DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 145, May 26, 1938 |
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Mtorisl Offices
RI-4111 Sta 227
Night-PR. 4776
SOUTHERN
DAILY
Volume XXIX
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
United Press
World Wid« News Service Z-42
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, May 26, 1938
Number 145
Annual To Be Scholars
Will Be Honored
Issued Today
Super frand colossal—magnificent—and other superlatives from Webster will be called into play today when students receive their copies of El Rodeo. U.S.C. annual, Leonard Rosen, business manager, asserted last night. Distribution will begm at 10 a.m. in 211 Student Union and will continue
today and tomorrow until all books *----
have ;:?en given out.
Soloist
Presentation of student activity books or receipts ol payment is necessary to secure copies.. A few E! Rodeos may be purchased for V> ::om Mrs. Marie Portker in the university bookstore. Students who have lost activity books must report p’ the bookstore before going to the ticket office, according to Mrs. Poet-krr.
BOOK PRAISED BV PRINTERS
Edited by Clint Ternstrom. junior architecture student, the 1938 El Rodeo has already been named for yearbook fame by engravers, printers. and former editors of the annual who were guests at the staff banquet Tuesday evening. John Jackson, who has printed U.S.C. yearbooks for more than a decade, selects it as the best produced here In 10 years.
Casting aside traditional layout
tnd makeup, the book achieves its implicity and effectiveness through Uie use of montage effects and ap-i>ropnate cokw\*Temstrom explains, j ■Vne of the most marked Innovations !
photography by Midori. Pasadena j bhotographer. whose work won ! national honors.
EL RODEO STAFF
Assisting Ternstrom in construct- : ng the annual were Eugenia Row-and. associate editor; and Neil )easy. assistant editor.
Other staff members include:, ohn O’-ipman.. Jhn Roberts. Bob kden. Louise Brant. Barbara Moron. Esther L’Ecluse. Lynn Moody, zorine English, Freeland Simms, ifvrton Purkiss.
Bill Zima, Harry Clmring. dark i ones, Bob Townsend. Winifred :iaire. Mary Mills, Mar?' McMastere. ladelyn Hallock, Murtei Faeder, UlI Spring, Harry Moss, Rocky ipioer, Tom Lipman. Bill Flanagan, jeonard Rosen.
Aaron Zwerdling. Howard Kop-hleman. Jim Talcott. Marshall Benedict. Jean Eby. Eunice Launer, O.
Editor
Clint Ternstrom is editor of the 1938 El Rodeo which will be distributed to students today and tomorrow in 2 I I Student Union.
U.S.C. Will Observe Annual Scholarship Day At Dinner Tomorrow
U.S.C. will recognize its newest I scholars, more than 200 members-i elect of 32 honorary societies, at a semi-formal dinner in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow evening.
Presiding over the program will be Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid. who has set tomorrow aside as the sixth annua! Scholarship day. The j>nn-cipal spcaker wil be Dr. Walter H.
Dexter, superintendent of public instruction in Calfornia.
MACKENZIE TO SING A vocal solo by Tandy Mac Ken -zie. noted Scotch-American tenor, will highlight the program proced-ing the address by Dr. Dexter, whose topic has not been ascertained. Miss Margaret Reynolds is MacKenzie’s accompanist.
The scholars will have places at tables representative of their par-i ticular societies. Scholarship day was formerly observed at a morning* assembly, or with an all-dav vrogram. but in an attempt to foster a traditional method of rerog-nition. the “scholarship societies” dinner ^has beer* substituted.
INITIATION DAY PROPOSED Honorary scholastic fraternities 506116 °f the m
Green
Resigns
AFL Post
Labor Head Leaves Position To Avoid Expulsion By Miners
WASHINGTON, May 25 — (L’.P)— The resignation of President Will-
Institute To Present Film Awards Tonight
Tomorrow Is Deadline For Senior Week Tickets
Tandy MacKenzfe, noted Scotch-American tenor, twill sing at the Scholarship day dinner in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow evening.
Engine Failure Blamed for Plane Crash
Roper Names Four-Man Board To Investigate Air Disaster
Senior students intending to attend the numerous events iam Green of the American Feder- during Senior week must purchase their tickets either today atiop of Labor as a member of the or tomorrow, Jaye Brower, general chairman, stated last
night. Students desiring to participate in the events may make a deposit and thus secure reservations, Brower declared.
—-* Arthur Crippen and his 12-piece
orchestra has been selected to play
New Wampus Head Calls Staff Meeting
Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, national scholarship fraternities, is tomorrow afternoon.
