-03~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 30, No. 11, October 03, 1938

