Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 33, November 02, 1938 |
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United Pr«ss Dir»ct Wire Service Z-42 SOUTHERN DAILY CALIFORNIA TROJAN Editorial Office* Rl 4111 Sta 227 Night--PR. 4776 ■ 30 wo Men Tie or Presidency f Freshmen Dwight Hart of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Jack Berger of Kappa Alpha received 64 votes each yesterday to for the presidency of the freshman class Run-off elects will be conducted Friday to select the leader of the of -42 *-—-- Fraternities To Confer At UCLA USC To Have Delegates At Discussion Friday On Mutual Problems A conference of fraternity presl- Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, November 2, 1938 Number 32 Spenser s Tomb Delayed Arrival of Tags Fails To Yield Stays Community Chest Manuscripts Campaign Until Tomorrow LONDON, Wednesday, Nov. 2— U'.P)—The Dally Mirror said o-day that the tomb of the poet Edmund Spenser ln Westminster Abbey was opened last night ln bona Bray lone woman candi- ■ the race, polled enoufh I,., to pain second place Votes ■ ft ln the election totaled 244. 1 tiers "ho competed were Bill |Lry. Richard DeWeese. William ^cPIw snd Floyd Hyde. Iturt t student in the College j Commerce, was nominated from floor in a special freshman. Ion Monday. Bersinger, also j the College of Commerce, sub- j ktod his application for eandl- dents, rush chairmen, scholarship More than a score of sorority sales women, prepared to swarm the campus today to make Troy "tag-conscious,” were forced to stay their efforts until tomorrow when the cam-an effort to Answer the oidTques" Pal&n taSs failed to arrive from Community Chest head-tlon of whether Francis Bacon j Quarters. Coincidental with the announce- and Carol Warren. Delta Delta Del-ment that the drive for the gen- (B; jRC|(ie comerford and Dorothy eral student body wtU begin to- Rosenberger. Alpha Chl Omega; morrow, Ed Davis, chairman, re- | Jean Carr and Betty Brigham, ported that the campaign wtll be oamma Phi Beta: and Rose Marie J evening In court nf the sensational continued Into next week because Watkins. Kappa Alpha Theta. ; Shea vs Deitrick autt which to of the delays. A benefit show for | gale of the tags will begin at i date has seen the two counsels vlr- wrote the works attributed to William Shakespeare. No manuscripts were found, the Mirror said, leaving the question still unanswered. It will be decided today whether thc lead casket Itself will be opened, the Mirror said. It may still hold the solution of the greatest controversy in literature. According to Spenser s contemporary historians, when he died Trial Begins Tonight Superior Court Judge To Hear Mock Suit In Porter Hall Tonight will mark the opening the charity fund is planned for next week. More than $250 was collected for 25 cents from fraternities and sororities yesterday when members of the fly- a m. tomorrow and last until j tually at each others throats on Tuesday The ticket* will be sold I numerous occasions. Clarence L. Kincaid. T,os Angeles superior court judge, will preside at the trial which last week. Bn-OFF set run-off election will be coned Friday between 10 a.m. and Polls will be located In it of the Administration build-Dave Keller, commissioner of will supervise the voting. chairmen, officers, and faculty advisors will take place at UCLA on Friday at 3:30 p.m. The interfraternity presidents’ council of UCLA will be host for the occasion. The conference, sponsored by the Interfraternity Alumni association of Southern California and the interfratemity alumni advisors- council of UCLA, will have (Voters must present their white delegates from USC, UCLA, and Occidental college. ALUMNI TO TALK Delegates w'ill take a tour of the campus in the afternoon after which the meeting will continue with round-table discussions on various important phases of fraternity life. The leaders in the discussions will be fraternity alumni who are particlularly well-versed ln the subject on which they will talk all the great poets paid tribute I ln* squadron sold the 1000 avail-bv throwing elegies which they j able ,aBs Thp Greek houses have composed into the open grave, to- i Already pledged 100 per cent finan-j gether with the pens they had | used. Spenser, who wrote “The Faerie Queen," was buried 393 years ago, but members of the Baconian society hoped to find a poem in the handwriting of Bacon signed William Shakespeare" to prove that this was a pen ! name of Bacon, Quota for the campaign has been _ „„ , _ _ . set a. $800. which represents a $50 | 1 *;,30 increase over last year The raise was necessitated by Increased char-cial support to the drive. I lty new*®- A partial