Phi Beta Kappa will initiate its ymembers-elect in the Foyer of Town and Gown at 5 oclock, and the initiation ceremony of Phi Kappa Phi will follow in the art and students interested in obtaining lecture room 0f Doheny library at staff positions on the Wampus are 6 p.m. ** —
invited by editor-efect Bud Cole- GUESTS WILL BE. LIMITED
CLEVELAND. May 25 —(U.P)—Investigators tonight swarmed to the lynerious crash and
and societies on the campus have | burning of a transcontinental not in the past initiated their transport plane, which took 10 lifts, pledges at ceremonies held on thr while W. A. Patterson, president of same day. The administration of United Air Lines, which operated the university anticipates the day, tjj* ship blamed failure of both its possibly next vear. when all initia- engines for the tragedy, j tions will be* conducted on the af- I jn Washington. Secretary of Com-; ternoon of the scholarship societies merce Daniel C. Roper named a dinner. four-man board to investigate the
Initiation date for two outstand- a^sh this week in public hearings, ing scholarship organizations, Phi
United Mine Workers of America was accepted by the union's ex-! evutive board today after Green had been branded as a “betrayer” of organized labor.
The board was empowered by the 26th convention of the miners here on February 2. 1938 to hear charges against Green. It is controlled by John L. Lewis, head of the union and chairman of the rival Committee for Industrial Organization, and Green resigned to escape certain expulsion.
GREEN IS CHARTER MEMBER
A charter member of the mine organization, Green served as its secretary-treasurer for many years, and until Lewis broke with the federation over the issue of industrial unionism, Lewis threw the support of his group behind Green to keep him at the head of American Federation of Labor.
Tonight the mine board made public a resolution containing condemnatory provisions hitting Green. The resolution was prefaced by the statement that not-
F.D.R. Backs Latin-America Peace Meet
Bolivia, Paraguay Urged To Settle Gran Chaco Dispute
WASHINGTON, May 25 —(UJ?)— President Roosevelt tonight joined with the presidents of five South American republics in urging the chief executives of Bolivia and Paraguay to accept the peace confer-1 ence proposal which tomorrow will 14 be submitted for settlement of the
Louis Mayer, Author To Speak
The American Institute of Cinematography will honor outstanding figures in the motion picture industry tonight when it meets at the fifth annual banquet in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
. . ... * * * . Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid will
chairmen of the event, stated yes-: .. “
. . preside over the affair, which will
y‘ j have Howard Estabrook. ice-presi-
FINAL EVENT j dent of the Academv of Motion
Climaxing a week’s festivities, the Picture Arts and Sciences, for Ms
dance will be the final affair on master of ceremonies.
at the annual senior formal dinner dance in the Biltmore hotel, Coalson Morris and Al Gordon, co-
the program. The orchestra is the best available at that time and holds the record of playing for two years steady at the Trocadero cafe.
Members of the Senior week ticket book sales committee will meet today in the lounge in Student Union during assembly period, Al Gordon, member of the committee, states.
Gran Chaco controversy.
Mr. Roosevelt's action coincided with that of the presidents of Ar-withstanding his resignation Green gentina, Brazil. Chile, Peru, and has been guilty of apostasy to the Paraguay.
mine union and it ‘ should be spread SETTLEMENT ASSURES PEACE upon the records. In separate telegrams to President
German Busch of Bolivia and Pres-
Magazine Sales Contest Results To Be Given In Tomorrow's Trojan
Tr.norrow morning at 10 o’clock.
430 Student Union.
“It is essential that all students
Gt Wallace. Charles Canbv. Charles grove to attend 8 “lookin* ahead” feetts, Mfcbaef McBan, and Jane meeting in the office of t^e editor, liOhmorKi.
itudent Gives .ecital Tonight
Al ee Joy. senior student in the lool of Music, soprano pupil of stio Cogswell professor of sing-
INQUIRY OPENED
O. D. Murph* department of commerce inspector and one of four inspectors sent to Cleveland - from Washington, and W. R. Robertson, resident airline inspector, conducted an official investigation as United officials opened their own inquiry.
All sought to determine whether flames streaked from one of the
t twin wing motors of the 12-passen-
Members of Phi Beta Kappa. ger Douglas “mainliner’” just be-
whether alirtnni. frfculty, or stu- fore jt plunged into a heavily-tim-
dents. are ipvited to witness the in- bered ravine nine miles from Cleve-
itiation. Guests will be limited co land airport, or whether witnesses
relatives or personal friends of the Who said they saw flames had been
deceive^ by backfire from one of
CHARGES AGAINST GREEN
The Federation head was accused of:
Betraying the union to which he “owes hohor and prestige.”
