Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 34, November 03, 1938 |
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United Press Direct Wire Service Z-42
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
DAI LY WT ROJAN
Editorial Office*
Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night--PR. 4776
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, November 3, 1938
Number 33
SC To Greet i-RCIubs
Program To Open
ears at Rally
SC, ASUSC
presidents To Meet
lillforma students will bo wel-
■ t to mingle with Trojans at
■ Trojiov.li Jamboree, it w'as anal iced today through the coop-I ion of Henry Flynn. ASUSC ^Kdcnt. and Alan Lindsay, ASC I Ident. both of whom will be at I danrr tomorrow evening at the Ril rside Breakfast club.
t e conclave Is the first all-uni-VJ ny rally-dance to be sponsored J the social committee. Curby (jot nth and Betty Jane Barthol-om ; head the activities.
irett Hoagland and his orches-tiJ irho have just completed an
I looters: Oet your tickets for tl I Cil gamr now! The number | available seats is fast dimln-Admission to the game be denied to ticket holders they show student activity along with tickets.
gement at El Patio ballroom in | Francisco, will contribute mu-the swing session. By spec-lermisslon of the welfare board, i for the event have been ex-untll 1 a.m.
dance has oeen scheduled
tice of the traditional bonfire ■auon which has formerly i held pilot to the Trojan grill encounter with the Golden p. Since rally spirit will pre-throughout. w'ith songs and I under the direction of Ron lev, the affair wdll be strictly trial.
Ksha\e been distributed to fra-
Rallyette
■
Topic Discussions To Play Important Role in Week End Convention
Twenty-five colleges and other
Neville Chamberlain Wins Confidence Vote in House Of Commons, 345 to 138
LONDON. Nov. 2—(U P.)—Prlmr Minister Neville Chamberlain late tonight won a 345 to 138 vote of confidence in the house of commons for hts pact of friendship with Premier Benito Mussolini after his critics had mercilessly described him as “the boneless wonder of the age.”
The vote, revealing that the^ prime minister actually had lost
none of his parliamentary strength turn hix efforts immediately to over the "peace of Munich," was in f°«r P°»er collaboration on such
Japan To Check Europe
Nipponese Make Plans To Eliminate Occidental Control oi Orient
TOKYO, Thursday, Nov. 3—(U.E)
FacultyNames Rhodes Croup
Nominees Selected by Foreign, American Scholarship Committee; Crawford, Kaufman, Haggard Chosen To Compete A* Finalists
Three senior students, Robert Crawford. Daniel Kaufman
educational institutions wlll be rep- ! effect a go-ahead signal for his j proposals for a durable European _The imperial Japanese govern- j and Ernest Haggard have been nominated by the Foreign
resented on the USC campus tomorrow when the Pacific Southwest conference of International Relations clubs begins the first of a two-day program of world problem discussions.
Following registration In the Hall
four-power program of dealing with P<"#ce as Uie dictators. 1—Non-aggression pledges where-
As a result of the vote, the An- by Britain, Germany, Italy, and
glo-Italian pact Initialled In Rome last April 16 will be put into operation immediately and Britain will recognize formally Italian sovereignty over Ethiopia.
be held ln the Art and Lecture room of Doheny Memorial library, where Mlss Amy Hemingway Jones, Carnegie endowment representative. George B, Scofield, president of the conference, and Dr. Rulus B. von KleinSmid will be introduced.
PRESENT TOPICS
Five round table discussions will occupy the remainder of the morning program. Topics to be presented and the chairman colleges are as follows: “The League and International Security,” Scripps col-i lege; "Economic Readjustments for | World Peace,” Pasadena college.
■'Central European Crisis and [ Racial and National Minorities,” Redlands university and University of California at Los Angeles; ‘'The j Far Eastern Crisis,” George Pepperdine and San Diego State col-Sally Kirby Leads Chest le*e*: and “Present Trends in Lat-in American Relations,” LaVerne Workers To Reach Quola college.
Goal of $800 guests 'speak
Dr. Graham H. Stuart of Stan-After a three-day delay, more | ford university will be the guest than a score of sorority sales giils, | speaker at a Friday evening ban-
, The vote of 3;'i lo 138 compared
of Nations, the opening session will | wlu} one of 316 t0 108 cast for
Betty Jane Bartholomew, winsome Trojan vice-president, along with Curby Goldsmith will head the Troytown Jamboree tomorrow night at the Riverside Breakfast club.
Tag a Trojan Drive Is On
France would renounce war against each other.
2—Some satisfaction of Germany' s colonial claims.
3—A plan to curb Europe's frenzied armament race.
