6
BOOST THE BOBCATS IN GAME WITH UTAH AGGIES JAN. 26-27 OLUME XXV . &ontana BOZEMAN, MONTANA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1934 FANG PLEDGE DANCE WILL BE HELD FEB. 2nd-BAXTER HOTEL NIDIBER 15 . Young Attends BOBCATS WILL TANGLE l t~'::~/i:1Lowe's Report Features M::!/f/:!~:! WITH STRONG UTAH AGS~~:': .:. ~~ .. ~~. ~~All-Student Assemlby CATS IMPROVED ;~ 1 ~f:~1~£lffiirtt~:r~~i~::r1 DENLER-WESTLAKE 1ont.ana B O tan y Authority Speaks at Several Eastern Points Dr. Paul A. Young, assistant in the he botany and bacteriology . depart- ent of the experiment station, re- urned January 14 from a trip to Bos- n and points south ~v~ere be lect- red extensively and V1s1ted research aboratories enroute. In Boston Dr. oung attended .th~ meetings of the merican Association for the Ad- ancement of Science. During sessions of the associ~tion onvention he spoke on three subJects, the destruction of winter wheat . by light in Gallatin county, the freez.mg phenomena of creosope emuls_ions o! troleum oils and on the 011 mas:s heory of petroleum oil penetrati~n · to protoplasm. On the return trip rom Boston Dr. Young spoke on these e subjects at the agricultural ex- riment stations of Dela ware, Mary- land, Wi:;<:onsin and Minnesota. He discussel important research problems vith botanists at the University of Chica.go, Harvard university, Yale uni- ersity, Rockefeller Institute for Jlfedlcal Research, Boyce Thompson ln- titute for Plant Research, C.Onnect1- cut agri cultural experiment station, New Jersey experiment station an_d the United States Department agri- culture at Washington, D. C. Abstracts of one of Dr. Young's papers, which he presented at .the co!1- vention in Boston were published m several impartant newspapers of which the Washington Star is the most prominent. Young's paper, enti~led, ''The Significance of Frozen Emulsions of Oil," is a yivid illustration of why the freezing of life cells is harmful to their continued performance of the life processes. The first part of the paper, which explains how freezing acts upon petroleum oil is followed by the explanation of how it affects hu- man flesh. The final paragraph reads as follows: "Now, how about those frozen fingers? When they become to cold, needles of ice formed in the flesh and punctured many of the cells and nerves. No wonder the fingers hurt. freezing continued, the ruthless ice took water from the protoplasm of the cells, and left behind solutions of salts and acids injuriously concentrated. When freez.ing progresses until ice needles pierce too many cells, and ~e remaining solutions become too toxic, then the fingers die. But if they thaw before they die, the cells of the fingers are sore because they were punctured by ice needles and poisoned by con- centrated solutions." M S C'S NEOPHYTE POLITICIANS LAY CAMPAlfiN PLANS Young Democrats Plan to Open Series Of Discussions On N. R. A. Plans were completed last week for the organization of the Young Dem- ocratic club which was recently pro- posed to the student s of Montana State college. The executive committee met and outlined a program for the !irst meet- ing, which will be held Feubrary 4. At this meeting there will be a compre- hensive discussion of the "Personal- ities of the New Deal." The first part of the meeting will be devoted to a formal discussion which will be fol- lowed by a round table discu~sion. Negotiations were also started by the executive committee to secure the neces sary information relative to the affiliation of the club with the na- tional organizltion. Election of officers for the club will be held at the first regular meeting. SIN rE LAST SEEN of the many people hired here under pad d I e W re a k 8 IJ J!~~a~ta~~~·:iNi:~!~t::~ soNr. KINr.s TAKE the payrolls the followinir week. U U AsA Student Sees It ON HOME rouRT None of the workers have been laid p . h t T 1J ~:~ke~u~o t'~ur~h~s!eekh~av~rb;~~u:~l Un l S men I O SCHOOL'S FANCY to 24 hours. while stenogr t.phers and A new but unexpected tone was added to news concerning the Civil \\'orks Administration when graft in e, ~e ry phase of its local operation in an F~tern city, was revealed yester 4 day. Several unscrupulous admin- istrators were found to be exhorting a fee of up to 50 cents a day from the workers under their supervision. Summary dismissal from his jo!> was the employees· punishment non-pay- Games Will Be Played Friday and Satu rday at College Gym. Many Men Will See Action technical assistants n ow work 30 hours I B k instead of 40. R The college CWA payroll figures for u e re a er s the week ending January 11, show that At the first all student assem- bly of the year yesterday morn- ing Bud Lowe, President of the Associated Students, gave a de- tailed report upon the activities of the National Student Feder- ation Convention at which he represented Montana State Col- lege in Washington D. C. during the last Christmas vacation. Lowe's report to the student body was concise in every detail. It was a demonstration of the inspiration which one interested observer at a stimulating stud- ent convention can bring back to an entire student body. $190 was paid to teamsters and labor- Montana State plays its fifth and sixth Rocky Mountain conference games here Friday and Saturday night when they tangle with the Utah Ags from Logan, Utah. The Ags will bring one of the finest teams that they have displayed on the local court in many a ~eason. ers who are working on improvements of the campus, while approximately $3,750 was paid during the same time to technical assistants, painters, extra janitors and other indoor laborers. Inter-Frat Hop Pleases Large Crowd in More Ways Than One ment. An astounding scandal from another pert of the world stirred the French Capitol. Paris, yesterday, when it was found that officials in powerful banks there had embezzled banking funds for private gambling operations. The Utah aggregation is just fresh fro~ a win over the strong Utah U. quintet, having defeated them in a conference game last Saturday night. However, this is the only victory that they have annexed this season in con- ference play. They have lost two games to Brigham Young U., and won and lost one to Utah U. The Bobcats have not such a formidable record, since they have lost four conference 1<ames, two to both Utah U. and Brigham Young. REMINISCENCE Among those not present at this so-called, all-student as.- sembly were : Vice-president George Parke, Commissioner of Finance Robert Emmett, Com- missioner of Athletics Louis Ed- wards (with a good excuse), Class President Jim Young (likewise good), Class Prexy Jack Rowland, and assorted freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors. Montana State College society, last Saturday evening, put it's final mark of approval on a dance which is destined to become Gne of the major social events of the season-the Inter-fraternity Hop. President Roosevelt's much malign 4 ed and misunderstood monetary pro- gram came nearer to its definite ob- jective yesterday, as news came that his dollar devaluation bill had passed the House by an overwhelming ma- jority. This act in effect establishes by an ingenious manipulation of the country's currency standard what is approximately a 200 per cent gold reserve behind every dollar now in circulation. It also seems to estab 4 lislt a definitely controlled inflation which the calamity howlers have been declaring for months to be impossible. Officials of the Burgess Battery and subsidiary companies conducted an interesting silver e.xperiment at their last regular pay day. Without warning eveey employe in the plant was paid his wages in silver dollars. The company expected in this way to trace the course of money through the hands of workers, their wives, merchants and banks for several weeks. The country has recently been r e- minded forcibly of the old "crime wave" which filled newspaper col umns before the depr ession, by a sensation~} break by three desperados from h Kansas prison and by the perfectly executed kidnapping of one, Boemer, a brewer of the Twin City district. 12 Men Sign Up For Chess Tourney Plans for the first all-school chess tournament to be held at Montana State college are well under way with 12 men already signed up for partic- ipation. The event will begin February 1 in the Exponent office and will con- The Bobcats will no doubt show more strength than they did in the last home series. They held the strong Brigham Young quintet to a close score during the first half in both of their last engagements, but were not able to rally in the final period. How- ever, they have shown considerable strength since their last home stand. Coach Dyche will probably start Taylor and Vavich at forwards; Young at center· and Harding and Edwards at guards. Doyra, Oliver, Stebbins, Purdum, Bilant and Dunkel will prob- ably see action. Doyra played a nice (!'ame in both encounters with the B. Y. U. five. Coach Romney of the Utah Ags says that his team is one of the best that he has coached in recent years, and with a few games under their belt should be plenty hard to beat. Coach Dyche, however, is relyin,g- on the Cougars to be victims for the Bob- cats' first conference win. This should add stimulus to the game. Both games will start at 8 p. m. sharp. The NRA and the whole presidential recovery program constitute a transi- tional phase, moving us toward a collective society. lt is important that the flexibility inherent in Roosevelt's policies be inaintained. -Dr. William H. Biddle. As compensation for these empty chairs, howevE:r, we h_ad with us Deans Hamilton, Lin- field, Harrison and Brannegan; and faculty members Hannon and Stewart. Pat Dolan, we hear was detained elsewhere bi pres;ing duties. And speaking of glorification of grades, we express the feeble wish that some kind soul would condescend to glorify ours just a little-we'd like to make the Cribbers' Digest just once before leaving these classic halls. With reference to cribbi ng- why didn't someone invite the faculty to the assembly? They might have enjoyed it. Oh, yes---why on earth ai.·e the poor dears ( we mean the frosh) discouraged from occu- pyin1< a few of those glaringly empty first floor seats? That handful of seniors and the Spurs did look so lonely-even though so intellectual. But at any rate spirits should be relatively easy to inculcate in this post December fifth era. We're right in there cheering senators! And so, before signing off, may we suggest:- Did Denler and Westlake really expect that encore? Or do they use that headgear regularly? Toodle-oo. Spartanian Spree Success For Coeds tinue for some time under either a round-robin or elimination system, de-I Well, well, and well, the fair' the number of Sig pledges who pending upon t.he number of entr1es. d 1 f M S C t d were seen in the nurse's office The tourney 1s open to anyone who amse s o . . . cavor e . has a knowledge of the game. Alrea.dy gaily Saturday eve. at the Spar- Monday. mornmg) · . several freshmen haYe entered with . . . The prize for the funniest costume a desire to show the upper classmen tamans blowout. Frisco Sadie, was awarded to Alice Waters who was few pointers about the game and Beau Brummel and even the re- disguised as a baboon's littl e sister; 1t 1s expected that some faculty mem- .' and the prize for the most original bers will enter. . peal of the eighteent h amend- costume went to two K. Ds. who went Entries to date are: Bob Hirst, John ment were very much in evi- as beer mugs. (What is the youn:.:er Stokan, Ben Law, Bill Sweeney, Jerry dence generation coming to)? And the next ~nsmg, Bernard Copping, pana Law, · prize was awarded to the usual Rag- Bill Schenk, S~.m .Eagle, M1lton Voel- Sweeney's orchestra piped gedy Ann and Raggedy Andy. ker, Leonard G1es1ker and Avery San- merrily for the wrestlin~, and The annual stunt contest was won ford. by the Chi Omega Pledges. Ri ght up FANGS AND PLEDGES the jigging antics of the mas- in the world aren't we? It seems that quering coeds provided an im- this stunt contined three little pigs mense amusement for the Sigma and a big, bad wolf, and all the little There will be a Fan{ meeting · 11 'fraid ( Ed. to 's note Chi . pledges who st1·ai·ned their pigs were rea Y · 1 r this evening at 5 o'cloc , in Her- -Van Fleet was not present). rick Hall . Independent pledges necks to gaze upon the scenes And we mustn' t forget the prize will get their tickets to the Fang of festivity. (This accounts for waltz and foxtrot. Delight Dennet _ d_a_n_c_e _a_t_t_h_is _ m_e_e_t_ in _g _·--------------------- and Ethel Rundel wafted gaily into During the course of the evening halts were called at two dif- ferent times to wreak dire punishment upon those who had dis- obeyed the rules. The resounding crack of the paddle added much to the merriment of the crowd and after the second round things became even warmer. The first suffer was Margaret Roberts. Poor littl e Margy stepped out on the floor with her head high, lips aquiver. Argu- ing did no good; those boys were determined. '10h well, I'll pro- bably come out alive." Assuming the angle she closed her eyes. For an instant there was breathtaking silence. The "plop"-the paddle fell with no force, the easiest bat of the evening. One of the most interesting matters of which Lowe spoke concerned the proposed establishment of a ~ational College Laboratory at the national capitol which would be conducted muc.h after the fashion of a regular uni- Those who followed poor Margy were: "Mugs" Murray, Rae Symonds, Edith Watson, Edith Allport, Ladora Kerr, "Fat" Mc- Bride, Bob Hirst, Dorothy D' Autremont, Bob Emmett, John Coey, and others. In only one case was the fine payed in preference to taking the bat. Some of the victims were lucky--------------- enough to get their pictures taken by the Montanan photographer. Of course they pretended that they didn't like having the "black box" pointed at them but it is only consistent with human nature for them to enjoy thinking of themselves spread over one of the pages of that famous year- book. Rules regarding the mode of dress and the conduct of those who attended caused much hilarity, not to mention pain, for violators. These rules, in a modified form, are as follows: 1-All men must wear cords and a jacket or sweater. 2-Jlfen must meet dates at ball. Dexter, Taylor, Potter To Head Extension Frat. Annual Convention of Extention Workers Concludes With Elec- tJon of Officers 3-Must not exchange dances with frat brothers. John Deider, head· of the publicity department of Montana Srete college, and editor of the Montana Collegian, was elected president of Epsilon Sigma Phi, honorary fraternity for extension workers with ten or more years of service, at the close oi the Montana county extension agents con- vention held here last week. Jack 4--Girls must wear house dresses . &-Girls must pay 60% of evenings expense. &-No jewelry allowed. 7-No freshly shined shoes allowed. &-Chaperones must dress as do the students. . Taylor, director of the state extensi?n 9-N o cosmetics allowed. J service was elected analyst while 10-0ne representative from each Charles Potter, state 4-H club leader. frat is appointed to enforce the above was made secretary-terasurer. rules with paddles which they should C. H. Wilson of Valley county was carry ,vith them. elected president of the County Agents The idea of holding such a dance 'Extension association and the various was formulated last year. It was be- other .offices of diff~rent parts of the cause of the success of last year's orgaruzat1on were filled by eA'tens1on dance that it was decided that it should work~rs, many of whom are graduates be made an annual event. See you of this college. at the Third Annual Inter-Fraternity The convention held last week was Hop. ~?:ti~!:h it!: 1 s 0 }:!.tnr~lb~h';u!~~~: versity. Its members would be drawn from the leading students of every college in the country. Lectures and instruction would be under the super- vision of national leaders. The col- lege would attend sessions of Con- gress and would be so conducted that the highest type of encouragement of student enterprise and development could be secured. The following part of this news- story was secured from Lowe's per- sonal notes and observations on the convention. The Exponent has not seen fit to alter his notes in any way b~- cause to do so would destroy their clairity: They read as follows: "Although a convention of the nat- ure of that at the N. S. F. A. af- fords a wonderful opportunity for student body representath-es to pre- sent problems and difficulties, they are beinu faced with, in their respect- ive scho0Is, it was not only with this in mind that I attended the congress. As I have said before tn regard to general financial difficulUes in the general make-up and activities of our student government, ~I. S. C. is com- paratively better off than many older eastern schools. "In attending the congress, I did not feel that I had any intricate prob- lems to offer that body, to get a (Continued on Page Five) DUNCAN TO HAVE IMPORTANT PART IN WINTER SHOW FRED C. JACCARD PASSES IN CHICAfiO sions and work on the production con- trol program of the Agricultural Ad- justment Administration. The exten- sion workers have charge of the nec- essary informational work of the ad- justment programs and they are con- nected in the sa1ne way with the gov- ernment's activities in the rural credit One of the most interesting featureti of the next Montana State college dramatic production, ''The Wild Duck,'' is the usual characteristics of the parts in the play that make them ex- ceptionally difficult to perform. Out- standing amonP- these is the role of the child, Hedvig Ekdal, to be por- t:rayed by Katherine Duncan. Word has been received here of the death of Fred Constance Jaccard in Chicago last Wednesday. He was the brother of Jane and Eugenie Jaccard1 who are now attending Montana State college. field. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA Montana State To Regain ANNOUNCES INITIATES High School Hoop Tourney AT THIRD ANNUAL TEA first place for the wal tz, and The Fagenhoople sis and Margilret Boet- cher, apache and moll gained the coveted powder puffs fo rthe foxtrot. Seein' as how we shouldn't forget the refreshments they might have been mighty good if the writer had got hold of any of them. Fred J accard was ill for only a week. Dw·ing his school career he was a football star at Butte high school where he nlayed for thre years. He attended Montana university and had recenUy compl eted an electrical engineering course in Chicago. His father, who is connected with the en- gineering department of the Anaconda company, was with his son when the end came. Burial was in Kansas City, the former home of the young man's parents. Outstanding speeches of the weeks program were speeches made before the convention by President Alfred Atkinson, who gave his interpretation of present economic _p1·oblems to the group, and by Dr. J. M. Hamilton, dean of men and economics professor at the College, who spoke on the monetary problems faced by the pres- ent administration . Frank Hoffman Hedvig, is in may ways the most difficult character in "The Wild Duck" to understand. Her nature is perhaps best eA--plained as .. self-sacrificing"; she is willing because of nn unusual love for her faU1er to give him any- thing that is within her power, if it will make him happy. HedYig's ac- tions have been interpreted by some critics as those of a moron, but rather than go to this e::..."treme they are prob 4 ably best understood by realizing tha she is going through a stage in her; adolescence where certain symbols and reasonings of others are misinter preted. Hedvig will be the second part fo Katherine Duncan to carry in her col lege career. Coming to Montana Stat last year with but one high scho~ During tha afternoon of January 13 Alpha Lambda Delta spon sored its third annual benefit card party. Over 70 people were present. Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women's hon- orary scholastic or&"&niz.ation, is the only groun on the campus having the privilege of being able to sponsor a benefit of thjs kind since it has no other means of raising funds to carry on its functions. The new pledges of Alpha Lambda Delta are Lois Dale, Dorothy Clemens, Vir~nia Finley, Rose Fogerty, Vivian Gneiser., Virginia Hansen, Jean Hur- 17J~. Wilda Parker and Mary Stiens- In order to become a pledge of Alpha Lambda Delta one must have an average of 90 or over for the fresh- man work completed. Jews can best fight anti-Semetism by living up to the best tradltions of their culture and relying on the decen.cy of the American people.- Rabbi Edward L. I.srael, Baltimore. Preparations are under way for the state high school basketball tourna- ments lo be held late in February and early in March. The plan as drawn up at the con- clusion of the 1932 tournament to go into effect in 1933 provided for Class "A" and Class 0 B" tournaments. The Class II A" teams are comprised of the 16 larger high schools in the stat~, eight being in the southern and eight in the northern division. The partici- pants in the finals of the Class "B" tournaments are also 16 teams, eight in the northern division and eight in the southern. These 16 teams are the winners of their respective district tournaments. The Class ''A" tournaments and tha finals of the Class "B" tournaments a.re to be held ,the northern division at Great Falls and the southern di- vision at Billings. These tournaments are held at the same time although there is no interplay between the Class "A" and the Class 11 B" teams. The four winning teams, the winn er of A and B in the north and the win- ner of A and B ln the south then play in the state finals at Bozeman, the date this year beinll' March 16-17. All tournaments and playoffs are held directly under the auspices of the Montana High School association. It will be remembered that this sys- tem was not used last year due to the closing of the banks and conse- quently there were no official tourna- ments held. This year the plan as represented, will result in keener com- petition among all the high schools in the state and will give the smaller schools the same chance ,vith the larger schools to enter the final play offs, while the people of Bozeman and the students of 111. S. . will have the opportuniyt to see the best high school teams of the state in action. Good Pro spects For Ri fle Team With a turnout of 60 freshmen and the return of seven letter men ~rom la st year Lt. C. E. Jackson beheves that the prospects for the rifle roam are the best in years. Ellm!nat1ons are under way and the team is to be selected this week. The letterm en returning are: Dillon, Solomon, Vnn Fleet, V~n Arsdale, Bailey, Stebbins and Jlfortm. The team will be composed of 15 men. . The first competit ion meet w1ll ~e February 3, and will be held bf mail. Meets arc already schedul~d W\th the University of Iowa, University of South Dakota, North Dakota Ags , Drexel ni stitute, Alabama Tech , and New York Military Academy. John Dexter, director of publica- tions, who is in charge of the prepara- tions for the state tournament here , states that complete plans are unavail- able pending the an-ival of R. H. Wollin, secretary of the Montana High School assOC'iation, who is coming here to discuss the various matters inci- dental to the carrying through of the Yale will not .select a new 1 plan. football coach until February head FANG PLEDGES TO BE ANNOUNCED SOON Tuesday evening the Fang chapter held a meeting for the purpose of selecting its pled,<es. This year three men from each fraternity and five from the Independents were chosen. The reason for the increase in this number is due to the fact that there are fewer fraternities. At the beginning of the year a number of pages are named by each fraternity. These men work at fo?t- ball games. basketball games, illumin- ating the "M.'' etc. Thos~ .who have done their work most eff1c1ently are chosen as pledges. These men will be tapped at the annual Fang pledge dance, to be held at the Baxter hotel February 2. N S t 1 show to her credit (and that, she says, e w e r g ea n because she was the only girl in schoo with long hail·) she was cast in th 1 k T Tp I.ITork autumn quarter production, "Th a eS U, yy I Barker" although many other mor experienced, uppercla~s women trie Sergeant Frank Hoffman 1 who ha.s taken Sergeant L. E. Ellsworth's posi- tion as staff sergeant, has arrived at Montana State college. Sergeant Hoff- man was rifle instructo1, with the Washinl!ton National Guard for four years. Last &Ummer he was with the CCC .in Redding, Calif., from where he was transferred here. The new '·Sargt1" was with the 11th Mat·hine Gun Battalion, 4th Division during the \Vorld \Ynr. Since then he has served in mo~t of the principal army po:-.t~ in the United Stntes, and hns seen service in the Phillipine Islands. Sergeant Hoffman is an expert rifle shot and is instructing the men on the rifle team at present. He be- lieves he is going to like Bozeman be- cause of the good fishing in the mountain streams. out for the part. In comparing th two roles, that of Lou, in "Th Barker" with HedYig in "The Wit Duck" nothing- that nears similarit can be found. The two are so <liffere in every respect that nothing can retained from the charnctcristics Lou for those of Hed,·ig. In order t be successful in this play, then, )Ii Duncan "ill have to prove herself t be ex-tremely versitile. In speaking of Duncan and her abi ities, Bert Hansen, director of "T \Vild Duck" has said. "She ha!-'1 a r markable talent for adjustinit herse to dranrntic situation~; sh<' ha~ mo control over her voice nnd over h emotions than any person I know; s can, to a degree that is rnre ev among- hig-hly trained profe!is_iona completely submerge herself mto part. All of which is to say, she ' an actress."