list of sorority sales | Aiding Davis in the "Tag s Tro-women, selected for beauty and per- j jan" campaign are Jack Levinson, sonality. was released yesterday by Trojan Squire of Phl Sigma Kappa, _________________________________ Sally Kirby .member of Pi Beta Phi | and Tom Lipman, Trojan Squire of I that John Sliea is merely attempt-sorority, and leader of the sales crew. Zeta Beta Tau. Van Foster and ing to replenish his bank account Included in the list are Charlene j Dick Steckel are supervising fra-Acker and Roberta Grant. Delta ! ternity contacts, and Kay Young is Gamma: Louise Hammond, non- J taking charge of sorority contacts, org; Bette Hollister and Betty Lou j BIU Flood ls leading the flying Stone. Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy Hepp , squadron. Bert Weyl, defense counsel said last night. "We have uncovered some startling new evidence which Clarke Stephans, my law partner, and myself do not intend to divulge until the trial tonight. Furthermore. we will definitely prove be Interfratemity Alumni association INVITATION EXTENDED ent identification cards which them to be members of the i of ’42. Komi ses made )ne of the candidates in his cam-i speech at the assembly prom-class members four dances a as well as a number of tions for the president's counsels f added to the present calendar, proceeds of the dances would Idonated to charity. addition to this platform, the Ididate would place 30 freshmen [a committee to assist him. Half |the group would be elected by cisss at large, while the reining members would be sped by the president. axter Reads Owen Today Jn am a poet s poet," wrote wu- Store Clerks Return fr« Owen to his mother. "I am ■Jted." Shortly after he wrote To Work in Bay City th^c optimistic words, the young Bullish poet, was dead. ■ 1* hom the work of this man. career was so short yet mark-•ith such genius, that Dr. Baxter will read during his ram as assembly period today fcovard auditorium. P>e ife and background of the •111 be discussed as well as ork. selections from which Dr. sr will read. Wilson Flake 7~7 “ ~ 77 7 ~ Speaks Today lckes °Pens War of Words With Dies on Radio Inquiry Clarence L. Kincaid, superior court judge, will preside af the moclt trial of fhe USC School of Law tonight. Bach Festival Celebrated Music Hour Program Today Will Present Noted Compositions Trade Board Member Gives Luncheon Address For Della Phi Epsilon Wilson C Flake, assistant trade commissioner of the United States, will address an open luncheon sponsored by Delta Phi Epsilon, national former friend of WASHINGTON. Nov. 1—(U.P.)—Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes and Chairman Martin Dies of the house committee investigating un-American activities began a war of words tonight over the feasibility of inquiring into the ] who charges the actor-doc-“monster Martians’ invasion” of New Jersey. Ilor deltb|,r»tely hooked him in the Ickes struck the first blow when ♦---------- at Deltrick's expense.-* WITNESS HIDDEN Plaintiff Counsel Turrentine also made a claim to possession of Important new evidence and stated that he had a witness "hidden out" whom he would not reveal until the I trial. j Henry Deitrick. noted character- The Bach festival, which occurs actor and doctor, who ls being sued , annually throughout the world, with by John Shea. Mediocre Picture lnternRtlonally known R,.tlsts (ak. teresU of families of varying instar, for $1,000,000 for alleged per- j . comes will be explained by Profes-sonal Injury, refused to comment lng p ' motivate thc theme I ,or RUCh. The Psychological cor-upon the case when approached j °f lbe Listening Hour at 2:30 p.m by reporters. Deitrick ls Dr. Ruch Lectures Today Psychology Professor To Illustrate Effects Of Campaigns on Public Methods of the Psychological cor-j poration ln New York in gauging public opinion will be discussed by Dr. Floyd L. Ruch, professor of psychology and associate ln th* Psychological corporation, at the regular lecture meeting at 4:30 p m. today in the Doheny art and lecture room. Dr. Ruch will use slides snd statistics to Illustrate effects of radio promotion campaigns on the sales of a product: how they rise rapidly ln the beginning, reach a peak, and gradually drop off. He will tell how a nationally advertised toothpaste’s sales collapsed when a toothpowder company coined a slogan that made the country tooth-powder conscious. POLL FAILED Thc speaker wlll explain why the Literacy Digest poll failed so completely in 1932. while Fortune magazines survey was nearly 100 per cent accurate. The system by which advertising campaigns arc adapted to the in- he caustically accused Dies of seek- la, o[ the works proJect charge« cheek