Chamberlain last Mav 2 - five I Economic and financial ad-months before Munich-when the Justment* to strengthen lnterna-orlglnal terms of the Italian agree- j tional friendships, ment were approved. I The four-power leaders, at their
Chamberlain asked support for Munich conference on September the pact with Italy on the grounds 29. agreed to meet again within that “It must be regarded as a three months or a* soon as the step towards appeasement . . . im- Czech frontier disputes with Poland proving the prospects of peace as and Hungary were disposed of. The a whole.” i Czech-Hungarian dispute was set-
The opposition, and even former tied by arbitration today, opening
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden of his own party, cordemned the pact as another "surrender” to the dictators. bringing closer the menace of war.
Eden, who resigned from Chamberlain's cabinet last February ln protest against the Anglo-ltalian pact, voted against it.
Chamberlain was expected to
the way for another meeting of the "big four."
London newspapers referred confidently today to the possibility of an early meeting between Chamber-lain and Chancellor Adolf Hitler, but there was no reference to such a meeting in the commons debate in which attacks were heaped upon the prime minister.
ment today completed a program and American scholarship committee to represent USC in the for Japanese domination of Eastern j final regional competition for the Rhodes scholarship award
Reilly Takes Over Post Vacated by Baker
Confined ln the hospital, where he is recovering from an emergency appendectomy. Bill Baker, Kappa Sigma, has
Asia and the elimination of British and Prench influence as a major factor ln East Asian affairs.
Developments came swiftly. The government Issued a statement outlining Japan's "immutable” policy to create a political and economic union of the Japanese empire, Man-chukuo. an,d China. This declaration was considered as sounding a death knell to the Amerlcan-ln-splred nine powers treaty designed to guarantee China's territorial Integrity, and an effective answer to the recent American note protesting against Japanese violations of the | American policy of the "open door jmd equal opportunity” ln China. JAPANESE WITHDRAW
Japanese withdrew from participation ln cultural and economic activities of the League of Nations, and the government announced that Japan would not attend more j meetings of the league's mandates I commission which ls supposed to j
One of last years
Women To Edit Daily Trojan
Tomorrow's edition of the Dally Trojan wlll be put out exclusively by women members of the School of Journalism. All stories, headlines, and make-up of the pages wlll be done by the feminine Journalists, Cecile Hallingby, managing editor of the edition, said yesterday.
Male reporters, desk men, and editors wlll rejoice; take a vacation. and ln general have a rest from newspaper worries as they turn the paper over to Mlss Hallingby and her assistants.
Other staff positions wlll be control the Japanese mandate over | filled by Carol Tiegs, desk editor; former Oerman Islands ln the Louise Brant and Esther L'Ecluse, South Pacific ocean. i co-sport editors; Elaine Holbrook.
Seihin Ikeda. Harvard-educated j feature editor, and Ruth Winner.
minister of finance, warned the Japanese people that new sacrifices would have to be made to complete the conquest of China and reconstruct that country. The minister was confident that Japan could finance these vast projects alone. SEEKS COLONIES The official spokesman of the foreign office said no portion of
women's page editor.
In and soroitv houses bv Har- armwl with Community Chest tag! quet. His topic will'be "The Euro- been forccd to resign from his position as Student chairman As)r should b, "westernized
I ' J n.ill hocrin tlioir “Too A Tmion'M_______________ A______• tk. if 11 „ ilnn Hiii-lno Hnnur.nmini> moot nlplr . ______________...
partnon. ticket chairman. They also been placed on sale at iBtudent Union book store at a : of $1
John Hill ictures Today i Palestine
will begin their “Tag A Trojan campaign today.
Under the leadership of Sally Klrb.v of Pi Beta Phi. the women, selected for beauty and personality, will attempt to extend the tag sales to everey Trojan student. Fraternities and sororities already have pledged 100 per cent support.
Included in the sales crew are: Charlene Acker and Roberta Grant
pean Crisis and American Neutra- of the interfratemity sing during Homecoming week. Dick | ll ty.” During a luncheon on thc Keefe announced yesterday. * — ame day. Dr. John Eugene Har- | To succecd Bake|.. wh0
wa.s rush
John G Hill, professor of
ril literature, will relate his ences in Palestine last spring i on sabbatical leave, at the bi-weekly afternoon meeting Jie Drama Workshop at 3:30 p.
day ln Touchstone theater.
I is expected that Dr. Hill will
ley, professor of political science, will speak on "The Place of Geneva in the World Picture."
A continuation of the round table : yesterday appointed discussions will take place Satur- | Kappa Alpha, day morning, culminating in a bu- 1 siness meeting in Bowne hall, where progress reports will be mrde, a
Delta Gamma; Louise Hammond, ! new conference location will be se- _______________ _____^..............
non-org; Betty Hollister and Betty lccted. and new officers will be el- j execuyve capacity while con-Lou Stone, Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy ectcd. I vafMc.jng
Hepp and Carol Warren. Delta Del----
ta Delta; Jackie Comerford and
Baxter Presides
ed to the hospital Monday night, Keefe, student chairman of the entire 15tli annual Horreroming week Nell Reilly.