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BOOST THE BOBCATS

IN GAME WITH UTAH

AGGIES JAN. 26-27

OLUME XXV .

&ontana BOZEMAN, MONTANA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1934

FANG PLEDGE DANCE

WILL BE HELD FEB.

2nd-BAXTER HOTEL

NIDIBER 15

. Young Attends BOBCATS WILL TANGLE lt~'::~/i:1Lowe's Report Features M::!/f/:!~:! WITH STRONG UTAH AGS~~:':.:.~~ .. ~~.~~All-Student Assemlby

CATS IMPROVED ;~1~f:~1~£lffiirtt~:r~~i~::r1 DENLER-WESTLAKE 1ont.ana B O tan y Authority Speaks at Several Eastern Points

Dr. Paul A. Young, assistant in the he botany and bacteriology . depart­ent of the experiment station, re­

urned January 14 from a trip to Bos­n and points south ~v~ere be lect­

red extensively and V1s1ted research aboratories enroute. In Boston Dr. oung attended .th~ meetings of the merican Association for the Ad­ancement of Science. During sessions of the associ~tion

onvention he spoke on three subJects, the destruction of winter wheat . by light in Gallatin county, the freez.mg

phenomena of creosope emuls_ions o! troleum oils and on the 011 mas:s

heory of petroleum oil penetrati~n · to protoplasm. On the return trip rom Boston Dr. Young spoke on these

e subjects at the agricultural ex­riment stations of Dela ware, Mary­

land, Wi:;<:onsin and Minnesota. He discussel important research problems vith botanists at the University of

Chica.go, Harvard university, Yale uni-ersity, Rockefeller Institute for

Jlfedlcal Research, Boyce Thompson ln­titute for Plant Research, C.Onnect1-

cut agricultural experiment station, New Jersey experiment station an_d the United States Department agri­culture at Washington, D. C.

Abstracts of one of Dr. Young's papers, which he presented at .the co!1-vention in Boston were published m several impartant newspapers of which the Washington Star is the most prominent. Young's paper, enti~led, ''The Significance of Frozen Emulsions of Oil," is a yivid illustration of why the freezing of life cells is harmful to their continued performance of the life processes. The first part of the paper, which explains how freezing acts upon petroleum oil is followed by the explanation of how it affects hu­man flesh. The final paragraph reads as follows:

"Now, how about those frozen fingers? When they become to cold, needles of ice formed in the flesh and punctured many of the cells and nerves. No wonder the fingers hurt. ~ freezing continued, the ruthless ice took water from the protoplasm of the cells, and left behind solutions of salts and acids injuriously concentrated. When freez.ing progresses until ice needles pierce too many cells, and ~e remaining solutions become too toxic, then the fingers die. But if they thaw before they die, the cells of the fingers are sore because they were punctured by ice needles and poisoned by con­centrated solutions."

M S C'S NEOPHYTE POLITICIANS LAY

CAMPAlfiN PLANS Young Democrats Plan to Open

Series Of Discussions On N. R. A.

Plans were completed last week for the organization of the Young Dem­ocratic club which was recently pro­posed to the students of Montana State college.

The executive committee met and outlined a program for the !irst meet­ing, which will be held Feubrary 4. At this meeting there will be a compre­hensive discussion of the "Personal­ities of the New Deal." The first part of the meeting will be devoted to a formal discussion which will be fol­lowed by a round table discu~sion.

Negotiations were also started by the executive committee to secure the necessary information relative to the affiliation of the club with the na­tional organizltion.

Election of officers for the club will be held at the first regular meeting.

SINrE LAST SEEN of the many people hired here under pad d I e W re a k 8 IJ ~~}~f~~ J!~~a~ta~~~·:iNi:~!~t::~ soNr. KINr.s TAKE the payrolls the followinir week. U U

AsA Student Sees It ON HOME rouRT None of the workers have been laid p . h t T

1J ~:~ke~u~o t'~ur~h~s!eekh~av~rb;~~u:~l Un l S men I O SCHOOL'S FANCY to 24 hours. while stenogrt.phers and

A new but unexpected tone was added to news concerning the Civil \\'orks Administration when graft in e,~ery phase of its local operation in an F~tern city, was revealed yester 4

day. Several unscrupulous admin­istrators were found to be exhorting a fee of up to 50 cents a day from the workers under their supervision. Summary dismissal from his jo!> was the employees· punishment non-pay-

Games Will Be Played Friday and Saturday at College Gym. Many Men Will See Action

technical assistants now work 30 hours I B k instead of 40. R

The college CWA payroll figures for u e re a er s the week ending January 11, show that

At the first all student assem­bly of the year yesterday morn­ing Bud Lowe, President of the Associated Students, gave a de­tailed report upon the activities of the National Student Feder­ation Convention at which he represented Montana State Col­lege in Washington D. C. during the last Christmas vacation. Lowe's report to the student body was concise in every detail. It was a demonstration of the inspiration which one interested observer at a stimulating stud­ent convention can bring back to an entire student body.

$190 was paid to teamsters and labor-

Montana State plays its fifth and sixth Rocky Mountain conference games here Friday and Saturday night when they tangle with the Utah Ags from Logan, Utah. The Ags will bring one of the finest teams that they have displayed on the local court in many a ~eason.

ers who are working on improvements of the campus, while approximately $3,750 was paid during the same time to technical assistants, painters, extra janitors and other indoor laborers.

Inter-Frat Hop Pleases Large Crowd in More Ways Than One

ment.

An astounding scandal from another pert of the world stirred the French Capitol. Paris, yesterday, when it was found that officials in powerful banks there had embezzled banking funds for private gambling operations.

The Utah aggregation is just fresh fro~ a win over the strong Utah U. quintet, having defeated them in a conference game last Saturday night. However, this is the only victory that they have annexed this season in con­ference play. They have lost two games to Brigham Young U., and won and lost one to Utah U. The Bobcats have not such a formidable record, since they have lost four conference 1<ames, two to both Utah U. and Brigham Young.

REMINISCENCE

Among those not present at this so-called, all-student as.­sembly were : Vice-president George Parke, Commissioner of Finance Robert Emmett, Com­missioner of Athletics Louis Ed­wards (with a good excuse), Class President Jim Young (likewise good), Class Prexy Jack Rowland, and assorted freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors.

Montana State College society, last Saturday evening, put it's final mark of approval on a dance which is destined to become Gne of the major social events of the season-the Inter-fraternity Hop.

President Roosevelt's much malign 4

ed and misunderstood monetary pro­gram came nearer to its definite ob­jective yesterday, as news came that his dollar devaluation bill had passed the House by an overwhelming ma­jority. This act in effect establishes by an ingenious manipulation of the country's currency standard what is approximately a 200 per cent gold reserve behind every dollar now in circulation. It also seems to estab 4

lislt a definitely controlled inflation which the calamity howlers have been declaring for months to be impossible.

Officials of the Burgess Battery and subsidiary companies conducted an interesting silver e.xperiment at their last regular pay day. Without warning eveey employe in the plant was paid his wages in silver dollars. The company expected in this way to trace the course of money through the hands of workers, their wives, merchants and banks for several weeks.