Giving counsel to those whose admitted object w'as io cripple and destroy the mine union.
Opposing the gubernatorial can-
ident Felix Paiva of Paraguay, he said that the settlement, drawn up by a peace conference which has been in session in Buenos Aires for three years, assures “peace and security to both parties.”
He recalled that the United States has “cooperated loyally and
didacy of Thomas Kennedy, Tsecre-. tary-treasurer of the union, in the actively with the governments of Pennsylvania primary. BoIivia and Paraguay and with the
encouraging factional opposition to governments of the other media-labor candidates and threatening to tory nations in seeking a just and
ruin politically friends of the labor definite settlement of the dispute
which cost an estimated 100.000 lives in several years of warfare.
the
who wish to work on tS»% publica- newly elected. Students of the uni
tion for next year be at the meet- versity may attenc^the ceremony;, of , the plane’s sputtering motors ing,” emphasized - Colegrove, "as othefc honorary oj-gani^tioft. V
plans will be made,,to caPry on The program ot Scholafship day stur
----------- .------ ----- ^ spons«Jd fcy the«>Uotfkg schol- Patterson.-said that “careffc
a'rship societies: yXv ! amination by ou*. engineers and fly-
Alpha K^a'Del^VJciolog}-; Pi ing officials »at th><scene of the ac-Kapfc I#m;bda.-niTisic; Beta Alj5ha ! cident indicates quite concjusively
preparatory wark during ^ the su*i mer mqrt|hs.” • *
Colegrove u erred that positions of. staff assista^s win be given But
movement.
Opposing and denouncing Wagner labor act.
Jeopardizing enactment of adequate wrage-hour legislation.
Undertaking to brand as Communists workers in industrial union.
MATTER IS IMPORTANT
Mr. Roosevelt said that it is of vital importance to the peace and welfare of the western hemisphere that the matter be settled.
He said that the peace conference
® iii nrwnt hVr rprital tnniffht each month for tne best stosies sub-* P«i. a~oounHng* Pi Lambda Theta. that neither of the tw^o engines w'as L ^ ,lotted nex, yep-. U&2*: -U 'Sigma, in operation at the moment of im-
be accompanied by Josephine He further emphasized that stu- .■ "ommetce, ft Sigma Alpha, poll- pac . ^
j,drid dents wishing to write for the cam- science; Beta Pi. all-engineer- Coroner S. R. Gerber announced
Her selections have been chosen pus humor magazine nee</ not be ing; Psi Chi. psychology. Black- that flames rather than the ciash *om the works of Rimsky-Korsak- enrolled in the flfchool of Journal- stonfa'n, pre-legal; Rho Chi society, landing caused the deaths of the If. Grieg. Charles, and others. The ism. as the publicjifi>n ^ an ^il- i pharmacy; Cjii Epsilon, civil en-:iUil is under the supervision of ; university project. • i ginetnng; Sign^a Delta Pi, Spanish;
van Lewen Swarthout, direc- Returns of the Wampus sales con- II?elta Phl Sigma
of the School of Music. test> .onducted upon the appear-
ance of the May-June issue of the
plane's seven passengers, two pilots and stewardess, all of whom, he said, had" been identified through
lie School of Music will hold its
Fcital at 12:45 o'clock today in magazine, ^ill be announced in to-lovard auditorium instead of the morrow's Trojan, states Geor«
Gamma Epsilon, geology, petroleum initialed jewelry or clothing marks engineer4".g; Delta Phi Delta, fine which had not burned in the wreck, arts; E^ilon Phi. English. Tau Sig-j_-
lluSic hall, usual site of the recitals tudents are invited to attend.
Cook, sales manager: V
The delay in divulging the winner of the contest who will also be the winner of .ne Wampus cup. is due to several salesgirls who have
ma Delta, architecture; Eta Kappa
Yu. electrical engineering; Honor- , .. n__,arLc T-
ary Music club music; Iota Sigma Indian Remarks IO D©
Continued on page four j^eme for Meditation
Being indefensibly silent with re- proposal represented a final effort
spect .to anti-labor vigilante activ- to fulfill one of the obligations as-
ities. * sumed under the Protocol of June
Becoming the recognized puppet 12, 1935, when Bolivia and Paraguay
of sweatshop employers and labor agreed voluntarily to cease hostil-
baiting--corporations. ities and await negotiations of a
BARS COOPERATION settlement by the mediatory repub-
Barring cooperation between Fed- lies,
eration unionists and industrial un- “Almost three years have elapsed
ionists. I since hostilities ceased in the Cha-
co,” he said. “That agreement put an end to the death and destruction of armed conflict, but the burden of suffering and loss must still w’eigh heavily upon the two peoples. I am confident that the peoples of the two countries want peace
OTCIALS MEET
YUMA. Ariz. May 25—« I T —Ari- ro several salesgirls who have n£t _ « j.
na and California unemployment made returns of fcash and copi& D©Vin©, D©n©dlCi
Cook requests that all girls still holding either cash v - copies make immediate return to the 'W%mpus business office. 215 Student Union.