Keefe reported lhat Baker is doing wel! and wlll be able to see friends- today, but that it would b" impossible for him to continue in
At Movie Forum
Producer Waltor Wanger It Chairman of Series
Dr. Frank Baxter, professor of
which will be sponsored by the -_ _ _ ■ J\A/' r I
Cinema Appreciation league of USC lO be UeVelOpeO W inS rreeOOm tomorrow night at 7:30 in 159 Sci- j
Story workshops similar to those By i ntud Prt
Dorothy Rosenberger, Alpha Chi Omega; Jean Carr and Betty Brigham, Gamma Phi Beta; and Rose Mnrie Watkins, Kappa Alpha Theta.
---------------- Jack Levinson, Trojan Squire of
slides illustrating the differ- Phi Sigma Kappa fratemity. and Blaces of which he will speak. Tom Lipman. Trojan Squire of Zeta Juse lie was ln Palestine when ( Beta Tau. are aiding Ed Davis in fighting took place between the campaign. English wlll preside ai the first | rl
rabs and Jews, he promises to*1 Quota for the drive hits been set cmrmHlo.M1,phy f0rum of the year, ill
IInformation on the situation. ' *""" ■-----1—
jmMtlng will be open to all inpersons.
|ima Workshop is now search-por original one-act plays for mental production, Aileen pig, president, announces. Any j ■nt interested ln writing Ls in- j 1 to submit work to the Work- !
' for a reading rehearsal. If % is deemed worthy, it will jiwented.
i°ne-act play by Susan Glas- '
'nd George Cram Cook, "Sup-Desires,” is now in rehearsed will be presented at an eventing later this month.
j The student chairman said that J plans of the other commiitees. as j well as the one previously presided over by Baker, are rapidly tak'ng shape and should be ready for pub-j llcation some time next week, as ; Friday's luncheon meeting for all chairmen should enable the lead-
ers to coordinate their activities into a working program.
Announcement of the week’s events wlll probably be made at the conclusion of thc slogan contest, now in progress, which will close Wednesday, November 9,
Entries in the contest should be inserted in the "Letters to thc Editor" box ln the foyer of the Student Union, Keefe said. He also reminded students that two 50-yard line tickets for the Notre Dame game would be awarded to the writer of the best slogan.
Short, snappy, original phrases which may be Incorporated in the theme for Homecoming are preferred, Keefe said.
at *800. The campaign will continue until next Tuesday.
Niese Will Speak on Pan-American Countries
Henry C. Niese. Argentine consul,
m
Plots
German Pair
ence.
“The Role of the Cinema In Dramatic Arts" is the topic of the initial forum, which Is part of a series of 12 to be presented during the year on the general theme
anl lecturer on international rela- ••understanding Cinema Language
tions at USC, wil! be the speaker at the graduate student luncheon Tuesday in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall. Material for his topic, “Eighteen Pan-American Countries from the Air." was compiled during
Walter Wanger. film producer, is chairman of the series. In explaining the purpose of the forums, he stated, “Understanding of cinema language is Important to vitalize and modernize educational meth
n KleinSmid mpletes Tour
trip which he made through the ods by helpjng teachers use the
countries last spring. vast store of Information that can
Because his position as Argen- be found in the best pictures.”
tine consul forbids discussion of The Cinema Appreciation league
political problems. Niese will speak ^ a part of the American Institute
upon the industrial, economic, agrl- 0{ cinematography, a USC organ-
cultural. and cultural aspects, of Latin-America.
Graduates and graduate faculty are Invited. Thc price of the tlc-■ sale at the Administra -
ization that also includes the World's Affairs Institute.
Season tickets are available ln the cinematography office, 120 Old College, for $2 Students mav obtain them for half price Single admission for everyone is 50 cents.
inning alter a two weeks tour J? ,i‘UAI nr- Rufus B. von *id. president of the univer-•rrived in Los Angeles yester- j kets, which are
1 Graduate office, 160 ron KleinSmid took part In Hon, is 45 cenu.
I “'augural ceremonies of two 1 « law _
Architecture College Saved
m?!.'. ' ! ! j c Leebrick a.s I, Kent State university.
■ I DreMri*,,,
president also spoke at an ILtch" c*‘remon>’ when Charles IE?* be<ame president of college in Alliance, Ohio.
used by motion picture studios will be started this week by students of scenario writing in the department of cinematography.
Eight groups of five students each will meet every week to develop story plots Into forms required ln film work.
Leaders of the various conference groups have been selected from the class. They are: Joanne McEIroy, Russel Bledsoe. Louise Conserve. Alan Rubin, Florence Temple. Jack Wood, Donald W. Duke, and Ted Abrams.
