6
~ontann 1Exp:on:ent VOLUME XXV. THE l\IONTANA EXPONENT, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1933 NID.IBER 11 AsA Student Sees It "THE OPEN RANGE" TO BE RELE AS ED T HI S THURSDAY SAYS STUDENT PUBLISHER AR'l' BAZAAR Students, facul ty and towns- people are cordially invited to attend the Art Bazaar which will be held next Friday night, December 8, from 7 to 10 o'clock and Saturday, December 9, until 5 p. m. in the art department, room 307, Herrick Hall. Comple ted Plans Show That ~)orority Dormitories to Make Impressive Campus Addit ion WlTH ACTUAL REPEAL of the 1th amendment to the constitution 01 t.he lJmt.ed :states only a few hour s uti the people of th.l.s and other states still :;;.eem very much in the dark as to Just what t.he era of so called "per- i:iOnal liberty' 'is to bring. So far ten states hav~ adopted more or less def- mite plan~ for dealmg with liquor when 1t aga.m becomes a legal bev- t!rage. '1 ne::ie plans vary w1aely . m provision from t.bat of l\lontana which provid es ior state hquor stores and only hceni:;ed consumption to that 01 .1. evada wruch true to mercenary form will pernnt the uncontrolled return 01 the oid-t.une saloon. FIRST ISSUE OF STUDENT :MAGAZINE TO CONTAIN DRAMA, POETRY, FICTION, For a number of years the Art Club has sponsored an in- teresting bazaar during the fall yuarter which included products from many countries. This year a most unusual collection of ar- ticles has been a rranged . Hand made p0ttery is being sent from the Univers ily of North Dakota which ha s interesting western designs and glazes. Japanese prints, near ea st embroideries and Czechoslovakian porce}ajns are other examples of what you will find at the bazaar. The prices are very reasonable. --------------- Rivenes Annual $200,000 EXPENDITURE ' ILL BE ME'l' OVER PERIOD OF 25 YEARS AND CRITICISM Takes Another $ignal Honor "The Open Range," student literary magazine, will make it s initial appearance on the campus next Thursday when the fall quarter issue is released. If the first issue is received favorabl y, the staff plans to put out two more copies of the publication dur- ing the winter and spring quarters, with a possibility of estab- lishing it as an official student organ. The price has been set at ten cents a copy to faculty and students. Home made candy will be sold by the Home Economics Club. DYER AND PARKE filVEN MENTION Another unique compliment is paid to the All-American Montanan, edited la.st year by Dave Rivenes, in a spe- cial sec:tion for the November issue of the Scholastic Editor, stude nt journal- Further and more definite plans for the sorority dormitories upon which is to be started at Montana State College as soon as the weather permits next spring have recently been formulated and prepared for publication. According to the architects plans the dormotories will consist o fthre eseparate buildings of two units each making six units in all They will be located in the block between sixth and seventh streets now occupied by the College Inn. »trangely enough there is very little public mtere:;t m the impending re- real. During the past 15 years 1t h llS been one of the most bit.erly op- poocd and Joy ally supported issues to aemaud the attention ot this countr). Always a major political iss u\! the hquor controYersy has been a powtr- ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of doJiarb ha,·e been bpent in the cir- culation 01 both wet and dry propa- ganda. E,·en religion has been caHed m by bot.11 bide& to intlame the crusad- ing instinct. of their followers. For- tunately now repeal is taken as the rather unimportant matter of fact which it really is. .Besides some of the other problems facing the. en~re world today the simple re-legalization 01 somelhing which has been going on since the Habalonian Prince first dis- co,ered that fermented grape juice has certain dynamic qualities not lound in the un-a ged prouuct is of re- Jauve insignificance. According to Bill Schenk, editor-in-chief of the magazine, the forthcoming issue contains a variety of material that should be of interest to almost every student on the campus. ~i~~al1~~~:;~:ho)~~l:ht!; t~~!i!~ t ion. The three buildings will be con- \Yill Come Back," dep1ctmg an met- 1934 Mo ta a The leading feature will be a one-! act play by Ellis WE:st!ake, ·'~e~l IN ALL-AME RICAN In the section of the magazine de - w d s k ,·oted to P!Ctu~es of the ~onven_tion of ar pea s the organ1zat1on, held m Ohio last summer, Miss Marion Hart of Waite nected by surface walks and driveways and by underground tunnels for use in winter and for serving food from e. central kitchen in the north unit. Absolutely fireproof construction will be used throughout with the out- side being of brick supported by steel and concrete. There will l.,e no woad used. The c.lormitotics will be of a type of architecture d.fforent from that of any othe. building on the campus. Those who help~d de:;ign the dent in a lumbe,· camp durmg a bliz• n n n zard. Bert B. Hansen, dramatic coach1 high schol, Toleda, is shown looking o H d•t T over some of the vearbooks awarded prizes 1ast year by the critical serv-\ Il ere I y 0 ice maintained b·· the association. The under whose supervision the play was S .d A written, states that it is h)r far the its tr1 e S best of the sev:eral student-written plays comopsed smce he has been here. Both Receive Honorable Mention In A. P. Selections. Kravik Named In All-Conference List yearbook she is inspecting- with every R h Cl b evidence of deep interest is the 1933 esearc u Montanan with the full-length por- Wallace Cole has contributed a story w k St t called ·'Corning-Coming-Coming" or ar s dealing with an allied spy in Germany who was captured and sent- Two Montana State college football enced to death. This, in combination Jay · en honorable mention with a comica1 wild west satire by Fn tb~s ~if~!J!;ican selections made Ed Keeler and a sketch written by Work on the 1934 Montanan comes last week by the Associated Press, Louise Talmage, makes up the fiction into full swinit this week when sever al "Corky" Dyer being mentioned as contents for this number. newly appointed staff members take guard and Captain George Parke be- Two critical articles have been in- up their duties in connection with the ing placed at quarter back . This is a eluded, both dealing with the drama. various departments into which the signa l honor and a fitti ng climax to Bernard Copping has worked out a enterprise is divided. the three years of gridiron campaign- discussion of the works of Ibsen, the According to Lou Gudgel, editor of ing each of these two men has be- great Norwegian dramatist of the the yearbook, the athletic editor this hind him. In addition to this men- 19Lh century, which is of especial iu- year will be George Misevic. Imme- tion both were members of the all- THE L'\'.TEREST1NG CO~FLIC1 terest since Ibsen's masterpiece, 11 The diately after his appointment, Misevic state team twice, and Parke received between the inflationists and anti- VVild Duck," bas been chosen by the began work on this import.ant section honorable mention in the all -confer- intlationist~ has contmued unabated dramatic department as the winter of the book, and should have the foot- ence roll once. durmg the past week. At the _same quarter production. The other a rticle ball wr1teups com.lpete by December I Also included in lhe list of honor - time the administration has contmued deals ,vith the recent perflrmance of H. t t h t t b bl fa other l\lon to juggle with the gold dollar which Hfiay Feyer," by Xoel Coward, in a ch~sen~ 5 assis an S ave no ye een ran~n~ 8 G~~n of ulntermountai~ inc1ciently is not the real basis for our critical fashion. . . . . at fulback, Eric Er~kson of Mines at currency system. Charges are many Poetry printed in this issue includes Kate. Spam and Vivian Finlay ~e halfback, Bob Stansberry of the Uni- that Al Smith, politition and writer, work by \Vallace Cole, Joe Vicars, to. be in charge of the photo section versity at halfback, and Blast:c of the would like to find himself at the head Arbutus "reamer, Kathryn Smith, La- this year. 'lhey have already com- University at quarterback. of the conservative gold bloc of the Rue Samuelson and others, while the menced. operations on the large num- In the all-conference selections democratic party and the other party clever cover design made from a ber of fre~h.man ~ictuies to . be made by the Associated Press about a such as it is. President Roosevelt woodcut by Russell Lane ads to the mount~d befo1e Chnstmas vacation wek ago Gay K.ravick, junior tack.le of smiled and went on his seeDUngly un- appearance of the magazine. and will be able to handle the sopho- the Bobcat eleven, was given honorable disturbed way as news of such charges Copies will be available in Main more photos as fast as they are taken. mention. The Montana Stanard's all- 1·eached bis ears. Hall, Herrick Hall, the Ag building According to a statement by Stuart state selections gave first team births and the Engineering building at 9 Challender, business manager of the to four Cat players, na mely Dick And speaking of anti -inflationist o'clock Thursday morning. book, the response to the call fo r Burns at end, George Park e at half. sentiment, one of its significant rreshman pi ctur es has been the best I back, Chuck Nagle at tack le and phazes is that a great deal of op- evei· repor ted. Uver 240 of the ::S50 ''Corky" Dyer at guard. position to expansion of the dollar Debaters Plan 1egisLered trosh in the college haAe 1n all five Bobcats received mention comes from within the ranks of the been "shot" already, wiLh s t ragglers on various honor teams for their fine administration itself. l\len who the increasmg the number almost daily. play durin .... a none too successful chief executive has appointed to per - ~o special time has been set aside to I season. This is considerably better form one definite part of his recovery I n V a s •. 0 n Of take care of the late comers, as it 1S t han for several years and warrants some cases to be very much against as the freshmen to have pictures nu\de program have proved themselves in I necessary for all sophomores as well better times ahead. some other of its points. M• , D 11 by December 15 m order to secure -- ' Ines ec. placmg m the clas sectlOns, and the p g St THAT THERE IS DISCORD with- execut ive staff was planned to cover . I schedule released by the Montanan 1ng on ars in the ranks of the administration I this. However, it ts still possible for seems upon ex.am1nat1on to indicate md1v1duals who for any reason were R h F• 1 not that ,t is weakening as m,gbt Last week the Montana State col- unable to have thetr picture made on eac Ing Ina first appear but that It Is growing lege debaters accepted the mv1tat1on schedule to Jnake a private appomt- fundamentalJy stronger. Roosevelt is of the ll1ontana School of Mines to ment with the Linfield studio. enough of a real leader to realize that participate in a debate ther e on the T St when opposition cannot be overcome questi on, resolved: that the United Ad\•ertising is shaping up well un- ourney ages it can be surrounded, taken into camp Slates should 1eturn at once to the der the direction of Joe Steiner, ad- and set to w,rk for the good of the gold stanard. Other schools participat- vertising manager. Leonard Delough- surrounder. For this reason the pres- ing will probably be the University ery and James 1'1.nn have been se- ident has taken antagonistic groups and the Normal. lected as a ssistan ts for cover ing local into his governmental circle and put This conte~·t will be rather unique. business firms , while Steiner has them on jobs where their combined The debating is to be conducted in an woi.·ke<l out a campaign for fo i-eign efforts will oroduce the res ult be de- open forum manner with the delegates ads that shou ld g reatl y increase the sires. Under these conditions their from two schools uniting to take op- revenue from this section of the book. verbose incompatibility shows power posite sides on the question. Each Secretarial work on the volume is not weakness . school may send from two to four in the hands of La Rue Samuelson, Smiling Governor Rolph of California branded himself early last week as a demagogue of the first degree when he sanctioned the lynching of the confessed kid- nappers and murderers of young Brook L. Hart. His action amounted to little less than the approval of two murders to pun- ish one. The howling mob, which hanged Hart's kidnappers to a tree, and then grumbled omin- ously at the weak considerations of punishment which reached its ears, was in reality on very much the same level as the men whose punishment they took into their own hands. And Rolph evidently think ing that under such circum- stances, public opinion would be behind the lynchers and that to go against it would endanger his political position, declared him- self against yunishment of those who bad obviously dealt a severe blow to leg al justice. ENGINEERING FROSH BUILDS A REPLICA OF MARYSVILLE JlfI LL A working replica of the gold and •ilver, cyanide mill at Marysville is n ow in the engineering building. It was built by John Hopkins, Marys- ville, freshman in mechanical engi- neering. delegates . At the beginning of the who will select a number of assistants discussion the chairman in a br ief to be announced later. Other members manner will outline the main debat- of the staff recently appointed are able poin ts in the question following ig. \Venaas, to ha\"~ charge of the which the f lo or will be opened to de- pa ges devoted to music, and Harold bate , t he chairman seeki ng to alter· .Murdock, bookkeeper. nate the discussion pro and con and to give preference to those who hav e spoken the least. The time each speaker may hold the floor is limited to three minutes. members of the audience will have the opportun ity to voice their opinions. If a decision seems desirable it will be decided by a popular vote of the ( Continued on Page Five) Though Ohio stadium was dedicated in HJ22, the Buckeyes ha,·e never won more than one Big Ten game per season in the hu ge hor seshoe. The Russ ians are disturbed by the way the Japanese are embroidering the Ru ssian border with airplanes. Federal Government Loans Soon Extended To Students College students all over the United States are soon to obtain money from the federal governmet to continue their education. The proposal is, how- ever, only tentative and not of much benefit as yet. ever will not be given his grades un- til the fees are paid in full. The pro- posal includes all colleges, univer- sities, t.echnical schools, and church colleges in the United States. The in- stitution itself ,viii have nothing to do with distributi ng the money. It will be President Atki son, in a conference carried out entirely by the state re- in Helena with T. C. Spaulding, the lief organizations. director of civil works and director of Thi s new CW A project was first relief for Montana, bas found the fol- brought to light by the Univer sity of lowing facts: Minnesota. The president of that in- The ping pong tournament in the men's gym is being run off with great rapidity. With many upsets during the course of several days of play. Such strong players as Charles Stroup of Ping Pong specialists from Missoula met an early defeat when he met B. Stebbins, who defeated him after a hard fought battle, the outcome be- ing in doubt till the final serve. Jimmy Young, the S. A. E.'s dark horse, continued to keep in the run- ning by defeating L. Hammond and Neil Cowan. Krau se, the I ndependent's mainstay lived up to pre-tourname nt expectations by defeat ing D. Ove,- turf and D. Rivenes. Bowman seems to be the spark plug from the K. S. house when he reached the semi -finals by defeating E. Wegman and B. tebbins. Brownlow a S. X. pledge, seems to have t.aken over the respon- sibility of his brood when he reached the semi-finals over the fa v-orite Ba1·- ton Russell, who according to dope, was picked to be one of the finalist s, but was off form in his match with Cowan and lost only after a terrific battle the contest going to three games. The tourament will be decided the early part of this week when Young meets the winner of the Cowan- Krause match. The other semi-final- ists ,Vill be Bowman and Brownlow in a game that should provide many thrill s for the spect ators. According to present prediction it seems tha t the winner of the tourna ment will be the winner of the Krause-Young- match. STUDENTS TO SING CAROLS It is the plan of A. W. S. to sponsor the singi ng of carols around the Christmas tree in the Iris Garden the la st day of the quarter. Mrs. Har- rison is very anxious to have this become an annual custom. traits of several of M. S. C.'s football heroes very much in evidence. She acted as one of the judges of the national rating service for annuals all over the countt y. In the ratings ghen all competing yearbooks in an article accompanyi ng the picture the Montanan is listed as one o:tl only two annuals published by sehools of Montana State college's size to enrn the all-American rating, the hhrhest honor bestowed upon a yea1 book by the service. M ONTANA STATE R ECEIVES HELP FROM THE CW A Eleven Men and $2,388.75 propriated to Prospect Water On Campus A p- For Montana State college has applied for and received funds and men from the CW A to prospect for water on the campus . The college must have a sup- ply of its own water to supplement that received from the city. Eleven me n and $2,388.75 have been obtained for the project. No trouble is anticipated in finding the water. When the basement for the engineering building was being excavated, underground water was found in such qua n tities that pumps had to be used and even then a team of horses was drowned. In digging the basement for the heating plant, water was found so plentifully as to require the construction of a coffer-dam. Con- sequently the test wells will be made on the sou th side of the cam pus. For six CWA projects in Gallatin county 100 men have been taken off the relief rolls. The 11 men for the college project are from the 100. These men will work from now until February 16 for 30 hours a week and receive a minimurn of 60 cents an hour. National Prexy Of Mortar Board Visits Locally Wife of Former M. S. C- Pro- fessor Explains Wonders of Nature buildings describe it as, "what mig-ht be called a modernized Tudor," sim.lar to that used in many of the most up to date dormitories all over the country. The dormitories will provide room for 120 girls, 20 in each unit, with their housemothers and caretakers. Last evening at the enginering as-1 The total cost of the buildings and semblx . rooI!1, Dr. ~o!lore Ward of ground they occupy· will be very close the Umvers,tr of M!ch1gan, gave the to $205,300. Of this amount the fed- ffrst of the Sigma Xi lectures for this· eral government grants outright 30 year. She. ~poke most interestingly I per cent of the cost of labor and ma- and authont1vely before _on~ of tb.e I terials. This grant \\ill reach approx- largest a~d most apprec1ative aud1- imately 61,000. The remaining costs ences which has gather~ to hear will be provided. for by a loan from these talks, on the subJect of our the government. For the first five "Heriditary Complex. 11 vears after it is established the col- Dr. Ward impres~ed upon the audi- iege will pay 4 per cent each year. ence first the realization of the very For 21 years after it will continue to minute size of the mechanisms \vhich pay 4 per cent interest on the re- are the foundation:,: of genetics. The maining principal anJ. -1 per cent of cromosorne, one of the grosser organs the principal itself each year until are about one-half onf one ten thou- the buildings are paid for. sandth cubic centi~eter in . size ~ml The construction of the sorority the genes , the minute bodies wh1c~ dormitories will be the first major have so often called the. atoms of b1 - building program to take place on the ol~gy, are a~most 14 ~1mes smaller. campus since Herrick Hall was con- W.1th . S':JCh tmy ~r~msms to_ W?rk structed. During the last two or three ~v1th it 1s not supnsm~ th.at this t1el<l, years the ins' itution has had consider- is one of the newest Jn biology to be able difficulty in securing money developed. enough even to maintain the campus The work of Dr. T. H. Morgan at as it is at a satisfactory state of 11~~fi~~n:t IT -:x:tea~~ Tits~!i:r repair. and Weinstein all of whom are con- temporary workers, was reviewed by ''Peevi'sh Pete's Dr. Ward. She spoke of the work of radium genetics being carried on in many places, and of the baffling nat- ure of the 1esults obtained, of the "ever sporting" theories of Mueller as contrasted to the mutation theories of De Vries. In concluding her address, Dr. Ward laid stress on the human ,~atues to be gotten from a study of this science. If the race of man is to be improved at all, or even to be maintained, it will be ne~essary that we give serious attention to the suggestions and ad- vice of genetics, just as it is only by applying these principles that we have made superior animals and plnnt . PROFESSOR MAIL TO GI\'E LECTURE ABOU1' SNAKES Prof. G. Allen Mail of the entomology department, is to give on Thursday next an illus~ trated lecture concerning the snakes of Montana. The lecture is the third and last one which has been sponsored by Phi Sigma this quarter. Prof. Mail has made special effort in the preparation of this l ecture, and while it is being given particu larly for membe1s of Phi Sigma the public gener- ally will find it of considerable interest. The pro\"erbial musicale will climax tbe evening. Pipe Dream'' Is Shown Here This morning (Tuesday) at 11 o'clock a film entitled "Peevish Pete's Pipe Dream" ,rill be shown in Room 101, of the engineering- building, through the courtesy of the American Cast Iron Pipe company of Birming- ham, Alabama. The showing of the film will be accompanied with a lect- ure by Prof. Eric Tberkelson of the mechanical engineering department. Dealing with the manufacture of cast h·on pipe by a centrifugal method, involving the use of sand molds the film covers the entire pro- cess from the quality of the sand used and the method of its use in shaping the cast iron pipe, to the final trea~- ment of the product. The centrifugal method of manufacturing cast iron in- volves a process of spinning the flasks under high p: essw·e, until the metal is sufficiently set to retain its shape. The manufacturers claim <listinc1. advantag-e for their product o,~er the old sand-cast pipe including- a casting entirely free from breaks, one which has a 40 per cent better resistance to hydrostatic oressure, a pipe which will I resist corrosion for a longer time and '-- ---------------' (Containued on Pago Five) Good Says Public Works To Stimulate Recovery The national president of Jllortar Board, Mrs. Ka y Wills Coleman of Lincoln Neb., was in Bozeman last week-e~d for a two day visit of the local chapter at Montana State col- lege. She was on an inspection ~ur of colleges in the northwest at which chap ters of the senior g irl' s honor society are located. Sunday, November 26, l\Irs. Coleman was a guest of honor at a. tea at the home of Mrs. E. C. Professor M R. Good of the general This he pointed out will be the best Il arr1son, social director. Besides ~he engineering department e..xplained in way of restoring the mental nnd phys- Mortar Board members, the active a most vivid and enthusiastic manner ical well-being of the people of t~e chapter of Spur;: the way in which the public works country. The unfortunate folks . m soph_omoro womens administration and its cohort, the this country who ha\'e long been w1ll- serv1ce group, and civil works administration, will lend ing to work but have not had the op- Al Ph a Lamh bda I to national economic rehnbilitaton, at I port unity, are now going to be back to D _e l ta, fres men the general convocation yesterday work for productive things . g 1 r l s'. hono~ary morning. After s ketching in some Good drew the most apt analo;;y of sch?lastJc society, detail the l?ast history of economics the XRA as being a hu e mechanics, assisted at the tea. in this contment and especiall¥ of t~e with the 11ublic works pro~m as the About 40 guests philosophies of government m bus1- boiler the national nedit as the fuel, we{,r.8 presegt- 1 ness in these United States, Professor the a/lrninistration a~ the steam fitter b. \st. 0 eman Good procee_ded to ~laborate o!' the and the business of the nation as the iJ~~; ~ithah!r r:d :YRYS m ' 1•h1ch public works will fit turbine. . had conferences mto the New Deal. Before the address of the m?rnm;... ,vith the President Good pointed out that the era of Hans ~lehn. pre, ldent of Pht Eta and Dean Hamil · " Rugged Inclividualism 11 is closed am.1 ~1gma pre~ented t~ Bob Emmet, pr~s ton. Leona Marvin that the attitudes of the founders of 1dent of Siv:ma Ch,, the .Plaque wh1c Though standing only to one's hip, the mill is true in all practical re- spects to the original. With an electric motor for power, almost a score o! string cables drive ma ssive quartz crushers, turn the huge coil of the sluice box, syphon cyanide into the settling vats. A locomotive brings the ore to the top of the mill. As the project now stands, only stu- stitution , Dr. L. D. Coffman, in dis- dents who have had to quit college cussing the plan with President At- because of financial difficulties and kinson said that it would not be of whose parents are now on the relief much use because of the lack of stu- list will receive help. The propos al is dents meeting the. necessary qualifi- to become effective on t he first day cations. At Montana State there are , of next year . President Atki nson believes, no stu- Under the oresent system the fed -1 dents who could qualify to o_btain the eral government wi 11 g ive the students relief. Attempts are. n?w bemg made $15 a month for boar d and room. The to widen the r est ri c~10f!S so more college or university will set aside students might remain m school or the tuition and fees. The student how- return. Last year ol,ll)' a few students took part in the carol singi ng . At 5 o'clock the la st day of the quarter. let's nil get together around the Christmas tree. All of our ex ams will be over, and we should be full of the Christ- ma s spirit. Mrs. Colema n is the president o.f this count ry in regard to govern~14:nt the honorary scholastic frnterntty Morlar Board onr this campus; in business will have to be n~od1f1ad pre!sents cal'h year to .the house who~e Dorothy Lyma n is vice pres ident, in mind as they are already in fa~t. frt?shmen ha\~.e L.he h1ghe~t scholast.1 Jean Miller is treasurer, Alice Dur- Thi s country has laun_ched, he said, 1 ave_1a~e. Th1s 1s the third ycnr u land is secreta 1 ·y, Maxine Whitcomb is upon a progam of taking th t: unem-1 ~\'htch the R~vard has heen made, hnv. editor and Mary Jane Roberts is ployed in the county of the relief rolls mg been gn•en to the Lambda Ch1 historian. and putting them on the payrolls! Alpha house each of the other years,

