Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 87, February 28, 1939 |
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United Press Assn.
Direct Wire Service
NAS Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
Editorial Offices
Rl-4111 Sta. 227
N.ght-.PR. 4776
VOLUME XXX
Original )ramas Slated
Workshop To Present •After Eight Years/ •Man Without Letters'
OMilnC and completing several work. ' Man Without Let-?ind "After Eight Years.” or-L; one-act plays, will be pre-utd by members of the Drama [tehop tonight at 7:30 oclock at , open meeting of the workshop Touchstone theater.
Uritten, directed, and acted by t students, this evening's pro-ia will offer the first two in a m of si* experimental plays to poduced by the workshop.
mtfr is hero
•Man Without Letters” by Ken-j. A(jam is concerned with a Id? student who quit college bis senior years to devote his ie writing for a journalistic con-Mid the troubles which arise to his mother, who still believes to be In school, arrives to see i graduated.
Tryouts for ' Blow Bugle Blow,” k of the two plays to be pre--iiifd on March 14 by the worktop. wiil be conducted tomor-n ilternoon at 3 o'clock ln ■hsloni theater.
i Davis, graduate drama stu-u is director. He is remember-for his work as assistant director "One Sunday Afternoon" and for i portrayal of Sumpter Summers ta semester's production of "Por ipter Summers."
1ST LISTED
lhe cast of “Man Without Let-includes Richard, John King; Grover Stewert; Timmy, Jtnev Alexander; Allie, Mary it)'French; Mrs. Fellon, Natalie uni.
Humorous in form, the scene for Eight Years.” by Garland Hs laid in a small town and about the hunting and fln-capture of an attractive female i-pocket by the town sheriff, a 4 but blundering character.
KflOR WINS PRIZE It* drama is under the direction Helen Barsumian, formerly of 14- She has received several Ws (or achievements in drama* i Among these was a first prize ml for a skit written and pro-si while she was enrolled in *ngeles City college.
its cast in this play are Wf Bill Smale; Nora, Helen K Nancy, Paula Jean; Fred, Benson.
**e effects are being handled Henry Kahler. stage manager, ‘Boyer, and Bud Lyons.
™bers of the Drama workshop "ttw committee who head to-> performance are Harry Ed-i tv Productions manager; '“vis, Aileen Dallwig, Eliza-■ Danforth, Veronica Vlllnave.
Annual Issues Deadline for Final Payment
Pinal installments are due this week on El Rodeo panels.
All organizations, social, professional, and honorary, are reminded by the Comptroller's office that the second and final ] payment ls now due at that office.
Social sororities are billed for $22.50, while the total amount j owed by other groups is $12.50.
“'Unless the organizations that | have not turned ln their member-J ship lists do so Immediately, the | publication office cannot guar-; antee the correctness of their panels." warned John Morley. supervisor of publications.
These organization* are: Alpha Delta Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi. Beta Oamma Sigma, Delta Phl, Epsilon. Delta Psl Kappa, Delta Kappa Alpha, Kappa Zeta. i Lambda Kappa Sigma, Pi i Sigma Alpha, Pi Kappa J Sigma. Phi Delta Chi. Sigma Al-\ pha Iota, Sigma Sigma, * Zeta Phl Eta, and YMCA.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1939
NUMBER 86
S.C. Boxers, Wrestlers, Coaches To Entertain At Tonight s Frosh Stag
Campus athletic brain and brawn swing Into action tonight at the freshman stag, scheduled for 7:15 o’clock In the men's gym. Although billed as a “freshman” stag, sophomores and upper classmen are invited to attend.
A.s a special attraction a talented Mexican actress will perform as mistress of ceremonies *- -
Members of Alpha Phi Omega.
Recital Scheduled For Tonight
Honorary Music Club To Present Sludenls
Philosophy MakeL,p Exam
_ Applications
Forum Will Open
Oriental vs. Western Education Theories Is Topic ol Lecture
aphony Orchestra 9Broadcast Tonight
' by the southern Cal-■ui T°11?ge Symphony orches-be brcwdi., t by the Mut-
ho 1o'!.netWork tonil*ht f*om „ «-i5 pjn. over station
Market Chief Talk Planned
College of Commerce Students Will Hear Dr. Wilford L. While
Dr. Wilford L. White, chief of the marketing research division of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, will speak informally on "The Present Status of Interna tional Trade” at the commerce assembly Thursday at 11:15 a.m. in Touchstone theater, Old College.