Each leader wlll propose a subject for a plot to be outlined by the group at the weekly meetings. Actual writing of the scenario will follow, with problems being reported and discussed.
Two young Germans, who leaped Into the sea rather than risk deportation to Germany where they feared they would be executed, late today were awarded their temporary freedom.
The Hollywood Anti-Nazi league posted *500 bonds to secure the release of Hans Kurth, 27. and Gunther Haberman, 17. who leaped off a Hamburg-Amerlcan liner last September to escape immigration officials awaiting them at San Francisco They swam ashore near the Oolden Gate and hitch-hiked to Santa Barbara where they were taken Into custody and later returned here.
This was taken to mean that Japan would work to abolish French and British concessions in Tientsin, Shanghai, and elsewhere and may attempt to regain for China the rich British crown colony of Hong Kong on the South China coast.
Thc finance minister's statement elaborated details of the Japan-Chinn-Manchukuo bloc; the changed situation in the Orient following Japanese military occupation Continued on Page Four
Franco Claims Air Victory
Madrid Under Fire For Two Hours
HENDAYE, Franco - Spanish Frontier. Nov. 2 — ll'Pi—Generalls-
winners of the Rhodes scholarship .♦award, Joan Golay. was the USC nominee in the national competition. Golay. former editor of the Daily Trjoan. Is now studying at Oxford.
The three candidates will be examined with other nominees from universities ln California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona. Colorado, and New Mexico and from these, two men will be chosen for the Oxford award.
Daniel Kaufman, who majors in both history and latln, has a grade ] point average of 2.94. He ls pres-| Ident of thc Classical Languages I club, and ls assistant to the Ath-j letic News director of the univer-| sity.
| Haggard ls a philosophy and psychology major and his grade point average ls 2 62. The third nominee, Robert Crawford, is a political science major and has achieved a grade point average of 2.59. He j Is a member of the varsity debate squad and a member of the Wampus staff. Crawford ts student assistant for the Man and Civilization course and is the author of several chapters In the Man and Civilization syllabus now being used m that course.
The nominees have yet to be examined with numerous students from this district, which comprises the seventh region, and then they must compete with finalists from the regional examinations before the winners of the two and three-year scholarships at Oxford are announced. The number of candidate* entered ln the competition is determined by the size of the enrollment ln their respective schools. The Oxford Rhodes scholarship ls awarded to 32 American students annually.
Freshmen Poll For Leader
Dwight Harl and Jack Bersinger Are Matched For Class Presidency
Dwight Hart of PI Kappa Alpha and Jack Bersinger of Kappa Alpha tomorrow will seek to break the tie vote that kept one of them from becoming freshman class president ln elections last Tuesday, j--—
The election to determine the | leader of the class of '42 will be Albertina RaSCn conducted from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in front of the Administration building. Voters must present white student Identification cards which certify them to be members of the freshman class.
Trojan Amaions, supervised by Cecile Hallingby. president, will officiate at the polls.
Hart and eBrslnger each received 64 votes ln the preliminary elec-
To Discuss Strauss Today
simo Francisco Franco's Insurgents tions, defeating four men students
President To Issue Plea For N Y. Democratic Vote
Frnm Firp bv Senior Students WASHINGTON, Nov 2 — (U.P.)— The national political
rrom nre uy spotlight shifted to Hyde Park. N. Y„ tonight when President
Three senior students believe that they have a legitimate Roo.seVelt returned to his country home to make a radio plea claim of 85 cents against the university today only because ; on pfiday for the success of the New York state Democratic they saved the Coiiege of Architecture and Fine Arts and tlc!cet and to vote in the November 8 election.
Its equipment, valued at an esitmated $40,000 from total white House aides said that the
h«* To Discuss Use ^counting Friday
for business man-
If*ller®l Communication
destruction by fire last night. »
It was the quick action of Doug arrived, however, the student de-Brown, who heard the warning cry, pUtjes had everything under con-rushed Into a smoke-filled wash- ali(j au the company had to
room and dragged out a llaming mi out a report Librarian
already
rubbish box. which had
----------------- caused the souUi partition to ig-
_ uuxjrporated, will speak nite. At the same moment, Delos °pu of "The Industrial | McGraw unraveled the fire equipment on the wall across the paiio and proceeded to extinguish the blaze, although he was forced to
-er, ,7 “ 'ne indus ton* JI* of Acc°unting ** Friday at 11:
nag
kj - -- will be dis-
attend the talk which ^ auspices of Beta Al-at*Kr*n MtounUng fra-
Eleanor Wneatiey and Prof. Raymond Kennedy first dete'ted the fire when they he\rd a crackling and saw smoke at approximately 7 p in.