Declaring war on all workers who seek to organizg except upon the ‘ir.ept pattern” of craft distribution, and of preaching a boycott of the services and products of organ-zied workers.
Repudiating the principles upon which the mine union has been es- and should have peace.”
tablished and conducted. j--—^—-
“With the shameless zeal of a betrayer, he has branded himspu n Oi ir f
the chief antagonist to an effective IVK-M yal I, V/U3ICU labor movement in American,” the resolution concluded.
jmpensation officials conferred Icre today upon a method to extend Ir.vmcnt of unemployed benefits to estate workers.
Presented Aviation Awards
apanese Tighten Ring round China Key City*
TVA Chairman, Raps New Deal
WASHINGTON, May 25 —(U.P)—
Remarks of the Caughnawaga In
dians. some observations of Cicero, j__________
and a Chicago commencement ad- F.D.R. TO ACT ON TAX BILlf dress will furnish the theme for the WASHINGTON. May 25 —(U.P)—
meditation in the Little Chapel of president Roosevelt, whose delay in .
Silence tomorrow’ morning at 7:30 signing the $5,300,000,000 tax bill A j°int congressional investigating o’clock. Dr. Carl Sumner Knopf, said has ient authority to reports that he committee which today began air-yesterday. « may indicate his dissatisfaction with ing the feud-ridden Tennessee Val-
Dr. Knopf, dean of the School of the revision of NeW Deal tax pol- 1 ley Authority’s ‘ dirty
the icies. will act on the measure to-i morrow, it was learned today.
Marshall C. Bendict and Robert D:vine were honored last night at ^ Religion, will be -in charge of a joint banquet of Alpha Eta Rho.! service. national aviation fraternity, and the National Aeronautical association. The two students were award-* ed prizes for the doing the most for the advancement of aviation at U.S.C. during the past year.
Earl Hill, faculty adviser of Alpha Eta Rho. made the honor
awards. Rosemary Sturgess is the winner of the prize for being
Alpha Phi Omega Awards FirV Junk Drive Prize
SHANGHAI. Thursday. May 26—(U.P..)—Columns from iree Japanese armies drew a tightening ring of guns around [aifeng today. They were expected to occugy tl it key city China's crumbling Lung-Hai railway line withii. 48 hours.
When Kaifeng, headquarters of the combined Chinese ________ ____ _______ wm ..._ „
" + armies of Generals Shang Chen and j Eleven students were &rmally in- j jturn in her money for Junk day tags, announced
Li Esung-Jen. falls, the wav will be ^tiat^d into the fraternity, iiie Qene Zechmeister, chairman of the Alpha Phi Omega Junk oDen for a jaoanese attack on „r „mem^1rs are: drive to earn money for the new religion building. Another
Prize remains to be Larded to the boy or girl selling the most ert Mer&on. Sumner Ravitch. Eu- tags. The prizes are two poun s °
gene Trombel. Theodore Watson candy from Brown’s drug store, and Delta Delta, Delta Chi, Alpha Gam- f0re taking direct testimony,
’1 - — ii— i ma £)eita pi Kappa Alpha, Pi Beta 1
Phi, Beta Kappa, and the Women's
From the Office Of the President
Chengchow is the key the
northern defenses of Chine*- ^Jen- P^mond Novell a $5* money order at the Student j ma Delta, Pi Kappa Alpha. Pi Beta
linen” was given a flying start by Dr. Arthur E. Morgan, deposed chairman who charged the New Deal power agency is steeped in “collusion, conspiracy, and mismanagement.”
The engineer-educator who Was fired by President Roosevelt for refusing to substantiate accusations against his former co-directors, David E. Lilienthal and Dr. Harcourt A. Morgan, gave his version of the “inside story” within the TVA In a 4000 word statement.
Lilienthal and Harcourt Morgan will present written defenses tomorrow and the committee will digest details of the three statements be-
The formal dinner dance will be staged in the blue room of the Biltmore hotel and plans have been maue to completely dtcorate the large dining hall for the affair. U.S.C. colors will dominate the decoration theme. Morris stated yesterday.