The College of Commerce faculty will meet for luncheon in honor of Dr. White ln the faculty council room at 12:30 o'clock. All commerce classes will be dismissed for the morning assembly.
The speaker is a member of the American Marketing association and was president in 1934 and director in 1935. He belongs to the National Distribution council, the American Statistical association, the American Economic association, and the American Association of University Professors.
As director of the marketing research division of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. Dr. White has supervised the compilation of numerous widely-read reports on trade and allied subjects.
today's
^rgan Program
^ Mid m!U"‘ W<<“ielisohn
r«22LUmmw s Dream" j«VMd when Mendelssohn 1 during When he wa , lulling dally Moschelta, and Wr,“'" - the society *br«l7 “s spohr. Hummel, lu*Lr', 1 Meytrbeer. •mini men ln ,lle world
fc-ViT ,!.....“ w“* to
,M U* Work a''d lhe Pr8C' Nriatn. * ' “•'*•»> b> his % g, ****** in Birlin *4d w Pl4fisl°n and
% Organ k ' the
Mx 80,18188
1 Suit
* Courts nf I SlOkghtOH
I G.Z 1 Ja"“>hyd ^ c*HIen of iram
L foceiv^^n'1 Uf Worcester,
[
r « 1 "' -M'*te but , ®*Wre<i bv“‘!fMUons hav'e L*°*her» i, * litera-
too,‘‘‘‘s 111 eIodic plc-
Rni, 111011 m
OB
* ^r Khayain.
Music Hour Alters Policy
Works from both the Romantic and Modern schools of composition will be featured in Wednesday's Listening Hour program, scheduled for 2:30 p.m. in Bovard auditorium.
Written ln the early nineteenth century, the opening number on the program will be Cherubini's overture, “Anacreon.”
The second selection for the afternoon will be the Schumann Symphony No. 4 in D Minor. This work, written by one of the best-known composers for the piano, is considered to be one of the greatest symphonic masterpieces of the German Romantic period in music.
Taking its background as well as its title from Alfred Noyes’ poem, “A Victory Ball,” the concluding composition on the program wlll be an American orchestra fantasy written by Ernest Schelling.
Doheny Library Given Fine Arts Design Award
“For recognition of merit in design and execution of work in architecture and fine arts."
This was the basis for the award made by the southern California chapter of the American Institute of Architects, and presented last week to Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid for the Doheny Memorial library.
The award, bearing the seal of j the local chapter, ls on display ! ln the main entrance hall of the library, opposite the card catalogue room.
Also included In the display are several photo studies of the library j taken both when the building was being constructed and after its completion.
CALIFORNIAN WINS QUIZ
NEW YORK, Feb. JI—O)—Mr*. Elizabeth C. Benincasa, ‘281 Gough St.) San Francisco, Calif, won the $50,000 first prize in the $250 000 national movie quiz contest sponsored by tht entire film industry,
It wh announced tonight.
sponsors of the stag, Trojan band members, and Don Bartelli will meet In the loung of Student Union at chapel hour today.
Coaches Dean Cromwell and Eddie Leahy, varsity and frosh track mentors, will be interviewed by Herb Klein. Daily Trojan sports editor. ai will other members of this year's squad.
Jack Hunter, announcer for the "Man on the Street” program, a local radio station feature, will apply his question-answer specialty.
Four boxing and two wrestling bouts wlll present students of Coach Andy Anderson's physical education classes, Don Douglas, a protege of Coach Charles Graves, will represent Troy's gym team. His stunts will include hand balancing, tumbling, and free exercise events.
| A discussion of the development j ol the Oriental and Western theory j of education will open Dr. Ralph Tyier Flewelling's lecture on "The | Goal of Education," which he will read at 4:15 t'clock this afternoon ' at the philosophy forum lecturc | series in Bowne hall.