The cleaner s bill on Brown and
stop during the procedure to stop McQrav. s pain, will be 40 cenU
up a puncture in the hose Ray- per pair, and Nugent spent a ntckle
mond Nugent, too. lent a hand by on the telephone They maintain
telephoning the fire department that 115 cents lor *40.000 is a pretty
Before the wagons of Station 22 fair trade for USC.
address, which will be broadcast to the nation, would be of general interest. This was Interpreted as an Indication thal the chief executive ! again will urge that the electorate rcplace political conservatives with k: own llberi Is—the theme song of J his Ul-fated “purge" of party re-| celcitrants tn the prun-ims.
The New Yo.l; Democratic ticket ls headed by Gov. Herbert K Lehman, who was described by Mr Roosevelt as “my good right arm." until he broke with the White House on its supreme court enlargement bill. Lehman's Republl-i can opponent is 34-year-old Tho-
mas B Dewey, whose racket-busting successes made him a national figure.
With Lehman at the head of the ticket are Sen. Robert F Wagner, ardent New Dea> Democrat and adviser of the president on social and labor legislation, and Rep. James Mead, who has voted consistently for the New Deal. Wagner's Republican opponent is James Lord O'tirian, noted lawyer, while Mead Is opposed by Edward F Corsl. Wagner and Mead have Uie en-
tonight claimed a victory in one of the biggest air battles of the Spanish civil war, fought by more than 400 planes that blackened the sky over the Ebro valley northeast of Gandesa.
Simultaneously, Insurgent guns ln the Guadnrraina mountains subjected Madrid to one of its worst shellings In its two years of siege, hammering the shattered city for more than two hours with eight and ten-inch shells.
The shelling of Madrid, which will observe the second anniversary of its siege next Monday with a two-year toll of nearly 500 casualties and 5000 buildings wrecked, began at 9 p.m and tapered off shortly before midnight.
The bombardment, which brought ambulances and fire-fighting equipment screeching thro igh the streets was ln grim contrast with the flowers dropped earlier In the dsy by a lone Insurgent bomb*r on the east cemetery ln an A', cjoul's day tribute.
and Dona Bray, coed who shattered precedent by her candidacy for the freshman position.
Bersinger is a graduate of Los Angeles high school. Hart attended Harvard Military academy where he served as cadet major, a position. corresponding to student body president. Both freshmen are enrolled ln the College of Commerce
Men Asked To Report To Car Mathews
"Johann Strauss and the Oreal Waltz" Is to be the theme of a radio talk by Mme. Albertina Rasch today at 2 p.m. over radio station KFAC. She will be interviewed by Mrs. Mary Duncan Carter, director, and Betty Franklin and Bill Caldwell, students in the School of Library Science.
Mine Rasch, jvho was trained in the Imperial ballet ln Vienna and who wa.s at one time premiere dan-seuse at the Metropolitan Opera company ln New York, founded her own school of the dance in the American city. She trains dancers for motion pictures and stage productions.
She will also review books which explain the background and history of the period during which the composcr. Strauss, was a favorite of Vienna courts.
"Wine. Women, and Waltz,” by Davis Ewen, an Informal and ro-The following men are asked to I mantle biography of the two fam-
report to Oar Mathews between 1 and 3 p.m. Monday ln 22g Student Union, Mulvey Z. White, director of the bureau of employment, announces;
Martin Akeyson, Whitney Alexander. Richard Anderson, William Anderson. Roily Andrew, John Ariaudo, Jack Arnold, and Alex Atan-asoff.
ous Viennese musicians, Johann Strauss the elder and his son, Is one of the books Mme. Rasch will
discuss.
Several historical romances are included ln the list which was prepared by Dorothy Harmon, a library school student.
Howard Atkin, Charles Avery^ Dkarmarictc
r.nli Rik.r la fit Hinta Jack: r I I dl IIItH.15 I J
Conduct Contest
Barron, William Bauer, and Charles Baugh.
Law School Mock Trial, Shea Vs. Dietrick, Gets Underway
Greenery and roots making up campus landscaping are eliciting an unusual amount of attention this week because of a contest conducted by students of pharmacy who are members of the American Pharmaceutical association.
dorsement of the American labor stand was John Shea, former star party in New York and of the Am- of Mediocre Pictures Incorporated, erican Federation of Labor, | and plaintiff in Uie 11,000,000 suit
After two hours of dull cross examining in the Initial court appearance of the Shea vs. Deitrick mock suit ln Law school court last night, Defense Lawyer Bert Wyl moved for j prlzes wm be given to any stu-non suit on the three counts before the court. dents in the college who name the
Judge Clarence L. lKncaid granted a non suit on the first most drug plants on campus, giving count only, that of negligence on* . , H(.lirv i>eitriek cliaracter thelr approximate lotatlon. Tomor-Il.e pan Ul Hemy Ix-itrnk in cast- . d u^ row ls the final day of the ooo-
£ . , v., ! test, which began Monday.