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~ontann 1Exp:on:ent VOLUME XXV. THE l\IONTANA EXPONENT, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1933 NID.IBER 11

AsA Student Sees It

"THE OPEN RANGE" TO BE RELEASED THIS THURSDAY SAYS STUDENT PUBLISHER

AR'l' BAZAAR

Students, faculty and towns­people are cordially invited to attend the Art Bazaar which will be held next Friday night, December 8, from 7 to 10 o'clock and Saturday, December 9, until 5 p. m. in the art department, room 307, Herrick Hall.

Completed Plans Show That ~)orority Dormitories to Make

Impressive Campus Addition WlTH ACTUAL REPEAL of the

1th amendment to the constitution 01 t.he lJmt.ed :states only a few hours uti the people of th.l.s and other states still :;;.eem very much in the dark as to Just what t.he era of so called "per­i:iOnal liberty' 'is to bring. So far ten states hav~ adopted more or less def­mite plan~ for dealmg with liquor when 1t aga.m becomes a legal bev­t!rage. '1 ne::ie plans vary w1aely . m provision from t.bat of l\lontana which provides ior state hquor stores and only hceni:;ed consumption to that 01 .1. evada wruch true to mercenary form will pernnt the uncontrolled return 01 the oid-t.une saloon.

FIRST ISSUE OF STUDENT :MAGAZINE TO CONTAIN DRAMA, POETRY, FICTION,

For a number of years the Art Club has sponsored an in­teresting bazaar during the fall yuarter which included products from many countries. This year a most unusual collection of ar­ticles has been a rranged . Hand made p0ttery is being sent from the Univers ily of North Dakota which has interesting western designs and glazes. Japanese prints, near east embroideries and Czechoslovakian porce}ajns are other examples of what you will find at the bazaar. The prices are very reasonable.

---------------•

Rivenes Annual $200,000 EXPENDITURE ' ILL BE ME'l' OVER PERIOD OF 25 YEARS AND CRITICISM

Takes Another $ignal Honor

"The Open Range," student literary magazine, will make its initial appearance on the campus next Thursday when the fall quarter issue is released. If the first issue is received favorably, the staff plans to put out two more copies of the publication dur­ing the winter and spring quarters, with a possibility of estab­lishing it as an official student organ. The price has been set at ten cents a copy to faculty and students.

Home made candy will be sold by the Home Economics Club.

DYER AND PARKE filVEN MENTION

Another unique compliment is paid to the All-American Montanan, edited la.st year by Dave Rivenes, in a spe­cial sec:tion for the November issue of the Scholastic Editor, student journal-

Further and more definite plans for the sorority dormitories upon which is to be started at Montana State College as soon as the weather permits next spring have recently been formulated and prepared for publication.

According to the architects plans the dormotories will consist o fthre eseparate buildings of two units each making six units in all They will be located in the block between sixth and seventh streets now occupied by the College Inn.

»trangely enough there is very little public mtere:;t m the impending re­real. During the past 15 years 1t hllS been one of the most bit.erly op­poocd and Joy ally supported issues to aemaud the attention ot this countr). Always a major political issu\! the hquor controYersy has been a powtr­ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of doJiarb ha,·e been bpent in the cir­culation 01 both wet and dry propa­ganda. E,·en religion has been caHed m by bot.11 bide& to intlame the crusad­ing instinct. of their followers. For­tunately now repeal is taken as the rather unimportant matter of fact which it really is. .Besides some of the other problems facing the. en~re world today the simple re-legalization 01 somelhing which has been going on since the Habalonian Prince first dis­co,ered that fermented grape juice has certain dynamic qualities not lound in the un-aged prouuct is of re­Jauve insignificance.

According to Bill Schenk, editor-in-chief of the magazine, the forthcoming issue contains a variety of material that should be of interest to almost every student on the campus.

~i~~al1~~~:;~:ho)~~l:ht!; t~~!i!~ t ion. The three buildings will be con­

\Yill Come Back," dep1ctmg an met- 1934 Mo ta a The leading feature will be a one-! act play by Ellis WE:st!ake, ·'~e~l

IN ALL-AMERICAN

In the section of the magazine de- w d s k ,·oted to P!Ctu~es of the ~onven_tion of ar pea s the organ1zat1on, held m Ohio last summer, Miss Marion Hart of Waite

nected by surface walks and driveways and by underground tunnels for use in winter and for serving food from e. central kitchen in the north unit.

Absolutely fireproof construction will be used throughout with the out­side being of brick supported by steel and concrete. There will l.,e no woad used . The c.lormitotics will be of a type of architecture d.fforent from that of any othe. building on the campus. Those who help~d de:;ign the

dent in a lumbe,· camp durmg a bliz• n n n zard. Bert B. Hansen, dramatic coach1

high schol, Toleda, is shown looking o H d•t T over some of the vearbooks awarded prizes 1ast year by the critical serv-\ Il ere I y 0 ice maintained b·· the association. The under whose supervision the play was u· S .d A

written, states that it is h)r far the its tr1 e S best of the sev:eral student-written plays comopsed smce he has been here.

Both Receive Honorable Mention In A. P. Selections. Kravik Named In All-Conference List

yearbook she is inspecting- with every R h Cl b evidence of deep interest is the 1933 esearc u Montanan with the full-length por-

Wallace Cole has contributed a story w k St t called ·'Corning-Coming-Coming" or ar s dealing with an allied spy in Germany who was captured and sent- Two Montana State college football enced to death. This, in combination Jay · en honorable mention with a comica1 wild west satire by Fn tb~s ~if~!J!;ican selections made Ed Keeler and a sketch written by Work on the 1934 Montanan comes last week by the Associated Press, Louise Talmage, makes up the fiction into full swinit this week when several "Corky" Dyer being mentioned as contents for this number. newly appointed staff members take guard and Captain George Parke be-

Two critical articles have been in- up their duties in connection with the ing placed at quarterback . This is a eluded, both dealing with the drama. various departments into which the signal honor and a fitti ng climax to Bernard Copping has worked out a enterprise is divided. the three years of gridiron campaign­discussion of the works of Ibsen, the According to Lou Gudgel, editor of ing each of these two men has be­great Norwegian dramatist of the the yearbook, the athletic editor this hind him. In addition to this men-19Lh century, which is of especial iu- year will be George Misevic. Imme- tion both were members of the all-

THE L'\'.TEREST1NG CO~FLIC1 terest since Ibsen's masterpiece, 11The diately after his appointment, Misevic state team twice, and Parke received between the inflationists and anti- VVild Duck," bas been chosen by the began work on this import.ant section honorable mention in the all-confer­intlationist~ has contmued unabated dramatic department as the winter of the book, and should have the foot- ence r oll once. durmg the past week. At the _same quarter production. The other article ball wr1teups com.lpete by December I Also included in lhe list of honor­time the administration has contmued deals ,vith the recent perflrmance of 1· H. t t h t t b bl t · fa other l\lon to juggle with the gold dollar which Hfiay Feyer," by Xoel Coward, in a ch~sen~