PROGRAM HAS 14 EVENTS
Fourteen separate events have been included in the final plans for the week’s activities. Beginning with baccaluareate services in the coliseum Sunday afternoon, seniors will be feted daily at numerous events. The week’s festivities will be closed Saturday evening. June 4 at the senior prom.
Arrangements are nearing completion for the Senior -swing, annual sport dance, which will open the week’s activities Monday evening. Plans made include a 10-piece orchestra to play at the opening affair, which will be staged at the Los Angeles Breakfast club. The program will be broadcast over a Los Angeles station if present arrangements go through. Al Gordon, chairman of the dance, said.
JOE COLLEGE DAY SET
Tuesday has been set as Joe College day, and in the afternoon a barbecue and outing at the Uplift-er’s club will be the highlight feature of the day While Wednesday the senior .play, “School for Scandal” will be presented.
Thursday, June 2, a senior awards assembly in Bovard auditorium will open the day’s activities, followed by Ivy day ceremonies in Old College. A tea reception at the home of Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid. and a roller skating party in the evening. Saturday, the seniors will be feted at the annual alumni luncheon in the Foyer of Town and Gowm.
AWARDS DIPLOMAS
Each year the Institute awards diplomas of achievement and honorary membership in the American Institute of Cinematography, incorporated to the presons who. in its estimation, have contributed to the advancement of motion pictures.
Lionel Barrymore. Spencer Tracy, Miss Louise Rainer. Cecil D. de Mille. Slavo Vorkapich. Francis Marion. Adolph Zukor. and Boris Morros were among those receiving awards at last year's banquet.
MORROS PROVIDES MUSIC Boris Morros received his diploma for distinguished achievements in creating a higher standard of music in motion picture productions and theaters. He will entertain at the banquet with his famed string quartet, which is composed of John Pennington, Jack Pepper, Phil Ka-hagan, and Alexander Borisoff.
Louis B. Mayer, prominent studio executive, will address the gathering as will Dr. Lloyd C. Douglas, author of “Magnificent Obsession.’’ Dr. Douglas will speak on “Pygmalion and the Pictures” The topic of Mr. Mayer’s address has not been announced.
PURPOSE OF INSTITUTE The Institute was founded in 1932 and incorporated in 1934. with its purpose “to act as a clearing house for the exchange of Ideas offered in solution of the many problems presented by the picture industry.” It sponsors several activities in addition to honoring outstanding figures in the industry, a few of which are the cinema appreciation forums, the committee on international relations, and the Cinema Prograss magazine.
Insurgent Air Raid Kills 300
STEAMSHIP LINE TO START WASHINGTON, May 25 —(UJ?)—
Chairman Emory E. Land of the U. S. maritime commission tonight announced that the commission will establish a new and fast steamship service to the east coast of South American about September 1 to accomodate ripidly increasing trade the heavily-populated working-cla.vs and travel. districts.
VALENCIA. Spam, May 25—a*.P» —Loyalist dispatches said tonight that 300 persons were killed and 1000 wounded when a squadron of 40 Insurgent planes raided Alicante, 100 miles south of Valencia. The civil governor of Alicante said it was “the War’s worst air raid” on the city.
Hundreds of houses were demolished at Alicante as the raiders concentrated their bombardment on
eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek s tfro- and Herb Granger, visional captital in Hankow, it, probably will be taken easily by the Jap-
Union.
|The life force oi an institution of ;her learning is to be found in achievements of its scholars.
|hile it is true that scholarship is anese whose columns advancing own reward, it seems fitting that westward from positions south of e day should be set aside as Kaifeng alreadv are threatening its tholarship day in order that rec- aoaam approaches. '
the
Student Picture To Be
Fraternities and sororities compet- J dormitory, ing for the award to be given to Mrs. Tema Clare will head
Fire Destrovs Sinnal Hill the house donating the most junk women’s faculty committee, which is CUQWn Tomorrow uesrroys signal mil are asked by the drive officials t0 composed of Dr. Ruth w. Brown, jnown 1 omorrow
Derrick- Man Injured PaPers *or weighing and to col- representing Bridge Hall, Dr. Cath- Considered by critics to be
Religious Conference Advisers Meet Today
Advisers and chaplains who will serve for the University Religious conference for the coming year will meet with Dr. Carl S. Knopf, chairman, today in 323 Student Union for a luncheon.