Shea told Uie court jt his ac- I tions on the day of Uie asserted First prise is one year's mem-maliclous action and said lhat re- bership ln the assoclaUon, valued suiting hospital charges amounted al *5 Second and third prizes are to *800. Asked if he had been em- j *2 and *1 toward memberships, ployed since the time of the injury, j In the case of a tie, the entry Shea replied indignantly, “I should I submitted first will receive the say not!" And then added, “Not J prise. Entries should be placed in ln a case like this.” I the office of Dr. Alvah O. Hall
The case was continued over un- j assistant professor of mat«rt» Ul tonight M 8 30- I niedica.
ing with his fly rod The other two counts had to do with Intentional and malicious intent to do harm to John Shea ln removing the hook from his cheek, where lt had lodged and in treating the resulting wound.
The first witness called to the
Object Description
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| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 34, November 03, 1938 |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
United Press Direct Wire Service Z-42 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA DAI LY WT ROJAN Editorial Office* Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night--PR. 4776 Los Angeles, California, Thursday, November 3, 1938 Number 33 SC To Greet i-RCIubs Program To Open ears at Rally SC, ASUSC presidents To Meet lillforma students will bo wel- ■ t to mingle with Trojans at ■ Trojiov.li Jamboree, it w'as anal iced today through the coop-I ion of Henry Flynn. ASUSC ^Kdcnt. and Alan Lindsay, ASC I Ident. both of whom will be at I danrr tomorrow evening at the Ril rside Breakfast club. t e conclave Is the first all-uni-VJ ny rally-dance to be sponsored J the social committee. Curby (jot nth and Betty Jane Barthol-om ; head the activities. irett Hoagland and his orches-tiJ irho have just completed an I looters: Oet your tickets for tl I Cil gamr now! The number available seats is fast dimln-Admission to the game be denied to ticket holders they show student activity along with tickets. gement at El Patio ballroom in Francisco, will contribute mu-the swing session. By spec-lermisslon of the welfare board, i for the event have been ex-untll 1 a.m. dance has oeen scheduled tice of the traditional bonfire ■auon which has formerly i held pilot to the Trojan grill encounter with the Golden p. Since rally spirit will pre-throughout. w'ith songs and I under the direction of Ron lev, the affair wdll be strictly trial. Ksha\e been distributed to fra- Rallyette ■ Topic Discussions To Play Important Role in Week End Convention Twenty-five colleges and other Neville Chamberlain Wins Confidence Vote in House Of Commons, 345 to 138 LONDON. Nov. 2—(U P.)—Prlmr Minister Neville Chamberlain late tonight won a 345 to 138 vote of confidence in the house of commons for hts pact of friendship with Premier Benito Mussolini after his critics had mercilessly described him as “the boneless wonder of the age.” The vote, revealing that the^ prime minister actually had lost none of his parliamentary strength turn hix efforts immediately to over the "peace of Munich" was in f°«r P°»er collaboration on such Japan To Check Europe Nipponese Make Plans To Eliminate Occidental Control oi Orient TOKYO, Thursday, Nov. 3—(U.E) FacultyNames Rhodes Croup Nominees Selected by Foreign, American Scholarship Committee; Crawford, Kaufman, Haggard Chosen To Compete A* Finalists Three senior students, Robert Crawford. Daniel Kaufman educational institutions wlll be rep- ! effect a go-ahead signal for his j proposals for a durable European _The imperial Japanese govern- j and Ernest Haggard have been nominated by the Foreign resented on the USC campus tomorrow when the Pacific Southwest conference of International Relations clubs begins the first of a two-day program of world problem discussions. Following registration In the Hall four-power program of dealing with P<"#ce as Uie dictators. 1—Non-aggression pledges where- As a result of the vote, the An- by Britain, Germany, Italy, and glo-Italian pact Initialled In Rome last April 16 will be put into operation immediately and Britain will recognize formally Italian sovereignty over Ethiopia. be held ln the Art and Lecture room of Doheny Memorial library, where Mlss Amy Hemingway Jones, Carnegie endowment representative. George B, Scofield, president of the conference, and Dr. Rulus B. von KleinSmid will be introduced. PRESENT TOPICS Five round table discussions will occupy the remainder of the morning program. Topics to be presented and the chairman colleges are as follows: “The League and International Security,” Scripps col-i lege; "Economic Readjustments for World Peace,” Pasadena college. ■'Central European Crisis and [ Racial and National Minorities,” Redlands university and University of California at Los Angeles; ‘'The j Far Eastern Crisis,” George Pepperdine and San Diego State col-Sally Kirby Leads Chest le*e*: and “Present Trends in Lat-in American Relations,” LaVerne Workers To Reach Quola college. Goal of $800 guests 'speak Dr. Graham H. Stuart of Stan-After a three-day delay, more ford university will be the guest than a score of sorority sales giils, speaker at a Friday evening ban- , The vote of 3;'i lo 138 compared of Nations, the opening session will wlu} one of 316 t0 108 cast for Betty Jane Bartholomew, winsome Trojan vice-president, along with Curby Goldsmith will head the Troytown Jamboree tomorrow night at the Riverside Breakfast club. Tag a Trojan Drive Is On France would renounce war against each other. 