The country has recently been r e­minded forcibly of the old "crime wave" which filled newspaper columns before the depression, by a sensation~} break by three desperados from h Kansas prison and by the perfectly executed kidnapping of one, Boemer, a brewer of the Twin City district.

12 Men Sign Up For Chess Tourney

Plans for the first all-school chess tournament to be held at Montana State college are well under way with 12 men already signed up for partic­ipation. The event will begin February 1 in the Exponent office and will con-

The Bobcats will no doubt show more strength than they did in the last home series. They held the strong Brigham Young quintet to a close score during the first half in both of their last engagements, but were not able to rally in the final period. How­ever, they have shown considerable strength since their last home stand.

Coach Dyche will probably start Taylor and Vavich at forwards; Young at center· and Harding and Edwards at guards. Doyra, Oliver, Stebbins, Purdum, Bilant and Dunkel will prob­ably see action. Doyra played a nice (!'ame in both encounters with the B. Y. U. five.

Coach Romney of the Utah Ags says that his team is one of the best that he has coached in recent years, and with a few games under their belt should be plenty hard to beat. Coach Dyche, however, is relyin,g- on the Cougars to be victims for the Bob­cats' first conference win. This should add stimulus to the game.

Both games will start at 8 p. m. sharp.

The NRA and the whole presidential recovery program constitute a transi­tional phase, moving us toward a collective society. lt is important that the flexibility inherent in Roosevelt's policies be inaintained.-Dr. William H. Biddle.

As compensation for these empty chairs, howevE:r, we h_ad with us Deans Hamilton, Lin­field, Harrison and Brannegan; and faculty members Hannon and Stewart. Pat Dolan, we hear was detained elsewhere bi pres;ing duties.

And speaking of glorification of grades, we express the feeble wish that some kind soul would condescend to glorify ours just a little-we'd like to make the Cribbers' Digest just once before leaving these classic halls.

With reference to cribbing­why didn't someone invite the faculty to the assembly? They might have enjoyed it.

Oh, yes---why on earth ai.·e the poor dears ( we mean the frosh) discouraged from occu­pyin1< a few of those glaringly empty first floor seats? That handful of seniors and the Spurs did look so lonely-even though so intellectual.

But at any rate spirits should be relatively easy to inculcate in this post December fifth era. We're right in there cheering senators!

And so, before signing off, may we suggest:-

Did Denler and Westlake really expect that encore? Or do they use that headgear regularly? Toodle-oo.

Spartanian Spree Success For Coeds

tinue for some time under either a round-robin or elimination system, de-I Well, well, and well, the fair' the number of Sig pledges who pending upon t.he number of entr1es. d 1 f M S C t d were seen in the nurse's office

The tourney 1s open to anyone who amse s o . . . cavor e . has a knowledge of the game. Alrea.dy gaily Saturday eve. at the Spar- Monday. mornmg) · . several freshmen haYe entered with . . . The prize for the funniest costume a desire to show the upper classmen tamans blowout. Frisco Sadie, was awarded to Alice Waters who was ~ few pointers about the game and Beau Brummel and even the re- disguised as a baboon's little sister; 1t 1s expected that some faculty mem- .' and the prize for the most original bers will enter. . peal of the eighteenth amend- costume went to two K. Ds. who went

Entries to date are: Bob Hirst, John ment were very much in evi- as beer mugs. (What is the youn:.:er Stokan, Ben Law, Bill Sweeney, Jerry dence generation coming to)? And the next ~nsmg, Bernard Copping, pana Law, · prize was awarded to the usual Rag-Bill Schenk, S~.m .Eagle, M1lton Voel- Sweeney's orchestra piped gedy Ann and Raggedy Andy. ker, Leonard G1es1ker and Avery San- merrily for the wrestlin~, and The annual stunt contest was won ford. by the Chi Omega Pledges. Right up

FANGS AND PLEDGES the jigging antics of the mas- in the world aren't we? It seems that quering coeds provided an im- this stunt contined three little pigs mense amusement for the Sigma and a big, bad wolf, and all the little

There will be a Fan{ meeting · 11 'fraid ( Ed. to 's note Chi. pledges who st1·ai·ned their pigs were rea Y · 1 r this evening at 5 o'cloc , in Her- -Van Fleet was not present).

rick Hall. Independent pledges necks to gaze upon the scenes And we mustn' t forget the prize will get their tickets to the Fang of festivity. (This accounts for waltz and foxtrot. Delight Dennet

_ d_a_n_c_e_a_t_t_h_is_ m_e_e_t_in_g_·--------------------- and Ethel Rundel wafted gaily into

During the course of the evening halts were called at two dif­ferent times to wreak dire punishment upon those who had dis­obeyed the rules. The resounding crack of the paddle added much to the merriment of the crowd and after the second round things became even warmer.

The first suffer was Margaret Roberts. Poor little Margy stepped out on the floor with her head high, lips aquiver. Argu­ing did no good; those boys were determined. '10h well, I'll pro­bably come out alive." Assuming the angle she closed her eyes. For an instant there was breathtaking silence. The "plop"-the paddle fell with no force, the easiest bat of the evening.

One of the most interesting matters of which Lowe spoke concerned the proposed establishment of a ~ational College Laboratory at the national capitol which would be conducted muc.h after the fashion of a regular uni-

Those who followed poor Margy were: "Mugs" Murray, Rae Symonds, Edith Watson, Edith Allport, Ladora Kerr, "Fat" Mc­Bride, Bob Hirst, Dorothy D' Autremont, Bob Emmett, John Coey, and others. In only one case was the fine payed in preference to taking the bat.

Some of the victims were lucky--------------­enough to get their pictures taken by the Montanan photographer. Of course they pretended that they didn't like having the "black box" pointed at them but it is only consistent with human nature for them to enjoy thinking of themselves spread over one of the pages of that famous year­book.

Rules regarding the mode of dress and the conduct of those who attended caused much hilarity, not to mention pain, for violators. These rules, in a modified form, are as follows:

1-All men must wear cords and a jacket or sweater.

2-Jlfen must meet dates at ball.

Dexter, Taylor, Potter To Head Extension Frat.

Annual Convention of Extention Workers Concludes With Elec­tJon of Officers

3-Must not exchange dances with frat brothers. John Deider, head· of the publicity

department of Montana Srete college, and editor of the Montana Collegian, was elected president of Epsilon Sigma Phi, honorary fraternity for extension workers with ten or more years of service, at the close oi the Montana county extension agents con­vention held here last week. Jack

4--Girls must wear house dresses . &-Girls must pay 60% of evenings

expense. &-No jewelry allowed. 7-No freshly shined shoes allowed. &-Chaperones must dress as do the

students. . Taylor, director of the state extensi?n 9-N o cosmetics allowed. J service was elected analyst while

10-0ne representative from each Charles Potter, state 4-H club leader. frat is appointed to enforce the above was made secretary-terasurer. rules with paddles which they should C. H. Wilson of Valley county was carry ,vith them. elected president of the County Agents

The idea of holding such a dance 'Extension association and the various was formulated last year. It was be- other .offices of diff~rent parts of the cause of the success of last year's orgaruzat1on were filled by eA'tens1on dance that it was decided that it should work~rs, many of whom are graduates be made an annual event. See you of this college. at the Third Annual Inter-Fraternity The convention held last week was

Hop. ~?:ti~!:h it!:1s

0}:!.tnr~lb~h';u!~~~:

versity. Its members would be drawn from the leading students of every college in the country. Lectures and instruction would be under the super­vision of national leaders. The col­lege would attend sessions of Con­gress and would be so conducted that the highest type of encouragement of student enterprise and development could be secured.

The following part of this news­story was secured from Lowe's per­sonal notes and observations on the convention. The Exponent has not seen fit to alter his notes in any way b~­cause to do so would destroy their clairity:

They read as follows: "Although a convention of the nat-

ure of that at the N. S. F. A. af­fords a wonderful opportunity for student body representath-es to pre­sent problems and difficulties, they are beinu faced with, in their respect­ive scho0Is, it was not only with this in mind that I attended the congress.

'· As I have said before tn regard to general financial difficulUes in the general make-up and activities of our student government, ~I. S. C. is com-paratively better off than many older eastern schools.

"In attending the congress, I did not feel that I had any intricate prob­lems to offer that body, to get a

(Continued on Page Five)

DUNCAN TO HAVE IMPORTANT PART

IN WINTER SHOW

FRED C. JACCARD PASSES IN CHICAfiO

sions and work on the production con­trol program of the Agricultural Ad­justment Administration. The exten­sion workers have charge of the nec­essary informational work of the ad­justment programs and they are con­nected in the sa1ne way with the gov­ernment's activities in the rural credit

One of the most interesting featureti of the next Montana State college dramatic production, ''The Wild Duck,'' is the usual characteristics of the parts in the play that make them ex­ceptionally difficult to perform. Out­standing amonP- these is the role of the child, Hedvig Ekdal, to be por­t:rayed by Katherine Duncan.

Word has been received here of the death of Fred Constance Jaccard in Chicago last Wednesday. He was the brother of Jane and Eugenie Jaccard1 who are now attending Montana State college.

field.

ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA Montana State To Regain ANNOUNCES INITIATES High School Hoop Tourney AT THIRD ANNUAL TEA

first place for the waltz, and The Fagenhoople sis and Margilret Boet­cher, apache and moll gained the coveted powder puffs fo rthe foxtrot.

Seein' as how we shouldn't forget the refreshments they might have been mighty good if the writer had got hold of any of them.

Fred J accard was ill for only a week. Dw·ing his school career he was a football star at Butte high school where he nlayed for thre years. He attended Montana university and had recenUy completed an electrical engineering course in Chicago. His father, who is connected with the en­gineering department of the Anaconda company, was with his son when the end came. Burial was in Kansas City, the former home of the young man's parents.

Outstanding speeches of the weeks program were speeches made before the convention by President Alfred Atkinson, who gave his interpretation of present economic _p1·oblems to the group, and by Dr. J. M. Hamilton, dean of men and economics professor at the College, who spoke on the monetary problems faced by the pres­ent administration.

Frank Hoffman

Hedvig, is in may ways the most difficult character in "The Wild Duck" to understand. Her nature is perhaps best eA--plained as .. self-sacrificing"; she is willing because of nn unusual love for her faU1er to give him any­thing that is within her power, if it will make him happy. HedYig's ac­tions have been interpreted by some critics as those of a moron, but rather than go to this e::..."treme they are prob 4

ably best understood by realizing tha she is going through a stage in her; adolescence where certain symbols and reasonings of others are misinter preted.

Hedvig will be the second part fo Katherine Duncan to carry in her col lege career. Coming to Montana Stat last year with but one high scho~

During tha afternoon of January 13 Alpha Lambda Delta sponsored its third annual benefit card party. Over 70 people were present. Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman women's hon­orary scholastic or&"&niz.ation, is the only groun on the campus having the privilege of being able to sponsor a benefit of thjs kind since it has no other means of raising funds to carry on its functions.

The new pledges of Alpha Lambda Delta are Lois Dale, Dorothy Clemens, Vir~nia Finley, Rose Fogerty, Vivian Gneiser., Virginia Hansen, Jean Hur-17J~. Wilda Parker and Mary Stiens-

In order to become a pledge of Alpha Lambda Delta one must have an average of 90 or over for the fresh­man work completed.

Jews can best fight anti-Semetism by living up to the best tradltions of their culture and relying on the decen.cy of the American people.­Rabbi Edward L. I.srael, Baltimore.

Preparations are under way for the state high school basketball tourna­ments lo be held late in February and early in March.

The plan as drawn up at the con­clusion of the 1932 tournament to go into effect in 1933 provided for Class "A" and Class 0 B" tournaments. The Class II A" teams are comprised of the 16 larger high schools in the stat~, eight being in the southern and eight in the northern division. The partici­pants in the finals of the Class "B" tournaments are also 16 teams, eight in the northern division and eight in the southern. These 16 teams are the winners of their respective district tournaments.

The Class ''A" tournaments and tha finals of the Class "B" tournaments a.re to be held ,the northern division at Great Falls and the southern di­vision at Billings. These tournaments are held at the same time although there is no interplay between the Class "A" and the Class 11B" teams. The four winning teams, the winner of A and B in the north and the win­ner of A and B ln the south then play

in the state finals at Bozeman, the date this year beinll' March 16-17.

All tournaments and playoffs are held directly under the auspices of the Montana High School association.

It will be remembered that this sys­tem was not used last year due to the closing of the banks and conse­quently there were no official tourna­ments held. This year the plan as represented, will result in keener com­petition among all the high schools in the state and will give the smaller schools the same chance ,vith the larger schools to enter the final play offs, while the people of Bozeman and the students of 111. S. . will have the opportuniyt to see the best high school teams of the state in action.

Good Prospects For Rifle Team

With a turnout of 60 freshmen and the return of seven letter men ~rom last year Lt. C. E. Jackson beheves that the prospects for the rifle roam are the best in years. Ellm!nat1ons are under way and the team is to be selected this week.

The letterm en returning are: Dillon, Solomon, Vnn Fleet, V~n Arsdale, Bailey, Stebbins and Jlfortm. The team will be composed of 15 men. .

The first competition meet w1ll ~e February 3, and will be held bf mail. Meets arc already schedul~d W\th the University of Iowa, University of South Dakota, North Dakota Ags, Drexel nistitute, Alabama Tech, and New York Military Academy.

John Dexter, director of publica­tions, who is in charge of the prepara­tions for the state tournament here, states that complete plans are unavail­able pending the an-ival of R. H. Wollin, secretary of the Montana High School assOC'iation, who is coming here to discuss the various matters inci­dental to the carrying through of the Yale will not .select a new

1 plan. football coach until February • head

FANG PLEDGES TO BE ANNOUNCED SOON

Tuesday evening the Fang chapter held a meeting for the purpose of selecting its pled,<es. This year three men from each fraternity and five from the Independents were chosen. The reason for the increase in this number is due to the fact that there are fewer fraternities.

At the beginning of the year a number of pages are named by each fraternity. These men work at fo?t­ball games. basketball games, illumin­ating the "M.'' etc. Thos~ .who have done their work most eff1c1ently are chosen as pledges.

These men will be tapped at the annual Fang pledge dance, to be held at the Baxter hotel February 2.

N S t 1 show to her credit (and that, she says, e w e r g ea n because she was the only girl in schoo with long hail·) she was cast in th

1 k T Tp I.ITork autumn quarter production, "Th a eS U, yy I Barker" although many other mor experienced, uppercla~s women trie

Sergeant Frank Hoffman 1 who ha.s taken Sergeant L. E. Ellsworth's posi­tion as staff sergeant, has arrived at Montana State college. Sergeant Hoff­man was rifle instructo1, with the Washinl!ton National Guard for four years. Last &Ummer he was with the CCC .in Redding, Calif., from where he was transferred here.