Rabbi Magnin, new president of the university religious
conference corporation, will be the*-guest speaker. Guests of honor are
the
lect articles before Saturday, when erine Beers, Science; Prof. Hanna best student production yet filmed a truck will pick up the materials. Tacie Rew. Old College: Prof. Julia f by the U.S.C. cinematography de-
~ ~ partment. “The Magnificent Rev-
B\\IJntted Press
One man was reported badly Zechmeister asks faculty members ! How-ell, Music: Prof. Miljdred Bate-Chinese and Japanese dispatches burned last night when fire desrtoyed to leave their addresses at the of- son. Architecture; Prof. Della T.
ution may be given to the com- I
n aim thai draws together the, ------ —^ —----- ------ ----------- — — ,----------*
ividuals of the several scholar- agreed that the Japanese forces in a wooden oil derrick and a 750- fice of the counselor of men by Early. Administration, and Christian
•p organizations of the university. central Phir.» v,cre fi^htm* their barreI tank in an outfytng section Friday, in order that tho truck may R. Dick. Library,
it aim is the furthering of the 7 • of the Signal hill oil fields. collect their donations. Jack Long, Ron Cooley, Frank
liellectual and cultural life of Uie l°ward HanKOw a.onp thiee The name of the injured man was Tag sellers are requested to turn Johns. Carlos Munoz, Jim Reardon,
ludent. of the university, and of PrmciPal routes—the Yangtse river, j not learned immediately. Long in their money before noon today Bob Simmeral. and Tom Lipman le community.
elation” will be presented in Touch stone theater during the assembly Ajjjjn_3mith period tomorrow.
The story deals with college life and the leading part, that of “B.M.O.C,” is played by Louis Tar
Mrs. Thomas Evans, secretary of the conference; Mrs. Rufus B. von KleinSmid. and Ran Hall, conference board chairman.
Advisors and chaplains include Dr. Francis Bacon. Dr. Mary Sinclair Crawford, the Rev. George Davidson. Byron Done. Edith Hirsch, the Rev. J. E. Hoick, the Rev. Wendell Miller. Adamantios Th. Polyzoides, Gale Seaman, the R3V. D. G. Stewart, and Dr. Pearle
Purpose of the luncheon is to arrange programs for next year, dis-
a central line between that stream Beach equipment responded to the by Alpha Phi Omega members in w-ere appointed by Zechmeister late leton, while Don Bartelli. who cussion of a new religious center.
RUFUS B. VON KLEINSMID, ant* the Yellow river, and the Lung- i alarm and after a half-hour battle President. Hfti line on the south bank of the v^as believed to have brought the _ Yellow river. fire under control.
charge of the drive,
Houses that have gone 100 per cent in buying the tags are: Delta
yesterday to ride the horse-drawn played the title role in “Liliom,”
and Dorothy Dahl are supporting
vehicle that will make the collections.
stars.
and appointment of a secretary to succeed Margaret King.
Today’s Organ Program
Archibald Sessions, university organist, will present the following program today during the assembly period in Bovard auditorium.
Adagio from Sixth
Organ Symphony .................. Wider
Wider first came into prominence when he succeeded Cesar Frank as professor of organ at the Paris Conservatoire. Deceased last year. Wider became known as one of the mc«t prolific of modem composers for the organ as well as the foremost French organist of his day.
Two Mountain Sketches ............ Clokey
Canyon Walls
Jagged Peaks in the Moonlight Etude de Concert ................... Bonnet
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 145, May 26, 1938 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 29, No. 145, May 26, 1938. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
Mtorisl Offices RI-4111 Sta 227 Night-PR. 4776 SOUTHERN DAILY Volume XXIX CALIFORNIA TROJAN United Press World Wid« News Service Z-42 Los Angeles, California, Thursday, May 26, 1938 Number 145 Annual To Be Scholars Will Be Honored Issued Today Super frand colossal—magnificent—and other superlatives from Webster will be called into play today when students receive their copies of El Rodeo. U.S.C. annual, Leonard Rosen, business manager, asserted last night. Distribution will begm at 10 a.m. in 211 Student Union and will continue today and tomorrow until all books *---- have ;:?en given out. Soloist Presentation of student activity books or receipts ol payment is necessary to secure copies.. A few E! Rodeos may be purchased for V> ::om Mrs. Marie Portker in the university bookstore. Students who have lost activity books must report p’ the bookstore before going to the ticket office, according to Mrs. Poet-krr. BOOK PRAISED BV PRINTERS Edited by Clint Ternstrom. junior architecture student, the 1938 El Rodeo has already been named for yearbook fame by engravers, printers. and former editors of the annual who were guests at the staff banquet Tuesday