5 assis an S ave no ye een ran~n~

8 G~~n ai~~~~ of ulntermountai~ inc1ciently is not the real basis for our critical fashion. . . . . at fulback, Eric Er~kson of Mines at currency system. Charges are many Poetry printed in this issue includes Kate. Spam and Vivian Finlay ~e halfback, Bob Stansberry of the Uni-that Al Smith, politition and writer, work by \Vallace Cole, Joe Vicars, to. be in charge of the photo section versity at halfback, and Blast:c of the would like to find himself at the head Arbutus "reamer, Kathryn Smith, La- this year. 'lhey have already com- University at quarterback. of the conservative gold bloc of the Rue Samuelson and others, while the menced. operations on the large num- In the all-conference selections democratic party and the other party clever cover design made from a ber of fre~h.man ~ictuies to . be made by the Associated Press about a such as it is. President Roosevelt woodcut by Russell Lane ads to the mount~d befo1e Chnstmas vacation wek ago Gay K.ravick, junior tack.le of smiled and went on his seeDUngly un- appearance of the magazine. and will be able to handle the sopho- the Bobcat eleven, was given honorable disturbed way as news of such charges Copies will be available in Main more photos as fast as they are taken. mention. The Montana Stanard's all-1·eached bis ears. Hall, Herrick Hall, the Ag building According to a statement by Stuart state selections gave first team births

and the Engineer ing building at 9 Challender, business manager of the to four Cat players, namely Dick And speaking of anti-inflationist o'clock Thursday morning. book, the response to the call fo r Burns at end, George Parke at half.

sentiment, one of its significant rreshman pictures has been the best I back, Chuck Nagle at tackle and phazes is that a great deal of op- evei· r epor ted. Uver 240 of the ::S50 ''Corky" Dyer at guard. position to expansion of the dollar Debaters Plan 1egisLered trosh in the college haAe 1n all five Bobcats received mention comes from within the ranks of the been "shot" already, wiLh s tragglers on various honor teams for their fine administration itself. l\len who the increasmg the number almost daily. play durin .... a none too successful chief executive has appointed to per- ~o special time has been set aside to I season. This is considerably better form one definite part of his recovery I n V a s •. 0 n Of take care of the late comers, as it 1S than for several years and warrants

some cases to be very much against as the freshmen to have pictures nu\de program have proved themselves in I necessary for all sophomores a s well better times ahead.

some other of its points. M• , D 11

by December 15 m order to secure - - ' Ines ec. placmg m the clas sectlOns, and the p· p g St THAT THERE IS DISCORD with- executive staff was planned to cover . I schedule released by the Montanan 1ng on ars

in the ranks of the administration I this. However, it ts still possible for seems upon ex.am1nat1on to indicate md1v1duals who for any reason were R h • F• 1 not that ,t is weakening as m,gbt Last week the Montana State col- unable to have thetr picture made on eac Ing Ina first appear but that It Is growing lege debaters accepted the mv1tat1on schedule to Jnake a private appomt-fundamentalJy stronger. Roosevelt is of the ll1ontana School of Mines to ment with the Linfield studio. enough of a real leader to realize that participate in a debate there on the T St when opposition cannot be overcome question, resolved: that the United Ad\•ertising is shaping up well un- ourney ages it can be surrounded, taken into camp Slates should 1eturn at once to the der the direction of Joe Steiner, ad-and set to w,rk for the good of the gold stanard. Other schools participat- vertising manager. Leonard Delough-surrounder. For this reason the pres- ing will probably be the University ery and James 1'1.nn have been se­ident has taken antagonistic groups and the Normal. lected as a ssistan ts for covering local into his governmental circle and put This conte~·t will be rather unique. business firms , while Steiner has them on jobs where thei r combined The debating is to be conducted in an woi.·ke<l out a campaign for fo i-eign efforts will oroduce the result be de- open forum manner with the delegates ads that should greatly increase the sires. Under these conditions their from two schools uniting to take op- revenue from this section of the book. verbose incompatibility shows power posite sides on the question. Each Secretarial work on the volume is not weakness. school may send from two to four in the hands of La Rue Samuelson,

Smiling Governor Rolph of California branded himself early last week as a demagogue of the first degree when he sanctioned the lynching of the confessed kid­nappers and murderers of young Brook L. Hart. His action amounted to little less than the approval of two murders to pun­ish one. The howling mob, which hanged Hart's kidnappers to a tree, and then grumbled omin­ously at the weak considerations of punishment which reached its ears, was in reality on very much the same level as the men whose punishment they took into their own hands. And Rolph evidently thinking that under such circum­stances, public opinion would be behind the lynchers and that to go against it would endanger his political position, declared him­self against yunishment of those who bad obviously dealt a severe blow to legal justice.

ENGINEERING FROSH BUILDS A REPLICA OF

MARYSVILLE JlfILL

A working replica of the gold and •ilver, cyanide mill at Marysville is n ow in the engineering building. I t was built by John Hopkins, Marys­ville, freshman in mechanical engi­neering.

delegates. At the beginning of the who will select a number of assistants discussion the chairman in a brief to be announced later. Other members manner will outline the main debat- of the staff recently appointed are able points in the question following ig. \Venaas, to ha\"~ charge of the which the f loor will be opened to de- pages devoted to music, and Harold bate, the chairman seeking to alter· .Murdock, bookkeeper. nate the discussion pro and con and to give preference to those who have spoken the least. The time each speaker may hold the floor is limited to three minutes. members of the audience will have the opportun ity to voice their opinions. If a decision seems desirable it will be decided by a popular vote of the

( Continued on Page Five)

Though Ohio stadium was dedicated in HJ22, the Buckeyes ha,·e never won more than one Big Ten game per season in the huge horseshoe.

The Russians are disturbed by the way the Japanese are embroidering the Russian border with airplanes.

Federal Government Loans Soon Extended To Students

College students all over the United States are soon to obtain money from the federal governmet to continue their education. The proposal is, how­ever, only tentative and not of much benefit as yet.

ever will not be given his grades un­til the fees are paid in full. The pro­posal includes all colleges, univer­sities, t.echnical schools, and church colleges in the United States. The in­stitution itself ,viii have nothing to do with distributing the money. It will be

President Atkison, in a conference carried out entirely by the state re­in Helena with T. C. Spaulding, the lief organizations. director of civil works and director of Thi s new CW A project was first relief for Montana, bas found the fol- brought to light by the University of lowing facts: Minnesota. The president of that in-

The ping pong tournament in the men's gym is being run off with great rapidity. With many upsets during the course of several days of play. Such strong players as Charles Stroup of Ping Pong specialists from Missou la met an early defeat when he met B. Stebbins, who defeated him after a hard fought battle, the outcome be­ing in doubt till the final serve. Jimmy Young, the S. A. E.'s dark horse, continued to keep in the run­ning by defeating L. Hammond and Neil Cowan. Krause, the Independent's mainstay lived up to pre-tournament expectations by defeating D. Ove,­turf and D. Rivenes. Bowman seems to be the spark plug from the K. S. house when he reached the semi-finals by defeating E. Wegman and B.

tebbins. Brownlow a S. X. pledge, seems to have t.aken over the respon­sibility of his brood when he reached the semi-finals over the fa v-orite Ba1·­ton Russell, who according to dope, was picked to be one of the finalists, but was off form in his match with Cowan and lost only after a terrific battle the contest going to three games.

The tourament will be decided the early part of this week when Young meets the winner of the Cowan­Krause match. The other semi-final­ists ,Vill be Bowman and Brownlow in a game that should provide many thrills for the spectators. According to present prediction it seems that the winner of the tournament will be the winner of the Krause-Young- match.

STUDENTS TO SING CAROLS

It is the plan of A. W. S. to sponsor the singing of carols around the Christmas tree in the Iris Garden the last day of the quarter. Mrs. Har­rison is very anxious to have thi s become an annual custom.

traits of several of M. S. C.'s football heroes very much in evidence. She acted as one of the judges of the national rating service for annuals all over the countt y.

In the ratings ghen all competing yearbooks in an article accompanying the picture the Montanan is listed as one o:tl only two annuals published by sehools of Montana State college's size to enrn the all-American rating, the hhrhest honor bestowed upon a yea1 book by the service.

MONTANA STATE RECEIVES HELP

FROM THE CW A Eleven Men and $2,388.75

propriated to Prospect Water On Campus

A p­For

Montana State college has applied for and received funds and men from the CW A to prospect for water on the campus. The college must have a sup­ply of its own water to supplement that received from the city. Eleven men and $2,388.75 have been obtained for the project.

No trouble is anticipated in finding t he water. When the basement for the engineering building was being excavated, underground water was found in such quantities that pumps had to be used and even then a team of horses was drowned. In digging the basement for the heating plant, water was found so plentifully as to require the construction of a coffer-dam. Con­sequently the test wells will be made on the sou th side of the cam pus.

For six CWA projects in Gallatin county 100 men have been taken off the relief rolls. The 11 men for the college project are from the 100. These men will work from now until February 16 for 30 hours a week and receive a minimurn of 60 cents an hour.

National Prexy Of Mortar Board Visits Locally

Wife of Former M. S. C- Pro­fessor Explains Wonders of Nature

buildings describe it as, "what mig-ht be called a modernized Tudor," sim.lar to that used in many of the most up to date dormitories all over the country.

The dormitories will provide room for 120 girls, 20 in each unit, with their housemothers and caretakers.

Last evening at the enginering as-1 The total cost of the buildings and semblx . rooI!1, Dr. ~o!lore Ward of ground they occupy· will be very close the Umvers,tr of M!ch1gan, gave the to $205,300. Of this amount the fed­ffrst of the Sigma Xi lectures for this· eral government grants outright 30 year. She. ~poke most interestingly I per cent of the cost of labor and ma­and authont1vely before _on~ of tb.e I terials. This grant \\ill reach approx­largest a~d most apprec1ative aud1- imately 61,000. The remaining costs ences which has gather~ to hear will be provided. for by a loan from these talks, on the subJect of our the government. For the first five "Heriditary Complex.11 vears after it is established the col-

Dr. Ward impres~ed upon the audi- iege will pay 4 per cent each year. ence first the realization of the very For 21 years after it will continue to minute size of the mechanisms \vhich pay 4 per cent interest on the re­are the foundation:,: of genetics. The maining principal anJ. -1 per cent of cromosorne, one of the grosser organs the principal itself each year until are about one-half onf one ten thou- the buildings are paid for. sandth cubic centi~eter in . size ~ml The construction of the sorority the genes, the minute bodies wh1c~ dormitories will be the first major have so often called the. atoms of b1- building program to take place on the ol~gy, are a~most 14 ~1mes smaller. campus since Herrick Hall was con­W.1th . S':JCh tmy ~r~msms to_ W?rk structed. During the last two or three ~v1th it 1s not supnsm~ th.at this t1el<l, years the ins' itution has had consider­is one of the newest Jn biology to be able difficulty in securing money developed. enough even to maintain the campus

The work of Dr. T. H. Morgan at as it is at a satisfactory state of

~~e 11~~fi~~n:t IT-:x:tea~~ Tits~!i:r repair. and Weinstein all of whom are con-temporary workers, was reviewed by ''Peevi'sh Pete's Dr. Ward. She spoke of the work of radium genetics being carried on in many places, and of the baffling nat­ure of the 1esults obtained, of the "ever sporting" theories of Mueller as contrasted to the mutation theories of De Vries.

In concluding her address, Dr. Ward laid stress on the human ,~atues to be gotten from a study of this science. If the race of man is to be improved at all, or even to be maintained, it will be ne~essary that we give serious attention to the suggestions and ad­vice of genetics, just as it is only by applying these principles that we have made superior animals and plnnt .

PROFESSOR MAIL TO GI\'E LECTURE ABOU1' SNAKES

Prof. G. Allen Mail of the entomology department, is to give on Thursday next an illus~ trated lecture concerning the snakes of Montana. The lecture is the third and last one which has been sponsored by Phi Sigma this quarter.

Prof. Mail has made special effort in the preparation of this lecture, and while it is being given particularly for membe1s of Phi Sigma the public gener­ally will find it of considerable interest. The pro\"erbial musicale will climax tbe evening.

Pipe Dream'' Is Shown Here

This morning (Tuesday) at 11 o'clock a film entitled "Peevish Pete's Pipe Dream" ,rill be shown in Room 101, of the engineering- building, through the courtesy of the American Cast Iron Pipe company of Birming­ham, Alabama. The showing of the film will be accompanied with a lect­ure by Prof. Eric Tberkelson of the mechanical engineering department.

Dealing with the manufacture of cast h·on pipe by a centrifugal method, involving the use of sand molds the film covers the entire pro­cess from the quality of the sand used and the method of its use in shaping the cast iron pipe, to the final trea~­ment of the product. The centrifugal method of manufacturing cast iron in­volves a process of spinning the flasks under high p: essw·e, until the metal is sufficiently set to retain its shape.

The manufacturers claim <listinc1. advantag-e for their product o,~er the old sand-cast pipe including- a casting entirely free from breaks, one which has a 40 per cent better resistance to hydrostatic oressure, a pipe which will

I resist corrosion for a longer time and

'-----------------' (Containued on Pago Five)

Good Says Public Works To Stimulate Recovery

The national president of Jllortar Board, Mrs. Kay Wills Coleman of Lincoln Neb., was in Bozeman last week-e~d for a two day visit of the local chapter at Montana State col­lege. She was on an inspection ~ur of colleges in the northwest at which chapters of the senior g irl's honor society are located. Sunday, November 26, l\Irs. Coleman was a guest of honor at a. tea at the home of Mrs. E. C. Professor M R. Good of the general This he pointed out will be the best Ilarr1son, social director. Besides ~he engineering department e..xplained in way of restoring the mental nnd phys­Mortar Board members, the active a most vivid and enthusiastic manner ical well-being of the people of t~e

chapter of Spur;: the way in which the public works country. The unfortunate folks . m soph_omoro womens administration and its cohort, the this country who ha\'e long been w1ll­serv1ce group, and civil works administration, will lend ing to work but have not had the op­Al Ph a Lamh bda I to national economic rehnbilitaton, at I port unity, are now going to be back to D _e l ta, fres men the general convocation yesterday work for productive things. g 1 r l s'. hono~ary morning. After sketching in some Good drew the most apt analo;;y of sch?lastJc society, detail the l?ast history of economics the XRA as being a hu e mechanics, assisted at the tea. in this contment and especiall¥ of t~e with the 11ublic works pro~m as the About 40 guests philosophies of government m bus1- boiler the national nedit as the fuel, we{,r.8 presegt-

1 ness in these United States, Professor the a/lrninistration a~ the steam fitter

b. \st. 0 eman Good procee_ded to ~laborate o!' the and the business of the nation as the iJ~~; ~ithah!r r:d :YRYS m '1•h1ch public works will fit turbine. . had conferences mto the New Deal. Before the address of the m?rnm;... ,vith the President Good pointed out that the era of Hans ~lehn. pre, ldent of Pht Eta and Dean Hamil· "Rugged Inclividualism11 is closed am.1 ~1gma pre~ented t~ Bob Emmet, pr~s ton. Leona Marvin that the attitudes of the founders of 1dent of Siv:ma Ch,, the .Plaque wh1c Though standing only to one's hip,

the mill is true in all practical re­spects to the original. With an electric motor for power, almost a score o! string cables drive massive quartz crushers, turn the huge coil of the sluice box, syphon cyanide into the settling vats. A locomotive brings the ore to the top of the mill.

As the project now stands, only stu- stitution, Dr. L. D. Coffman, in dis­dents who have had to quit college cussing the plan with President At­because of financial difficulties and kinson said that it would not be of whose parents are now on the relief much use because of the lack of stu­list will receive help. The proposal is dents meeting the. necessary qual ifi­to become effective on the first day cations. At Montana State there are, of next year. President Atkinson believes, no stu-

Under the oresent system the fed -1 dents who could qualify to o_btain the eral government wi11 g ive the students relief. Attempts are. n?w bemg made $15 a month for board and room. The to widen the restric~10f!S so more college or university will set a side students might remain m school or the tuition and fees. The student how- return.

Last year ol,ll)' a few students took part in the carol singing. At 5 o'clock the last day of the quarter. let's nil get together around the Christmas tree. All of our exams will be over, and we should be full of the Christ­mas spirit.