The new '·Sargt1" was with the 11th Mat·hine Gun Battalion, 4th Division during the \Vorld \Ynr. Since then he has served in mo~t of the principal army po:-.t~ in the United Stntes, and hns seen service in the Phillipine Islands.

Sergeant Hoffman is an expert rifle shot and is instructing the men on the rifle team at present. He be­lieves he is going to like Bozeman be­cause of the good fishing in the mountain streams.

out for the part. In comparing th two roles, that of Lou, in "Th Barker" with HedYig in "The Wit Duck" nothing- that nears similarit can be found. The two are so <liffere in every respect that nothing can retained from the charnctcristics Lou for those of Hed,·ig. In order t be successful in this play, then, )Ii Duncan "ill have to prove herself t be ex-tremely versitile.

In speaking of Duncan and her abi ities, Bert Hansen, director of "T \Vild Duck" has said. "She ha!-'1 a r markable talent for adjustinit herse to dranrntic situation~; sh<' ha~ mo control over her voice nnd over h emotions than any person I know; s can, to a degree that is rnre ev among- hig-hly trained profe!is_iona completely submerge herself mto part. All of which is to say, she ' an actress."

Page 2: &ontana - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-15-… ·  · 2016-06-28then the fingers die. But if they thaw ... represented Montana State Col

PAGE TWO THE MONTANA EXPONENT

Gird for Senatorial Battle

Oontinuanc., of Weekly Exponent and Monthly Exponent Founded 1895. Published Every Tuesday of the College Year By the Associated Students of Montana State College, Bozeo1an, Montana

they had been in the fall. Instead of J\1ontanans going to California for the winter those now in the orange state will be sojourning back to the

would be caught with the blood on his hands,. He would be found guilty of misrepresenting entirely defens.ive peoples as aggressive vandals, and the funny part about it is that the mis­represented defensive nation wouldn't have even defensive armaments if the war profiteer hadn't misrepresented other nations to him.

One objection to this theory of war profiteer responsibility for war is that the war profiteer is not entirely re­sponsible but that the masses desire war. Now it would be a paradox to say that the masses desire war while we admit that the masses have no grudge against peoples of other nations.

treasure state to spend a pleasant winter. Subscription Rates: ;2.00 Per School Year We never hear about the bad weather that the

Telephone 147-Ask for Exponent Califorinans have but we do hear about the little On Monday After 1 P. M.--80 good weather that they have between rain storms.

Acceptance for Mailing at Special Rate of Postage Provided While on the contrary tbe glorious weather that for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1927, Authorized we are having does not receive any publicity. February 17, 1919. Strange as it may seem the old alibi of spring EDITOR-IN-CHIEF_ .. _ ............ .BEN LAW-726-R fever has made its appearance in the classes. MANAGING EDITOR. ..... BILL SWEENEY-582 Stud~nts have been using the subject for common

However, I think this paradox can be easily explained, admitting that the masses do desire war. The masses of an overpopulated nation migrating in­to their own purchased but unsettled territory (Japan and Manchuria) are to be called warlike and only in like

NEWS STAFF conserrntion during the past few days. What Associate Editors. ................ Bill Schenk, Bernard Copping, is the cause of all our good fortune? lt it just

; cases are masses warlike. ; Now to continue interpreting in a l pacifist's way this militarist's argu-1 ment, I will say that the masses of

Joe Walters. the changing of climate conditions or is the good News Editors ..... -..................... Ted Hedrick, Dean Stebbins, Lord letting the hardy northerners reap a harvest

Gerald Lansing. from the toils of past winters? Society Edltor ..................................... llfary Ellen Bielenberg , Sports Editor ............................................ -.. -......... Gene Garner What ever the cause of the weather we re sure Women's Sports Editor .............................. - ........ Edna Selman that every one is all for it. Even the winter Feature Editor ............................................ _ ........... Nina Davis sport lovers can not complain because it is pos-Exchange Editor ......................... -..... -·-·-···-········ .. ··-··.Bob Hirst sible to get in skiing and tobagganing by traveling Society Reporters ................ Dorothy Olson, Wanna Caspers, a short distance from the town. What could be

Kay Rafferty, Helen Sollid, Lillian Button, Clavie Andei·son. nicer than having everyone pleased. That is

Sports Writers. ....................... George Misevic, Jack Marron, what is being done by a trick of nature, good old John Barovich, Mother Nature, long may she reign.

Feature Writers .......... Betty Atwater, Margaret Boettcher, j Maxine Esgar.

Reportorial Sta!L ...................... John Parker, Carroll Speck,/ WHAT ABOUT IT DEAR FELLOW STUDENTS? Ed Keeler, Alice McDowell, L&Rue Samuelson, Leolyn Howard, Bob Sonntag, Pauline Soderholm, Dana Law, . k . us er-lllarjorie Giesiker, Clifford Nelson, Rutb Burdick, Durmg the last wee numerous camp p Maxine Moss, Frances Taylor, Bernice Totten, Ralph sonalities have suggested a remedy for several Hurlburt, Winifred Brewer, Ebba Young, Hilda distressing conditions existing at this institut10n Halonen, Kay Bownes, Anne Stokan, Bessie Fages- of higher education. trom, Jack Bownes, Leonard DeLoughery, Ed Harding. 'lhey suggest that the men students on the

BUSINESS STAFF campus conduct a beard growing contest and that Business Management. ... Gretehen Thaler, Elwood Wilson, the women forego the use of cosmetics in any

Carl Coffman, Catherine Allard, Louis Noffsinger, form whatever. The reasons for the suggestion Leonard Landoe, Bob Hirst.

Business Secretory .......................................... Lillian Greiner of this old panacea are as follows: First, to prepare Cil·culation Manager ................. - ................................. J,m Hall for the coming cold spell: it is well known that Circulation Assistants .................... Charles Anderson, Vietor there is a certain amount of cold weather each

Swanson, Elmer Bowlen. year, and because of the extremely mild zephers Typists and Stenographers ........... Montana Vegas, Louise which have wafted there way from the agricul-

Talmage, Opal Petrausch, Irma Puutio, Mary Alice Trask, Margaret Wilson, Wadine Huntley, Aileen tural department to the engineering department Cummings, Alice Swisher. up till now, King Winter will probably come all

Proof Reader ....... ·-·-·-····-···---··---·-···-~aehel Egbert at once? Therefore, it has been deemed advis-

EPITAPH ON THE TOMB OF THE GO TO •COLLEGE FAD

able to prepare for this cold snap by having a fuJJ grown beard when it comes. Second, to in­stall in the basketball team and the student body in general a spirit of pep, as it has been suggested that the contest continue until the Bobcat team

There comes inevitably to every college man a wins a conference victory. Another reason is time when he commences to wonder about and to that it would undoubtedly save the entire student ask himself: "Wherefore am I here, and whither am I going?" and there are many in these un­certain times who not only wonder but who de­finitely decide, that there is nothing for them in college, and nothing for the college in them.

body a great deal of money in razor blades and cosmetics.

all nations would jump on anyone who dared be the first to ask for wotld peace by taking the move of abandon­ing army and navy.

Do you conclude, that, if the U. S. abandoned her army and navy other nations would not attack us? It would be. interesting to know.

-A Fa.nntic.

Dear Editor:

i®J Stshl,O.'l'()R,cl"OHtsSul,,

The other day I was kiddin~ a mem­ber of the college orchestra in a friendly way about the lack of orches­tral talent on the campus. uWhy," I said, "you even have to have the fac­ulty .to help you or you wouldn't have an orchestra.11 That must have hit a tender spot because he sure started in on me.

It seems 'that the orchestra, while supposedly to be by and for the stu­dents, has in it several members of the faculty who don't even come to the orchestra1s practice. Now even I won­dered about that. Is it that there is no student talent available and so the faculty must be called in, and is it that these faculty men a.re so good that they don't need the practi-ce?

~Vith forme_r Pr~~hh'r.t. l!erbcrt 1-lov:~r recoverin~ frum hi~ o,·cnvhelm. mg d~feat m 1931, 1~olit1cal Pl'O_gnos~1cators nssert that he will soon be back ID t_he arenn. w1th the Caltfornia Senatorial election providing an opportumty for him_ to cross swords once more with his conqueror. The term of Senator Hiram Johnson. California's Republican Procrressiva, en~s next year, and ~oove: i~ ~!elern'\ined he shnll not be re-eleCted. To this end/ the ex-President 1s sa1d to have chosen Walter F Dexter, for. mer col ege be~d, to oppose Johnson, whose bolt to Roosevelt Hoover

/never ha~ fqrg1ven. But Senator Johnson, too, will have backing. For not only 1s he a R_oosevelt program backer. but is also a close personal

,frien.d of tJ:e Pres1dent. Thus the battle, provided Johnson runs for re­·,e_!oction, w~ll realJy be a return bout bet:ween Roosevelt and Hoover.

In The Editor's

Mail Dear Editor:

He.re is some dope on how to pre­vent another war.

I'm going to say that, if the U. S. abandoned her ai·maments, other na­tions would follow suit.

Now first, i.f we don't do something about stopping wars, I believe it is evident that eventuallv mankind will wipe himself from the face of the earth,. (and some of us won't have gotten to Mars first, either, to propa­gate the breed.

Of course the U. S. should join the League of Nations as one steo toward furthering peace, but she hasn't, which merely points out that the U. S. is imperialistic in Central America. So admittedly, we are no different from other counh·ies in our foreign rela­tions.

beasts and because they can gain noth­ing by it in this complicated civiliza­

Of course I am just an outsider and I suppose that I dou 1t know all the angles to it. There may be a perfectly good reason why the faculty is used. I'd just like to know, that's all .

-A student who likes to know.

tion it seems as though the masses of If the NRA does not succeed there all . countries shoul~ join a fight are three possible consequences. There agamst the '1'.'ar profiteer. I 01ay be another period of depression

_Of .course it should be that way ~ut and . worse choas, or there may be t~1s 1s, ns you are probably s.a~_ng Fascism or a government fashioned r1g~t _n~w, ?-S far from a pass~b1hty I along socialistic lines.-Prof. August ~s .1~m1ty 1s from the other s1de of Claessens. mfimty. ---------

Bo·wever, I think tne scenes eould It is only when men rise above be peacefully changed to a realization domination by the profit motive and by all peoples that their only enemy learn to subordinate profit to service is the war profiteer; that peoples of that the social, economic and political other countries have no belligerent in- order-S begin to come in sight of a tent~ when no~ blinded by the war !irm foundatio~ and a continuing ex­profiteer and his propaganda. 1stence.-Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler.

This realization of the true state of affairs will be accomplished by some nation's abandoning its army and navy. Immediately the war profiteer

Big Bill Tilden ranks Henri Coohet, of France, as first among the players whom he has met.

Tuesday, January 23, 1934

Noted Poet Stricken

Edwin Markham Known throughout the entire coun. try as ~he beloved author of "The 1\ifan With the Hoe/' Edwin Mark­ham, 80-year-old poet, is seriously ill at Oklahoma City, where he col­lapsed while addressing a Pllnquet.

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!_ .. _ CHAS. E. :HJ:EHEAD, : ___ :

Diseases !! !: i Eye, Ear, Nose, '11hroat ·-'

;; Glasses Fitted •

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For Good

POPCORN

TRY THE

CORN SHOP

There was a time, and that not so long ago when one amounted to something just by being a college man. There was something unique and sanctifying in the mere possession of a degree. A person so distinguished was one to be looked up to by those humbler ones who had not been able-and very few of whom ever aspired to be­come an educated '.man.

But it is one of the few satisfactions of a father that he may make some of the unfulfilled ambi­tions of his youth come into being for his sons. And so father after father, mother after mother, pinched and scrimped and did without, so that Willie could go to college. And so Willie went.

The possibilities of such a contest in obtaining the desired results can best be forseen by oberving what has happened at other schools where similar contests have been tried. At the State University last fall the football team won an important vic­tory against Gonzaga after facial adornments were only two weeks old. __ Certainly if victories can be had at Missoula because of a beard and cosmetic contest Montruia State should be able

France has much the sanie outlook as we 11ave. Germany has much the same as France. A is as good as B and so on into the night. Evidenced

to win a conference championship after a week by tbe fact that no one wants war, it or so of the same abardon here. seems that A, B, C, etc., must all be

pretty good ii no one wants war and Of course there are numerous rules that should all are equal.

govern the contest. Penalties for both men and Therefore, .seeing that all n.ations . ' . are peace-loving, I thmk all w,II be-

women should be established and some prize lieve, after a little refleetion, that it should be offered for the best beard and for the I is the war profiteer who. incites na-

. . . t1on agamst nation by mahc10us prop· most beautiful co-ed, sans pamt. All of this can aganda and patriotic music. He in-be worked out with the cooperation of the basket- cites the nations !'gainst each o~her

by saying they will surely be given ball team, the student senate and the entire stud- the works if they aren't prepared to ent body. Anyway we favor a big beard no protect themselves.

= =

Advertising Opens the Door to

Business = = = Regardless of whether his I. Q. was 75 or 150; even though many a lad enrolled in pre-law cher­ished a secret longing to be a shoemaker; not­withstanding the fact that he might be too busy working his way really to get any benefit from his courses; hell-bent for election, Willie went to college.

So the colleges welcomed him with open arms; enrollment was the thing! And because Columbia boasted a student body of over 23,000, ergo Col­umbia was the finest school in the country. Of course, California with 21,000 was nearly as good, and Minnesota wasn't to be looked down upon be­cause she enrolled only 19,000.

But the older order changeth. And the depres­sion came. And allowances were chopped in half. And attendance dropped 30%. And over-loaded teachers were less scrupulous about handing out failures. And so Willie by the thousands dropped out of college.

Thank God! Mayhap the time is once more coming when a college degree means more than that a person is a qualified dressmaker or a reasonably good auto mechanic. In time to come, perhaps the fact that a man is entitled to put the letters B. A. or M. S. after his name may even indicate that the man is an educated one, and a man with a degree can get a job.

WHO SAlD THEY WANTED TO GO TO (' ALIFORNIA?

During the past two weeks we have witnessed a sight not seen before in the history of Montana State College. The tennis courts are more in demand than they were in the fall. All courts are in use and there is ordinarily a waiting line of some twenty students every afternoon. The weather conditions are better at the present than

. ' ' ''The big armies," says the war cosmetic contest. profiteer, "are perfect evidence that

It takes a great many years of hard work, tem­pered by the lessons taught by adversity and re­peated failures to succeed in a big way. And after all this demonstrates truth of a great law­the Jaw of evolution. Nothing is at its best in the beginning. It must grow, develop, evolve, profit by the lessons and bitter e:>rperiences of the ears, of the ages, of times, to reach its finest expressions, its acme of power and usefulness:­Welfare Magazine.

COMMUNICATION

Jamuarrie, 22, 1934 Deer Editore:

i shore am sory to bother u about sieh trifle maters I but i'se requested. And sinse i kan't get a pursoual con­gr.ess with u, cuz on akount of u bean so busi all the time, this here lettar kan nut be voiled.