evening. John Jackson, who has printed U.S.C. yearbooks for more than a decade, selects it as the best produced here In 10 years. Casting aside traditional layout tnd makeup, the book achieves its implicity and effectiveness through Uie use of montage effects and ap-i>ropnate cokw\*Temstrom explains, j ■Vne of the most marked Innovations ! photography by Midori. Pasadena j bhotographer. whose work won ! national honors. EL RODEO STAFF Assisting Ternstrom in construct- : ng the annual were Eugenia Row-and. associate editor; and Neil )easy. assistant editor. Other staff members include:, ohn O’-ipman.. Jhn Roberts. Bob kden. Louise Brant. Barbara Moron. Esther L’Ecluse. Lynn Moody, zorine English, Freeland Simms, ifvrton Purkiss. Bill Zima, Harry Clmring. dark i ones, Bob Townsend. Winifred :iaire. Mary Mills, Mar?' McMastere. ladelyn Hallock, Murtei Faeder, UlI Spring, Harry Moss, Rocky ipioer, Tom Lipman. Bill Flanagan, jeonard Rosen. Aaron Zwerdling. Howard Kop-hleman. Jim Talcott. Marshall Benedict. Jean Eby. Eunice Launer, O. Editor Clint Ternstrom is editor of the 1938 El Rodeo which will be distributed to students today and tomorrow in 2 I I Student Union. U.S.C. Will Observe Annual Scholarship Day At Dinner Tomorrow U.S.C. will recognize its newest I scholars, more than 200 members-i elect of 32 honorary societies, at a semi-formal dinner in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow evening. Presiding over the program will be Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid. who has set tomorrow aside as the sixth annua! Scholarship day. The j>nn-cipal spcaker wil be Dr. Walter H. Dexter, superintendent of public instruction in Calfornia. MACKENZIE TO SING A vocal solo by Tandy Mac Ken -zie. noted Scotch-American tenor, will highlight the program proced-ing the address by Dr. Dexter, whose topic has not been ascertained. Miss Margaret Reynolds is MacKenzie’s accompanist. The scholars will have places at tables representative of their par-i ticular societies. Scholarship day was formerly observed at a morning* assembly, or with an all-dav vrogram. but in an attempt to foster a traditional method of rerog-nition. the “scholarship societies” dinner ^has beer* substituted. INITIATION DAY PROPOSED Honorary scholastic fraternities 506116 °f the m Green Resigns AFL Post Labor Head Leaves Position To Avoid Expulsion By Miners WASHINGTON, May 25 — (L’.P)— The resignation of President Will- Institute To Present Film Awards Tonight Tomorrow Is Deadline For Senior Week Tickets Tandy MacKenzfe, noted Scotch-American tenor, twill sing at the Scholarship day dinner in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow evening. Engine Failure Blamed for Plane Crash Roper Names Four-Man Board To Investigate Air Disaster Senior students intending to attend the numerous events iam Green of the American Feder- during Senior week must purchase their tickets either today atiop of Labor as a member of the or tomorrow, Jaye Brower, general chairman, stated last night. Students desiring to participate in the events may make a deposit and thus secure reservations, Brower declared. —-* Arthur Crippen and his 12-piece orchestra has been selected to play New Wampus Head Calls Staff Meeting Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, national scholarship fraternities, is tomorrow afternoon. Phi Beta Kappa will initiate its ymembers-elect in the Foyer of Town and Gown at 5 oclock, and the initiation ceremony of Phi Kappa Phi will follow in the art and students interested in obtaining lecture room 0f Doheny library at staff positions on the Wampus are 6 p.m. ** — invited by editor-efect Bud Cole- GUESTS WILL BE. LIMITED CLEVELAND. May 25 —(U.P)—Investigators tonight swarmed to the lynerious crash and and societies on the campus have burning of a transcontinental not in the past initiated their transport plane, which took 10 lifts, pledges at ceremonies held on thr while W. A. Patterson, president of same day. The administration of United Air Lines, which operated the university anticipates the day, tjj* ship blamed failure of both its possibly next vear. when all initia- engines for the tragedy, j tions will be* conducted on the af- I jn Washington. Secretary of Com-; ternoon of the scholarship societies merce Daniel C. Roper named a dinner. four-man board to investigate the Initiation date for two outstand- a^sh this week in public hearings, ing scholarship organizations, Phi United Mine Workers of America was accepted by the union's ex-! evutive board today after Green had been branded as a “betrayer” of organized labor. The board was empowered by the 26th convention of the miners here on February 2. 