with a fishing hook while the two were on a fishing excursion at Klamath Falls last spring. today ln Bovard auditorium. The numbers on the program will be works of Bach written at different periods in his career. The "Prelude and Fugue in C Minor,-’ "Chorale Prelude." "Chro- . . foreign service fratemity, at 12:15 w to rival the author of "Alice ,,rrimn,hv the far, th«. th* n-iamain rans iasi spring. Judge Marshal S McComb will p m wday ln 321.322 student Un. ^ Wonderland- anri urged him to ImmlttTe Ijre^v hl^ -’ex^ed" ThP P‘CtT S'.Rr t°'d rTrtPnt that ™tlc Fantasy and Fugue,-’ and c spea cr o ic evening, and J [gntc the fictitious invasion or"1^!u\CeexDose’^ym an v o7Tkes'! "" " r<'M'U of D,,|,rlck's deliberate 8ulte No 2 in B Minor will con- R. Anderson, president of the ^ membpr Qf DfUfl ph, Ep_ t of Jersey dramatized In a radio i "... W“‘ ***** ."lfny °f 1 carelessness in removing the steel ........ ....... of Southern California and'a mem- silon- amved Monday from Sydney. ; program Sunday night. stltute the program. poration. function of which Is to study the reasons for the public’s acting as lt. does, has proved by research and experimentation the facts he will pre«ent tomorrow, the lecturer contends. REACTION STUDIED Besides having l3een a fellow at the University of Paris, Dr. Ruch received his Ph.D. from Stanford university In 1930. Working In conjunction with the Psychologl- friends and associates ... if our hook and malicious placing of iday from Sydney, j program Sunday mgni. money holds out long enough." He po^ned gauze upon the wound he 1 Barl1 bo*a11 bis career as a choir | cal corporation, he has made r. ber of Pi Kappa Alpha, will act as Australia, where he has been sta-: Thf secret a ry ^ formal sta foment also said that Ickes’ statement WRS confined to R hospital for two al Luneberg. He then became study of local and national audi-toastmaster. tioned for the last eight years in was Issued in reply to Dies charges "convicts him of my charge that flnd R ha]f )rlonths the organist at Arnstadt. Later j ence reaction to advertising the foreign service of the bureau of yesterday that the public works , had tried to sabotage this in- REp^,R IMPOSSIBLE he served thc Duke of Weimar as1 "Psychology and Life." the speak- of foreign and domestic commerce, administration had revoked a $335,- j Vestlgatlon by ridicule." I flnrt , concertmaster. then was court di- i er’s book, which was published la-st ity presidents’ council of UCLA Reservations should be made ln Dean Francis Bacon’s office today. Bach composed many cantatas j tic surgeons on the problem of re- j and masses for his choir and at cause Owen's career was so and because his best poetry SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 1—<t'.P> —Labor peace was restored ln the second large San Francisco merchandising field within 10 days today as an estimated 3500 retail store clerks marched back to the department stores they left September 7. Another 3500 persons went back to work a week ago in 137 warehouses which had been tied up from a month to several months In a second dispute. Each peace past carried to June I?the Bomba vwdclk^tu, ^dl^ | ” Af^er'-leaming'o'f'"lckes- state- Dies said had been turned down I dared and stated In addition that j offices. He is now In the United ment. the Texan Issued one of hts purportedly as a personal reprisal, | he had approached numerous plas-Stntps tn make a tour of dutv of ! own in which he said that as a j th® congressman said. thc leading citics of thc nation. “wit Mr. Ickes could not earn a “Mr. Ickes had great difficulty in moving or covering the disfiguring I the same time tuned instruments Flake is expected to sneak on the llvlnK In a third-rate medicine finding money for a $12,000,000 pro- 1 srar "" hu "*ft c'1"* H* flake is expected to speaK on tne j bul eyen jn that role he ; ject .Rockland dam) ln a Deino- would be better cast than he is as ! cratic state but he did not exper-the nation's number one spender of ience any difficulty in finding $65.