Mrs. Coleman is the president o.f this country in regard to govern~14:nt the honorary scholastic frnterntty Morlar Board onr this campus; in business will have to be n~od1f1ad pre!sents cal'h year to .the house who~e Dorothy Lyman is vice president, in mind as they are already in fa~t. frt?shmen ha\~.e L.he h1ghe~t scholast.1 Jean Miller is treasurer, Alice Dur- This country has laun_ched, he said, 1 ave_1a~e. Th1s 1s the third ycnr u land is secreta1·y, Maxine Whitcomb is upon a progam of taking th t: unem-1 ~\'htch the R~vard has heen made, hnv. editor and Mary Jane Roberts is ployed in the county of the relief rolls mg been gn•en to the Lambda Ch1 historian. and putting them on the payrolls! Alpha house each of the other years,

Page 2: ~ontann 1Exp:on:ent - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-11-001...ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of

P AGE TWO

What'll We Do l Ca~s Open Ye~r ((.;urrcnt Short,; OU t:oming Attrac- With Easy Win

t10ns 1.1t Local Theaters)

A'f THE ELLEN At Big Timber Doyra Counters 20 and Jimmy

Young rn As Team Defeats independent Five 55-23

With Jimmy Young counting. \9 points and fre:;hnum .t.:li Do)·ra smk­mg ZO, the Hobcat:; go.t off w ~ ru~~ 111ng strut in thelI l~aJ-34 ba.sketba1l campai.Jfn by b~atmg the Big Timber Independents 05-2::S. At no time wel'e the Cats pres ;c<l 1.Jy their opponents1 although there were three .fr~hruen m the line~p.

FROSH BEAT OLDSTERS 13-34 BEFORE 1110 TANA

OFFICIALS SATURDAY

THE MONTANA EXPONENT

PRINCETON ALONE UNDEFEATED AFTER ARMY -DUKE BEATEN

For the benefit of the ~lontano basketball o1f1c1a!s the freshman and I ,·arsity squads of M. S C. faced each other Saturday ntl?ht m a mp and tUlk b.ai:;k~tball game that saw Taylor formerl)· oi Gallatm Huth nnd Shetnll of \Volf Pomt run "1ld to give the I fro:-h a 43-34 , 1ctorr o,,er their more! As a result of the final frays of the experienced ten.mmnte::i. Taylor's one'. :;ea!;on last week only one major handed side shots were too much for eleven remained unbeaten and untied the older men, and the speed and pass- , . 1 • h . · ing nbility o! Sherrill took up where Notre Dame fire< its envy guns tn the red-headed fla8h left off. Three of the final ouarter and blasted the the uppcr-classmen stalwarts and Army Mule out of the undefeated three frosh stats were missing from dass while Duke's Blue Devils came t~e e~counter, having journeyed ,\~ a T~rtar in Lhe five times defeated Big 'l 1mber to meet an lndepede fe<:hsters from Georgia and lost 6-0, team. leaving Princeton's Tigers alone in the

tield niter a 27-2 win from a battered Yale eleven. Other games saw U. S. C. uphold the prestige of the west by rolling up 27 first dov.-ns against the Georgie Bulldogs to win 31-0, Oregon scored its first win against the t.

K.\PPA SIGS DEFEAT S. X. IN YOLLEYBALL

TITULAR PLAYOFF

DAVE BRENNEMAN TAKES HANDBALL

Brenn1mmn, the choice from the start of the tournament, lived up to expectations when he defeated Hexem in the finn.ls o'! the intramural hand­ball playoff Saturday. The final game was a hard-fought contest through­out, both contestants showing tactics that well displayed the reason why it was they and not others that playej in the finals. The contest wns clean throughout, and their sportsmanship time and again brought a hand from the packed gallery of enthusiastic fans, who were witnessing the contest.

The doubles championship was awarded to Allen and Hawks P. K. A. men that survived the round-robin tournament without a loss. It was their keen team work that put them up above the rest of the contestants and made it possible to win all their games.

---------

'l h ur:;day to Sa tU1·day - ;\Iae West in "l'm Ko Angel" makes her first appearance before col­lege audiences in the now fam­ous cunacious role of a million uolJar mamma who utters "You l:ihouJd Come Up'n See hle Some­time.· ''l'm ·o Angel" ill a story about a girl who lost her reputa­tion and never missed it. It takes her on a magnificent jour­ney from a dancer in a cheap carnival show to national fame as the gorgeous Tira, :Million Dollar Beauty, coU1·ted by soci­ety men. The blonde lady of curves, sings seven "scorch" songs ; dances the mid way, as a remarkable dance in which she mo,·es eYerything except her feet; puts her head in a lion's mouth, and utters a succession of breezy wisecracks. With Gary Grant and Kent Taylor.

Doyt a at center controlled the tip­off and bounred many shots oil. the backboard to count !l field goals and 2 per:;onab. Jimmy Young ga~·e in­c.heat.ions of stardom by dropprng 8 f1om the floor anc.1 tlu·ee from the foul line. Ziupon, who played forward op­posite ) oung, also 1ound little dif-1icult)· luttlnb the hoop and ran up 10 points. At gu.:u·<l Uat<tlllg, \'avich and l\agle per1ormcd brillumtly, boldmg the opposing attack well under con­U·ol and 111 add1t1on accouting for six points, Yanc.h gettmg ..J. and ilnrdmg-2.

In the series playoff for the Intra- l\Iary Gaels 13-7, Utah beat Colorado mural volleyball championship, l(n.ppn Aggies 13-0, Denver lost to C. U. 1-l-

~;.lrnl~-{ef~=rt tshc~r~!~Th~.h~~!~a; 12_g~d 1h:~~~~s~:aJ:a! ~;~;~u r!~:d co!c!~~~l~~:._\Vaiteco;:r~~tive with a Sigma team proved too strong for by winning two games in three dayt,!=============== their opponents and advanced one step Thursday defeating Missouri 27-0 in

'l'omorrow-The Cocoanut Grove Revue, a presentation of music, dancing and comedy, with Paul Cbolet as master of ceremonies, and a cast of 25 people ,comes for two stage ap­lJt:arances. Included in the troupe are a team oi dancers who appeared in the movie, "The Kid From Spain," a pair of acrobatic dancers, a high­kicking artist and many other novelty acts. On the screen will be Chester Norris in "'King For a Night," a story of a small-town boy who craved high life, and who was a palooka in love. Co-starring Helen Twelvetrees and Alice White.

townrds the championship. The lineup their annuul classic and then travel- I for the g-ames were: Kappa Sig-ma- ing- to Washington, D. C., to defeat CUTTINGS NEWS STAND Allen, Bowman, lnglchart, Matthews the George Wasltington outfit 7-0. As Denler, nnd l\lackanich. Sigma Chi- a result. of the weeJes play the Rose Next to Ellen Theatre Linforth, Cowen, \Vamsley, Spa.'m Bowl situation wa.s cosiderably mud-Emmett and Tilten. dled up. Army hnd previously en-I l\J agazincs Fine Candies

To conclude the series, Lambda Chi f~ii:db~riili! ~~~1~erztl~~~tb~fm~~~a~!~ School Supplies, Kodak Films Several more games are bemg ar- Alpha will p]ny Kappa Sigrna and them. Michigan must hurdle a con­

an • 10 thi month m prepala .Sigma Chi this wel'k 1or the finaJs of r. ge1u r ::ih f - the champiorn~hi1, pla,.,off. ference rulmg against post-season en- =============== t1on ·or a toug con erence ~ea::-on. counters, while Princeton has anl With only two ,·eterans available agreement with Yale to the same ef- nu, 1 11 11 • 1 1 1 , 1 , • , , , , , • ,

1 1 , , ,

Cou1,;J1 D.)1,;bt ll<.4S a w.Lfo.:ult. problem HO'lCA'!' 1?00'1'B. \LL HECORD feet. Nebraska holds victories o,er : , in a,;sembling u team which w..tl be FOR 1933 Oregon State, Iowa, Kansas, Okla- 1 • POOR S-FOOD-STORE capable of coping with the high scor- homa and others. Their only defeat : iug l.'tah forwards and piercwg the 0-Utah University -61 was at the hands of Pitt 6-0. Pitt, • l\1EA T AND GROCERIES tight defences of the guards. With 0-

6_BUrt1a·ghbamSta;:ouCongegUe. _-:..>

105 the eastern representative last year, -

many games back of them before the 1,,1;! ll has won all but one, losing to Minne- • conierence season opens in earnest1 7-\Vyoming University - 0 sota 7-3. They hold wins over Notre • the team may develop into a threaten- 0-:\Iont.ana UniYersity -32 Dame 13-0, Nebraska 6-0, Carnegie i.ng unit. Dyche's principal worry at 19-:Uontana Mines - 0 16-0, Duquesne 7-0, and Wash. an'l : present is the lack of a man who is 7-Idnho, Southern Branch-13 Jeff. 9-0. Duke, which had won nine <.:onsistant sconng threat. Such a traight before losing to Geo1:gia Tech, • player would enable the Cats to split 39- - 171 must be considered. as must Alabama, opopsing defences adn open the way Won 2-Lost 6. which lost only to Fordham 2-0. for the others to score. Taylor. Doyra, Minnesota's undefeated, but four times • Zupon, Sherrill and Yonng all have \Ve fight a war for peace and tied, squad also merits consideration.

Open Every Day 7 a. m. to 9 p. rn .

FEATURING Sand W

Merch a ndise Sunday to Tuesday-'"Should Ladies possibilities of developing into this straightway plunge into an orgy of Probably the outstanding feature of • .llisbehn,e'' featuring Lionel Barry- kind of man but as yet none of them war-breeding nntionalism.-Dr. Glenn a season of upsets was Army's defeat • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , , • • , , , , , , , more and Alice Brady, is an adaption haYe shown all that is desii-ed. Frank, 1,>resident of the University of at the hands of Notre Dame Saturday, ==============-of a sensational New York stage play, Wisconsm. after leading 12-0 at the end of the "The \'inegar Tree," by Paul Osborn. third period. Lukals score the first Barr}more is seen as Brady's grumpy I touchdown for the Ramblers after a husband who can't be bothered with Sports Yarns I man and Varsity played a game for one-man march of 62 yards in eight his flighty spouse's prattle of imagin- j the officials the same night. plays. The second came whe big Ed ath-e amours. ~lost of the action of Krause blocked a punt a minute later the ,play takes place in a quaint By Ping Pong must be a dangerous and Millman fell on the ball over the rambling country home of unusual sport. )Ve heard that a f ellow at goal. Notre Dame's margin was much architecture and interior decorative GENE GARNER the University nicked a six inch greater than the score would indicate theme. ------ ·------· gash in his head last year. , ve and vindicated five previous defeats.

AT THE RIALTO Tuesday to Thursday-An authentic

portrayal of a California nudist col­ony is I.Elysia" a comedy-drama, "hich opens today at the Rialto. It is a show which gh•es an intelligent presentation of the cult, or the reli· gion, of clean-minded people who seek beauty of body in their quest for health, freedom and happiness. Not furti,·e flashes of fat foreigners, but clear candid shots of pretty American £"irb and manly men.

Friday and Saturday-A rodeo and a motion picture are combined in one screening of Tom Mix.'s latest play, "The Rustler's Round­up." Tom and Tony, Jr., are seen as the cowboy and the pony who copped all the rodeo prizes-and beat the bad men at their own game.

There is only one undefeated team left in the country no\\. Princeton held tneir place in the football spot­light by deleating ).ate Saturday 27-2. Du.kc lost to Georgia Tech and .Army \\ as nosed out. b)' the Notre Dame ele, en, 13-12.

Stanford 1s i:oing to have some task picking the team to play them w the Rose Bovt'l. Prince­ton cannot accept because of a contract \\ith ). ale which forbids any post season games. .l\lichigan wlll not be a contender because of a Big Ten 1uling. Duke's defeat last Saturday put them on the sheli, and the Ai·my loss to 'otr~ Dame put a quell to theii- chance.

So Columbia got the bid.

don't know who the unlucky fel-low \\ as, but for particulars you might see Charlie Stroup.

The last week of the prediction con­test saw the following two winners:

TWENTY-ONE ENTER HONOR FRATERNITY

Clyde Turner and William Schenk. __ _ Both of these boys missed seven out . . . of a possible 23 guesses, but this was I Phl Kappa _Phi, hon~rary _upper-sufficient to win the tickets to the rf:sfa1rtil~~tr~~ ~~aii;~f!k H~h hD~~ Ellen theatre. I cember 5, at 7 o'clock. The following

I --- . faculty members will be initiated: Last week was the last lime l.he Mr. Bert B. Hansen of the English

predicl!on sheet _will be run. \Ve ha,e I department, Dr. P. S. Slngsvold, and somethmg new m store for you, how- R. II. Palmer of the agricultural de­ever, when basketball gets under full partment. sway . Perhaps if )"OU were not so Immediately afterwards, the follow. lucky in this last contest, you may ing st.udents will be initiated: Agri­find the next a little more to your culture-Stanley Voelker, animal hus­liking. bandry; Paul Weber, agricultural ed­

Your -Snapsho~ will make attractfre

Holiday Greeti11gs

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Alexander Art Co.

l\lichigan once chalked up a record a de.feat; one tie; 29 straight wins1

1901-1906.

Onl)~ th~ united opopsition of labor and the agrarian areas can prevent the setup of a Fascist state.-Norman Thoma,.

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Sunday and Monday-Zane Grey'• Last Trail" will be shown for two days at the Rialto. In the lead role is George O'Brien. The show is a Western thriller.

Utah Agricultw·e fell to the way­side before the mighty thrust of Mon­tana University, 2ti-O. 'the game was a post season fray for the University and they simply cut the Utags to pieces. l:Uastic, :itory and Stan:;oerry carried e,·er)-tlting otf the field but the goal posts. It was a sweet win for the Grizzlies.

Doyra played a bang-up game of basket.ball the other nite at Big Timber. He led the Bobcats to a victory over the Independents there. His high scoring was the feature of the Cats offensive at­tack. Six players made the trip, all seeing action.

ucation. Engineering-Stuart Challen­der, mechanical engineering; Sam Eagle, chemical engineeringi Ernest Roes 1 er, mechanical enginering; Warren Smith, mechanical engineer­ing; David )la:ion, chemical engineer­ing; Arnold Hanson civil engineo?ring; Robert Emmett, engineering physics.

Household and industrial arts-Nina Dads, secretarial; Alice Durland, art; Dorothy Lyman, home economics; Carolyn Nicholson, home economics; Elizabeth Yates, home economics.

~~

8 ASK THE USER 8 A book on military science written hr a German professor has been ban­~ed by the Nazi government because it is feared it might lead to misun­tlerstanding between Germany and other nations.

Coach Dyche cut his squad to seventeen players .Monday. These boys will remain on the squad until the Christmas holidays, when the group will then be diminished to twelve. It is going to be bard to eliminate five of these because they all look to be of equal strength.

Seience--Doris Plumlee, chemish·y; Arthur Sandenow, industrial chemis­try; J aae )!urdock, botany and bac­teriolol?Y; Hilda Johnson, botany and bacteriology.

Light refreshments will be served.

OPTICAL GIFTS

All the papers are picking an All­..\merican. U this writer had his choice, this is the "ay he would pick 'em ... Smith of Washington and Jllan­s:1k~ of 1\orthw~tern at ends; Cessi, 1 rmceton and Krause, Noire Dame tackles; Corbus, Stanford and Rosen­berg, U. S. C. at guards; Bernard of llichigan "ould get the call at center. '!"1----------------------------­ln the backfield Warburton, U. ::;. C.;

Arc pleasing and useful. Come in and view our selection. A visit to our store will be an in­teresting experience-and-you may find just the gift you have be~n searching for.

LESLIE E. GAGE Optometrist and Mfg. Optician Broken Lenses Replaced the

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

~ und, .:\linnesota; Buckler, Army, and Sauer, Nebraska look the best.