“Both the eastern and western developments of the nature-educa-| tion are to be understood less from the nature principles they profess-| ed, than from the systems to In Voice, Piano Program which they were opposed.” says Dr.
Fleweiling, director of the School Offering a varied program of of Philosophy.
songs and piano selections, the Honorary Music club will present a re-
CONFUCIANS STUDIED
"Under the Confuclan system.
Due March 2
All students desiring to take special examinations to complete courses in which they received a mark of "Ie" during the second semester of 1937-38 or the first semester of 1939-1939, should apply at the Office of the Registrar for the necessary authorization and mBke payment at the Comptroller's office on or before Thursday. Marrh 2.
Students who fall to apply and make payment on or before March 2 wlll have no further opportunity for taking examinations of the second semester of 1937-1938. There will be no further opportunity for taking examinations of the first semester of 1938-1939 until the regular period of special examinations ln the first semester of 1939-1940.
The schedule of special examinations to be held this semester will be prepared as soon as possible after the applications are received. Special examinations
Assembly
Abolition
Hit
Disapproves
cital by the advanced students of j was considered the better scholar, | f_°r th.ls semester will begin on the School of Music, tonight In the Bowne hall at 8 o'clock.
Marjory Lethin, Allen Hastings,
Headlining interpretive dancing and Mary Lou Perry wil be vocal
will be members of Miss Mary Jane Hungerford's classes.
Arthur Harvey and Hal Fisher will engage in fencing matches. The schedule includes two four-minute bouts of foil and quarter-staff combat.
Decorations for the affair are in charge of Xlmeno Tejada.
Two Trojans Begin Cycle Tour Tonight
soloists, while Terry Hirashiki and Josephine Madrid will interpret piano compositions. Dorothy Dodson and Terry Hirashiki will accompany Marjory Lethin and Mary Lou Perry.
The program follows;
Voice—
Un Bel di Vedremo—One Fine Day i Madame Butterfly) .....
................................................... Puccini
O Golden Sun Grace Adele Freeby Marjory Lethin
Voice—
Allerseelen ...........Richard Strauss
Tommy Lad ................Allitsen
Allen Hastings
Pi on a—
Magic Fire Music ..(from "Die
Walkuere”) .............. Wagner
The Lark .............Balakirew
Will o’ the Wisp ...Philipp Terry Hirashiki
Voice—
For Music_______________________________Franz
Mango Moon..........................Dungan
Sleigh . Kountz
Mary Lou Perry
Piano—
Mephisto Waltz ...................Liszt
Josephine Madrid
who could repeat the classics verbatim, and whose actions held to the Confuclan Idea of the 'Princely Man',” said Dr. Fleweiling, concerning his topic.
"The Taolst, rival of the Confuc-ian system, on the contrary, revolted against all formal learning. This teaching made the worship of nature a religion loaded with mysticism, in which Uie main element was the quietistlc recipiency of the learner who allowed the voices of nature to speak in and through him,” he continued.
IDEOLOGIES DISCUSSED
Dr. Fleweiling pointed out thc fact that in the western world Scholasticism, and not Confucianism was the point of attack
Saturday, March 11.
Theron Clark, Registrar.
Texans Plan Round-up
Sludent Union To Serve As 'Chuck Wagon' for Lone Star Slaters
With “see how little you can spend’ ’ as their theme, two Trojan students, Carl and Charles Krugmeier, leave tonight for a six-month comprehensive tour of central Europe.
Planning to spend only $500 for the entire trip, they will reduce transportation costs by purchasing bicycles on their arrival in Holland.
Leaving tonight for New York by bus, the trio will board a Hol-land-American steamer for Rotterdam where they will meet Richard Koontz, and will then begin first lap of the trip on cycles. .
