The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1933 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: University of Oklahoma Student Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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The QHaloma Daily
libnd si the Nonna poetoffice at second clou Matter under the act of Congrats Xarch 3 Jin
Weather
Partly cloudy today and Wed'
nnday Colder Wednesday
VOL XIX NO 38
-AP" MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
NORMAN OKLAHOMA TUESDAY OCTOBER 24 1933
“MORE THAN A STUDENT NEWSPAPER
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Two Sooners
Injured May
Miss Contest
Gentry Dunlap Victims
As Gridmen Drill
For Huskers
Hardage Is Pleased
Coach Says Team Has
‘Fighting Chance
For Victory
Health Week
Prizes Given
In First Test
Joyce Hutchison Beviie Kniseley
Awarded First Flace In
Posture Group
Doubt as to whether or not
cither Bob Dunlap or Cash Gentry
would be able to play against Ne-
braska at Lincoln Saturday loom-
ed in the Sooner football camp
Monday as coaches set to work for
the'all-imporlant game with the
Huskers
Dunlap was suffering from two nos
fractured In the Iowa State game
Saturday while Gentry aggravated an
Infected toe against the Cyclones
Gentry missed practice Monday and
was unable to wear anything on his
foot except a telt shoe Dunlap don-
ned football toga but did not take
part In any phase of the workout
Squad Umbers Vp
Jett Coker end Ben Poynor also
look ‘things easy during the session
CokeT has a shoulder Injury while
Poynor rehurt an old rib ailment
However both are expected to be
ready for Nebraska
s Sooner gridmen went thru a light
workout Monday merely limbering up
tiff and sore muscles Incurred in
the Iowa State melee '
Coaches Lewie Hardage and Bo
Rowland lost no time In getting over
to the squad the football system
that they must face Saturday
New Ptapi Outlined
- Rowland had charge of the linemen
and ha Instructed them Individually
on what to expect from the veteran
Husker primary defense
Hardage gave the beck field candl-
dates some new plays then worked
with Rowland in giving - defensive
moves designed to atop Husker backs
One varsity beam the members of
which did not play much In the Cy-
clone tilt got an opportunity to see
Comhusker plays ss executed by the
freshmen In a scrimmage session
Nebraska Praised
8cout Hugh V McDermott who
nw Nebraska humble Kansas State
I to 0 at Manhattan Saturday
brought back diagrams of his obser-
vations along with glowing tales of
naught
truly great Corhhusker jugger-
Joyce Hutchison Eutaw Alabama
Delta Gamma and Bessls Kniseley
Norman independent won first
(daces in the posture contest held In
the women’s building Monday after-
noon Virginia Lee Bartlesville PI
Bets Phi and Marjorie McKlasick
Oklahoma City independent
mcond places ore
The contest was the first of four
to be held during Health Week ac-
cording to Marjorie Bryant chairman
of Health Week according to Mar-
jorie Bryant chairman of Health
Week committee Dr Eleanors
Schmidt resident physician for wo
men Miss Morrison Williamson in-
structor in physical education for
women and Maxine McAfee Nor-
man were Judges -
Before the Judging Miss William'
on gave a talk on good posture In
which she detailed the essentia
points
Monday's winners of first places
Gibson Names
Sooner Staff
For Semester
Definite Appointments
To Be Made After
January 1
Twenty-one Chosen
Editor Urges Students
To Have Pictures
Made Quickly
nw fin ta Past Twa)
kittle Decrease in Receipts
leported by Markets
By the Associated Press
-Nebraska has everything— power
peed deception and a wonderful
defense" McDermott said He - has
seen D X Bible's eleven hold Texas
lows State and Kansu State score-
leu on successive weekends mean-
while rolling up impressive scores
Hardage Hopeful
Hardage pleased with hie Sooners
after their 19 to 7 triumph over Iowa
State thinks the Sooners have
chance to win from Nebraska If they
fight hard enough
"While we are not expecting
beet them anything may happen If
our eleven fights hard enough" he
He promised plenty of hard work
for the squad during the remainder
-f the week
Six of Eleven Members Favored
Change of Some Sort
From Dry Rule
Wickersham Group’s Famed Split Report
Is Recalled as Prohibition Era Nears End
Market centers at scattered points
m Iowa Minnesota Nebraska Illi-
nois and Wisconsin reported slightly
decreased receipts but no pronounced