The Frosh looked like a real ball club when they defeated the varsity last Saturday nite. Taylor and Sherill were the outstanding lights in the yearling offensive attack. Both look­ed like real college material. Oliver,] sophomore forward for the upperclass­men, looked good i his shooting was superb. Coach Breeden of the k'resh-

1

men ran in three teams against the varsity. Just wait until those boys get a little experience.

I --! Coach Dyche has scheduled

============== se, en pre-season games for his forges. Listed among the hardest is the Ogden .lioosters who have

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four All-Americans on their quin• let. 'fhe other members of the team do not have this prcst.ige., but he is 6 feet. 9 inches tall and is supposed to be the tallest play­er in basketball circles.

Billings high won the State foot­ball title. Butte was the victim of the final playoff which was held in the mining city. This is the first victory for the Beet City boys in ten years. Clyde Carpenter, a local Bil­lings boy, is the coach.

ome of the alumni at the Univer~ sity of MississipJ>i are ir)ing to change the name of Ole' .l\Iiss,' a title for the southern school, to some other name. The sport~ editor of the :\lem­phis Commercial Appeal is devoting whole columns of his paper to crili· size the changing of the name. One of the suggestions sent in is that of '"Ole' Hoss." We wonder what t hey mean by that?

The M. 0. A. meeting that was held here Saturday and Sunday was a great success. More than 76 officials and coaches atended. Saturday afternoon was spent in explaining nnd making exceptions to the rules. The Fresh-

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Page 3: ~ontann 1Exp:on:ent - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-11-001...ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of

esday, December 5, 1933

Good grades are maligned _by the or student as unrepresentative, .be­led by the good student as umm­

rtant, and sought by all .

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Now Available for College F unctions

EDUCATOR WANTS E L A ST I C I T Y IN

REQUIREMENTS Presidenl of Union College Says

Stiriclness Retards Advance­ment of Youlh

Engineering

THE MONTANA EXPONENT

J:-ler \)fj cakne~ PINfi-PONfi TABLE IS USED HEAVILY

BY BOTH SEXES Tournamenl In View For Follow­

ers of Indoor S port. Mixed Doubles Included

(The Union College Plan for the The newly revived sport of ping

PAGE THREE

IM.S.C. Man On Absence Takes Lead In "New Deal"

M. L. WILSON NOW IN WASHINGTON, HAS CONTROL OVER MILLIONS OF DOLLARS AN D VAST LAND AREAS I SUPERVISION OF AG RICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT

Intellectual Advancement of Youth) . pong has taken the college in hand to New York, N. Y., (NSFA)-"The an extent that there is a demand fo r

only requirement made of an ap- a mixed doubles tournament. At pres-

Reports from Washington, D. C. indicate that Milburn L. Wilson, former head of the department of agricultural economics at Mon­tana State College who has a temporary leave of absence from t his school, has become one of the most important cogs in the agricultura l adjustment machinery recently put to work by Pre­sident Roosevelt . plicant for admission to college should ent the title is claimed by many sh.in-

be 1You must have shown yourself ning stars composed of teams repre-intellectually proficient at some- senting jointly the following: P . K. A

Mr. Wilson has been placed in charge of the administrations subsistance homestead projects plans. This means that he will thing' ," says acting President Edward and A. 0. Pi; K. S. and K. D.; and

Ellery of Union College in a receat the A. D.; S. X. and P. B. Pi; A. G. direct the establishment of a score or more or "small-farm com-article in the ' ew York Times. "On R.TahnddA. G.dDh. b h th t I munities in several parts of the country in which those, at pre-that basis a boy can safely be admit- e eman as ecome sue a a I ted to the college and curriculum can brief tourna1_nent will _take place Wed- sent unemployed will be able to make a living. For establishing be adapted to him. Inelastic requ ire- nesday evenmo- of this w~ek and the hese experimental communities Mr. Wilson has been allotted ments for entrance to college, cover- following Wednesday the fmahsts wt ll . . ing several fields of study, retard play for the Litle. The time of play $25,000,000. Already plans which would necessitate the expendi-!;!thdi~c~~d~dadvN:c"s!i:':Jr·0~n~ou:;;I ~v~~lni~g:r~.7;,?.s~

0n; i~~i::.;;:,~~s~;~ tu re of close to a bill ion dollars have been submitted to him for

faculty and no plan of education can that there will be at least 15 couples approval. make all boys of ex.actly the same in- The only girl on the roster of New York University's College ot in the meet. Entries will be received An Associated Press dispatch, which tellectual calibre. Colleges have made Engineering, which numbers 3,000 students, Miss Isabel Ebel is pictured unti l 6 p. m. on Wednesday evenin~. R. H. PALMER LEAVES recently appeared in newspapers all the attempt to do it and have failed . in the immense wind-tunnel, part of the school equipment, as she com- Those entering the tournament may over the country, said of Wilson: That has been the fundamental e';Tor pares the streamlining of the modern automobile and airplane. She is sign up with whom ever they prefer TO ATIEND DETROIT "Agricultural economy is Wilson's in the college _practice of standardtze~I working on the development of a new tl_yi_ng wmg and a new desi~ for I and those not designating their choice VOCATIONAL MEETING specialty, studied at Ames, la., the entrance requirements and curncula. auto streamlm1~ ' ' ,,., '' " 11 will be given parters when the draw- University of Wisconsin and Cornell ,

Dr. Ellory groups subjects of st\ldY . . . . . . ings are made. N. Y., and taught at Montana State according to three or four logical only for adm1ttmg a student, but Ior rll:ptly ,v1th gradu~tion. Begmm~g, As this is the initial event of or- R. H. Palmer, professc,r or agricul- college and other schools. divisions: {~) ~ division of fine arts, placing him in oe of the groups o_f with t he present sen10r class, 17 of its ganized mixed play in ping pong on tural education ~t Mo.ntana S~te col--m_u~i~, paJntmg and sculpture; .(2) I study. p:ofessoi:s, who h.a ve been closely asso- this campus, it is expected that ex- lege, ~eft by tram F:1·1day evenmg for '

1

He worked out much of the vol-

sion of mathematics and science, in- . tr f s du" D Eu 8• 1111 t" ues dents during- junior and senior year'3s hers nual meeting of the American Voca- was author of the farm administra~

a div,s10n of languagesj (3) a d1,ri- "Aft t d t . d ·tted and ciated with particular groups of stu-

1

perts will not appear in large num- Detroit where he w1I1 attend the an- untary domestic allotment plan. He

cludng technology, and (4) a division I riioper Y Pace , r . eiy C';:m m .' an4 who have ther efore come to .k!1?W · . . tional association. With him :vas lion's wheat production control pro-of social studies. The one unalterable a. co~ege fac~lty _supervises hts intimately the young. me~·s ~b1h~ies _The cond1t1o~s of the tournament Ralph Kenck,J'resent state superv1sor gram. DecentiaJization of industry is requirement is three units of school c.aJ~r 11:1 a pa_rt1~ulai field,. a~d, es- and interests, are active 1~ d1rectmg1 a t e as !allows. . . for trades an industry and formerly a hobby with him. For years he has English, for "no boy should come to pec1ally m the JUill?r ai:id sen101 y~ard the candidates fo_r gr ~~uation advan-1 1: Sign your entry and tf you w1.sh connected with this college, who will been figurino- how people could work college who is unable to express his g:radually leads . him ~nto associate t~geously to un1vE:rs1t1es,. to pro~es- ~es1gnate your partner on the sheet retur!1 in about t~n days. After the shorter hours in the smoke and grime ideas in clear and correct English both field~ . There -a1e n~ insurmountable s10nal schols, or to J!1udstries, seek1_ng m t~e collf:ge book store. No entry meetmg in Detroit Professor Palmer of industry, and spend their extra spoken and written. Proficiency in a.ny bar;iers beb~·ee~ fields . of study. opening~ and. _p lac1!1g . each sem,1r fee is required. . will. go to Ohio and points east on time in the healthful out-of-.,loors, one of these fields is sufficient evi- rh~o~gh f~uf )ears dof t 1ctte~ec1?:l where his qualities will fi";d opportun- 2. Any man or woman seeking a busmess. making things grow. de~ce that the. student is college n~a- r~:}?~:gfh~r~s:i!~~n:;s :-r ua~n ac~u

1m~ ities f?r ~dequate e>..1>ress1o?t . partnei: may s_ecure the same th~ough uThese farms may tie up with tex-

t~rial. At U~11on College th~ .adm1s-1 ulation of unrelated facts; both real- "This 1s not a placement bureau, Mr. Ellis or Miss Stewart respective~y. Declaring that children should be ti les in the south. There's a possibil-s1ons board is now responsible, not i~ that no _man ca~ know much of a with its c~~-d catalog of students' re~- ut!~ it~! :d:\~:i1;s~~~!d b~t t~: bu--~; ::1:e~e ~tista~i;~ciFl!;g~t maunsi~aii ifrne:h::o~ld i~~c~~de will be a side-

s mg le subJect unti_l he k?ows the ords,_ po itions, _wages, etc. There 15 college student. There will be a n op- structor at the Horace Mann School established in Ari-fundamentals of allied subJects. nothing mechamcal a bout the plan. It portunity for many matches to be of Teacher J College, Columbia Univer- zona. ~I "At Union ~ll~ge ~raining is not a is a human olan. The professors know played off each evening with two sity, asserts that every home should "Everything from

I When You Seek Haircuts I process of ~I>E:cial_1z.att~m. On the con- the uniYersities, the men in them, the tables in action. be a miniature grand opera with all fly traps up the in-

that Please tr~ry, ~pec1al1zati?n IS left for the requirements of professional schools: 4. The initial tournament schedule conversations between chilch-en and dustrial scale have

St t t h unwers1ty, where it P_r~perly _belongs the qualities and abilities ca_lled for ":ill be posted on. the Main hall bulle- their parents taking place in a sing- been suggested as op a e The Uruon Colle~e t1ammg. 1s ~ased by industr1es. They know the interests t m board. Participants not reporting song, chanting manner. products, and the

FASHION BARBER SHOP on broad fu ndattwns and w1de mte!- and abilities a nd characters of their on time will lose their matches by task of Wilson is to

(N xt t E . k , T . Sta d) lectual contacts. special groups of students. The pro- forfeit. terested in future tournaments. Re- seleet those so e. 0 ric son 8 aXJ n "The responsibility of Union College fessors are coordinating pre-gradua- 5. Students are urged to bring member, in the auxiliary gym at 7:30 sensible they will ~ for its students no longer ends ab- ation and post-college car eers." their friends and help get others in- Wednesday night. amortize them-

selves, so scientific they w i 11 prove something w or t h while to an entire

I

locality and so geo- M. L. Wilson graphically dstrib-uted that the entire country will benefit.

"The two on which work already has begun are sufficietly contrasting to illustrate the possible range.

"On the $35,000 to $400,000 pro­ject at Reedsville, W. Va. 125 fam­ilies of former miners will be grouped about a factory to turn out post­office equipment, in a setting essen­tially rural, an old plantation. Year:i of study and extension work by the University of \Vest Virgiia were preparation for this project.

OF FINE TURKISH TOBACCOS usuburban is the $50,000 project

for 33 families on 160 acres near Dayton, Ohio. Its farmers expect to find industrial jobs in Dayton. Here, again, intensive sociological study has preceded actual establishment of the project.u

~. _ ALWAYS tltefinest to/,accos

ALWAYS the finest wommanslzip

Al.wAYS .luchies please/

wlzy luckies taste better, smoother

On certain mountains in the Near East is a limited collar of earth-called in Turkish, "Yacca." T obaccos grown there cost as high as $1.00 a pound. Carefully they are examined, leaf by leaf. Often it takes a man a whole day to select two pounds of certain of these fine tobaccos. Lucky Strike is the world's biggest user of fine Turkish tobaccos. For these tender, delicate Turk­ish leaves are blended with choice tobaccos from our own Southland-to make your Lucky Strike a cigarette that is fully packed -round and firm-free from loose ends. That's why Luckies taste better, smoother.

"u·s toasted~ FOR THROAT PROTECTION-FOR BEITER TASTE

DR. J. A. N ELSON IS AUTHOR OF BOOK

ON DAIRY JUDGI G

"Judging Dairy Pt·oducts" is the title of the book of which Dr. J. A. Nelson, professor of dairy industry, is the senior author and G. Malcolm Tl-out. professor of dairy manufactur­ing at :\Iichig-an State college, is jun­ior author. This new book will be the tirst in the field of dairy produd~ judging and will contain about 150 page:::. with illustration by pictures.

A book of this kind is needed to help standardize the judg-ing of dairy prouct:s. lt will aid very materially in the teaching and coaching of judg­ing- teams.

Dr. Nelson states the new book should be off the press about the first of January.

Longbow Belle

This belle knows her bow and at the moment t he picture was snapped our cameraman was in danger of gett ing an eyeful of a rrow as well as beauty. She is Char lotte Kahn, oo-ed at the George W asbington University, who is an expert with the lon11: bo\V"j\'i~eT~ that made l

Page 4: ~ontann 1Exp:on:ent - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-11-001...ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of

PAGE FOUR THE MONTANA EXPONENT

Beauty Reigns Over Snow

With The Social Whirl

This snow fits in well with Thanksgiving, doesn't it1 even if it is a few days late. I suppose now we will see all the future ski champs practicing their bit for humanity. Wednesday night was the most popular night for fall parties. Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi and Alpha Gamma Delta made the boys believe they were being rushed right off their feet. Other soror­ities entertained informally. On Thursday the Pi Kaps had a ctinnex-dance that was new and novel. Friday and Saturday the play was well attended by the theater-goers who enjoyed it very much. Numerous theater parties offered entertainment and dancing after the play. The S. A. E. 's will hold their fall party on the 8th and we hear that it won't be a bru.·n dance! The Spurs and Fangs are perfecting plans for the annual all-college dance at the Baxter on Saturday night. lt's a tradition, so we1ll see you there!

Friay evening dinner guests were I Tulr. and Mrs. George D. King, Betty King, Frieda Eikler, and Jean Barnes of Billings and John Dolan and Bob Langhorn of Helena.

Peter Ford and A. C. Ford of Edgar I were Saturday dinner guests.

The guests at an after-the-theatre I fireside Saturday night were \Vanna , . Caspers Anna Lee Johns, Winifred I Brewer,' Jean Miller, Ruth Tower: Helen Ephland, llelen McArthur, Fay I Chisholm, Virginia. Fisher, Vtr. ~mia \ Nelson Lila Ross, i\lary Lou Bailey, Mary Brody, Edna Selman, Margaz:et Johnson, Vesta Simpson, Kate Spam, !

..Alpha Omicron Pi. .Alpha Ga1uma Delta. Vhienne Finley Dorothy d'Autre-Kathleen Bownes spent Thanksgiv- Alpha Gamma Delta entertained at mont, Ma.rgaret Boettcher, Mary

ing day at her home in Annconda. a Thanksgiving Eve fireside, Wednes- Sande, Leolyn RowaTd, LaRue Samuel-Nellie Thomas of Havre spent the day evemng. The guests included Ebb son, Mary Sheri.ft', Ella Cran~, Dave

,veek-end with Jean Carruth. Lee, Gal'vin Jacobson, Harry Shad- RiYenes, and Mr. and l\1rs. Louie True. Jean Carruth and Margaret Kunkel duck, Henry Fox, Ed Harding, Roscoe

visited in Helena Wednesda.y. Ackerly, Kenneth :McBride, Louis Al- Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Mrs. Pond, Honey and Roberta were lison, Albert Runde!, B'ustei· Zimmer- Guests at the S. A. E. house

dinner guests of Alpha Omicron Pi; man, Fred Clark, VYesley Funk, Brun- Thanksgiving were Dr. R. E. Seitz. and Sunday. age Sprague, Ed Schiller, Carl :Meyers, Miss Eileen Cummings.