With a self-imposed maximum al- Begins Today
lowance of $1.25 per day the four
students will confine themselves en- j Judgment of 221 manuscripts, a tirely to youth hostels for food and I record number submitted to the lodging. The Krugmeters. in an at- 15th annual Apolliad, creativ« arts tempt to further the youth hostel movement in America, plan to make
First round-up of the newly formed Texas club will take place ln the chuck wagon of the Student Union tomorrow when all hands who were born in the Lone Star After paving the way with his ! state will attend a luncheon meet-dlscussion of educational theory, j in8*
Director Fleweiling will illustrate In order to promote friendship twt ideologies of education—those ; among the 60 Texans who are en-which run together, and those rolled at S.C., Warren Hewitt, Coi-
tion, ln terms of philosophy.
Following the forum lecture and the philosophy dinner, Rr. Dr. Hart-shome, noted author and professor of philosophy at Chicago university, will address the dinner group and other guests on "The Theolog-mij . ... - . * . | ical Analogies," at 7:15 p.m. In
the Apolliad Judging Argonauts hall.
which are opposed to each other. EDUCATION GOAL EXPLAINED
He will close the lecture, his third and last under the sub-title, "Leav-
lege of Commerce senior, originated the club this semester,
“Our student club will act as official Southern California host to
By Cleve Hermann
If the SC, student body has anything to say about it, the assembly hour ls here to stay.
That was apparent yesterday when, with comments ranging from:
"Heavens, no. don’t do away with lt! When would I have
--*n coke?” to:
| “It ls the only time that one can be certain of gathering together a full working group for any purpose," Trojans, from the common herd to student leaders, voiced their unqualified disapproval of the Dally Trojan's front-page editorial advocating abolition of the dally assembly hour.
Bud Colegrove, Wampus editor, made the latter statement in support of the 35-mlnute recess, and : Jane Richmond, Alpha Gamma Del-I ta, contributed thc first quotation, acting as spokesman for the group described by Editor Ben Cook a« “coke-blbbers."
CALLED "FINE TRADITION”
Trojan number one, Henry Flynn, was vehement in his opposition to any plan that would change the present order. "Assembly hour is a fine S.C. tradition," the ASSC president said, "and should be preserved. It gives students an opportunity to make friendly contacts that would be Impossible otherwise."
In agreement with Flynn was Betty Jane Bartholomew, vice-president of the ASSC. “Chapel period should not be cut out,” the first lady of Troy contended. “It serves to cut the moming ln two, and to make a break between classes.”
COLLEGE LIFE HELPED “However,” she continued, “this is not as Important as the college spirit lt brings. It ls tradition. It Senior athletic managers will be helps college life which so often a
, . , ,.....................college located ln a metropolis lacks.
elected tomorrow at a meeting or , ... . ,,
: There ls where Its Importance Ues the S.C. athletic council, according _brlnglng the whole university ln a to J. Kenyon McDonald, senior friendly circle."
Managers To Be Elected Tomorrow
es from an Oriental Notebook, by j aI| athletic teams and visitors from explaining the goal of real educa- j anv cf ule Texas universities," stated Hewitt. “John Boles and Ginger Rogers, both native Texans, are being contacted to act as official sponsors and hosts for the organization.”
Officers of the Texas club are Warren Hewitt of Houston, president; Helen Lee Hecht, of Ray-
comprehensive study of the well developed hostel systems now in operation in central Europe and to report on them upon their return to America.
One hundred dollars worth of camera equipment, two foreign dictionaries, and a change of clothes wUl comprise the only luggage to accompany the cycling travelers.
NYA Appointees To Register Citizenship Data
All NYA students who have received acceptance forms will meet at 12:30 p.m. today in 206 Administration building.
Citizenship affidavits will be supplied to students reporting at this time. Formal declarations of cltl-praisal, which is conducted to plan ! zenship are required from all stu-for presentation of two-and-one-half-hour show ln Touchstone theater May 6 The list of entries Includes 15 10
j mondville, vice-president; and Lola j | Sales of Victoria, secretary-treasurer.
j Tickets for the luncheon are 50 J cents per plate, and no reserva- I tions are necessary.
Supporting the argument of her fellow ASSC officers, Nancy Holme, student body secretary, expressed i the belief that although assembly [ hour doesn’t have any great “academic significance,” lt ls still of value because of the opportunities j It offers for development of other sides of university life.