Starting a new parageraff,-i wull kome to the point an all so hit the tack on the dome-or sompin. U to! me to get a recount of ray fan feet 's gurl friend which he kalls his thesiss but after a convernce with this wurthy gentman, i am without a artikle for this weak exponent four Fan Feet absolootly wull not hav his pursonall doings maid (get that) publick or nothin. Now i'm asskin u wat should a guy doo in a case like that???

I allso bean wonderin why moor people don't l'ite ya and tell ya wat a fine and dandie paper they think this exponent is getting to bee. i no the rest like it too so take it frum me an keep down the gud woik and if u giv be a desent assinement (but not with a guy like Fan) i'll hulp ya in my small way. Cuz i believe like the widow's mite when yo ki1l two stones with one bm·d a half a loaf i sbetter than none at tall.

In resigning, singing off i rneen

i remain and also stay afecks hauntly

YoUI· New Yoik corespondent W.W.

tbe other nations will attack you upon the least provocation." \Vben this state of affairs exists it doesn't take much to start a war. We know this status exists all of the time.

Seeing that all peoples abhor wru·, because they are human and not

Sightless Ph.D.

To Miss Eleanor Brown, teacher in Dayto!', .Ohio, High School, belongs th.e distmctton of being the first bhnd woman in the world to com­plete requirements for a Ph.D. de, g:ree. Miss Bro~rn, who has been si~htless since she was five

1 will re­

ceive the award from Columbia University ne,;t June,

=

~

BUSINESS CONDITIONS IN BOZEMAN ARE

OONSIDERED EQU.AL TO OR BE'ITER THAN

ELSEWHERE IN THE COUNTRY

ADVERTISING HAS BROUGHT NEW CUSTOMERS AND

KEPT OLD ONES IN THE OOMMUNITY

PROGRESSIVE BUSINESS MEN ADVERTISE

In The Montana Exponent

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= ~ =

i I I ; i i

' I

I

I

Page 3: &ontana - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-15-… ·  · 2016-06-28then the fingers die. But if they thaw ... represented Montana State Col

fu1.;sday, January 23, 1934

PHI SIGJIA

Cu..,.,.,INGS NEWS STAND I The following- people were formally ~ ~ initiated into Phi Sigma, honorary Nert to Ellen Theatre biological society, last Oecemb«;r:

Winfield Wilder, (Zoo.), Lewistown. Magazines Fine Candies Edith Johnson, (B. & B.), Malta.

S I. Koci k Fil Jacob Bauer, (B. & B.}, Laurel. School upp ,es, 8 ms Thomas J. Nielson Jr., (A.S.). Gra ss

Range. John P. Parker, (A.S.), Bozeman. Robert Patten, (Ent.), Livin~~on. Ellsworth Hasting~, (Ent.), 81lhngs.

1111 111 111 11 ,11 11 w11, 1 ·1111 101•1 1111 , ,, • • • 1 11 • , ,, John :i\IcFarlin, (Ent. ), Billin~s. ~laurice Schiffman, (B.&B. \ Butte. "STEW" AVERY'S

Galla tonians -.-

• A fairly high scholastic standin~ • and an interest in biological scienees - are the two major requirements for . a

eligibility in this organization.

STUDENTS LIKE OUR HAIR CUTS

PARK BARBER SHOP

THE MONTANA EXPONENT

PHI UPSILON OMICRON FETES COUNTY AGENTS Wednesday of last week about 40

people were entertained at a luncheon given by Phi Upsilon Omicron honor­ing the members o! the Extension Department.

Phi Upsilon Omicron i!- an honorary organization for home economics stu­dents. lL g-ives dinners to provide for a professional fund to be used for loans to home economics students .•

Ten dinners are served each vear. ~our durif"!.e: the fall quarter, four· dur­in.it the _winter quater, and two durin.t?

Campus Ensemble TAR HEEL REPORTS I STUDENT VIOLATION

I ST~·"

8:~:s~~~~.~~!~ SELF HELP ORGANIZA­TION TERMED ILLEGIAL

Chapel Hill, N . C.-The new student cooperative cleaners association, self­help project recently installed at the University of North Carolina, received a set-back last week when the local NRA head ruled that it was violating the code of fair competition, according / to the Daily Tar Heel.

Bramy Beauty

PHO::r~:, lO ! I 11111 11 t lll !l lll l t l lU II Jt l ll l I I ,i I fnl lf !J I II 111f UI II

I the ~pr1ng Quarter. First preference is given official college affairs, stu­dent honor and serivce org-anizations, departmental faculty, other faculty member!'\ including wives of officials. The!',e dinners are served in Herrick Hall.

The phrase "Dutch Courage" comes down to us from the time of Fromp

The organization, which operates on a non-profit basis and is raising its operating capital by charging a mem­bership fee, states that its purpose is to ugive service at cost." Although no investigation of the conditions under which the association operates has been undertaken, complaints had been received, the NRA official stated from commercial dry cleaners who considered the competition detrimental to their own business. Directors of the student organization declare that 1

their wage scale is higher than that provided for by the NRA code and that their employees work shorter hours.

ililllllllllllilllllliiliil lilllllliil!filllliliilllll=iillliiilllllllllillliillllllliiill

' ! '

Text Books --- Student Supplies Candies and Cigarettes

i Second Hand Books Bought and Sold I !

Associated Students Store

liiii iill ii II

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VISIT THE

Hotel Baxter Fountain Room

CREAMY MALTED MILKS AND OTHER

FOUNTAIN DRINKS

AN IDEAL PLACE FOR THEATRE PARTIES

and De Ruyter. The crews of the Dutch fothtini:r ships were given a nip of Holland gin before going into ac-tion. This was derisively termed, by their English foes, as "Dutch Cour­age."

Eagle Hat Works CLEANING, PRESSING,

REPAIRING EXPERT HATTERS

FONE 223

We Call For and Deliver

BOARD AND ROOM OR BOARD

513 SOUTH TRACY Phone 1156-References

Given

14 Years Experience

MRS. J. W. KENDALL

This charming cam pru srtit toorn by Kay Englisla, screen 11ltryer, i• of gray jer ey, Jashiori ecl in SHiagger 1tyle. Jf,'ith it &h e u·enrs a 1meater blou.se and guy stri11rd grt1y-and· acarlet kJtit scnr/. Th ,, i 11y bPrel

i, o/ black suetJe,

In recommending membership in t he association to students and defending it against criticism1 the Tar Heel says "The local NRA head has stated that iry his opinion, the Student Coopera­tive Cleaners Association is violating the code of fair competition but does this not assume-and wro~gly so­that the student organization is a competitive organization? The Stud­ent Cooperative Cleaners makes no such pretentions. It has been repeat­edly and openly averred that this or­ganization will not solicit business

Lena Halpern

deauty and brains are combined N"itb telling effect in the person. of Miss Lena Halpern. of New York. ivho recently won the Perkins Schol-1rsbip in the Yale School of Medi­~ine for the best record in medical md biological science. She had the nighest average grade in a group

of 693 students. .

Youth Movement Proceeds Slowly Paper Discovers

(NSFA)-"The distinction between among townspeople and that the trade . . . . . . . it will handle will be confined entirely State College, Pa.-;-(NSFA)-"In

I nat1onahsm and mte1nationahsm hes to its student members. Therefore it spite of th~ increased interest m na­mainly in the fact that internationaJ. is not a competitive enterprise ~nd t~onal affairs aroused by th 0 depres-

1

ism implies cooperation between na- cannot be said to be using competitive s. ion and subsequent attempts at re­tions under coercion whereas nation- methods, either fair or unfair. Any c~ve?', a tgre_att matenyd ~tudentt arh

. . . attempt to rationalize the position of stmp Y n~, m er1:s m a ~u ahsm means cooperation without coer- the cooperative cleaners may seem to Movement, according to _the ed1_t(!rs cion/' is the opinion of Professor be a backward, defensive attitude. of t~e ~enn State Colleg_ian, official

I Tyler Dennett of the Department of However this is not the case Th. r.ubhcation of P~nnsylvaJUa Stat1: col-. '. . . t d t ' t bl" h · h · 15

/ ege. The Collegian has Just published

its legietnnacy can destroy the good A · h d" · 1 d r

PAGE THREE

Reports Show Many Colleges Aided By CWA

COLLEGES BENEFIT FRO\! GRANTS OF EEOER.\L Fl'. ·os

C\V A and P\V A Providing Xew Build­ings. Landscapi ng, and Emplo)"ment For ~·eedy Students at )!any In­stitutions

New York N. Y.-\Vork for needy students and improvement of campus facilities of all kinds, provided for by Federal appropriations under the Civil and Public Works Administration, wa::; begun in many colJege~ during the Christmas vacation, according to re ports received by the National Stud­ent Federation.

At the University of Idaho, where a grant of $17,000 was received from the CW A before Christmas. two hundred of the 356 students chosen to do the work thus provided for de­cided to remain at the University dur­ing the vacation in order to eam part of their expenses for the second sem­~ster. The work consists largely of improvement to campus buildings an<l grounds. The allotment made for women students provides for 705 hours of work per week for six weeks. A CW A grant of the same amount to Western State Teacliers College at Kalamazoo, Michigan, is serving not only to improve the appearance of the buildings and the landscaping of the campus, but also to give work to the townspeople who will carry out the proposed projects.

A new and improved gymnasium. a new dormitory, and a group of faculty houses are being planned at Georgia School of Technology, which expects to be supplied with the necessary funds by the CW A and the PW A, while Dension University, Gran\ille, Ohio, with the aid of the CWA will receive an artificial lake to be used for zoology experiments as well as for skating.

I

Politics at Princeton University, and I s ud en efs a is ment .1s ere to stay, the first of a series of articles on at­a speaker at the recent N. S. F. A. ~n no_t . urther spacious attacks on tempts to form a Youth Movement in

~-------------- Co~gress. in \Vashington, D. C.- v.:ork which it has already so progres- w~h\1~!·f~u~ ~iJrl:;:n:e~t~~}~ re:!;tl; _,.,.UU~~. - Prmcetoman. s ,vely begun. in Washington by various recognized

As soon as improvements financed by the CW A on the campus of l!ass­achusetts State College, are completed the Public Works Administration will release money already promised to the colleg-~ for the erection of a men's dormitory and a fireproof librarv.

West Virginia University repOrts many students working part-time for the CW A as investigators, and some others who have even left college to fill jobs offered by the CW A. A num­ber of graduates are employed in the county schools. their salaries supplied by Federal grants, and numerous im­provements on the campus are takin~ place under the financial auspices of the Government.-(NSFA).

Another sign of jangled nerves • • •

Door banging, teeth gritting, foot tapping, arguing over trifles-or the old favorite-telephone slam­ming ... Just little ways which prove nerves are getting out of hand ... Danger signals ... If you' re guilty of such gestures, check up-

Watch your nerves ..• Get your full amount of sleep every night. Eat regularly and sensibly. Find time for recreation.

And smoke Camels-for Camel's costlier tobaccos never get on your nerves.

COSTLIER TOBACCOS Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS than any other popular brand of cigarettes!

CIIIWELS

How are YOUR nerves? TEST No. 13

Take a Jarge sheet of pa er . 12" deep. Along the top ~ra~afpro~1mately 20·· wide by ofa penny. Along the bottom pu:~ circles, each the size pick up tho pennies one b on e~ real pennies ... Now and place them 89 quickJ / e with your r ight hand circles at the top of th: : Y:u ca~ e~actly inside tbe Have someone time you AP g ' begi_nmn;i at the left..

· verage time 1s 12 ff'm, T. Tl/din 2nddidfc,o~t! smd,rJ, r,nnls t/,omp/::conds.

t ino suonds. •

Cot>nl(hc, 1933, 1t J, Rtyoolcb Tobacco Comp141

THEY NEVER GET ON YO UR NERVES!

TUNE IN f CAMEL CARAVAN featuring Glen Gray's CASA LOMA Orcheatra and other Headliners Every Tuesday and , Thursday at JO P.M., E.S. T.-9 P.M., C.S.1'.-8 P.M., M.S. T.-7 P.M., P.S. T .• over WABC- Columbia Network