:Margaret Herman spent Thanksgiv- Rex \Vyman, Bud Ferris ru1d John At the fll"eside after Lhe play were: ingodraoythayt anhedr hlsoanb,eelmFoB,.udt::·e,·e d1·n- Green. Audrey A .• 1kk, \.Vilda Par ker, Ca.ther-

D n Mrs. G. W. Setzer oi Malta was a ine Allard, Doris Plumlee, Marjorie ! ner guests Friday. guest of her sister ::.vls-x:ine Whitcomb1 l\IcKtnnon, Opal Petrausch, Eileen

l\.Irs. J . W .. Shoaf and Mary :Ipllen durin!t the past week. Cummings, Ameba Speith, Ruth Bui--Shoaf were dinner guests of l! ... ath- June Kearney of Butte was a dick 1 Ma...·\.'"ine Esgar, Elfrida Lloyd., 1een Bownes Saturday. Thanksgiving Day guest of Kathleen Callie Lou Peterson, Violet Trenne,

The a-etives of Alpha Omicron Pi Kearney. ' Montana Vegas, Nellie Thomas, Jean / entertained at a fireside~ November Marjo1·ie Foote, '32, was .a Thanks- Ca.Truth, Jane Hnbein, Bessie Fagen-29. The guest list includen Jack Pur- giving day guest of Alpha Gamma strom, Janet Ralph. Audrey Seifert, cium, Nick Bielenberg, Jim Wamsley, Delta.. Kay Busch1 Maxine .l\loss and Bermea Clifford Nelson, John Harrison, Orris Jean DUiland of Billings was a Brandon .

Emil7 lnper,on

Hawks, Bud ~we1 Russell Lane, Nor- Tha11ksgiyjng guest of Alpha Gamma Sunday dinner guests included Dr. man Cottrell, Ray Haggeny and Phil Delta. . . J. W. Cox and C. H. Pence of Lewis-,vaters. Miss Marguente Roscoe entertamed town and Mi·. and Mrs. w. H. Clifton

Roberta Pond, Ann Stokan and i\largaret l\lcl.ntosh, Theresa Mcln- of Bozeman Isabel Ford were in Helena, Wednes- tosh, Burnadete Martin, Nadine Han- · daJ. non and Mary Bernice Roscoe at din- Kappa Sigma.

Helen Bolton spent Thanksgiving ner Satw·day. The pledges were dinner guests day in Anaconda. Thanksgiving Day.

Kappa Delta. Wayne Sterling visited the chapter Chi Omega. Sigma Omega of Kappa Delta held house last week.

Sigma Beta of Chi Omega enter- formal initiation for Miss Leora M. Chauncey Grebe, graduate of '33, is tained at a fall party November 29 at Hapner of Bozeman, Thursday morn- visiting the chapter. the Baxter hotel. Chaperons =d ing. Norember 30. Mr. Larkin, Kappa Sigma from guests icluded Mr. and Mrs. Thaler, . ~ilcired Flannigan spent Thanks- Ohio State university, is a temporary Mr. and Mrs. Street, Mr. and Jllrs. g1vmg_ at Absarokee. . resident of the chapter house. Cheever, l\frs. W. R. C. Stewart, Dr. . Luc1lle Hutchins spe~t Tha.nksglv~ Ernest Kesler was a dinner guest and Mrs. Allard, Jl!ildred Ephland, mg at her home at Enrus. Sunday. Mary Bi-ody, Ethelyn Totten, Eileen I !11rs. Mondale spent Wednesday and Hugh JllcClure of Portland. Ore .. Cummings, Ella. Crane, Vivienne Fin- Thursday wJth her daughter in Three was a week-end guest of Donald lay, Mary Sande, Bobby Sadler, Mart Forks. . . Nauek. Crowley, Chris Stafford, Bob Emmett, Mrs. J. W. Shoaf of Whitefish w,s John McFarlin, Dick Burns, Carlton a week-end guest of her daughter, Dale, Keith Gastineau, Gordon East- Mary Ellen. . . man, Bill King, Dave Rivines, Harold fiirs. Knap~on. of Wh_1tef1sh and Luce, Louis Spain, Ed Howard, Bob da1:1,ghter Mar)or1e were dmner guests Smithers, Bumps Williamson, Loren Friday.

Alpha Delta Pi. Beta Mu of Alpha Delta Pi held

formal initiation Sunday, December 3, for l\lls. Elizabeth Plew. Mrs. Cather­ine Heetderks, Mayme Bertoglio and Emy Graf. After initiation a formal banquet was served.

Dinner guests Thursday were Mrs.

Alpha Gamma·Rho. Alpl1a Ga.mma Rho entertained at a

fireside Wednesday evening. Guests were Jllr. and Jllrs. Alton Mcillhatten, Norma Oakland, Mary Lou Bailey,

~urrounded by the ermine robes of Winter, Miss Emily lngwenon, of Chicago, makes a pretty picture as aha gathers her aport equipment about her to enjoy the tll'l!t snowfall of the season at Luell College, ' lllbumdala. Maa. Sha la "Qnaaa at WJntar Sncu:1:a" u t1ia ...u.a.

Florence Jane Buckner, Janet Ralph, Bertha Vandershaf, Doris MacQuarrie, Helen Huck, Carol Easton, Margai-et IU1ow1 l\Ia.rjorie Geiseker and Edith Pasha.

Lambda Chi Alpha. Thanksgiving guests were Mr. H. A.

Comer of Great Falls and Mr. and Mrs. C. J . Phel~n of Bowman, N. D.

Guests of Alpha Gamma Rho for Thanksgiving- were Mr. and Mrs. Bert Maynard, Elizabeth Ma,ynard and Edith Watson.

Dare Bolter of Butte and Ellsworth Craigo of Sidney were week-end guests.

Pi Kappa Alpha. Since entering the Big Ten in 19131

Ohio State has won more football games from 1\1ichiga.n than any other conference team. Pi Kappa Alpha entertained at a

Thanksgiving dinner. The guest lis t included Marion Warner, Mary Ellen Shoaf, Helen Thorpe, Allison Daull, Ethel Rundle, ~ Anderson, Ethel Kizer, LaRue Samuelson, Bernice I Totten, Mary Ellen Bielenherg, Aliee Watters, Patricia Gore, Alice Durfee1

Marjorie Knapton, Margaret Boetcher, Marie Kirscher, Mr. and Mrs. Louis I True.

George Hoffman, '33, was a week­end guest of Pi Kappa Alpha.

Cultivate That I Well Groom;:Y Appearance .

IDEAL BARBER SHOP (Next to Security Bank)

Tuesday, December 5, 1933

COLLECTION OF MODERN I ~II. I I I ' I I l ll l lll lt l ll l llt UI II I UI UUHJII H11'1 111UI II I Ul ll l UIUIU~

PRINTS BEING SHOWN IN ~ ~ HERRICK HALL BY A. F. A.~ ERICKSON'S i

Anexhibitionof.moder;,prints,sent[I TAXI SERVICE I out 'by the American Federation of ~ ; Arts is now hung in the corridor o[ ~ Prompt, Reliable Service, ~ the arl department in Herrick Hall, i ! and is open to all students at any ~ Careful, Courteous Drivers ~ ili= ~ ~

These 15 prints are large colored ~ i productions of paintings by European ~ --:-- ~ modernists as Cez.anrt1'., Chirici, Deg-as, i i Daumier, Manet, Marc, Renoir, Sisley ~ PHONE 31,.w ~ and Van Gogh. ! <z ~

All show the trend of modern a1·t by ; i 1nen who have won fa1ne and a place 111111 1111111111111111n 111 111 1111111111u 1111u1 n111 111 1u 1n 1u1 n,1.1 111l

in the history of art.

There is danger when a man throws his tongue into high gear before he I gets is bain a-going.-C. C. Phelps. Three things are ~iven man to do­To dare, to. labor and to grow; Not. otherw1se from earth we came, Nor otherwise our way we go.

-Bliss Carman. Jack Johnson, fonner heavyweight

champion boxer1 considers Bob Fitz­simmons the greatest heavyweight who ever Uved.

FOR EXPERT HAIRCUTTING

STUDENTS FAVOR THE

Baxter Hotel Barber Shop

For emen at morn, but friends at eve- I Fame or country least their care: (Wbat like a bullet can undeceive!)

-Herman Meville. i;,,:,,;H;H;RX>il:H:fl;,<;l<ll;H;RX>il:H:f®H;Rll:!l:>t>ii'!

liiillllllllliliillillillillllilillttltnm

Text Books ··· Student Supplies Candies and Cigarettes Second Hand Bookt< Bought and Sold

Associated Students Store GYMNASIUM.

Hotel Baxter Fountain Room

The Home of

CREAMY MALTED MILKS AND OTHER GOOD

FOUNTAIN DRINKS

An Ideal Place for Theatre Parties

After the Show

Marshall, Bob Linforth, Ray Van Fleet, George Cookson, Chuck Sande, Ralph Burns, George Parke, Glenn Da,~d, Bob Hirst, Bob Lord, Louis Edwards, Emil Krisman, Walter Jacobsen, Ernest Therkelson, Bnd Williamson, Les Wilson, Bernard Carl­son, Chuck Turner, Clarence Bruckner, Ed Wegman, Roy Lockwood, Joe Walters, Gene Garner, Babe Murdock, Gerry Lansing, Dick Weims, and Thorpe Thaler.

Walker, Mayme Bertoglio, Freek Oswald and Tom Murdock. about- •

Mary Sande of Laurel was a guest of Chi Omega for Thanksgiving.

Mila Tanner was a guest of Chi Omega Wednesday.

. Mildred Epbland was a Wenesday rught guest of her sister Helen.

Clayton Allard and Bill O'Donnell were Friday luncheon guests.

La.Rue Samuelson, Bernice Totten1

and Ethelyn Totten were Thanksgiv­ing dinner guests.

Pi Beta Phi. Mrs. Coleman, inspector for Mortar

Board, was a dinner guest of Pi Beta Phi last Monday evening.

Opal Winkes and Brownie Greene were Tuesday dinner guests.

The pledges of Pi Beta Phi enter­

The benefit bridge party given De­cember 2, by the chapter was well· attended.

Miss Mary Broughten spent Thanks­giving at her ho01e in Laurel.

Beta Mu of Alpha Delta Pi held ita fall party Wednesday, November 29. The invited guests were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Willson, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jackson, Mrs. Plew, Mrs. Heetderks, Rita Osterlund, Esther Bunnell, Peter Higman, Art Ferkin Paul Isaac, Jack Tucker, Frank H. Askins, Wes Walker, Larry Malborg Freck Oswald, Don Mcl.ntyre, Herbert Thompson, Allan Oliver,. Paul McLean, I Maurice Schlffman, 1:10ward Lord, Pete Peterson, Russell Atkins, Ben Law, Clyde Turner, Bob Sonntag, Wallace McLeod and Frank Green.

~ined at a fireside Wednesday eve- Home .Management News. ning. . . . Thanksgiving dinner guests were

A group of a_ctives gave a. fireside ]frs. Rhyne, Miss Rhyne, Caroline Thursday evening. Guests mcluded Nicholson, OaMe Anderson, Lois Jack Purdum, Deac Overt~rf, Gay Hoar and Alfreda Lloyd. Harper, John Han-1son and Bill Love- Guests for Tuesday lunch were Miss lace. Branegan, Mrs. Setzer of Helena and

Those who spent Thanksgiving Day Edith Johnson. o~t. of town were Betty Barringer in Margaret Gallagher was a guest Billings, Betty Atwater in Basin, Thursday noon. ' Mary Jane Roberts in Butte, and Anne Katherine Byrnes was a Friday din-, Sanders, Grace Davis, Rae Syrnonds

1 ner guest.

and Dorothy Olson in Great Falls. Ruth Bradbury spent Thanksgiving Miss Lillian Willcomb of Great Falls at her home at Willow Creek.

was a week-end guest. Marjory Li ttle of Butte was a din­

ner guest Saturday.

Texan 'Miss Arizona

Although ahe calls Houston, Ten,, her home !,<,~, ~iss Dorothy Gree~ has the d1st10et1on of winning the title of "Miss Arizona, 1934," in a con~t conducted at the University of An.zona, w_here she is a stadent. Modestly, Mtsa Greer saya she doesn't know how ah~ won !!ht title.

Hamilton Hall . Mr. and ~Irs. Severson were Sunday

dinner guests of Marjorie McKinnon and M:a.-jorie Hungerford . Mrs. E. Knapton was a guest of her daughter Marjorie, through Thanksgiving.

Martha Haynes and Vanetta John­son were dinner guests of Claire Frang Saturday. Dorothy Ford, former grad was a visitor of her sister Isabel, Friday and Saturday.

Doris Plumlee was a Sunday din-ner guest of Mary El iza.beth Rust. I

George Treat and Freddie Lauster were guests of Helen Helgelson and Jennie Lauster for self-service Thurs­day evening.

Vivian and Lois Tretsven were Sun­day dinner guests of Laura J obnson.

The Misses Blaine, Millice, Amick, and Erb spent the week-end at their respective homes. Mrs. R. H. Pond and daughter Geneva were week-end guests of Roberta Pond.

Francis Taylor was a Friday lunch­eon guest of Catherine Orr.

Anna LoWse Greene and l\1a>...'lne Winkes were guests respectively of their sisters Brownie Greene and Opal Winkes.

Agnes Orr of Belgrade was a luncheon guest of her sister Cathel'ine Saturday.

Jane Habein and Patricia Gore were guests of Audrey Amick and Claire Frang, respecth'e1y, for self-service Sunday evening.

Ethelyn Gatten was a week-end guest of her sister Bernice.

Sigma Chi. Thanksgiving dinner guests were

Winifred Brewer, Ruth Tower, Helen Ephland and Mary Sande.

Not so lo_ng ago practically all were made by hand

• cigarettes Now, Chesterfields are made by high-speed machines

that turn out 750 cigarettes a minute, and the

cigarettes are practically not touched by hand.

BY the use of long steel ovens -drying machines of the

most m odern type-and by age­ing the leaf toba cco for 30 months- like wine is aged­Chesterfield tobacco is milder and tastes better.

Only pure cigarette paper­the best made-is used for Chesterfield.

And to make sure that every­thing that goes into Chesterfield is just right, expert chemists test all materials that are used

in any way in the manufacture. Chesterfields are made and

packed in clean, up-to-date fac­tories, where the air is changed every 412 minutes. The mois­ture-proof package, wrapped in Du Font's No. 300 Cellophane -the best made-reaches you just as if you went by the fac­tory door.

In a letter to us, an emi­nent sci.enti.st says:

"Chesterfield Cigarettes are just as pure as the water you drink. "

1garettes

"Chesterfield cigarettes are just . as pure as the water you drink"

© 19H. LICCBTI' & Mvmu TOBACCO Co.

Page 5: ~ontann 1Exp:on:ent - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-11-001...ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of

Tuesday, December 5, 1933

PATRONIZE EXPONEKT ADVERTISERS

;o- score in Spectator

Sports .. --we<J.)"(...

CL~mupe~ m

HOLEPROOF HOS~ER)'

For the correct t ones to accent a grey costume, consult our Holeproof Color EnHmble Book. (HOJlery Dept.)