affect from the national farm strike
Picks teers in northwest Iowa with
the sanction of county holiday of fl-
eers '’prevailed upon many livestock
truckers to turn back from the Sioux
City ‘ market
R L Rlckerd president of the
Oklahoma association said Monday
night a statewide farmer! strike will
be railed within ten days "on every'
thing"
Rlckerd claimed the state associa-
tion now has more than UAOO mem-
bers and BO £00 supporters who would
"go to the limit" on anything ft
sponsored
"There win be no exceptions" he
said "The strike will cover cotton
wheat and other commodities of that
nature”
Selection of members of the
1934 Sooner editorial staff was
made Monday night by Joe Fred
Gibson editor No definite ap-
pointments to offices will be made
until the second semester Gibson
said
urging students to lend In feature
pictures to be used In the yearbook
Gibson announced that the staff
was making every effort to gather
feature material for the yearbook
Classes Being Completed
Plana to send class panels to the
engraven next month make It ur-
gent that all students have pictures
made as soon as notices are received
Oibson said
Vacancies In the staff will be filled
by students who file applications with
Oibaon he cold A number of appli-
cations already are on hand and
others will be filed as they come
In
At the start of the second term
offices will be filled according to
the work done this semester Oibson
announced
Assistants Named vi
Those ' chosen are Wifroft Brown
Oklahoma City James Hawes Nor-
man: Elwyn Hatchett Durant Kath-
erine Glbeon Pauls Valley Carl
Mann Lawton Katherine King
Oklahoma City Ed McCurtaln Okie
home City Bob Neptune Bartles-
ville Noton Methvln Chlckasba BUI
Whiteman Oklahoma City
And Kenneth Wilson Pawnee Brink-
er Ivy Duncan' Julia Kennedy Paw-
husks Margaret Llnebaugh Musko-
gee Charles PoUanshce Eufaula
Jimmy Denton Tulsa Jack Christian
Temple Tex Helen Hough Okla-
homa City Oayle McCorkle Elk City
Mkrjorie Newbern Oklahoma city
and Rose Mary Parka El Reno
The above cholera were made after
the experience of all applicants arv
thoroly reviewed Glbeon said
By John P Chester
WASHINGTON— (-The famous
split report of the Wickersham com-
mission upon the decision of which
the nation once held Its breath
probably will be considered by prohi-
bition's historians to nomination as
one of the early heralds of repeal
The document conceived during
eighteen months of warm argument
and disagreement has taken on
fresh Interest generally as the ap-
proaching superacndlng of the eigh-
teenth amendment stirs the dust of
nearly three yean upon its cover
Altho declaring against repeal
In Its Joint conclusion the report In
January 1931 nevertheless set forth
the Individual opinions of a majority
of Its members six of eleven— in
favoy of an Immediate change of
some sort
Changes Suggested
Two members ' held repeal to be
the only answer Four suggested' 1m-
muliase revision of the amendment
Pour more said the basic tow should
be altered If conditions failed to Im-
prove after further trial
Famous Poet
To Talk Here
Students May Take
Part in Jamboree
Stocks Surge Upward After
Gold Plan Announced
NEW YORK— A— Stock and com
modifies surged upward and the dol-
lar declined aa financial markets en
deavored to adjust thrnw?bes Mon
day to President Roosevelt's plan of
establishing a government-controlled
gold market
Shura registered numerous ad-
vances of II to IT rtlh gold mining
shares particularly buoyant An ex-
treme nra of MO a share appeared
in Home State mining
MIAMI Fla— The Graf Zeppe-
lin took off Monday night at 9:4S
eastern standard time continuing its
Journey to Chicago and the Century
of Progress exposition
LINCOLN Neb — UPI — Physically
resting but mentally hard at work
were the University of Nebraska
Cornhuskera In Monday's football
practice session Mistakes of the
Kansas State genie and what to do!
ones Inside the opponent's ten-yard I’1 rt r4 Mrteullure for
lino were emphasized I ? WMOO for a library
Canon reserve bock and Sauer!nd W50AD0 for dnrmitolea for Okie
triple-threat fullback were the onljrj college has bran ap-
caaualtlra and they expected to be "J lh t1 P011® wks
In suite today Coach Bible appointed ” n ‘warded to Washington
Jack Miler halfback and John Ilobyj MUl imday
ihmn Tara la raa faari 0r- Cl Bennett A and M presl
dent said present library fseimiiw
'are Inadequate
Issuance of bonds to build the
been auUinrlanl
the legislature
Fine!