-other people's money." [ 000,000 in the state of Pennsyl- He said that the secretary’s den- j vania." importance of foreign markets for American products. All students and faculty members of the university who are interested ln foreign trade and service are invited by Jim Sexton, president of Delta Phi Epsilon, to attend the luncheon, The price will be 50 cents. scar on his left cheek. He stated j taught village children, and played that each advised and warned him the organ. His diligent work re-that lt would be Impossible to do suited in the loss of his eye-slght, so. and that any attempt would j and for the period of three years result only ln greater disfigure- j before his death, he had to dictate ment. | all his compositions. Meanwhile, the two counsels are | _ _ Franco Begins New Offensive I.R. Plans Progress Dr John Eugene Harley, profes- Services Held For USC Coed still bickering and at an accidental meeting of the four lawyers yesterday ln front of the Law building hot words flew between them, each charging the other with unethical law practices. Harley To Tell U.S. Position In Rearmament Funeral services for Esther Ben- | sor of political science, wUl address son 20, prominent USC coed who Plans Are Outlined HENDAYE, French - Spanish j the first session of the Pacific dled Monday as the result of ln- _ _ . ... Frontier. Nov 1-H.P'— Generahs- Southwest International Relations ^ received in an auto arci- ^Or Goodwill Party --------------------------------simo Francisco Franco today threw clubs conference which wlll con- ; ______. ... 1940, providing for labor peace dur- 18 000 fresh troops and 360 war-! vene on the USC campus Friday dent last Friday, were conducted at Plans fora coming goodwill pat. Dr. Vivian Speaks On Natural Gas Utilization of natural gas hydrocarbons In the manufacture of organic compounds will be Dr. R. E Vivian's lecture topic at a buffet luncheon at 12:30 p.m. In 304 Science. Dr. Vivian, head of thc chemical not receive much re Jttton during his literary life first volume of his poems was national fair here. in an effort to wipe out the Loyalist salient which for nearly six months has held up the Insurgent drive on Valencia. Loyalist lines from Sierra de Los * by Siegfried Sassoon who MINERS FORECAST BOOM b«n one of hts closest friends | TUCSON. Ariz.. Nov. 1 —T.P'— t»o men met In a war hos- The regional convention of the Ain- where they Instituted and ed- erican Institute of Mining and Me- J Caballos to the Ebio river were * magazine for the enjoyment I tallurgical Engineers opened here j hammered as three main columns llw Patient*. today with a forecast of booming fought, their way acrtwsmckv high Heminawav Jones Car- Kill's mother who flew to her bed- were elected, personality, the ooet was ! times" for mining on the North lands from newly won positions on Miss Amy Hemingway Jones Car _______ There will be a general preconference meeting today at assembly period for those student interested in the International Relations clubs conference In 300 Administration building. By showing the relation of tht "crushing burden of armaments In Europe.” to the United States. Dr John Eugene Harley, professor of political science, today wlU designate the position of this nation in thc present world picture. Speaking at thc YMCA student-faculty meeting at 2:30 p.m. in th* tomorrow ! social lounge, Dr. Harley will ' lead the forum in the social lounge of thc Student Union. He will touch upon Uie Munich settlement, spoken upon at the last YMCA forum by Prof. A Bruc* Anthony, and will also discuss the the poet was ntful and highly imaginative American continent, pnting* reveal both character- the strategic heights. Iigion Board I Sponsor und Tables Nazis, Fascists May Test Unity in Czech Dispute VIENNA, Nov. 1—(U.P )—Germany and Italy were ex-oected tonight to show the extent of 'axis" solidarity by 1 ..... i________in llm t npt*t t nrio 1 , first meeting of the Junior councU j recently petrol and natural gas | Mrs. B. r. Palmer. t ]ftst nlgtlt wlth d1c|j Barton, pres- I have become the sources of many j The body was shipped last night j ident, presiding. | manufactured chemicals, especially j to Miss Benson's home town, Dov- i Officers for the coming year, j since the Worid war. These chem- er Ohio where burial services will Mar'’ Ellen Dudley. Alpha Chi j lcals have been developed mainly | principal changes brought about in be conducted either Friday or Sat- pa gjgmBi vice-president: and Bill I Dr. Vivian has beer, doing re-| I urday# Mrs. M C. Benson, the Flood, PI Kappa Alpha, treasurer, I search work ln the field of hydrocarbons for the last 20 years. negie endowment representative, j side before she died, is accompany-will preside over the initial lunch- j ing the body home eon on Friday. "American Neutrality and the European Crisis-’ wUl be discussed Alpha Gamma Delta social soror- _______ by Dr Graham H Stuart, profes- ity. serving as publicity chairman ^ ^ Attributed tO Cult MlcViaHCC, cmUncUng^m^rms''of'ih, of that house She was registered / ci I uieat power*, the league of nations Miss Benson was a member of Varsity Back Quits at Dartmouth I Turkey through the presidency ol Kemai Ataturk and his republican government, which ls largely responsible for me changes In thr Turkish dress, customs, and law*. Dr. Harley stated that he plant to skim over th* neutrality