2—Some satisfaction of Germany' s colonial claims. 3—A plan to curb Europe's frenzied armament race. Chamberlain last Mav 2 - five I Economic and financial ad-months before Munich-when the Justment* to strengthen lnterna-orlglnal terms of the Italian agree- j tional friendships, ment were approved. I The four-power leaders, at their Chamberlain asked support for Munich conference on September the pact with Italy on the grounds 29. agreed to meet again within that “It must be regarded as a three months or a* soon as the step towards appeasement . . . im- Czech frontier disputes with Poland proving the prospects of peace as and Hungary were disposed of. The a whole.” i Czech-Hungarian dispute was set- The opposition, and even former tied by arbitration today, opening Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden of his own party, cordemned the pact as another "surrender” to the dictators. bringing closer the menace of war. Eden, who resigned from Chamberlain's cabinet last February ln protest against the Anglo-ltalian pact, voted against it. Chamberlain was expected to the way for another meeting of the "big four." London newspapers referred confidently today to the possibility of an early meeting between Chamber-lain and Chancellor Adolf Hitler, but there was no reference to such a meeting in the commons debate in which attacks were heaped upon the prime minister. ment today completed a program and American scholarship committee to represent USC in the for Japanese domination of Eastern j final regional competition for the Rhodes scholarship award Reilly Takes Over Post Vacated by Baker Confined ln the hospital, where he is recovering from an emergency appendectomy. Bill Baker, Kappa Sigma, has Asia and the elimination of British and Prench influence as a major factor ln East Asian affairs. Developments came swiftly. The government Issued a statement outlining Japan's "immutable” policy to create a political and economic union of the Japanese empire, Man-chukuo. an,d China. This declaration was considered as sounding a death knell to the Amerlcan-ln-splred nine powers treaty designed to guarantee China's territorial Integrity, and an effective answer to the recent American note protesting against Japanese violations of the American policy of the "open door jmd equal opportunity” ln China. JAPANESE WITHDRAW Japanese withdrew from participation ln cultural and economic activities of the League of Nations, and the government announced that Japan would not attend more j meetings of the league's mandates I commission which ls supposed to j One of last years Women To Edit Daily Trojan Tomorrow's edition of the Dally Trojan wlll be put out exclusively by women members of the School of Journalism. All stories, headlines, and make-up of the pages wlll be done by the feminine Journalists, Cecile Hallingby, managing editor of the edition, said yesterday. Male reporters, desk men, and editors wlll rejoice; take a vacation. and ln general have a rest from newspaper worries as they turn the paper over to Mlss Hallingby and her assistants. Other staff positions wlll be control the Japanese mandate over filled by Carol Tiegs, desk editor; former Oerman Islands ln the Louise Brant and Esther L'Ecluse, South Pacific ocean. i co-sport editors; Elaine Holbrook. Seihin Ikeda. Harvard-educated j feature editor, and Ruth Winner. minister of finance, warned the Japanese people that new sacrifices would have to be made to complete the conquest of China and reconstruct that country. The minister was confident that Japan could finance these vast projects alone. SEEKS COLONIES The official spokesman of the foreign office said no portion of women's page editor. In and soroitv houses bv Har- armwl with Community Chest tag! quet. His topic will'be "The Euro- been forccd to resign from his position as Student chairman As)r should b, "westernized I ' J n.ill hocrin tlioir “Too A Tmion'M_______________ A______• tk. if 11 „ ilnn Hiii-lno Hnnur.nmini> moot nlplr . ______________... partnon. ticket chairman. They also been placed on sale at iBtudent Union book store at a : of $1 John Hill ictures Today i Palestine will begin their “Tag A Trojan campaign today. Under the leadership of Sally Klrb.v of Pi Beta Phi. the women, selected for beauty and personality, will attempt to extend the tag sales to everey Trojan student. Fraternities and sororities already have pledged 100 per cent support. Included in the sales crew are: Charlene Acker and Roberta Grant pean Crisis and American Neutra- of the interfratemity sing during Homecoming week. Dick ll ty.” During a luncheon on thc Keefe announced yesterday. * — ame day. Dr. John Eugene Har- To succecd Bake .. wh0 wa.s rush John G Hill, professor of ril literature, will relate his ences in Palestine last spring i on sabbatical leave, at the bi-weekly afternoon meeting