youth groups, including the National Student Federation, the League for In­dustrial Democracy, the National Stu­dent League and the grou~ of organ-

~~~~~!n~~i~~ sg~as:;:sd i~ ep~ftti~otal "For some time now" the editorial

states, "liberal writers have been de­ploring the fact that there is no real Youth Movement in America . They point to the traditional apathy of the American college student, his pre-oc­cupation with campus life and his in­difference to events and situations out­side of college walls. And they con­trast this with the interested and ef­fective youth groups in such countries as Cuba, Russia, Germany and Italy.

"I n general, the accusations of these writers are true. It cannot be said with any degree of reality that there is such a thin_g- as a concerted Youth Movement in this country. At the pres­ent time, howeYer, there are a num­ber of groups endeavoring to interest students in national problems and to adopt a plan of action along some par­ticular line.'1

In commenting on the .S.F.A. con­gress the Collegian says: uThe Na­tional Student Federation of Americ:1 is probably the most representative or any of the student groups. Delegates to its conventions are usuallv the stu­dent government presidents of the large number of colleges and univer­sities which are members of the feder­ation. The first concern of the dele­gates at the convention is the discus­sion of strictly campus problems. At the last convention . however, so many of the sessions were devoted to na­tional affairs, that the delegates voted to confine their discussion in the fut­ure to campus topics in order to have 'less sleeping in the sessions'."'

l'apa1 Prize Winner

Prof. George Birkhoff' I 1rhe pri%e of $10,000_ lire ($850), of­[ered by Pope Pius 1n a mathemati­~ competition for a "system for ~ho solution of differential equa-1 ti?n.s," goes to Professor George B1rkholl', of Harvard University. 1The contest was open to mathema-

tlci&n11 all over,~ ;ivorl4,_

(NSFA)-At the University of Florida exactly thirty-nine freshmen I were promised the freshman class pre­sidency dut· ing the active campaign­ing of "rush week."-John Hopkins News Letter.

l__!g Notes J. E. ~orton, superintep<lent of

Judith Basin Branch Experiment s.ta­tion and J. L. Sutherland of the class of '26, junior agronomist U. S. D. A. at Judith Basin, and )I. A. Bell. '21, of Northern Branch station were here last week for a conference with Di­rector Linfield and other members of the staff.

Directors of the )lontana See Growers association held a meeting at the College last Thursday and Friday. The present directors are W. T. Bu.rf. inzton, Crow Rock; Harry B. Allen. Vo~borg from southern districti X. C Briggs, Glasgow. northea$tern dis trict; F. A. Halverson, Lonepine "' es tern District; C. M. Stonn Power' central district, and Clyde ')le Kee. Bozeman, av.ronomist ex-officio.

STEADY READIXG Reading or figuring often pro­duces eye.strain, "'hich brin~s on eye-ache, headache and ner-vousness. Correcting eye-strain is my s pecialty.

LESLIE E. GAGE Optometrist and l\lfg. Optician Broken Lenses Replaced the

Same Day 20 S. Black Ave. Phone 842-J

Stationery An Exceptional

Value

HA.1\-fMERl\IILL Laid Antique

72 Sheets 72 Envelopes

49c A Limited Quantity

Buy Now

E.J. Poetter DRUG CO.

Phone 128 8 East Main

Page 4: &ontana - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-15-… ·  · 2016-06-28then the fingers die. But if they thaw ... represented Montana State Col

PAGE FOUR

WITH THE SOGIAl WHIRl

U UUUUUUHHHUDUUUUU u u U SOCIAL CALfu'IDAR u u u U Jan. 2&---S. A. E. Fireside. U U Jan. 27-Pi Beta Phi Formnl. ;;

~ i:t 2:i=.~nb.DPic};ormal; 4-H ~

U Club Dance. U U Feb. 10--Hamilton Hall Party; U :•: Alpha Gamma Delta Formal. U U Feb l&----'"The Wild Duck Ex- U U cl~siv·e Date. ;: U Feb. 17-'"The Wild Duck'' Ex- :-: .. elusive Date. U :-: Feb. 24-Scnbbard and Blade U ::: Dance. :.t U March 3-K.appa Delta FormaL :: U March 9-S. A. E. Fireside; Chi ··• :: 0. Formal. U U March 10-Lambda Chi Alpha II :: Formal; Independent Mixer. n u u t: U II UIIUIIHHHHUUUU~U

Deer Lodge; Napoleon Salnlil. Helena; Bruce Wylie, Whitehall, and Roy Lock­wood, Gk,sgow.

---

THE MONTANA EXPONENT

HChampagne Waltz" with a Kick

Fraternity initiations and the preliminary stunts have occupied the minds and time of Yarious people on the hill during the past week. Clever stunts, odd garments, various entertainments, and houseboy duties were uppermo~t in the minds of the pledges. 011 Friday evening the students appeared m public as they really are. A large crowd was in attendance and witnessed numerous paddlings for the unlucky offenders. The coed prom on Saturday night was a very happy affair. A very good time ~as had_ by all ~e mas­querading guests, and dancing and games were enJoyed with the different ~tunts put on by campus groups.

On Friday of this week, S. A. E . will entertain after the basketball game with a fireside at the chapter house. Saturday, Pi Beta Phi will entertain at a formal dinner-dance at the Baxter Hotel. Sunday everyone will pro­bab]y go to the theater or else try to stay home to study. \Vhich will you have?

Kappa Sigma. I Formal initiation for Hans Mehn,

George Yoldseth, Howard \\'elch, an<l John Hopkins was held Sunclay.

Alpha Omicron Pi. Home .Management.

Leslie Athey was a dinner gue"t )Iondny evening.

Guests for dinner ·wednesday were Cliff Anders.on and Nick Ilaberchuk.

Alpha Omicron Pi entertain~ the Kappa Sigma chapter at after dmner coffee Tuesday night. .

Betty Goe wns a Tuesday e,·ening dinner guest.

Mrs. Palmer was a dinner guest Wednesday night.

Leslie Athey wus n dinner guc~t I ..,unday.

~liss Faith h'.uter, Kappa Delta dtS­trict superintendent, and Montana Vegas were dinner guests of Alpha Omicron Pi, Monday, January 15. .

Jane Jaccard left for her home m Butte, Wednesday, on receiving word of her brother's death.

Kay Bownes and Lucille Seallon and Lille Johnson of Anaconda, visited at the Alpha Omicron Pi house, Sun­day.

Margaret Herman, Mary Bolkovat.z, Mary Ellen Bielenberg, and Jean Carruth were in Butte, Wednesday.

Pi Beta Phi. Montana Alpha of Pi Beta Phi an­

nounces the formal pledging of Eliza­beth Aikens of Winnet and Anne Sanders of Great Falls.

Guests for dinner Monday evening were Vivian Finley and G1adys Killal"D.

Pi Beta Phi entertained Omega Beta fraternity at open house Thursday evening.

.Mr. and .Mrs. Barringer and daugh­ters, Peggy and Judy, were Sunday ,;sitors.

Gladys Killam and Jean Hurly were dinner guests of Pi Beta Phi Sunday.

Mary Daugherty was a dinner guest Saturday evening.

Alpha Gamma Delta.

Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Cheever and :\Ir. and l\lrs. Harrv Ellis and daughter1

Betty, were dinller gue~ts a week ago Thursday.

Chi Omega. Miss Mary Sweet was guest of

Gretchen Thaler and Catherine Allard at self-serYice dinner 'I'uesday eve­ning.

Chi Omega entertained at their reg­ular tea Wednesday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Sheriff of Helena visited their daughter illary, last week.

Pi Kappa Alpha. Wednesday dinner guests of Pi

Kappa Alpha included Winston Smalle, :Bud Hendershot, Tom Selle, Jim Mc­Kay and Norris Quam.

Nick Haberjack was a dinner guest of Pi Kappa Alpha on Sunday.

Alpha Gamma JU,o. On·ille Lo\'e a.nd John :\kFarland

were \Yednesday dinner zue~t~. John Dodge and °"'nrren llnnn:1 j

spent the week-end nt Cardwell. .

1

Tom l\Ic:\lasters. '32, of Butte. 1s dsiting in Bozeman.

Sundav dinner guests of Alpha Gamma ·Rho were Kenneth Buholtz. John l\!cFarland and Prank Kozluke.

;\!rs. Emerson Hughes and Mr:-. A. Brown were Monday dinner guests.

Basi1 Ashcraft, '33, is a visitor at the house.

VIGILANTE PARTY IS POSTPONED TILL MARCH

The date of the Vigilante all-school I mixer, sponsored by the lndenendents, has been changed from January 27 to

Sigma Alpha Epsilon. )larch LO. This dance, which is a Formal initiation was held Sunday I feature of winter quarter social life,

for the followlng: Bill Lov·elace, has been postponed because a basket­Bozeman; Carl Robbie, Missoula; ball game scheduled for the night of Perry Chisholm1 Helena; Jerry Lan- the 27th, will make the preparation sing,· Sheridan, Wyo., Don Ma..'-~ell, of a good floor impossible.

1 Although the old saloon may never return. dance e:r:pert&-7 that the te1y measures a1 pre-prohibition da7" will come baek to favor with

c:ocktall,,, hlJd,hails and the Tom Collins. So they haw evolved tbia at the old-faahioned waltz, which la bell\K demonstrated JR:

'1lur.ra¥, New York dance instructor, and Mila 1)qppa Jl{An" _ - IUacalled tbe"Cbampacne Walla."' __ t,' .. ·:. ' ... '.

ALL Al\lERICAN GIRL IS RAPIDLY GROWING THINNER AND THINN ER

( "SFA)-The American girl is rap­idly becoming taller and thinner, al­though not yet a competitor of Alice in W nnderland, according to a survey recently made by Dr. Harold S. Diehl of the Department of Preventive Med­icine at the University c.f Minnesota.

The conclusion resulted from measure­ments made of 17,127 students in nine colleges and compared with tables computed twenty years ago. Stanford University has the tallest coeds, Smith the hea,iest, and Texas University the slightest. Other colleges cantributi:lg statistics were the University of Wis­consin, 1 orth Carolina College for women, Cornell University, Michigan State Normal College, and t he Uni­versity of Jliinnesota.-N. Y. Sun.

Tuesday, January 28, 1934

(NSF A)-Three versions of certain questionable scenes in pictures are now being produced in Hollywood. One is for the general American release, one f or the more moderate states such as Ohio a nd Pennsylvania and still another fo r England.-111. S. C. W.

TUXEDOS, SHIRTS, COLLARS AND TIES

pectator.

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Select Your Dress Needs at THE SPORT SHOP

Opposite Post Office

FOR i ERICKSON'S I i TAXI SERVICE i

EXPERT HAIRCUTI'ING

I Prompt, Reliable Service, i I Careful, Courteous Drivera ! i -~:-~ i ~ I , PHONE S14-W ;; ~ ~

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-:-

STUDENTS FAVOR THE

Baxter Hotel Barber Shop

YES You Can Always Do Better At

I w AGNER BROS. I "Bozeman's Largest Men's & Boys' Store" U 1111111111 Ill I Ill 11111 1111111 I I 11111111111111111111 11111111111 I I I 11 111111

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WATCH FOR SPECIAL'; UI II I II I Ull; I UI UI UI Ul ll l ll l ll l UI Ul ll . ll ll l Ul tl l ll l ll l LI I Ul ll l ll l ll l Ul ll l ll l ll l lll 111 11 1111 il l t\l ll l UI II I Ul ll l ll l lll lll lll UI Ul llllll lll

Delta Gamma of Alpha Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Mar­garet Passage of Fort Benton.

Alpha Gamma Delta entertained at a "Mickey Mouse" buffet supper Sat-­urday evening. The guests were Edna Cowan, Margaret Passage, Rose Fog­arty, Jane Riedner, Mary Brody, Marie Kirsher, Evelyn Miller, Alice Durland, Betty Ernst, Helen Wilson and Mary Alice Peterson .

~UC tr1 e thefi/j; jaciedctg'arelte . IIIr. and .Mrs. Harold Johnson of

Malta visited Miss Edith Johnson the past week.

Miss Virginia llfonteath visited at her home in Great Falls over the week-end.

Mrs. E. L. Fran!!'. of Big Timber and Claire Frang were Sunday dinner guests of Alpha Gamma Delta.

Miss Ernestine Higman was a Tues­day luncheon guest of Kathryn Raf­ferty.

Kappa Delta. Beth Murray of Great Falls and

Gladys Killorn were dinner guests Thursday.

Sigma Omega of Kappa Delta an­nounces the pledging of Lois Webber.

Mary Shaw and llfary Hawks spent the week-end in Butte.

Marjorie Schaeier, Lois Webber, Ethel Anderson and Norma Oakland were Sunday dinner guests.

Miss Faith Kuter, national in­spector, left Wednesday for Missoula.

Pledges and Marjorie Schaefer and Ethel Rizer were guests at slumber party Saturday night.

Alpha Delta PL .Mrs. Florence Pool Eliott, county

demonstrator of Valley county, was a dinner guest of )lary Anderson Thrus­day, January 18.

Miss Julia Cockerll, co'Jnty demon­strator from Forsythe, was a Wednes­day dinner guest of Margaret Wilson.

Miss Irene Everett spent the week­end at her he.me in Helena, Mont.

Miss Catherine Orr was a guest of the chapter house Sunday.

Hamilton Hall Mr. and Mrs. R. J . Baril, son

Henry, and Harry Stein were Sunday dinner guests of Lois Baril.

Florence Shaeffer was a dinner guest of Elizabeth Rust, Saturday.

Miss Yates and Katherine Baltzell were guests of Bernice Totten, for dinner Sunday.

Viviene Finley was a Sunday dinner guest of Margaret Boetcher.

Wallace McLeod, Lloyd Hammond, and Jim Marshall, Kappa Sigma pledges were !l"!'ests of Hamilton Hall for dinner Friday.

Irene Everett and Miss Alexandria Blain spent the week-end in Helena

vi1~cit:e~J:":~riramet erutten-den were dinner guests of I sabelle Ford, Sunday.

KAYWOODIE

PIPES

Kleinschmidt & Co. "For the Idle Hour"

' I

Always the Finest Tobacco

no loose ends

and only the Center Leaves

Always the finest tobaccos and

only the center leaYes are pur­

chased for Lucky Strike cigar­

ettes. \Ve don ' t buy top leaves

-because those are under­

developed. And not the bottom

leaves-because those are inferior

in quality. The center leaves-for

which farmers are paid higher

prices-are the mildest leaves.

And only center leaves are used

in m aking Luckies-so round, so firm-free from loose ends. That's

why every Lucky draws easily, burns evenly-and is always mild

and smooth. Then, too---"I t's

toasted"-for throat protection

-for finer caste.

Lucky Strike presents the Metropolitan Opera Company

Satunb.y at 1:5 5 P. M. , Eutem Swidud ~ o"c.r RN! and Blue Network, of NBC, LUCKY STRI KEwillbroadcuctbcMrttopolita.n ~Cam­pany of New York in the c:ompktc Open, 11Aida•0

NOT the top leaves-they're under-developed

The Cream of the Crop

NOT the bottom leav..-they're inferior Ul quality

Page 5: &ontana - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-15-… ·  · 2016-06-28then the fingers die. But if they thaw ... represented Montana State Col

~5day, January 23, 1934

restling, swimming, track. base­, lacrosse, boxing foo~all, and key are some of the thmgs Con­er, Canada's greatest athlete, stars

For a Good

Haircut Students Go To

COBB'S BARBERSHOP 3 South Black

"AH-H, MONEY'S . . MONEY'S IN YOUR SUIT?"

"You bet. The money you put into Howard's suits shows. Why not try one yourself, Shylock? You'd find this Portia woman a lot less eager to hinder your business plans, PH bet."

THE HUB Ed and Lou Howard

Notices WILL LECTUR.E

"Alcohol and Man, from ~ Psy.cho,~ logical and Physiological y1ewpoint, will be the subject of an illustrated, Phi Sigma talk to be given by Robert Shotwell January 31, at 8 o'clock in room 304 of Lewis Hall. .

~I r. Shotwell is with the United States Department _of Agriculture as assistant entomologist. . .

Phi Sigma, the honorary b10Iog1C?-nl fraternity, will. again arrange a series of talks for th.IS quarter. Mr. Shotwell is the first speaker.

PR! SW~lA MEETING

Phi Sigma will meet Thursday, January 25, 4:30 o'clock in Botany library.

H. Denler, Pres.

W. A. A.

W. A. A. members will meet at 12 o'clock today at Miss Stewart's office.

SECRETARIAL NOTES Lambda Phi Kappa, secretarial hon­

orary fraternity, elected the following officers at a meeting held last week: recordinJ;?; secretary, Erma Puutio; corresponding secretary, Winona Har­vey, and historian, Opal Petrausch.

Christine Stafford, Pete Spraines and Virginia Bohart are secretarial students who have recntly received positions through the C. W. A.

(NSF A)-"The quicker students get into politics the better," declared Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia of New York in a recent interview with a Princeton reporter. uProfessional poli­ticians are keeping a large part of students out of politics when they are