problems of the Scandanavlan countries sor of political science at Stan- ternatlonal Security,” and "Present Trends in Latin-American Rela Tiie program will Include a tour tler *nd hit a soft shoulder, caus- jjean Lloyd K Neldlinger upou^ returning Sunday to the college »t car in which she was riding left the highway on a curve near Whit- Uie organization of campus reaching a quick decision here tomorrow in the territorial •table diwussions as its chief dispute between Hungary and Czechoslovakia jibe student board of the Re-1 The arbiters of the ‘'axis” powers. German Foreign Min-Conference will convene at . Lster Joachim von Ribbentrop and* „ thls afternoon in the Stu- ! Italian Foreign Minister Count T|1P reported ‘ axis” solution of . Union social hall. Galeazzo Ciano, wUl first hear the tjlc Hungarian territorial demands of the campus, a tea and informal ing lie machine to turn over ‘Pari of his program for the two sides of the border rase But provides for fuKiUlng most of Bud- ( reception, a business meeting and •urn Hall, chairman, will pro- lt was reported that an agreement apesi s proposals, although the city a farewell luncheon climaxed by ,he arrangement of student I would be, forthcoming In 24 hours o( Bratislava would remain ln | the Installation of new officer* *l°ns of pertinent current by which 11.000 square miles of Czechoslovakia. ---—--—-- W»n.forbT1 WU1 con* Czechoslovakia with l OOOOOO popu- dellcata problem of a Joint - x , t te* 1 If >JrG*)ose«l Home- lation would be lopped off and ced- Hungarlwl.Poilsh frontier was mid- Dayton Teachers In hntin C . been ^hed- ed to Hungary. er*lood to have been sidestepped by _ ... . n . W a^ TL U,e board 01 Von R,bbenlr°P arnved to,U*"t giving Huntarv fertile plain area’, To Work On Promises ReliBinii'* 8*umnl members at the head of the Nazi delegation ^ southem Rulhenia bu; leaving a Conference. and a few hours later Hungarian ford university, at the banquet on M junlQr ,n ^ Colle({<> of Com, Friday evening. merce. Among the topics which wUl be \ ’ discussed by students ln round' Wl“le u'« *'*>’ <« » dance iohi» are- ‘’The Far East- ! accompanied by June Downey, Wil - . ern crisis." The League and In- lard Askew and Jim Merofick, the ! night that lt had lost Harrington Kenneth Gates blocking i____imvc tii f AAt ho nom t n t Y\a “Un u Cl Hr»ct u nH Tic Cates Withdraws From University BOSTON. Nov. 1—(U P.)—Dartmouth college revealed to- and the International labor organizations. back on the varsity football team, to the ‘ Holy Ghost and Us society." The 24-year-old Saugus, Mass., senior sent his resignation M„::r zzzrzs:»»- -rsKsr- -0"'" 1 ■ r b B‘rd Jane Bartho- and Czech Foreign Minuter Fran- *‘,d m ton. closed by the board of e *u a- Dupi Ruth Bennison Virginia tisek Chvalovsky put in an appear- In Rome todey Fascist political tion. wiil resume classes shortly for min Neil Deasy Saraent ance Count Ciano was enroute fi-u s forecast that inhabitant* of 34 000 • vrcahomr.g" students if the ••ary Fivn Cecile Hal from Rome ti e Ru’.’:eni* mountains scon would 1300 Uf.chera w 11 work for three Omar Hartzler, Jim Hast- I Tiie German-Itahan arbitration demand annexation to Hungary week, on <> promise to te paid later. ^ Holme ione Hooven I meeting, agreed to by the disput- The common Pci: h-Hun-arlan the board tweed ton. 'u °* Paul Johansing ! ing countries, will end for the tune bolder hrs had f emur Benito Common Pleas Judge Null M l“ *............being at lea>t the di*memberment Mr ol n s bi;kmg but it was und- HoJapp announced after a three- of Czeclio-lovakia In Prague today erstcod lhat Adolf Hiller opposed hour meeting with the seven-man lt was announced that the Polish- it, fearing a barrier would be raised board that he would drop contempt Czech border problem had been in the Reich s economic trek east. I of court proceedmg* aaginst the solved bv a decision to establish a Tomorrow * conferences will be j five board members who ignored mixed delimitation commission lo held in Belvedere palace, starting hi* restraining order against clos- tlx details of the new border. *1 JI 30 a.m. <6 30 a.m. E8r>. j uig the schools this week. Tomorrows Organ Program Archibald Sc.islous wlll lmlude three selections in his organ recital tomorrow ln Bovard auditorium. Hanover, N. H . after playing a stellar game ot football against Yale Saturday. Neidltti|/er said that the youth's act could be attributed to hls "complete allegiance" to the cult and that efforts to persuade him to return to Dartmouth, at least to complete his senior year, had failed. Although a member ot tiie cult Dupre since his sophomore year, lt had ............jonansing, Ucb WlU““n LtD^. Jo-P*ul Miller. Bai-William