Jie Drama Workshop at 3:30 p. day ln Touchstone theater. I is expected that Dr. Hill will ley, professor of political science, will speak on "The Place of Geneva in the World Picture." A continuation of the round table : yesterday appointed discussions will take place Satur- Kappa Alpha, day morning, culminating in a bu- 1 siness meeting in Bowne hall, where progress reports will be mrde, a Delta Gamma; Louise Hammond, ! new conference location will be se- _______________ _____^.............. non-org; Betty Hollister and Betty lccted. and new officers will be el- j execuyve capacity while con-Lou Stone, Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy ectcd. I vafMc.jng Hepp and Carol Warren. Delta Del---- ta Delta; Jackie Comerford and Baxter Presides ed to the hospital Monday night, Keefe, student chairman of the entire 15tli annual Horreroming week Nell Reilly. Keefe reported lhat Baker is doing wel! and wlll be able to see friends- today, but that it would b" impossible for him to continue in At Movie Forum Producer Waltor Wanger It Chairman of Series Dr. Frank Baxter, professor of which will be sponsored by the -_ _ _ ■ J\A/' r I Cinema Appreciation league of USC lO be UeVelOpeO W inS rreeOOm tomorrow night at 7:30 in 159 Sci- j Story workshops similar to those By i ntud Prt Dorothy Rosenberger, Alpha Chi Omega; Jean Carr and Betty Brigham, Gamma Phi Beta; and Rose Mnrie Watkins, Kappa Alpha Theta. ---------------- Jack Levinson, Trojan Squire of slides illustrating the differ- Phi Sigma Kappa fratemity. and Blaces of which he will speak. Tom Lipman. Trojan Squire of Zeta Juse lie was ln Palestine when ( Beta Tau. are aiding Ed Davis in fighting took place between the campaign. English wlll preside ai the first rl rabs and Jews, he promises to*1 Quota for the drive hits been set cmrmHlo.M1,phy f0rum of the year, ill IInformation on the situation. ' *""" ■-----1— jmMtlng will be open to all inpersons. ima Workshop is now search-por original one-act plays for mental production, Aileen pig, president, announces. Any j ■nt interested ln writing Ls in- j 1 to submit work to the Work- ! ' for a reading rehearsal. If % is deemed worthy, it will jiwented. i°ne-act play by Susan Glas- ' 'nd George Cram Cook, "Sup-Desires,” is now in rehearsed will be presented at an eventing later this month. j The student chairman said that J plans of the other commiitees. as j well as the one previously presided over by Baker, are rapidly tak'ng shape and should be ready for pub-j llcation some time next week, as ; Friday's luncheon meeting for all chairmen should enable the lead- ers to coordinate their activities into a working program. Announcement of the week’s events wlll probably be made at the conclusion of thc slogan contest, now in progress, which will close Wednesday, November 9, Entries in the contest should be inserted in the "Letters to thc Editor" box ln the foyer of the Student Union, Keefe said. He also reminded students that two 50-yard line tickets for the Notre Dame game would be awarded to the writer of the best slogan. Short, snappy, original phrases which may be Incorporated in the theme for Homecoming are preferred, Keefe said. at *800. The campaign will continue until next Tuesday. Niese Will Speak on Pan-American Countries Henry C. Niese. Argentine consul, m Plots German Pair ence. “The Role of the Cinema In Dramatic Arts" is the topic of the initial forum, which Is part of a series of 12 to be presented during the year on the general theme anl lecturer on international rela- ••understanding Cinema Language tions at USC, wil! be the speaker at the graduate student luncheon Tuesday in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall. Material for his topic, “Eighteen Pan-American Countries from the Air." was compiled during Walter Wanger. film producer, is chairman of the series. In explaining the purpose of the forums, he stated, “Understanding of cinema language is Important to vitalize and modernize educational meth n KleinSmid mpletes Tour trip which he made through the ods by helpjng teachers use the countries last spring. vast store of Information that can Because his position as Argen- be found in the best pictures.” tine consul forbids discussion of The Cinema Appreciation league political problems. Niese will speak ^ a part of the American Institute upon the industrial, economic, agrl- 0{ cinematography, a USC organ- cultural. and cultural aspects, of Latin-America. Graduates and graduate faculty are Invited. Thc price of the tlc-■ sale at the Administra - ization that also includes the World's Affairs Institute. Season tickets are available ln the cinematography office, 120 Old College, for $2 Students mav obtain them for half price Single admission for everyone is 50 cents. inning alter a two weeks tour J? ,i‘UAI nr- Rufus B. von *id. president of the univer-•rrived in Los Angeles yester- j kets, which are 1 Graduate office, 160 ron KleinSmid took part In Hon, is 45 cenu. I “'augural ceremonies of two 1 « law _ Architecture College Saved m?!.'. ' ! ! j c Leebrick a.s I, Kent State university. ■ I DreMri*,,, president also spoke at an ILtch" c*‘remon>’ when Charles IE?* be |
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