\

just the ones we need. They should take a more active part, furnish a new supply of energy and progressive thought, as they do in other countries"

HALVERSON'S FOOD MARKET

PHONE 88

--:--513 West Curtis

SPECIAL SALES ALL THIS WEEK AT

H. 8. McCAY Quality PHONE 49 Service

There's real ECONOMY in this perfection of detail

IHIOLIEPIROOF IHIOS/llt/RY

No other women's hosiery has all these fea­

tures of our famous Holeproof line - features

of quality, comfort, service, beauty. That's why

smart Holeproofs are so satisfyi ng - so distin­

guished in value, as well as in style.

See them! ... particularly our popular "walk­

ing sheers" - in colors to harmonize with every costume-at

$1.00 and $1.25 CHAMBERS-FISHER CO.

A Plea For The. Honor System

The following paragraphs were sel· ected from a longer article dea1ing with the Honor System which appear­ed in a recent issue of the National Student 1\lirror from an article written by Haywood ,veeks, of the. University of North Carolina. Be is Executive Committeeman of the National Stud· ent Federation of America. Due to ~he current interest on this campus m the subject of cribbing in classes we have printed parts of his article. \\" e do not agree entirely with some of its points but we did consider them well worth presenting to the student body for consideration.-Editor's Note

The two principle forms of student government are the honor system and the proctor system. The former is a principle that replaces espionage and monitorship by confidence in student honor on the theory that stud­ents are gentlemen and will act ac­cordingly in an honorable manner. The latter is a system which denies that students are gentlemen and hon­orable and substitutes for a system of mutual confidence, one of policing.

THE MONTANA EXPONENT

Ailing Psychologist

Dr- Sigmund Freud ~ost noted of psrcho-analysts, Dr. S~gmu.nd Freud. is seriously ill at his Vienna residence. "Freudian theory" is one of world's most fre-

quently discussed tooics.

LOWE'S REPORT FEATURES I PHI ETA SIGMA HAS ALL STUDENT ASSEMBLY

14 NEW PLEDGES (Continued from Pa~e One) solution for, but I did feel that there was much that could be done to im­prove our student government and make campus life at M. S. C. more pleasant and productive.

1ort was with these things •ill mind that I sought for all the constructive information and advice that people from other schools might have to offer.

"When learnin~ through discussion groups that so many schools have satisfactorily worked out ways and means of handling student employ­ment, I <:an see no reason why we cannot do likewise at M. S. C. We all know that the college and down­town establishments: offer a great mount of help to students. We also know that in a good many cases the most deserving and needy student jg often left out of the picture anJ eventually has to drop out of schooJ.

0 1 t is for these reasons then, that when the student senate takes up this project, a bureau of student employ­ment, and gets full cooperation from all sources of employment, the enroll­ment can be kept at par.

FROM FROSH CLASS· Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic

honorary fraternity for men, has pledged 14 students from the class of 1932 for election to that society be­cause of their high scholastic record

mi1:ndu;~og i~~eau~~:n p1~d;~d· are: M.arvin Meyer, Bernard Carlson, John Bower, Guy McBane, Bill Perkins, William Hess, Wong Sun You, Lester \Villson, Robert Everett, James Finn, Fred Grinde, Karl Swingle, William Johnston and Jack Goss.

Phi Eeta Sigma was rounded at Montana State college through the activities of Dean J . .M. Hamilton, who is still active in its work on the cam­pus. Last year when initiation was

r;~~t la~k~~s~:e ::t:a:I~a~e!e~b:; of the group.

College To Help Stockmen's Meet

PAGE FIVE

What' ll We Do (Current Shorts on Coming Plays

at Local Theaters)

AT THE ELLEN Sunday, llfonday-FTOm Bow­

ery burlesque she climbed to the heights of Broadway in the screen's greatest musical ro­mance. Such is the gist of "Dancing Lady,'' which co-stars Joan Crawford and Clark Gable. The play is a fast modern ro­mance of back-stage Broadway. In it are heard five new song hits, hundreds of beautiful chorus girls are seen and a mul­titude of unusual dance numbers are shown.

In the early American college, stud­ent discipline was a serious problem. The students were not trusted, and every action of theirs was closely spied upon and supervised, This na- MAN y STATES r.1vE turally led to mutual distrust and U

f~~~rt/tr4~ fr:J1i~~~ev:t~~:~f ~~~ I HIGHWAY CONTRACTS

"It was surprising how few insti­tutions were at all infested with the so-cal1ed 'cribber,' merely because over a period of years the students have been successful in establishing a higher ideal than that of 'cheating' themselves out of what they spend good money to obtain-an education.

"This campus has a series of tradi­tions, which, through the close co­operation of service and honorary groups are generally well kept up and respected by the student body. Why then should it not be possible that with the high class of student that comprises our student body, to start, in the same manner we have estab­lished others, to build (call it what you may) the tradition, the standard, er the fine ideal, that we do not

The Montana Stockmen's association which is to hold its fiftieth annual meeting soon at Miles City, has asked Montana State college to give its help in the preparation of a special annt­versary program. In response to this request, Dean Linfield, director of the experiment station, has appointed a committee composed of Louis P.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday-Jean Harlow and Lee Tracy are united for the first time in the picture "Bombshell," a portrayal of life in Hollywood ... 1\liss JTarlow is shown in her happiest rol~as the vivacious, "oluptuous bombshell of Hollywood who erupted so often she blew the lid off her own pri,·ate life and loves, to provide one of the merriest of shows. All the mechanical aspects of producing a screen play are also shown. first and greatest educators, Thomas

Jefferson, promulgating a new idea ?f academic discipline in the follow-mg excerpt of a report of the com­mission appointed by the Legislature of Virginia "to fix the site and devise the plan of organization of the Uni­versity of Virginia."

The opponents of the honor system ~ttack the ,~rtue of it by saying that 1t ~n·es the s~udent too much oppor­tunity to be dishonest. But in actual practice. it does not work out that way. Even \Vtth those of weaker characters the unsupervised power of mutual confidence and fear of betrayal of that tI-ust is stronger than the fear of being detected by a spying pro­ctor. School-boy ethics is a curious branch of moral philosophy and one of its principles seems td be that "where there is no trust, deceit is no crime." "Cribbing" is considered a venial offensewhen there are profes­sore a:ound for the express purpose of espionage.

In conclusion, I quote the words of . Professor Edward S. Joynes of University of South Carolina: uThe only true system for the education of a gentleman by gentlemen is the honor system-that is, the system of mutual respect and confidence."

Art News I SOAP EXlflBIT

. The annual soap sculpture exhibi· t1on from the Procter and Gamble company is now on display in cases on the third floor of Herrick Hall and will be here during this week. The exhibit is made up from prize pieces selected from the yearly contests and represents all classes of work from all parts of the country.

The students are urged to see this group as some pieces are very charm­ing according to those that have viewed them.

~;~ti/ {;}'_n C~it~rde1;;'.°"Tte1:.:'%~n::iui

Progress Is Rapid, 64 % of $400,-000,000 Being Already Award­ed

Progress in award of contracts for 1cheat' at Montana St.ate College? public works highway construction has "Strict measures an actions by a so­been so rapid in many states as to called lboard of suspension' are not leave only small balances of the ap- necessary. \Ve all know what ill feel­propriated funds stll available for al- ings are brought about by those ac­lotment. according to reports of the tions. It is inevitable that all feel U. S. Bureau of Public Roads. ings resulting from such measures

have charge of the preparation of a sepcial exhibit featuring the develo1>- Wednesday-A dr_ama that packs rnent of the livestock industry in Mon- ~motional ?u~~hes mto ever! scE:ne tana. They plan the exhibition of 1s offered m Stage ~other, wh_1ch cowboy, the old range, and general j features _Allee. ~rady m th~ leadmg wild west pictures and relics. As a role. It 1s .a vivid P.r~sentation of the sideline they intend to bring attention heartbreakmg amb1tton that causes to the development of the Montana "stage mothers" to drive their chil­State College Extension department dren to success in the theater. SkiU­with particular stress being laid upon fully blended into the drama are many its activities in the livestock field. light touches of sparkling comedy.

With Maureen O'Sullivan and Fran­chot Tone. NEW ECONOMIC HUMAN

BEING NEEDED IN U. S. At the end of the year, 64 per cent could be avoided if each and every of the $400,000,000 provided for emer- loyal wearer of the Blue and Gold took .lrency construction of highways by the it upon himself to say: Cheating? The old human being as Americ::i National Industrial Recovery Act had Cribbing? 1t just isn't being done has known him must be scrapped, been taken up in work advertised for here. says "The Christian Century/' leading .conh'act or started by day labor em- "Once the establishing of such a undenominational religious journal, in ployed directly by the highway au- high ideal as this the students them- a recent issue. What is needed is a thorites. Kansas had awarded to con- selves, you, and I, could do many new economfo ma who is wiling to doff tract all the work possible wth avail- times more than a board of suspensio~ his old hankering after riches and able funds. There are 26 other states or the suspecting eye of a conscien work for the social good. He will be that have exceeded the a\·erage rate tious instructor, to make this institu- different from the older American of progress in putting the road money tion not only one of higher learning with his rugged indivdualisrn and am-to work as indicated by reports of but of higher ideals. bition. work advertised for contract or started "It can be done, it has been done1 "The economic man of classic theory by day labor. These states and the but much larger schols than ours. Yes, and of capitalist practice," says 11The percentages of available funds they it has been done in schools that do Christian Century," '"is a man who have taken up are : not contain near the general high type consults his own self-interest first,

Arizona, 70.7 per cent; California, of indhidual that this one does. last and all the time. He is altogether 68.6 per cent; Connecticut

1 94.8 per "A challenge, students of Montana without altruistic impulses in his

cent; Delaware, 69 per cent; Florida, State College! Are we smart enough business activities, thinking only of 67.7 per cent; Idaho, 65.6 per cent; loyal enough, fair enough, honesf his own profit. He buys as cheaply as Iowa, 71 per centj Kansas, 100 per enough, to start now to establish a he can, sells for as much as the mar­cent; :Maine, 79.9 per cent; Michigan, new standard? ·We do not cheat at ket will bear, and pays the lowest pos-69.9 per cent; Missouri, 70.9 per cent; Montana State College,' and may the sihle wages which will induce men Montana, 70.5 per cent; Nebraska1 habitual breaker of such a tradition \""'Omen and even children to work foi-82.8 per cent; New Hampshire, 76.2 be ostracized by honest, earnest him. The new system calls preem-Island, 73.2 per cent; South hTddlxyh students." inent!y for a economic man of cooper-per cent; New Mexico, 76.1 per cent; ative, unselfish self-restraint, operat-New York, 93.8 per cent; Ohio, 74.2 ,--------------- ing in a limited market determined per cent; Oregon, 78.1 per cent; Penn- LJOW lt'• Done I according to a social plan, under an sylvana, 77 per cent; Rhode Island, fl I economy of abundance, in half-com-73.2 per cent; South Carolina, 66.7 per petition and half-coperation with other cent; Utah, 83.8 per cent; Vermont, . men about the quality of whose irn-81.9 cent; Washigton, 81.4 per cent; So often we hear questions as to pulses he can make no 'a priori as-Wyoming, 68.9 per cent; District of just what the girls living at the home sumption whatever." Columbia, 97.3 per cent; Hawaii, 80.8 management house do; what duties are per cent. performed and what advantages are HOME ECONOMICS CLUB

A total of 5,287 projects, estimated obtained? This article will answer a WILL BUY FILING CASE to cost $273,849,000 bad been adver- few of these questions. tised for contract or begun with da.y There are four girls living at the ---

Coming Next Tuesday-The ace of road shows, "Jazzmania of 1934," features Ted Lee and his nationally famous recording dance band. The show also includes the Downey Sis­ters. NBC and Columbia radio stars; futuristic dancers; comedians; an acrobatic tappatte, a fan dancer and many other nol"elty acts. Forty people are in the company. Two stage shows will be given and in addition the regular screen play will be shown.

AT THE RIALTO Sunday, Monday-Four great

stars, Leslie Howard, Doug Fair­banks. Jr .. Paul Lukas and Mar­,iaret Lindsay, are shown in the four-star hit, "Captured," the love story of three men and a woman played a:r::iinst the flaming back­gro11nt.! of the Great ""ar. The locale for the picture is a war­iime G<'rman prison camp. The four star~ and 2,000 other p1ayers relive the drama that Sir Phillip Gibbs, celebrated English war rorrespondent penned in his novel, "Fellow Prisoners.11

labor up to December 30, the bureau house for sLx weeks. Four duties The first meeting of the year was ART LECTURE states. The cost of the day labor pro- called manager, cook, housekeeper and held last Thursday night, the speaker

The sixth lecture of a series pre- jects included in the above is estimated child director keep the girls busy of the evening being hliss Rokahar.

Friday, Saturday - Wheeler and Woolsey in uDiplomaniacs," won the Ignoble Prize for their tuneful sex­pedition of hysterical importance. The play is a hilarious jumble of burles­qued facts in which the celebrated comedy pair are sent to the Geneva Peace conference as Indian represen­tath-es.

sented by the Bozeman chapter of the at $20,160,000. for one week, then she changes to an- Miss Rokabar is a member of the _The recovery program has accom­American Federation of Arts Wl.

11 be Of the total number of projects ap- other duty, thus rotating the duties ~ome ec'?nomics extension department phshed what we have been unable to

Proved by the fedel·al bureau 2 752 and keep·,ng the rout·,ne go1·ng. m Washmgton, D. C. The subi·ect of accompl,·sh by leg1·s1at·1on ·,n the last giyen by Mrs. E. B. ~eller on " D~or- were under construction at the 'end of The manager plans all the meals her interesting talk was a trip through 30 years.-Henry T. Rainev. speaker ~t1on ~nd Representation, Comr,artsons the year and 476 were completed. The does a11 the ordering, does family this department. of the House of Representatives. m Patntmg Vases, Rugs, etc. at the work under construction which is laundering, has general charge of the It was decided at this meeting to :============== Baxter Hotel January 24, at 8 o'clock. estimated to cost $169,575,000, was house, sees that the duties are being select a project. Last year the club Mr~. Keller will co?tmue the study of giving regular employment to nearly done correctly and at any time has donated a show case to the depart- ,._.,.._.,.,...,_..,_.__.,,_,..._,..._,.,._.,. • .,..,..., •• ..,_ • .__ • .,,.,..._,.. •• .,..,.u_v.•u.•~-"-·"._,., •• ,.,._~._ design and decoration. ,· 130,000 men at the turn of the year. the house ready for visitors and in ment. This year it was decided to pur- 1 Cultivate That I