1938 to hear charges against Green. It is controlled by John L. Lewis, head of the union and chairman of the rival Committee for Industrial Organization, and Green resigned to escape certain expulsion. GREEN IS CHARTER MEMBER A charter member of the mine organization, Green served as its secretary-treasurer for many years, and until Lewis broke with the federation over the issue of industrial unionism, Lewis threw the support of his group behind Green to keep him at the head of American Federation of Labor. Tonight the mine board made public a resolution containing condemnatory provisions hitting Green. The resolution was prefaced by the statement that not- F.D.R. Backs Latin-America Peace Meet Bolivia, Paraguay Urged To Settle Gran Chaco Dispute WASHINGTON, May 25 —(UJ?)— President Roosevelt tonight joined with the presidents of five South American republics in urging the chief executives of Bolivia and Paraguay to accept the peace confer-1 ence proposal which tomorrow will 14 be submitted for settlement of the Louis Mayer, Author To Speak The American Institute of Cinematography will honor outstanding figures in the motion picture industry tonight when it meets at the fifth annual banquet in the Foyer of Town and Gown. . . ... * * * . Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid will chairmen of the event, stated yes-: .. “ . . preside over the affair, which will y‘ j have Howard Estabrook. ice-presi- FINAL EVENT j dent of the Academv of Motion Climaxing a week’s festivities, the Picture Arts and Sciences, for Ms dance will be the final affair on master of ceremonies. at the annual senior formal dinner dance in the Biltmore hotel, Coalson Morris and Al Gordon, co- the program. The orchestra is the best available at that time and holds the record of playing for two years steady at the Trocadero cafe. Members of the Senior week ticket book sales committee will meet today in the lounge in Student Union during assembly period, Al Gordon, member of the committee, states. Gran Chaco controversy. Mr. Roosevelt's action coincided with that of the presidents of Ar-withstanding his resignation Green gentina, Brazil. Chile, Peru, and has been guilty of apostasy to the Paraguay. mine union and it ‘ should be spread SETTLEMENT ASSURES PEACE upon the records. In separate telegrams to President German Busch of Bolivia and Pres- Magazine Sales Contest Results To Be Given In Tomorrow's Trojan Tr.norrow morning at 10 o’clock. 430 Student Union. “It is essential that all students Gt Wallace. Charles Canbv. Charles grove to attend 8 “lookin* ahead” feetts, Mfcbaef McBan, and Jane meeting in the office of t^e editor, liOhmorKi. itudent Gives .ecital Tonight Al ee Joy. senior student in the lool of Music, soprano pupil of stio Cogswell professor of sing- INQUIRY OPENED O. D. Murph* department of commerce inspector and one of four inspectors sent to Cleveland - from Washington, and W. R. Robertson, resident airline inspector, conducted an official investigation as United officials opened their own inquiry. All sought to determine whether flames streaked from one of the t twin wing motors of the 12-passen- Members of Phi Beta Kappa. ger Douglas “mainliner’” just be- whether alirtnni. frfculty, or stu- fore jt plunged into a heavily-tim- dents. are ipvited to witness the in- bered ravine nine miles from Cleve- itiation. Guests will be limited co land airport, or whether witnesses relatives or personal friends of the Who said they saw flames had been deceive^ by backfire from one of CHARGES AGAINST GREEN The Federation head was accused of: Betraying the union to which he “owes hohor and prestige.” Giving counsel to those whose admitted object w'as io cripple and destroy the mine union. Opposing the gubernatorial can- ident Felix Paiva of Paraguay, he said that the settlement, drawn up by a peace conference which has been in session in Buenos Aires for three years, assures “peace and security to both parties.” He recalled that the United States has “cooperated loyally and didacy of Thomas Kennedy, Tsecre-. tary-treasurer of the union, in the actively with the governments of Pennsylvania primary. BoIivia and Paraguay and with the encouraging factional opposition to governments of the other media-labor candidates and threatening to tory nations in seeking a just and ruin politically friends of the labor definite settlement of the dispute which cost an estimated 100.000 lives in several years of warfare. the who wish to work on tS»% publica- newly elected. Students of the uni tion for next year be at the meet- versity may attenc^the ceremony;, of , the plane’s sputtering motors ing,” emphasized - Colegrove, "as othefc honorary oj-gani^tioft. V plans will be made,,to caPry on The program ot Scholafship day stur ----------- .------ ----- ^ spons«Jd fcy the«>Uotfkg schol- Patterson.-said that “careffc a'rship societies: yXv ! amination by ou*. engineers and fly- Alpha K^a'Del^VJciolog}-; Pi ing officials »at th> |
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