ABOLITION LABELED “FOOLISH” Knight President Al Corley reiterated the Idea of a metropolitan institution’s need for a time such as the 10 o'clock period and said ■ that lt would be "one of the most foolish things ever done," lf lt were abolished.
competition, begins today by the faculty committee as the initial step toward the completion of the Apolliad program.
Chairman Tacie Hanna Rew states that several weeks wlll be required for the preliminary ap-
Alpha Eta Rho To Hear Pilot
football manager.
Managerial candidates for football, basketball, track, tennis, and baseball will be selected from juniors Charles Vogeley, Kappa Alpha;
Marsh Green, Phl Psl; Al Butter-worth, Slgma Nu; John Cody, Delta Chl, and Bill Busby.
The athletic committee is composed of Don McNeil, football captain; Gail Goodrich, basketball captain; Eddie Stevenson, rugby captain; Dick Elliott, basketball manager; Herb Grainger, swimming team manager; Henry Flynn, ASSC president; Leo Adams, assistant graduate manager and assistant j Students do not linger around big athletic director; Willis O. Hunter, rlty universities as they do around athletic director; Arnold Eddy, AS those ln small towns and country SC general manager; and McDon- locations, Corley believes, and thia
aid.
The meeting will be held ln the office of the student body president at 2:30 p.m.
MILK CONTROL UPHELD
SALEM. Ore.. Feb. 27—(U.PI—Oregon's milk control law withstood | one-act plays, 15 short-stories,
Its major legislative test today essayi 169 and 12 muBlcai
when the senate of the state legls- .------
lature rejected a repeal measure, ! compositions. Entries in the danc- ally ^ dropped from the NYA list to which was attached a referen- *nR and fine arts division have not Affidavits must be handed ln by dum provision. | been compiled to date. 11 p m., March 3.
dents before NYA help can be given. A notary public will be present to witness the pledges.
Applicants who do not turn ln their pledges promptly cannot be placed on the pay roll. Students who do not hand in the signed and sworn affidavits will automatic-
Chemists Invited
On Oil Research
Europe-Bound Cyclists
Jay Buxton, one of Hmerica’s noted glider pilots and holder of numerous records for altitude, distance, and sustained flights, will address
members and guests of Alpha Eta T IJ C 4-
Rho, aviation fratemity, at a lunch- j lo near expert eon meeting ln Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall today at 12:15 p.m.
Mr. Buxton, who serves as local observer for the Los Angeles division of the NAA, established an American altitude record of 5780 feet and set an official record of 7‘n hours sustained flight at Elmira, N.Y., ln 1936.
Alpha Ela Rho will present Buxton with membership during the J oinner wlll be served at Cal tech meeting, which wlll be In Elisabeth „( g jq pm wmj reservations pric-von KleinSmid social hall, at 12:15 ,.u at 55 cents. Refreshments will be
hour gives them a time for gaining J college atmosphere in the midst of class sessions.
j “I have always looked forward to chapel hour,” Corley said. “It la a tradition that should not be destroyed.”
OTHER OPINIONS VOICED
From other sources, the following opinions came:
| Jack Slattery, LAS president: "We j need a period of relaxation, at least j we have become accustomed to It.”
' Donna Bray, the freshman who broke tradition to run for the presidency of her class: "Assembly hour ls valuable because lt can be used
The Chemistry club of California Institute of Technology will play hosts to S.C. chemists and chemical
engineers Thursday, March 2, when | three definite ways they meet to hear Earl Gard. authority on research chemistry ln tlL
pm. today.
Art Professors Submit Entries To World s Fair
served following the talk.
Full particulars regarding the meeting, to be held with a view to promoting friendship between chemistry groups of the two schools, may be obtained at the | chemistry department or from Dr. Robert E. Vivian, associate professor of chemical engineering.
I Out of 27 professional entries |___
from southern California ln the art j
section of the New York Worlds Qr Rosen Will Speak
fair, five of them were submitted 1 j by artists from S.C.'s College of Architecture and Fine Arts, Dean Arthur C. Weatherhead announced
I yesterday.
j Prof. Merrell Gage’s work 1s represented in sculpture. Professors Daniel Lutz and James Prender-gast, will exhibit paintings, and Prof. Glen Lukens wlll show work in ceramics.