Quinn. Glen fnian Taylor BiU Walk. • Dink nU‘Il Wolm*J>- A* * Barton, and Helen Dupre's recent triumphal American concert tour has reawakened interest in his works. This piece, written in memory of Lynwood Farman. has a great deal ol charming tone-color. ih-di-i/.uH . lit Hue Suite iijtid {butut Dialogue . (tigoul The versatile Eugene Gigout a popular organ master of 19th century France, contributed much to the culture of his time, as comparer, teacher, and recitalist. no apparent effect upon his scruples about footbaU until this fall. Oates falied to report for practice this season until last Wednesday. explain Gates' action and tiie college's attitude. Robert P Fuller, director of publicity, said that Gates' enthusiasm about his return to the fold continued from his appearance at practice until the team returned to Hanover Sunday. It was about 4 p.m Sunday, Fuller said, that Gales summoned a taxi to his rooming house and left town. The cult was founded in Maine by the Rev. Frank W. Sanford, the • Elijah" of the early 1900’s The world not ending as he predicted, Sandford announced that Throughout ills other years in col- God had commissioned him to go le?e, he had played regularly. forth and convert the heathen. Ac-Coach Earl Blaik, unable to de- cording lo a legend, when he pray-cide whether Gates should be al- ; ed for money a check for $10,000 lowed lo play, sounded out the team and found only complete enthusiasm about the youth's return This resulted ln Gates being sent ln for half the Yale game. appeared and he purchased the 150-ton schooner Coronet Th last of many voyages on the Coronet was made ln 1911 when eight members of the party died ol Sent to Bunion by Neldlinger to [ privation and scurvy FOUNTAIN PEN HEADQUARTERS SectAestt SHEAFFER PARKER EVERSHARP WATERMAN CONKLIN Pens from ^*0^8. Aimu m
Object Description
Description
Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 33, November 02, 1938 |
Format (imt) | image/tiff |
Contributing entity | University of Southern California |
Full text |
United Pr«ss Dir»ct Wire Service Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Editorial Office*
Rl 4111 Sta 227 Night--PR. 4776
■ 30
wo Men Tie or Presidency f Freshmen
Dwight Hart of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Jack Berger of Kappa Alpha received 64 votes each yesterday to for the presidency of the freshman class Run-off elects will be conducted Friday to select the leader of the
of -42 *-—--
Fraternities To Confer At UCLA
USC To Have Delegates At Discussion Friday On Mutual Problems
A conference of fraternity presl-
Los Angeles, California, Wednesday, November 2, 1938
Number 32
Spenser s Tomb Delayed Arrival of Tags Fails To Yield Stays Community Chest Manuscripts Campaign Until Tomorrow
LONDON, Wednesday, Nov. 2— U'.P)—The Dally Mirror said o-day that the tomb of the poet Edmund Spenser ln Westminster Abbey was opened last night ln
bona Bray lone woman candi-
■ the race, polled enoufh I,., to pain second place Votes
■ ft ln the election totaled 244.
1 tiers "ho competed were Bill |Lry. Richard DeWeese. William
^cPIw snd Floyd Hyde.
Iturt t student in the College j Commerce, was nominated from floor in a special freshman.
Ion Monday. Bersinger, also j the College of Commerce, sub- j ktod his application for eandl- dents, rush chairmen, scholarship
More than a score of sorority sales women, prepared to swarm the campus today to make Troy "tag-conscious,” were forced to stay their efforts until tomorrow when the cam-an effort to Answer the oidTques" Pal&n taSs failed to arrive from Community Chest head-tlon of whether Francis Bacon j Quarters.
Coincidental with the announce- and Carol Warren. Delta Delta Del-ment that the drive for the gen- (B; jRC|(ie comerford and Dorothy eral student body wtU begin to- Rosenberger. Alpha Chl Omega; morrow, Ed Davis, chairman, re- | Jean Carr and Betty Brigham,
ported that the campaign wtll be oamma Phi Beta: and Rose Marie J evening In court nf the sensational continued Into next week because Watkins. Kappa Alpha Theta. ; Shea vs Deitrick autt which to of the delays. A benefit show for | gale of the tags will begin at i date has seen the two counsels vlr-
wrote the works attributed to William Shakespeare. No manuscripts were found, the Mirror said, leaving the question still unanswered.
It will be decided today whether thc lead casket Itself will be opened, the Mirror said. It may still hold the solution of the greatest controversy in literature.
According to Spenser s contemporary historians, when he died
Trial
Begins
Tonight
Superior Court Judge To Hear Mock Suit In Porter Hall
Tonight will mark the opening
the charity fund is planned for next week.