The greys ore strong favorites in the out­

door life of fashion, this autumn ... and

with them, everywhere, goes Smokey. It's a shade that suggests g, irietal with

a taupe cast-developed by Holeproof

colorists expressly for the soft, rich wool­

ens in taupe grey, and slate, and medium and oxford grey .•. and shown in sheer chiffons and the more sternly practical

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I

Grizzlies Beat Utah Aggs 26-0 On Turkey Day

Score Twice In First Quarter. Blas,ic and Story Shine In Final Game

THE MONTANA EXPONENT PAGE FIVE

period Rhiehart grabbed a short pass is a sad state of affairs when the down the center and r n to the 8 yard government settles cases where an line from where the Grrzzlies count- illegal amount of fruit spray it takes ered in short order. to bring about chrontc poisoning."

ln the final period the Farmers be- Jn relation t.o governmetal assist-

Exponent Dramatic Critic Says "Hay.,Fever" Was Above Audience

gan a spec~acular aerial attn~k against ance Dr. Strand stated, ''The U. S. ~fii:dtostfh~g~~a/hs~~er°:r:fi,esthb:::: Department of Agriculture is telli?g Bringing to l\Iont.ana State College students for the first time fumbles and interceptions always I the growers how to grow their fruit; a modern sophisticated comedy the dramatics department opened stopped them when a touchdown was the U.S. Departmentof Entomology is it season last Friday and Saturday at the Ellen theatre with immi~ent. ~te in the quarter when showing them how to spray the~ the first strm.irers were rushed back fruit; the u. s. Department of Agri- Noel Coward's "Hay Fe\'er"' under the direction of Bert Hansen. into. ~he game. to stem the Farmer culture Economics tells them how to \Vhile the play was well received by upr1smg, Blastic tok the ball on a market the fruit, and the U. S. D!!- two appreciative audiences, it is doubt-• --------------a double lateral !ind ran so.me 60 yards partment of Pute Foods and Drugs ful if it was considered an outstand­acro~s t~e goal in 8 beautiful example condemns the fruit. Although one- ing success by the majority of the of p1votmg and change ~f pa_ce. As hundredth of a grain of arsenate to theater-goers. The most brilliant and

The jin.'i: that pursc.e:-. all Rocky lhe .1?ame ended lhe UniYersity ·wns one pound of fruit is the legal max- subtle of Coward's lines were lost on 1lountain teams, with the exception on the road to another touchdown but imum it is known that one forty-mil- the audience and the lack of any solu­of the Bobcats when they invade the the !?Un ended the march. lwnth of a grain of arsenate will in- lion to the problem probably left most.

A. 0. Pl'S CAPTURE RIFLERY TROPHY

!Pacific Coast conference held good Five students accompanied Coach jme an embryo. Yet tests made on of them feeling that they had been Thanksgivin · day when the tah Dyche to the game a~d reported that dogs and human beings show ~ _mark- entertained .for nothing. Hansen State Farmers were ignominiously the Cats can comuder themselves ed variance in the susceptab1hty of might have chosen a play that would beaten by the Montana U . Grizzlies lucky to have held the Grizzlies to different individuals, to the poison ." have been remembered longer by the Riflery has proved a most inter-26-0. Both teams had conquered the 7-0 for three quarterl'i. The only Utah ''Before 1926 little attention was customers. As it iis

1 It will probably esting sport for this quarter with 41

I Cats, l\Iontana U. winning- 32-0, and Aggie men who showed at all well paid to the spray residue. However, only remain in their minds because girls participating. l\Iiss Jane Mar­the Farmers 40-6. These comparative were \.Vard, the giant center, Law c.1t due to the fact thnt a Washington of the excellence of such and such n dock is manager-at-large, while Lieu~ scores indicated a close yame, but the tackle, and Fry at quarterback. Those grower received only $4 .55 for a car- player. tenant Jackson is in immediate charge

I Utahans were unable to cope with the ~tudents who made the trip to the load of apples shipped to New York, Kathryn Smith as Judith Bliss, waj of the group.

I power and deception of the Bears and J?ame were "Gorky" Dyer, Ben Law because they had to be rewashed and undoubtedly the most outstanding of The inter-sorority shoot ended with lost. Louis Edwards, Bill Sweeney and Bill repacked to comply with 8 new feder~l the cast. Her ability to keep Judith last Friday's match. Five girls from

The University took the opening Coey. law re,:rarclinJ? lead tolerance, the ''acting" all the time was the work oi each sorority and five independents kickoff and marched haH the distance aJ,?itation concei ning ~pray laws has a real actress and of one who know;:; composed the group. The match was of the gridiron to score and con\'ert come to a thrilling clinuLx." her theatre. However, it must be re- won by the Alpha ~Omicron Pt sorority

I to lead 7-0. Shortly afterwards the Strand Discusses Dr. Strand went on to say, "The membered that the lines. and actions with 951 points out of a possible 1000. Aggies punted and when Story fu!11- government, howe·ver, is merely play- of the whole show were m her favor; Kappa Delta won second place with bled the catch, Simmons recovered g1v- ~ • S • ing on the safe side in enforcing t.he under the circumstances it was not [ 950 polnts. Pi Phi annexed third with ing Utah first down on the U. 20. On I' TUlt prayzng spray regulations. It is not ascertain- difficult to keep the center of attrac- a score of 922. Alpha Gamma Delta the first play Fry's pass was short able whether or not other substances tion. And because she did let down took fourth, and Alpha Delta Pi cap-and Story redeemed himself by inter- be!'lidcs lead. an~ arsenate are neces- at times when she was not speaking tured fifth place. Chi Omega and cepting and returning almost 80 yards During an open forum which took sa:y !or poisoning. An ex~n_iple of we did not consider that she gave the Independent forefeited their points to the 10 yard mark from where the place Monday night. November 27, at this 1s shown by ~he physicians of I best performance. For a real piece of because of an insufficient number of ball , .. ·as rushed across for the second Lewis Hall, Dr. A. T. Strand dis- Wenatchee, and Y1:1-k1ma, Wash .. T~ey smooth acting, clear-cut diction and a participants. touchdown. The second quarter was cussed "The Spray Problem in Rela- report that practu.:ally ~o. poisoning I perfect stage presence we should like Individual honors in the contest scoreless although the Grizzlies lion to Public Health." In discussion is evident among the ~ivihans wh~ I to hand the bouquet to Gonstance t t M Ell B' 1 b · h

I threatened continuously. In the third of this subject, Dr. Strand said, "It consume many of the sprayed apples. \Viggenhorn. We especially liked her :~~~-e if 1~fout ~f 2QO.ens!~[nd1~igh -====-:::=--========-....:----===-----::==--,;_---::c--------=-=-=-=-=-=---= second act condemnation of the Bli.35 score was won by Opal Petrausch = family which was nothing short of re- with a score of 1~0. Dorothy Olson

markable acting. al o registered high.

The Climax of the Fall Quarter

Of Course You're Coming to the Annual All-School

FANG-SPUR DANCE HOTEL BAXTER DECEMBER 9, 1933

A Few Weak Spots The group is anxiously awaiting the While generally speaking the whole Anceney Trophy shoot which prob­

show was nicely done with the minor ably will take place next week. The parts holding up to the leads, there ten highest scorers of the entire group were a few weaknesses. Bob Smithers, will be participating in this highly in our estimation, fell flat as the dip. anticipated event. lomat, Richai:d Greatham. His char- The rifle season has been one of acterization was entirely short of the fine results, the scoring having been role and coupled with a very poor exceptionally high. stage presence, full of bad manner- ---------isms, his performance was the poor­est of the show. William Lovelace, in

~:Ja~ ~~!!h~ef~hrt~!v~~~; b~~ this was largely taken care of through his being the properly over-awed young man in the presence of the Bliss family.

Head and shoulders above the rest of the male actors was Joe Steiner as the artist, Simon Bliss. It was a typ­ical Steiner role and he put it over with fire and dash, winning the ap­plause for a fine comic characteriza-

This Reporter Shouldn't Drink

Strong Coffee tion. Roy Lockwood, as Da\;d Bliss1 • "A feature"_! crie!1 the editor. ")ly the author, showed excellent skill kingdom (ed1torsh1p) for a good, with his lines and marvelous stage comprehensive and humorous feature." manner brought him out as one of the Upon hearing this manical burst of

IT TAKES HEALTHY NERVES TO BE THE CHAMPION

TRAP SHOOTER

high spots of the play. pent-up emotions, a multitude (47 to Promise Shown be exact) of aspiring and ambitious

. Hamper~ wi.th the job of interpret-1 reporte!s scurried to their respective mg the s1tuat1ons and cba1acter of ~ypewr1ters, and began vently care:s:s­the Blisses for the audience, Jane mg the keys. Their faces beamed­Habein failed to give a satisfactory ambition :s~rged with~n them: They performance. However, even allowing began feed mg paper mto their type­for the <liflicult role she was plal,-ing. writ!?rs with. that sm.ile of hoJ?e ~nd she still fell down th.rough imperfect. confidence stt11 unsulhed on their hps. diction and her inability to put the Ahhh-they have written something. proper zest into her part. With all Let's see what it is.

R:!1.

. ..

. I".

SHOOTING FROM SCRATCH, 25 yards behind the traps, Walter Beaver pulled out of an exciting tie to win the 34th Grand American-the first time it h as been won by a limit contestant! He has been a steady smoker of Camels for years, and says: "During all these years I've bee n smoking Cam.els because I like their taste and mildness .•. they never jangle my nerves."

A

MATCHLESS

Bl EN 0 WALTER BEA VER, holder of the coveted

Grand American Handicap, says:

''Winning a trap-shooting champion­

ship is partly a matter of luck, partly

the resu It of practice and partly h ealthy

nerves. I'm a steady smoker. People

kid me about it at the tournaments.

They say I never have a cigarette out

of my mouth. During all these years

I' ve been smoking Camels, not only

HOW ARE YOUR NERVES? U you smoke a lot •.. inside •.. outdoors ... wherever you arc .•• join the swing to Camels. You' 11 find them milde r, better ta5ting, and they never get on your nerves.

because I like their taste and their

mildness, but also because they never

jangle my nerves."

It's no fun to feel that your nerves

are ragged-and to wonder why. Check

up on your eating ... your sleep . .. your

cigarettes. Switch to Camels. Your

nerves and your taste will tell you that

Camels are a more likable cigarette­

and that they don't upset your nerves.

T IERTOBACCOS CQoyr1Jht, l93S,

n. J, Reynold• Toba.c«> Compu1

these faults, Miss llabein gave indica- On this one it says in bold black tion of much talent which should show type, '·FEATURE.'' That's ,.;hat it up strong- in future productions. :Mary .says on this one too. And this. And brody as .the ·'perfectly sweet flap- this. And this. Why, they all have

I per," Jackie Coryton, was mdeed per- written the word "FEATGRE." I fectly sweet and by carrying her small know-they are all going to write <1 part at an even tempo throughout the feature for t.he dear old editor. He play gave a satisfactory performance. wants one, you kno\1/. He said so. In the only type role in the play, And when he wants anything, all the Margaret. Kunkel gave an adequate good little boys and girls on the re­

l characterization. portorial staff go right after 1t for As for the play considered as a him . Oh yes, their diligence is a.s­

whole it was quite well done. The tounding. weak spots showed up in only two But look at them now! 1niat's places : the first and second act open· wrong with them? \Yhy are they all mg curtains. when the actors failed to sitting around gazing into space? get the audience started right. ,vhat \\"hy-, none of them are \\Titing any­should have been a strong- second-act thing. Something is surely amiss. Ma:r­openmg turned out to be extremely be they cannot think of anything to weak. The scenery was for the most write about. ~o I'm sure that isn't part excellent but in our opinion the the reason; especially ,,hen a pe1son room_ should have been more. Bohemian is writing a feature. to. fit better the personahty. of the Look, look,-over the'"e is the cor­Bhsses. The costumes, _especially the ner. That funny looking fellow. He':s womens' gowns, were highly pleasing writing. He's smiling. The other 46 and added much to the show. repo1 ters are looking at him with a

co\ etous gleam in their eyes. Look DEBATERS PLAN INVASION at him go, would you. He's surely

I OF SCHOOL OF MINES burnin~ those keys up, isn't he? He's

I ( Continued from Paire One) On the conclusion of the debatmg,

audience. This method should grow to be extremely popular with debate fol­lowers. The time of each speech is so limited that the speaker must briefly and precisely present his case in such a manner that it is understandable by the audience. lt eliminates that intri­cate maze of reasoning that so often has put debate audientes to sleep, as well as giving more chance to answer opposing arguments.

1 Montana State college is to- be rep-

'

resented by Ben Law, \Villiarn Schenk, John Parker, and Sam Eagle. Repre­sented by such an experienced aggre-

1 gation this school should show up / second to none.

I PEEVIS=H=-P=E=T=E=,=sc-:P=IP=E

DREAMS SHOWN HERE

(Continued from Page One) ! one which has a greater solidity and strength under ground . I

I This film and similar films ha,·e been secured wholly through the ef-, forts of Dean Cobleigh, head of the

I engineering department. As a result1 engineering students of Montana State college are g-iven an opportunity of

~hi~t~:i.r;f~ihe~~v/~ed:t;j~~i.::;e;~;!~ I

finished-there he goes into the editor's office. How thankful the dear editor will be. Loudly will he acclaim the young man as the most promising reporter on the staff-one out of 47. Think of it. Well, that's that. I guess the editor obtained a feature. I'll see you next llonday night at the Exponent office.

And so-another feature bites the dust or takes its place among the great literary works of our time.

Some professors think their subjel't in the most important in the curricn, lum and others grve cuts.

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Fone 223

CLEANING, PRESSING, REPAIRING EXPERT HA'ITERS

We Call For and Deliver

Page 6: ~ontann 1Exp:on:ent - Montana State Universityarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-025-11-001...ful influence in making and breaking office seekers of all kwds. Millions of

PAGE SIX THE MONTANA EXPONENT Tuesday, D ecember 5, 19

JR.ontan~xpon.cnt In The Editor's

Mail

A Lady Laughs .-..~'-'-'-~'-~~~

LRDUROY TROUSERS Bes t Grade $5.00

Continuancv of Weekly Exponent and Monthly Exponent • this great social problem of crime and its place .l<'ounded 1895. Published Every Tuesday of the College in our Jives. Year By the Associated Students of Montana State College, Bozeman, Montana

Subscription Rates: $2.00 Per School Year

Telephone 147-Ask for E>.'l)onent On Monday After l P. M.-80

Acceptance for Mailing at Special Rate of Postage Provided for in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1927, Authorized } ebruary 17, 1919.

GET 1N THE GA.ME

The leaders in the classroom are not always leaders in the business world. A recent survey made of the graduates of the Uni\·ersity of .Mich­igan shows that the members of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholastic fraternity, are mak­ing a.11 average of $3,000 annually, while students who were acti, e in campus activities a.i·e annually earning an a,·erage of $10,000.

Dear Editor : The Associated Students of Mon­

tana State college have presented Noel Coward's "Hay Fever," and in the eyes of this critic the honors must be awarded to Joe Steiner and

"Only 17 more shopping days until Christmas." . Colle~iately speaking that means, "Just 14 more school days unt~ Christmas vacation!" All of which i a kindly method of beanng the sad tidings that the joyous season of term papers, book reports, note­books, and examinations once again is descending upon us. Now take term papers - wonderful little exercises in copying! It would be so much easier just to mark the pa sages in the books and hand in the books themselves in tead of our abridged copies -of them.

THE SPORT SHOP ~~~~

Add trimness to your new co tumes with a pair of t h e s e smartly styled Brownbilts. BEN LAW ·······················-····-····--·-EDITOR, Phone 726-R

BILL ::iWEEl\EY ... _ ... _ .. iUANAGING EDITOR, Phone 582

Connie \Viggenhon1. ,vhich causes me to wonder what' literary masterpiece and band it in. Steiner's interpretation of the part ever happened to that student many Think of the savm.(? of time, eyesight, ~

of Sim~m Bliss, the la~y, rather slop- Y!!ars ago who_ actually read 1

five or paper, pen and i!1k-a1;1d it wouldn't = PY. artist, son of Judith a.i:id Da~d s1x books, took notes, and v.r_ote a be violating the ~RA either. La tly 3 !,_=•.