GEO W WICKERSHAM
George W Wickersham the com-
mission's chairman declared he was
"not convinced that the present sys-
tem may not be the beet obtainable
At the same time however he sug-
gested an amendment be placed be
fore the people "simply repraling
the eighteenth amendment"
Chairman Suggested Amendment
Be Submitted Directly
To People
'Cabinet Quits
After French
Budget Fight
Even aside from Its conclusions
the report had wide effect by speak-
ing with a voice of authority concern-
ing the evils arising under the syi
tern and the general failure of
prohibition to prohibit under con-
ditions as they then existed
Report le Explained
The report Included such state-
ments as these:
“There to a thoroughly organized
business which replaces its retail
selling agencies as fast aa they are
discovered and closed up"
"Against the gain In eliminating
the saloon must be weighed the de-
moralizing effect of the regime of
more or less protected speakaxles up-
on regard for tow and order gen-
erally" "Unless till number of apeakasles
ran be substantially and permanently
dlsminlshed enforcement ran not be
held satisfactory"
"People of wealth professional and
business men public officials and
tourists are drinking In hotels cafes
and tourist camps under dreumstan-
(Plcmss Tin Is Fsss Fssr)
Chamber of Deputies
Throws Daladier’s
Ministry Out
Vane Is Imperiled
Premier Says Inflation
Inevitable Within
Few Weeks
John Gould Fletcher Champion !
Of Free Verse to Speak
November 7
Just a Pipe!
First It Was Barber Shops And
Then Cigarets — But
Now Look
University performers win be ask'
ed to participate In the first annual
chamber of commerce "Jamboree"
be held November I in the Union
according to W C Follcy secretary
of the organization
The Jamboree will consist of a ban-
quet and two and one balf hours of
etage entertainment Fnlley said An
outside speaker will be obtained lor
lha event
The Jamboree open to anybody
desiring to attend will be presented
to the purpose of financing the
chamber of commerce community pro-
gram for the remainder of the fiscal
year Tickets will go on sale this
week The price to 93 for the pro-
gram Norman's three civic rluha Rotary
Lions sad Klwanto will have Inter-
club sales competition Fnlley said
Tha RoUrUns hare already selected
thrlr team
Chairmen of the arrangement com'
mlttere are Urtwcll Still program
T Jack Foster 'speaker selection
and If P Meyer sales
John Gould Fletcha ana of the
leaders of the group of rebellious
poets who for a decade fought crit-
ical battles to mike verse free will
lecture November 1 In the Engineer-
ing ' auditorium f
Tickets for the lecture win go on
tale at 35 cento today in 309 Liberal
Aria building and the treasurer's
office
As one of tl leaden of the
Ima gists a group ' of poets Intent
chiefly In writing - picture-poetry
Fletcher occupied a high place In
modem literature
Was Rebellious Poet
He waa one ol the most rebellious
of the experimenters and thru bis
efforts to fuse music and pointing
In poetic expression was a major
Influence In the group of writers
attempting to throw off the shackles
of rime and meter
Fletcher's experiences in bumping
against rock-ribbed conservatism will
be discussed In hto lecture His topic
to "Tradition and Experiment in
Contemporary Literature”
Of tote Fletcher has thrown off
the Imagtotlc mantle to engage In
a fight for regionalism a literary
movement to which the university
to i attributing thru Its publication
of “Folk-Bay" a regional miscellany
ed'tod yearly by Dr B A Botkin
assistant professor of English
Contributed to Folk-Sat '
Fletcher contributed a group of
poems to the 1931 volume of "Folk-
Bay" He waa bom In Little Rock Ark
but wandered far in hto search for
Ulerary material Since leaving Har-
vard In 1907 without a degree he
has traveled widely In Europe and
America spending most of hto time
In England He to now living in
Little Rock
NRA Leaves
Small Towns