More than $250 was collected for 25 cents from fraternities and sororities yesterday when members of the fly-
a m. tomorrow and last until j tually at each others throats on Tuesday The ticket* will be sold I numerous occasions. Clarence L.
Kincaid. T,os Angeles superior court judge, will preside at the trial which
last week.
Bn-OFF set
run-off election will be coned Friday between 10 a.m. and Polls will be located In it of the Administration build-Dave Keller, commissioner of will supervise the voting.
chairmen, officers, and faculty advisors will take place at UCLA on Friday at 3:30 p.m.
The interfraternity presidents’ council of UCLA will be host for the occasion. The conference, sponsored by the Interfraternity Alumni association of Southern California and the interfratemity alumni advisors- council of UCLA, will have (Voters must present their white delegates from USC, UCLA, and Occidental college.
ALUMNI TO TALK Delegates w'ill take a tour of the campus in the afternoon after which the meeting will continue with round-table discussions on various important phases of fraternity life. The leaders in the discussions will be fraternity alumni who are particlularly well-versed ln the subject on which they will talk
all the great poets paid tribute I ln* squadron sold the 1000 avail-bv throwing elegies which they j able ,aBs Thp Greek houses have composed into the open grave, to- i Already pledged 100 per cent finan-j gether with the pens they had | used. Spenser, who wrote “The Faerie Queen," was buried 393 years ago, but members of the Baconian society hoped to find a poem in the handwriting of Bacon signed William Shakespeare" to prove that this was a pen ! name of Bacon,
Quota for the campaign has been _ „„ , _ _ .
set a. $800. which represents a $50 | 1 *;,30
increase over last year The raise was necessitated by Increased char-cial support to the drive. I lty new*®-
A partial list of sorority sales | Aiding Davis in the "Tag s Tro-women, selected for beauty and per- j jan" campaign are Jack Levinson,
sonality. was released yesterday by Trojan Squire of Phl Sigma Kappa, _________________________________
Sally Kirby .member of Pi Beta Phi | and Tom Lipman, Trojan Squire of I that John Sliea is merely attempt-sorority, and leader of the sales crew. Zeta Beta Tau. Van Foster and ing to replenish his bank account Included in the list are Charlene j Dick Steckel are supervising fra-Acker and Roberta Grant. Delta ! ternity contacts, and Kay Young is Gamma: Louise Hammond, non- J taking charge of sorority contacts, org; Bette Hollister and Betty Lou j BIU Flood ls leading the flying Stone. Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy Hepp , squadron.
Bert Weyl, defense counsel said last night. "We have uncovered some startling new evidence which Clarke Stephans, my law partner, and myself do not intend to divulge until the trial tonight. Furthermore. we will definitely prove
be
Interfratemity Alumni association
INVITATION EXTENDED
ent identification cards which them to be members of the i of ’42.
Komi ses made
)ne of the candidates in his cam-i speech at the assembly prom-class members four dances a as well as a number of tions for the president's counsels f added to the present calendar, proceeds of the dances would Idonated to charity.
addition to this platform, the Ididate would place 30 freshmen [a committee to assist him. Half |the group would be elected by cisss at large, while the reining members would be sped by the president.
axter Reads Owen Today
Jn am a poet s poet," wrote wu- Store Clerks Return
fr« Owen to his mother. "I am
■Jted." Shortly after he wrote To Work in Bay City th^c optimistic words, the young Bullish poet, was dead.
■ 1* hom the work of this man. career was so short yet mark-•ith such genius, that Dr.
Baxter will read during his ram as assembly period today fcovard auditorium.
P>e ife and background of the
•111 be discussed as well as ork. selections from which Dr. sr will read.
Wilson Flake 7~7 “ ~ 77 7 ~
Speaks Today lckes °Pens War of Words With Dies on Radio Inquiry
Clarence L. Kincaid, superior court judge, will preside af the moclt trial of fhe USC School of Law tonight.