The students who have attended find spectors. At the end of her week she chase a file. The club is very proud th~ course valuable in explammg the AG CL B MEETS WEDNESDA y submits to Miss Clow, who has charge of this project be<:ause the cost of the Well Groomed Appearance prmciples of art and how to enJoy the of the house, a report which includes file is approximately $115· -Try-different arts. At the regular m_eeting of the A~ II dit · to d This file is to hold records of all IDEAL BARBER SHOP

Club tomorrow evenmg, Dr. H. Welch, ~ue~~r:r u~:eh~~~-en ry, menus an home economics graduates and under- (Next to Security Bank) Money is a man-macte device to en- veterinarian of the animal husbandry The housekeeper cleans the entire graduates, all home economics books

courage, promote and facilitate cont· department, will speak on the sub- house, waits on table and washes which are now in the main library .._.,....,..,..,....,,.. •• ,.. •• ,.,._.,. • .., •• ..,_.._._.,...,.. •• ,., •• ,., •• v•v.•u.-u.•~.,..-.,.,-.,.,._~.._ merce and trade and, being man-ere- ject of Montana Big Game. Dr. Welch, dishes. and the home economics library, and ated, it is subject to control, manage- who has lived in Montana for manv The cook does all the cooking for also any clippings of interest concern­ment and manipulation by men.-Sen- years and who has been an enthuS- the house members except the baby ing the department. This file is ex­ator Elmer Thomas. iastic sportsman during the entire The child director has full charge pected to be in the home economics

time, is well qualified to speak on this of the baby including the preparation library before th, close of the school DAFFODILS AND PUSSY WILLOWS

Make an ideal center The idea of progress is a modern subject. Because of the unusual nature of. its food. year.

idea. Early and medieval Christianity o~ the program the Ag Club has in- These duties are of such variation ---------------knew httle about it, for it relied too v1ted all who are interested to attend that the girls get experience in every The rally opened Friday evening much on Providence for everything. \Vednesday's meeting. angle of managing the home. with a banquet at the Methodist piece 'Y}lat. the goal of this desirable direc-

1

pr. ,Welch'~ speech will begin at Each week a dinner for guests is church at which Sam Eagle, Bozeman1

tlon is unknown.-Rev. Demetrius B. 7 :30 o clock m room 201 of the Ag held. These entertainments includes acted as toastmaster. Saturday eve-Zema, Fordham University. building. a formal dinner and a buffet supper ning an art slide song service and

or fireside. In this way each girl has musical numbers constituted the pro­

Death Calls Two Noted Writers

Louis J oaepb Vance Robert W • Cbamben American literature lost two famous contributors when Louis .Joseph Vance and Robert W. Chambers died the same day in New York. Vance, famed for his mystery stories, was burned to deabh w:iten he fell asl~ep while IIDlOkinC a cla-arette. Chambers died folloWUI& an operation

for intestinal trouble.

an opportunity to become hostess anJ gram at the Christian church. to cook for a guest night. Sunday, vesper services were held

M.Langohr FLORIST

19 East Main Phone 95 The girls living at the house are at the Baptist church, following which

kept Yery busy performing their the group attended the Intermountain duties, but they also have a very good Union college chorus at the Presby-time. terian church. :..-------------..:

PLAN FOR NEXT ISSUE ~ • .-.-•••••••• ._._ •• .,,. • ...,..,.,,._._._._ • .,._._.........,.....,.,,._,..,._ • ..,_..,_._._ .... _,.,.,,.,.,.,,.,,....,.uvs....,.,,,.,,.,....,._ OF "THE OPEN RANGE'' ) • • .,.. • -- •••••• .,.~

Plans for the next issue of the new ~ Have You Seen the New Spring ~ student literary magazine, "The Open ~ Range" are well under way, ,accord- ) Dresses U.Te A re Show,·ng? ' ing to Bill Schenk, editor of the mag- ) ,..,.

4 • '

azine. It will probably be issued the 1 ' first week in March. BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS

According to the editor the next ) issue ,vill contain more subjects of a •,~ WONDERFUL SILKS general nature than were in the firat. )

short stories, book reviews, poems and I I

Already the material selected includes 'l) LA TEST STYLES

articles of general interest. Authors -AT-and names of articles have not been I l announced as yet. • ~

The editor has announced that there $3 95 I is still room in the next issue for short • articles or short stories. Anyone who has a contribution should see Bill YOU MUST SEE THESE Schenk at once.

CHI BETA ALPHA ~ SPONSERS RALLY ~

I ~ ~ About 60 young people, many of I · ~

whom were Montana State college I G I M C k ,

students, attended the Inter-Church '~ enrge C rac en s ~ rally sponsored last week-end by Ch, V Beta Alpha, religious fraternity, in cooperation with the young people of .-. _._ •• ._ • .,.. •• ._.._..._ •• -.,y,,. •• ._ • .,..,....,..,._.,,..,.__._.__. •••••• _._.....,..,.w.w.-.-.-, six Bozeman churches.

Page 6: &ontana - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-15-… ·  · 2016-06-28then the fingers die. But if they thaw ... represented Montana State Col

PAGE SL~ THE MONTA A EXPONENT

f Sport:,Yarns 1 Bobcats Defeated .,___The Bo-=~OG-0:::-i:e on.the Tw1·ce In B y u T1·1t nose from the conference champions e e e last week. Brigham Young looks µIce a contendor ngain for the chnmp1on-ship. The Cats played a good game :Saturday night but were not able to hold the Cougar, in the last half.

Notre D.ame lost its first game of the season Saturday night. Pitts­burgh ,, as able to nose the Irish out five point.s. Even the Ramblers can't win all the time.

Young and Taylor Star for Cat. M. S. C. Basketballers, Unfortunate In "34",

But The Conference Champs Of 1936

The Bobcat swimming team is preparing for a ~uel m_eet _with ... \Iontana University, wruch is to be held some time m .February. Mi.sevic .Fox, Harrboo, Russell, and a f~w more are working out daily. \V ith this ho:.t of :,Lari:;, the Cats should be able to tuck a win under their belts.

\Vith the weather as it has been, it will be a favorable lime for the track squad to work out. Harrison, Smith, and Kram.is have been out jogging daily. We only hope that it is this warm next spring.

Brigham Young University took two hotly contested games from the Bobcat last week end, 48-31 and 52-37. The ,ictors won both games easily, even after the Bobcats had managed to hold the score to 29-25 during the first half of the latter game. The victory put Brigham Young ahead in the western division of the conference race; Utah having lost to the Ags in their Satur­day night encounter. The games were played in Provo.

Brigham Young flashed the same color that carried them to a conference championship la t year. Tall, lanky, experienced men strolled out on the Couger floor to gh·e the Bobcats the worst defeat that they have experienced this eason. Never were the Cats within victory range of the highly totted Brigham Young · aggregation. The dctory was a sweet one for the Provo five since it gave them undisputed possession of Ll1e conference race.

James Taylor was again the high \'a\·ich and Edwards both ~howe<l ~ign:-: score man on the trip. The first nig~t of good generalship but were not able

. The state basketball rae:e bas turned Jim annexed ei~ht points, and the f1- to keep up with the' fa~t pace thnt th,.;i, mto a fow· cornered affair. .Montana nal fray saw him ring up a tot.al of . U., Montana State, T.he Mmes and 13 points. Young played an outstand- tnh b_oys set. Intermountam are a~ f1g~ting for t~e in~ game, his passing and guardmt: B. ): . U. rang up a total of tOO lead. Montana Umve.i·s1ty took it / wa.s feature of the initial contest. points for the two encounters, com-/ once ';)ll the chin from the M_iners, but pared with 6 for the Boben.ts. These reta!lted and ga~e the Miners the . . , worst whipping they have had this ., scores arc co~s.1der~bly h1g~, but the year. Intermountain defeated the 1..

1 ronference n.ftord!-. high scoring teams. Miners once, but tc.,ok two defeats Brigham Young has :w~ragcd 43 from Dillon Normal. The B~bcats J>Oints per g-ame in their four confer-have only played two games m the ence games. The Bobcats have only state loop so far. Both of these turn- ::wcraged 34 points per game. ed out on the loss side. The Miners Nelson led the attack for the were the victors. It looks like a real Cougars. His height and accurate race for the state crown this year. passing was a great hindrance to the

They tell us that Cunningham i.s out to win all the middle distant races this winter in indoor competition. Last year the Kansas tate flash did a nice piece of running, winning the national indoor and outdoor mile races. The first big race wiU be the Milrose games this week in New York City.

Bobcats' defense. Nelson scored 23 points in the two games.

Dick Purdum, John Dunckl'l, Albert Zupan, Jim TnYior, Jim Young (co-captain ) Ed Ilnrding (co-captain) Deac Overturf, Eli Doyra, Herold Murdock (manager), Brick Breeden (coach), Bill Stebbins, Joe Bilant, Pete Va,-ich, Schubert Dyche, (coach).

Speaking of the ~Iilrose games, Metcalf, the colored flash, wiU also be there. Last year Ralph was a bit unfortunate in his races. Toppino, the fast man from LoyoUa, beat out the colored boy in the 60 yard dash. Metcalf is out to avenge the defeat of last year, however.

Brigham Young no~ leads the West­ern dfrision of the Rocky Mountain Conference. Utah U. took ita first defeat last week from the Utah Ag­gies. This drops the Utah Five into second pJace.

You can't beat those professional football teams. The Chicago Bears are touring the Western coa.st, nnd have won a game from an aJl-star team from Southern California. Red Grange galloped twice for touchdowns, through the entire foe line. With such men as Musso in the Bear line they should be able to run over the other team. Musso weighs 265 pounds, and hails from Millikin University located at Decatur, Illinois.

Twenty frosh received the em­blem for their work in football this season. Thirty more received point awards. Captain Stroup, the Overturf boys, Taylor, Pur­dum· nd McKay ,-..•ere the main­stays of the eleven. You'll see plenty of these felJows next year.

These basketball players can't seem to keep out of fights. Only last week we learned that Riggs Stephenson went the matrimonial way. If they are not fighting the diamond, they'll be fighting over the diamond (ring).

THE MOST EARNEST

Player in uniform 113 Ed Harding, co-captain this yeax with Jimmy Young. Ed was an All-State forward in high school and while he seems to have Jost his uncanny eye for the basket he is one of the fastest and clevere~t floor player since the days of the Wonder Team.

The Bobcats meet the Utah Ap in their next ,:?ame on the local floor Friday and Saturday nights.

The lineups: Firs:t Game

Johnson, rf . . .... Cannon, rf Adams, rf ...

..... 1

.... 1

. .... 0

0 2 0

1 Grimmett, lf . . . 2 1

1

~clson, c .. . . ..... 7 0 Cannon, rg ...... ...... 1

- Whitman, lg- ..... .. 1

0 1 1 3 0 0 0

1i STATE BASKETBALL Montana Slate (3!) FG FJ 1? oung, rf ......................... 1 Oliver, I! ··-···· -···· l 0 Edwards, c ······-···-· ..... 1 1 Doyra, rf ·······- ......... --·· 1 0 Harding, lg ...... . . .. -··· 2 1 Taylor, If ······-·· ···- ···--·- 3 2 Bilant, c ... .. - ·- .• ___ 0 0 Zupan. rf .. _ .. ... 0 0

tebbins, rf ···········-··-······· l 0

Totals . ··- .. 11 Brigham Young (4 ) Millet, rf .......... ···-··-······· 4 Grimmett, If .. .... . .... :l Nelson, c ···········-···· ..... . 4 Hunter1 rf -····················-··· 2 Whitman, If ···-··· .. . ...... 5 Giles, c ............... _ ............. 1 Turpin, lf ··-······-· • ____ ... 0

3 0 0 0 1 0 0

5 PF Totals . . ·- . . .. 21 6 11 Johnson, If ..... ... . . ... 2

1 Free throws missed: Montana State I Hunter, rg .. ··- ·-·. . ... 3 1 -Young-, Harding-. Va,-ich. Brigham/ Giles, II ...... ·-·· ... 2 ? Young-Hunter, Vi'nitman, Johnson -

i QUIET LAST WEEK 1 Giles, Cannon. Totals -· .. -··-···· ..... 22 62 1 \ --- Half time score: l\lontnna State 23; 21 Second Game Bri,:rham Young 29. I )!onlana Stale (37) FG FT TP P!rsonal fouls-Millett 3; Grimmett 0 I Taylor, rf . . . . 5 3 12 2; Nelson, (annon, Whitman, Johnson, 0 Hardmg, If . __ -· .. 2 0 4 Hunter 3; Gilles, Taylor, Harding,

- Young, c . .. ... . ....... 3 l 7 Young, Do:rra, 4. 9 Doi ra, rg - .. . 2 1 5 Free throws missed: Millett, Nelson,

Stebbins, lg - . ··-- 2 0 4 Whitman, Taylor, Hardin, Doyra 3, 3 1 Ya,ich, If -·. -·· ....... 1 2 4 Va,ich 2, Stebbins 2. 1 Bilnnt, c ................... .. ..... 0 0 0 21 Edwards, rg ···-- 0 0 0 1 - Steel towers are being constructed O Totals . ....... .15 7 371 in Tennessee so that forest wardens 0 j Brigham Young (52) can maintain constant watch over 14,-0 )Iillett, rf .. . _ .... 4 11 000,000 acres of woodland.

.Miners Win Two From Vandals While Grizzlies and Bobcats Lo~ In on-state Games

Last week was quiet in the state basketball race that has been assu m­ing porportions because of the appar­ent strength of all the teams. As it stands now, it is pretty much of a toss-up in selecting the winner.

The State University has one up on the Miners from Butte but the Min­ers have one win orer the Bobcats.

tie c(!arette liars MILDER tie c(jaret!e tia(ArrAsTES BETTER

Tuesday, January 23, 1934

~!;eswi~e~h!bse~~ ';:~:. nTh~mt~t! were in Utah where they dropped two to the strong Brigham Young outfit, T n the meantime the Mines took two games from the University of Idaho

ouhtern Branch, 38-26 and 47-23. A' was the case when the Mines edged out to a one-point victory over the Cats, their swift forward, Gallanti was the star of the games.

At Missoula this last week-end the Grizzlies took it on the chin from the flashy Ellensburg Teachers from Washington, to the tune of 34-26. Montana used 11 men in the game, while Ellensburg played only five.

It is the height of absurdity to sow little but weeds in the first half of one's lifetime and expect to harvest a valuable crop in the second half.­Percy H. Johnston.

It is where a man spends his money that shows where his heart lies.-A. Edwin Keigin, D. D.

Seven transcontinental railway sy~~ terns cross the Unite<! tates and three railways run from coast to coast through Canada.

"YEAH, MOSCOW

" . . and you failed me" and you will feel the ~e way if you fail to get your picture in time for the 1934 :Mon­tanan.

Linfield Photographer

It takes a great many years of hard work, tempered bi- the lessons taught by adversity and repeated failures to succeed in a big way. And after all, this demonstrates truth of a great law-the law of e,-olution. Nothing is at its best in the beginning. It must irrow, develop, evolve, profit by the lessons and bitter experiences of the ears, of the ages, of times, to reach its fine~t expressions. its acme of power and usefulness.-Welfare Mag­azine.

We state it

What has happened in the past hun­dred yea.rs is that industrial age bas superimposed itself on agricultural civiliztion.-Mussolini.

P1ay mg an<l injur~d knee has fea­tured Joe Bilant's playing so far this year. An expert jumper and a good ball handler, be should prove to be une of the most valuable players dur­ing the three years coming.

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