Factories Chain Stores Remain
Under Blue Eagle Price
Probe Announced
By Observer
rY THIS In your ege
The straw that broke the
camel's back to here This straw
to a pipe And while there's noth-
ing extraordinary about a pipe
when you ace a coed behind the
pipe there's something to get
smoked up about
Bo don't be surprised If you see
some member of the' (how can I
say weaker eex) ' firing up her
briar between sips of coffee
Pipes for women— nice brilliantly
colored ones— are available hi Nor-" “those employing woes thsn-Tlvs peo-
MASON IS a ROUP LEADER
"Freedom of tha W1U" will be the
topio discussed at the meeting of the
Philosophy club at 7:30 tonight In
311 Liberal Arts building J Whitney
Moran Ok! home City wlH act at
leader of tlw discussion
man now They are regular pipes
about five inches long with a honey
dipped bowl n everything
U some of them have an imi-
tation Jewel set In the stem:
But don’t get alarmed too quick-
ly One merchant reported that
altho the pipes were designed and
designated to women men are
buying them and that- so far no
coed has dared to purchase one
The feminine pipes are being
used by some eastern coeds thou
who are In the know of the doings
of the smart collegiate world have
asserted
And what will' the poor men do
If the women decide to adopt pipe
smoking?
Aa I raid before Just smoke it
In your pipe
St Pat’s Council
Chairmen Chosen
Eighteen students were appointed
chairmen of committees of St Pat
council Saturday by Lawrence Elder-
kin Sprlngvllle N Y president of
Knights of 8L Pat council Repre-
sentatives from the various engl
n erring departments were also an-
nounced by Eldcrkin
The chairmen of committees ap-
pointed were: Rex Reed Oklahoma
City Donald Cullan Norman George
Weber Sprlngvllle N Y Earl
Beard Oklahoma City Harry Plum-
mer Buffalo Booth Wiley Norman
Lewis McBride Lawton Bessie
Kniseley Norman
i The representatives of the engl-
PARIS— (P) —The French
cabinet headed by Premier Dah-
dier resigned Tuesday following
to defeat by a 329 to 241 lack of
confidence vote in the chamber of
deputies
Premier Daladier went down to
defeat fighting to the lart for a
alanced budget in order to save
tlw franc ’
The chamber threw the ministry
out unmoved by Daladier’s warning
that failure to strike a budgetary
balance would mean that Inflation
was Inevitable "within five or six
weeks”
Refute Salary Cute
The deputies refused Daladier
proposal to cut the salaries of gov-
ernment functionaries
Members of the cabinet withdrew
Immediately from the chamber fol-
lowing the vote They assembled at
once to prepare their resignation af-
ter holding office almost nine
months— the avenge life of a French
ministry
The session ended In a hubub
whlcli was reflected In the streets of
Paris where the heaviest guards in
many years petroled
The vote came on S compromise
amendment cutting In half the gov-
ernment's original proposal to dash
functionaries' salaries despite Dtila-
diei firm stand that Ills proposed
those doing interstate business andiry cut should be retained
— - rwniiwl i—rJ - rtfc - ' ' n
pie still have NRA watching over
them even in the otherwise exempt
towns of 3 £00 or less
Markup Provision Out
The order‘d Issuance coincided with
promulgation of the retail trade code
whlcli emerged - with a price control
provision stripped of the ten per
cent markup but so phrased as to
give substantially the same protection
against price-cutting
At the same time the president
had made public hto own definition
of the employers' right to hire and
fire a worker on a basis of merit
saying this was quite legal to long
as not used as a subterfuge to oust
union men but that It should not
be written into a code
Tribunals Planned
To protect the consumer from un-
due price advances blamed by
profiteers on recovery movement the
president ordered investigation
Johnson said most of the com-
plaints have been against retail prof-
iteering and that local tribunals "to