Bach Festival Celebrated
Music Hour Program Today Will Present Noted Compositions
Trade Board Member Gives Luncheon Address For Della Phi Epsilon
Wilson C Flake, assistant trade commissioner of the United States, will address an open luncheon sponsored by Delta Phi Epsilon, national
former friend of
WASHINGTON. Nov. 1—(U.P.)—Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes and Chairman Martin Dies of the house committee investigating un-American activities began a war of words tonight over the feasibility of inquiring into the ] who charges the actor-doc-“monster Martians’ invasion” of New Jersey. Ilor deltb|,r»tely hooked him in the Ickes struck the first blow when ♦----------
at Deltrick's expense.-*
WITNESS HIDDEN Plaintiff Counsel Turrentine also made a claim to possession of Important new evidence and stated that he had a witness "hidden out" whom he would not reveal until the I trial.
j Henry Deitrick. noted character- The Bach festival, which occurs actor and doctor, who ls being sued , annually throughout the world, with by John Shea. Mediocre Picture lnternRtlonally known R,.tlsts (ak. teresU of families of varying instar, for $1,000,000 for alleged per- j . comes will be explained by Profes-sonal Injury, refused to comment lng p ' motivate thc theme I ,or RUCh. The Psychological cor-upon the case when approached j °f lbe Listening Hour at 2:30 p.m by reporters.
Deitrick ls
Dr. Ruch Lectures Today
Psychology Professor To Illustrate Effects Of Campaigns on Public
Methods of the Psychological cor-j poration ln New York in gauging public opinion will be discussed by Dr. Floyd L. Ruch, professor of psychology and associate ln th* Psychological corporation, at the regular lecture meeting at 4:30 p m. today in the Doheny art and lecture room.
Dr. Ruch will use slides snd statistics to Illustrate effects of radio promotion campaigns on the sales of a product: how they rise rapidly ln the beginning, reach a peak, and gradually drop off. He will tell how a nationally advertised toothpaste’s sales collapsed when a toothpowder company coined a slogan that made the country tooth-powder conscious.
POLL FAILED Thc speaker wlll explain why the Literacy Digest poll failed so completely in 1932. while Fortune magazines survey was nearly 100 per cent accurate.
The system by which advertising campaigns arc adapted to the in-
he caustically accused Dies of seek- la, o[ the works proJect charge«
cheek with a fishing hook while the two were on a fishing excursion at Klamath Falls last spring.
today ln Bovard auditorium. The numbers on the program will be works of Bach written at different periods in his career.
The "Prelude and Fugue in C Minor,-’ "Chorale Prelude." "Chro-
. . foreign service fratemity, at 12:15 w to rival the author of "Alice ,,rrimn,hv the far, th«. th* n-iamain rans iasi spring.
Judge Marshal S McComb will p m wday ln 321.322 student Un. ^ Wonderland- anri urged him to ImmlttTe Ijre^v hl^ -’ex^ed" ThP P‘CtT S'.Rr t°'d rTrtPnt that ™tlc Fantasy and Fugue,-’ and c spea cr o ic evening, and J [gntc the fictitious invasion or"1^!u\CeexDose’^ym an v o7Tkes'! "" " r<'M'U of D,,|,rlck's deliberate 8ulte No 2 in B Minor
will con-
R. Anderson, president of the ^ membpr Qf DfUfl ph, Ep_ t of Jersey dramatized In a radio i "... W“‘ ***** ."lfny °f 1 carelessness in removing the steel ........ .......
of Southern California and'a mem- silon- amved Monday from Sydney. ; program Sunday night.
stltute the program.
poration. function of which Is to study the reasons for the public’s acting as lt. does, has proved by research and experimentation the facts he will pre«ent tomorrow, the lecturer contends.
REACTION STUDIED Besides having l3een a fellow at the University of Paris, Dr. Ruch received his Ph.D. from Stanford university In 1930. Working In conjunction with the Psychologl-
friends and associates ... if our hook and malicious placing of iday from Sydney, j program Sunday mgni. money holds out long enough." He po^ned gauze upon the wound he 1 Barl1 bo*a11 bis career as a choir | cal corporation, he has made r.
ber of Pi Kappa Alpha, will act as Australia, where he has been sta-: Thf secret a ry ^ formal sta foment also said that Ickes’ statement WRS confined to R hospital for two al Luneberg. He then became study of local and national audi-toastmaster. tioned for the last eight years in was Issued in reply to Dies charges "convicts him of my charge that flnd R ha]f )rlonths the organist at Arnstadt. Later j ence reaction to advertising
the foreign service of the bureau of yesterday that the public works , had tried to sabotage this in- REp^,R IMPOSSIBLE he served thc Duke of Weimar as1 "Psychology and Life." the speak-
of foreign and domestic commerce, administration had revoked a $335,- j Vestlgatlon by ridicule." I flnrt , concertmaster. then was court di- i er’s book, which was published la-st
ity presidents’ council of UCLA Reservations should be made ln Dean Francis Bacon’s office today.
Bach composed many cantatas j tic surgeons on the problem of re- j and masses for his choir and at
cause Owen's career was so and because his best poetry
SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 1— |
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