Bhss, was excellent. He fell 10 love m term paper that r:epresented his _re- word about examinations. Now that the true Steiner style wit~ as much search and reasontng on th,e su~J.ed someone took it upon himself to write gu to on the stage as off 1t. he hnd chosen. Pro~bly hes editmg a communication to the Exponent ob-

NEWS STAFF Associate Editors .............. .Joe Walters, Bernard Copping This is not published with the view of dis-

Bill Schenk ::iociety Editor ...... ·-···············-······-···Mary Ellen Bielenberg

Society Reporters: Dorothy Olson, Wanna Caspers, Kay Rnffert>, Helen Sotlid, Lillian Button, Clavie Anderson.

Sports Editor ...... ·-··············-·····-·-··-··-····-·········Gene Garner Reporters ............ Ed Keeler, Dean Stebbins, Carrol Speck,

Ebba Young, Hilda Halonen, Alice McDowell, LaRue Samuelson, Loretta Solomon, Leolyn Howard, George Misevic, Clifford Nelson, Bob Sonntag, Pauline Soder­holm, Donald Brockway, Ralph Hurlburt, Ted Hed­rick, Elsie Evatz, Kay Bownes, Anne Stokan, Charles tiande, Jack Marron, \Vinifred Brewer, Gerald Lan­bing, Dana Law, Bessie Fagenstrom, John Parker, Lila Ross, Marjorie Gei~iker, Edna Selman, Huth Burdick, Maxine Esgar, Maxine Moss, Jack Bownes, Leonard D~ Loughery, Bob Campbell, Ed. Harding, Francis Taylor, John Bt:n·ovich, Bernice Totten.

couraging scholastic ideals, for the student who gains recognition scholastically is as great as the student recei\'ing glory on the gridiron. It is published to encow·age students who are not lum­inaries scholastically to take part in student acti­,·ities, and in1press upon the great number the benefits to be obtained from student associations and activities.

Miss \Viggenhorn's arrogant "I'm the almnnac of Curol 5 ~hocolete co~: jectin.(? to the practice of using the telling you" manner made .M.yra poun~ .. And t?en book reporf5· Its same examination questions every Arrundel by far the most outstanding surs-rtsmg how much you ga n from year, we can·t depend on our old col­~emininc part of the evening. One rea mg /hebpr:face dandh 1° or ~hr~ !ections of questions any more. We'll feels perfectly r:.ssured in saywg that pages O a 00 --:-3-n . w a a goo re Just have to trust to luck (for study­Steiner stole the show with \Viggen- port you can n~ake without even open- ing is out of the question) that \'\'e horn finishing a close second. mg the book, ~nd notebooks-the I can put the correct mark before ome

Congratulations certamly must be greatest of all_ evils-a proble_n; th~t several hundred statements concern­extended to the freshmen members of could be so easily solved too .. I heres ing things totally strange to us, put the cast :Uld especially to Roy Lock- really no necessity of demanding that' the right word in several hundred wood and Jane Habein. The former everyone m_ake a copy of the one D!)te- blanks, and be able to compare life in in the role of David, held up his end book that IS ~ept ~or the clas5:-Just a Spanish village with the influence of the play in an admirable fashion . I let e,·eryone sign his name to this one, of poetry on the cannibal. And if we ,,nen it came to that -long embrace, don't get on the honor roll, we can and ~o knowing Paris, ~ck.wood_ was while those which touched upon the always tell the world that it's just certainly the master. Miss Habem as vulg-ar were seized upon. I wonder that those other guys are better S~rrell, the self-centered daughter , what ,,,.ill happen to "The Wild Duck" hand-shakers. That's all and don'!

I • ; A beautiful Bro\v-nbilt San-~ dal of Black Satin and • Silver Kid trim

I $5.95 In practically every school activities are car­ried on by a few who are "in everything."' This is not only at the expense of the activity, the rest of the student body, but the student himself. ActiYities are really a part of the college cur­riculum. If properly distributed they will show a great ad\'antagc to a large number. When con­fined to a few the law of diminishing returns gets into effect and everyone is cheated. Do not get O\'er-Joaded with activities necessitating the sacrifice of the scholastic side, but on the other hand, no student is doing himself justice by not

dtd a great deal toward putting across this winter'! forget it's just 14 schools dnys until the eccenh·icities of the Bliss family . - In Passing. the end of the quarter!

IMt:im,;JJf.l However, before her next play .Mhs Rabein should be given instruction in ---------------

.Feature Writers .... Betty Atwater, Joe Steiner, Nina Davis proper enuncialion. J\ T f • J\Iary B1·ody, Bill Lovelace, Mar- J. ~0 lees

Excbange ...... ·-········································--····-···········Bob Hirst garet Kunkel, and Bob Smithers each

BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MA,'\AGER-.. ·-···-·-···-MICHAEL DEEVY Advertismg Manager ...... ·-····-··--··-··-···-·.Nick Bielenberg Circulation Alanager ...... - .. ··-·-04---·--··············--·Jim Hall C:irculation Assistants ............... .Frank Blaskovitch, Charles

Anderson, Margaret Boettcher. Business Assistants ..... - ... Gretchen Thaler, Elwood Wilson

Virginia Rae Symonds, Cynthia Hopkins, Bud Price. Typists and Stenographers .. _ ...... Montana Vegas, Louise

Talmage, Opal 1-'otrausch, Irma Puutio, Mary Alice Trask, Margaret Wilson, Wadine Huntley, Eileen Lummings, .Alice Swisher.

Proof Reader .. -·--··-··············--·······-··-······.Rachel Egbert

Collrier Print~ ~ .Montana

HOLIDAYS l\IlGHT BE EQUALIZED

lt is a curious fact that in the autumn quarter of each year there is provision made for not less t11an four officially recognized holidays, not in­

cluding the glorified and maddening interlude of Rush Week, and the wearing burly-burly and phy­sical strain of registration day; and all this in a bob-tailed quarter that by count includes only ten weeks of actual academic work, with a fow·­day session of mental tortw·e at the end.

But in the winter quarter there is no provision whate\·er for any time off except the distant and ever receding prospect of two days' free time

during the basketball tournament. No holiday occurs at all during a twelve-week session of the most a1·duous and tedious labor of the yea.i·, a period toward the end of which more than one under-graduate bas been driven by brain fag and

general mental monotony Lo commit scholastic suicide by way of va.i·ying the dreary round.

Again in the cw·tailed spring quarter we dis­coyei.· a profusion of holidays for the diversion of

those who have managed to endw·e the preceding tweh·e weeks grind.

Why could not the winter quarter be broken once or twice by a day's release from duties? Both faculty and students would be the better for it.

1\101'.TANA SETS THE PRECEDENT

Fifty or sixty yea.i·s ago Montana was consider­

ably annoyed by the actions of cattle rustlers gun-men, and desperadoes who made life hazard~ ous for all citizens within the state. Law and

order did not exist in any practical form, so the

Vigilantes came into being, summarily disposing of the trouble-makers.

lent excellent support, and that fa I'---------------: I about the highest compliment that can be paid these unsung heroes of minor parts. Howe,·er, Smithers as a diplo­matist still retained a few of those indefinite movements of the hick coun­try kid in ;,The Barker,"-but then maybe those movements just belong

taking an active part in student affairs. r-p·--i-pM_e_D __ r_e_a--m--s-i

.,._! _ _ B_y_Jo_e_C_o_L_Le_gMe_M __ J This fellow Hutchins, president of the University of

Chicago, is becoming more of a leader every day. Ne."'Ct to F. D. R. and his N. R. A. this man Hutchins is about lhe biggest man in America. His latest interview is as follows; "1 am hectic on admission requirements. If I had my way I would admit any student who could read and

to Bob. Now, Judith Bliss, as played by

Kathryn Smith, whose play it should have been, had to many ups and downs to carry away any honors. rot even in a red dress could Kay attract i enough attention to cover up her weaknesses in scenes where the con­versation was not a.II hers. If som~­one can tell me why they used that gaudy cheap looking, neon red dress as a costume in the second act. I shall be dee1>ly gratified.

The play was well done. I liked it but after all this is only one c~'s opinion and as to what the reader thinks rests entirely with.in himself.

-The Tormentor.

write and was recommended by a reputable person." His Dear Editor: interview also contained this quotation: "The only need for I "Hay FeYer" has aroused _more com-

. ment thnn any other offermg of the I grades in the University of Chicago is for b:ansfer pur- dramatic department for years, and in po:ses as an accommodation to other schools. Probably line with prevailing custom may I add within the next few years other universities will follow my bit.

f · ill d. 1 For me the outstanding part of the our lead and the neces~ity o gradmg w· 1sappear a - whole production was the work of together." Kathryn Smith, none of the others

It is said that the play committee didn't ueed to have Pat Dolan help check up on the activity tickets because every student went to the play. If students showed as much interest in athletics as dramatics, there would never be any need for graduate managers to play the role of private detective.

can be compared to her. She was bril­liant, equalling her performance in 11Arms and the l\Ian" last year.

Joe Steiner has been lauded as the best in the cast. As I see it that de­pends U[/On what you expected. If your desire was acting then you must inevitably have been disappointed in the perfo1mance of Joe, because he did not act the part of Simon Bliss.

The election system is working 100 per cent, so they· Joe has a marvelous personality and you are for him all the time, but he

say. It is impossible for a student to change the pictures, was Joe Steiner in 1oHay Fever," not to forge signatw·es, bribe assistants, etc. You are to be Simon Bliss. I'd know him in any dis-congratulated for your worthy efforts, Mr. Dolan. guise.

Thanksgiving turkeys sometimes have petals instead of feathers. At the florist's shop the other morning was a beautiful bouquet of red roses for a Miss Babe Brandon. We would never say for sure, but we would venture a guess that our boy, Joe Jr., from Lewistown knew some­thing about the price of roses in Bozeman.

The only glaring errors in the piece were the miscasting of Smithers and Lovelace. Bob is not a diplomat, no matter how hard he tries; he is an unsophisticated lad, and brought mem­ories of his part in last fall's play. Lovelace had the wrong conception of his part, but did as well as he could.

Constance Wiggenhorn turned in her usual steady performance, not brilliant, but entirely satisfactory. She

L'WEP&'\'D&'\'T WO.MEN

The Independent Women will have a self service dinner at Helen MncQuarie's home, 502 South Eighlh avenue, Tuesday, December 5 (today) at 6:30 p. m.

LECTURE

The fourth lecture of the Boze­man chapter of the American Federation of Arts will be given by Prof. H . C. Chee,~er on "Color in Art and Nature" at 8 p. m., December 6, in the Ba.xter hotel. This is open to all student.s.

Many have attended former lectures and say that they were well worth the time and helped to give them an appreciation of the arts.

FANGS AN D PAGES

There will be a meeting Thurs­day night at 6 o'clock in Herrick Hall. It is important that every­one be there.

Ed Howard, Duke.

ALPHA LAMBD.\ DELTA MEETS

Alpha Lambda. Delta meets at 1 p. m., Thursday, in Herrick Hall. This is very important! Be there!

Hamilton Hall.

SPURS

The Spurs "~ll meet at 5 o'clock this afternoon in Herrick Hall.

SOPHO)lORES

There will be a sophomore class meeting Thursday in- the Little Theatre at 5 p. m.

Jack Rowland, Pres.

A "weariness of popular cynicism and sophistication in university circle signals a very definite turn in the tide of spiritual affairs in American colleges," according to Bishop Ira D. '\\1arner.

The American system is education by the adding machine.-Dr. Robert :II. Hutchins.

Among the sorority writeups the name of Ella Crane I is probably the most polished actress is never missing. ls she as versatile as we might infer, on the campus, sophisticated to the os is it that somebody needs more pledges? Anyway, nth degree. somebody will bet a five cent cigar that she is still the Probably the most pleasing part of !!"'-------------~

f d d the play from the standpoint of the queen o the In epen ents this time next year under future was the work of Roy Lockwood Davey's tutelege. and Jane Habein. Both showed talent

that should car, .. them to the heigbta. D'd b Habein's lone fault was a tendency to

1 any ody ever stop to see whether there are any slur her lines and to speak to fast. twins in .Montana State this year? One school in Okla- Mary Brody showed her u,expert­homa has a set of quadruplets. Surely, we ought to be ence but gave indication of talent. able to find at least one pair in this game of duces wild. Roxy Kunkel was quite satisfactory.

Bert Hansen is to be commended

These stenos down at the Ag department have the drive. The way one pencil pusher has taken Lou Gudgel under her wing almost makes a bachelor airaid to get near the place.

for his efforts to broaden the cultural equipment of this section, although at the same time it must be ment ioned that his efforts for the most part go unrewarded. The cleverest lines in ;·Hay Fever" were not caught at all

1

BOARD AND ROOM OR BOARD

513 SOUTH TRACY Phone 1156-References

Given

l\IRS. J. W. KENDALL

Enrolled in the engineering department this year is another girl who happens to be spending her time in the architectural section. Not since Marguerite Roscoe bas a woman had the courage to vie with the men in their chosen profession. Candy! Candy! Candy!

A wave of crime unparalleled in the nation's history has seized the country for the past two years. Established methods of dealing with crim­

inals through law have proven a failure, so the

great American public has asserted itself, just as in the case of the Vigilantes, through lynchings.

This method is something like that of the wolf­pack and other wild beasts, certainly it is not akin to anything normally considered human. There

is only one logical course for authorities to choose

in dealing with mob leaders or inciters and that is to soak a heavy jail sentence on them. Mobs must be discouraged or violence will supplant ·eason in government, and that would ma.i·k a

Monday there was another all-school assembly on the present economic situation. 'This is an excellent idea on the part of the administration. Professor M. R. Good spoke, and he had something important to say.

F re!:jh From

d . In addition to being one of the best of the earlier 1stinct backward step in our civilization. coaches at M. s. c., Professor w. F . Brewer is a master However thei.·e is one redeeming feature con- at reading poetry. He can put more emotion in ten lines

nected with this uprising of the mobs. It is an of Shakespeare than Amos and Andy can put in ten ind1cat10n that John Pubhc 1s thrnugh pampermg minutes of broadcasting. We still hke Gertrude Stein

· l ·t d th t h · I and Carl Sandburg, however. socia paras1 es an a e will from now on see

that th.ey are given no mercy, disregarding: • ' othing has been said lately of the college students who '.11.ethod m fa\'or of results. Governmental author-! pushed over the mail boxes on Halloween. The way people 1t1es had best take heed of the warning note and keep secrets around here is remarkable, but someday the clean house. ~veryone has been waiting for lmeup of that party might make print.

~rom reading- the communications this week it is quite endent that two students have conflicting opinions and need we say prejudices? '

mttttn=I IIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllll llmttWmlllllllllllllllllllllllllll I 1111111111111111111

WHEN YOU CAN BUY A WORTH WHILE BOOK FOR

$1.00 YOUR XMAS IS MADE EASY

Hundreds of new titles in this line, for merly sell ing a t

$2.50 up to $5.00 F iction - Histor y - Travel - Biography

Roosevelt's action toward or upon crime. So far he has not indicated just what course he will take, but this is the proper time for him to in­

augurate his war against criminals; the psychol­ogy of the mo\·e would be perfect. Foreign af­fairs and economic questions can go hang for

awhile, what is more immediately important is

Let us hope that Walt Disney doesn't attempt any

furthe.r portrayals of Mother Goose Rhymes. Ray Van p ff f L L f p s B o o K s T o R E Fleet 1s rapidly becoming the "Prima Donna'' in this line. How does Edie stand it as a steady diet? j

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i<l111 I I I I I I I ... . I I I I I I I I I I I I I

Don't Let the Reindeer Run Off With Your Pocket Book

COME TO WAGNER BROS. FOR YOUR MEN'S GIFTS

You don't have to spend 5 when you'd like to keep a certain gift down to $1.00. If finances are giving you one worry this Christmas ... come to \Vagner's where worr y less buying is a part of every parcel. Gifts at 50 cent to l;il0.00 and you choose with the knowledge that you couldn't do better in style or in value if you were standing at 42nd Str~et and Fifth Avenue.

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