Margaret Tomkins, graduate student in paintings, will display pictures done in that medium.
“(1) A student who has awakened late and hurried to an eight o’clock can eat his breakfast at 10. (2) It breaks up the morning and relaxes one. (3) It serves as a period to take care of business that could not be handled at any other time.” •TIRED FEELING” RELIEVED Barbara Morton, Delta Gamma and member of the Mortar Board,
I “It relieves that tired feeling. Four hours of straight note-taking would be too much.”
Jimmy Talcott, Wampus assistant editor, "Assembly schedules are not arranged as easily as the editorial | indicates. The change would give rise to no end of difficulties."
On Fascist Moral Issues Campus
"Moral Issues Involved ln the | « . ..
Fascist Regime" will be the subject | \ytgan IZ 3TI On S of a speech to be given by Dr j Today
Frank A Rosen, Instructor In Poll- i Servll,< _ „ 50 , M.,
Union soclal hall.
tlcal Science at the monthly lunch- I
Btudent
Ch«rl#i and Carl Kruqmaiar
MRS. ROOSEVELT QUITS DAK
WASHINGTON, Feb. 27—«UP*— Mrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt has resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution ln protest against the organization's refusal to permit Marian Anderson, Negro contralto, to present a concert at Constitution Hall, lt was indicat-. ed tonight.
eon-meeting of the Jewish councll ' at 12:15 today ln the Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall.
NEGRIN GOVERNMENT FALLS
PARIS. Feb. 27—d'-R)—Arrange- ! ments to evacuate thousands ol Spanish Loyalists from the Mad-lid-Valencia zone and save them from almost certain death were rushed tonight as the government of Premier Juan Negrin—repudiated by Europe s powers—crumbled rapidly.
Sophomore Junior 12:15 p.m., Student Union social hall.
Choral and Drama — 3:30 p.m.,
Student Union social hall.
Delta Psi Kappa — 12 15 p.m. WAA room.
Student senate — 1 pm., senata chamber. Student Union.
Junior Council — 7:30 p.m.. Phi Sigina Kappa fraternity.
Tomorrow WAA cabinet — t il p.m. senate chamber. Sludent Union. International Helatlous club — 10
am. 300 Administration.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 30, No. 87, February 28, 1939 |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | United Press Assn. Direct Wire Service NAS Z-42 SOUTHERN DAILY CALIFORNIA Editorial Offices Rl-4111 Sta. 227 N.ght-.PR. 4776 VOLUME XXX Original )ramas Slated Workshop To Present •After Eight Years/ •Man Without Letters' OMilnC and completing several work. ' Man Without Let-?ind "After Eight Years.” or-L; one-act plays, will be pre-utd by members of the Drama [tehop tonight at 7:30 oclock at , open meeting of the workshop Touchstone theater. Uritten, directed, and acted by t students, this evening's pro-ia will offer the first two in a m of si* experimental plays to poduced by the workshop. mtfr is hero •Man Without Letters” by Ken-j. A(jam is concerned with a Id? student who quit college bis senior years to devote his ie writing for a journalistic con-Mid the troubles which arise to his mother, who still believes to be In school, arrives to see i graduated. Tryouts for ' Blow Bugle Blow,” k of the two plays to be pre--iiifd on March 14 by the worktop. wiil be conducted tomor-n ilternoon at 3 o'clock ln ■hsloni theater. i Davis, graduate drama stu-u is director. He is remember-for his work as assistant director "One Sunday Afternoon" and for i portrayal of Sumpter Summers ta semester's production of "Por ipter Summers." 1ST LISTED lhe cast of “Man Without Let-includes Richard, John King; Grover Stewert; Timmy, Jtnev Alexander; Allie, Mary it)'French; Mrs. Fellon, Natalie uni. Humorous in form, the scene for Eight Years.” by Garland Hs laid in a small town and about the hunting and fln-capture of an attractive female i-pocket by the town sheriff, a 4 but blundering character. KflOR WINS PRIZE It* drama is under the direction Helen Barsumian, formerly of 14- She has received several Ws (or achievements in drama* i Among these was a first prize ml for a skit written and pro-si while she was enrolled in *ngeles City college. its cast in this play are Wf Bill Smale; Nora, Helen K Nancy, Paula Jean; Fred, Benson. **e effects are being handled Henry Kahler. stage manager, ‘Boyer, and Bud Lyons. ™bers of the Drama workshop "ttw committee who head to-> performance are Harry Ed-i tv Productions manager; '“vis, Aileen Dallwig, Eliza-■ Danforth, Veronica Vlllnave. Annual Issues Deadline for Final Payment Pinal installments are due this week on El Rodeo panels. All organizations, social, professional, and honorary, are reminded by the Comptroller's office that the second and final ] payment ls now due at that office. Social sororities are billed for $22.50, while the total amount j owed by other groups is $12.50. “'Unless the organizations that have not turned ln their member-J ship lists do so Immediately, the publication office cannot guar-; antee the correctness of their panels." warned John Morley. supervisor of publications. These organization* are: Alpha Delta Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi. Beta Oamma Sigma, Delta Phl, Epsilon. Delta Psl Kappa, Delta Kappa Alpha, Kappa Zeta. i Lambda Kappa Sigma, Pi i Sigma Alpha, Pi Kappa J Sigma. Phi Delta Chi. Sigma Al-\ pha Iota, Sigma Sigma, * Zeta Phl Eta, and YMCA. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1939 NUMBER 86 S.C. Boxers, Wrestlers, Coaches To Entertain At Tonight s Frosh Stag Campus athletic brain and brawn swing Into action tonight at the freshman stag, scheduled for 7:15 o’clock In the men's gym. Although billed as a “freshman” stag, sophomores and upper classmen are invited to attend. A.s a special attraction a talented Mexican actress will perform as mistress of ceremonies *- - Members of Alpha Phi Omega. Recital Scheduled For Tonight Honorary Music Club To Present Sludenls Philosophy MakeL,p Exam _ Applications Forum Will Open Oriental vs. Western Education Theories Is Topic ol Lecture aphony Orchestra 9Broadcast Tonight ' by the southern Cal-■ui T°11?ge Symphony orches-be brcwdi., t by the Mut- ho 1o'!.netWork tonil*ht f*om „ «-i5 pjn. over station Market Chief Talk Planned College of Commerce Students Will Hear Dr. Wilford L. While Dr. Wilford L. White, chief of the marketing research division of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, will speak informally on "The Present Status of Interna tional Trade” at the commerce assembly Thursday at 11:15 a.m. in Touchstone theater, Old College. The College of Commerce faculty will meet for luncheon in honor of Dr. White ln the faculty council room at 12:30 o'clock. All commerce classes will be dismissed for the morning assembly. The speaker is a member of the American Marketing association and was president in 1934 and director in 1935. He belongs to the National Distribution council, the American Statistical association, the American Economic association, and the American Association of University Professors. As director of the marketing research division of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. Dr. White has supervised the compilation of numerous widely-read reports on trade and allied subjects. today's ^rgan Program ^ Mid m!U"‘ W<<“ielisohn r«22LUmmw s Dream" j«VMd when Mendelssohn 1 during When he wa , lulling dally Moschelta, and Wr,“'" - the society *br«l7 “s spohr. Hummel, lu*Lr', 1 Meytrbeer. •mini men ln ,lle world fc-ViT ,!.....“ w“* to ,M U* Work a''d lhe Pr8C' Nriatn. * ' “•'*•»> b> his % g, ****** in Birlin *4d w Pl4fisl°n and % Organ k ' the Mx 80,18188 1 Suit * Courts nf I SlOkghtOH I G.Z 1 Ja"“>hyd ^ c*HIen of iram L foceiv^^n'1 Uf Worcester, [ r « 1 "' -M'*te but , ®*Wre |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1939-02-28~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1206/uschist-dt-1939-02-28~001.tif |
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