which any person ran complain'
would be set up at once
Retail code to effective next Monday
Compromise Turned Down
It had been hoped the govern-
ment's last minute acceptance of a
compromise would satisfy the social-
ists but at midnight Leon Blum
socialist leader refused the compro-
mise thereby drawing a terrific de-
nunciation from Daladier
The premier denounced Blum to
applause of the chamber In terms
which rarely had been heard there
-—j By Barbers Adams iiB-nKm rvnwniHmn mil
nwi!lU brn uthMp4 blr I puma I tola murder the city in one easy (?) lesson
! wswiaiure I editor My Instructions were to go to llcs-
Mu Mil Epsilon 7:13 303 Fliicj 1 I Car you Imagine taking 55 min- try hall and to lake the slowest way
Aria building WASHINGTON— —Lera ulto (4 go tram Ihe engineering buil'fom 1 headed s-'Ulh from the power
Omlcron Nu 7:30 103 Liberal ArU elKm months after lie left bu pwt ln "men’s dormitory? I did p'ant'z basement On the wsy "
neerlng schools are: civil engineering
Cline Mansur Elk City mechanical
engineering Peter Tauson Oklahoma
City architectural engineering Hugh
Humphrey Tulsa: petroleum engi-
neering Ray Pool Lawton chemical
engineering Scott Reeburgh Okla-
horna Cliy engineering physics James
drilled contortionist out of anybody Cos-lea Tulsa
And These Are the Caverns
MARINE SENDING A GIRL DOWN THERE
Students to Organize
New Club Wednesday
Petroleum and Natural Gas engl
neerlng students win meet at 7:30
Wednesday light In the Engineering
auditorium to organise and draw up
a constitution for a petroleum engi-
neering club according to John W
Robinson' Calumet
Bob FMmster 33 win give a talk
on the Pitot Tube method of measur-
ing volume and pressure of gas
wells
building
El Mndjl 7:30 301 Art building
PI Zetii Kappa pledging 5 o’clock
Women's building
Publication board 4 o'clock Ill
Press buUdlng
Phi Della CM 4 o’clock 301 Phar
macy building
lleslla club 5 O'clock 311 Science
hall
secretary of labor undr llonvsr
William N Doak II died Of heart
disease at hto horns on Virginia
bluff overlooking Washington Ma-
sonic funeral setvlrvi will bs held
Wednesday
Of ewirra not the regular way— by pawed the leala to the petroleum
llw Union the library and anrasi enginrerlng lubnntory and the
h street branch that leads alt to tha field
The itMito he told me la take house lymi can't get into baakrltall
to snmeahal different First I went games this winter by say of tbs kin announced
down below ground level Into the tunnel irauet Ih'r to a barred gain
Other members announced were
Rlrliard Sneed Bristow president of'
Bigma Tau Farrell McMullan prcvl-!
dent of Tau Beta PI Latham Yates
Bartlesville representative from the!
men's council I
The next meeting of Bl Pat council!
will be held at 5 o'clock Wednesday!
In the Engineering building Elder-:
HAROLD HUGGINS IMPROVED
I paxaed the condition of Harold Ifuggln
OKLAHOMA CtTY-iPv-A Urg-:a fiuss thing Jul le Irek at It firtdtinure Overhead I heard the grind ' recently underwent an
live turtle was unearned Monday 1 from Hie opening but it's huger hen to roller skate and the footstep P’nUuo frtr nppondlcilto In St An-
Omlcron Nu S o'clock 310 Selene by workmen digging ux Iret beneath you gel Into U and Hnd Hie mass to to arena heavyweight Then X turned lunpUnl in Oklahoma Cityi
the cement floor to the main ww pipe tablrs end brace that tm- unitor lha sidewalk that extends "nnrmcd Munduy according to
building at Lincoln park The buUd-ped pregrew along tlte north aide to Brook el reel I attendant Ilugghu who has
Ing waa erected In ISa loo it'nndin1 Tlw tunnel h nearly seven fret m front to the library Noon 1 found Khdrawn from aeluwl was a mem-
oo auperlnlendeni said there no! from flrer in rref and etmit Ih mvwlf under a noisy bit to territory krf to llw university band Hi will
hatL
Philosophy dub 7:30 311 Liberal
Aria building
Jan Hounds— Noon— Spoonholdcr
Derby Club— 10:30 0 m— Stoma Nu
house
way th turtl could hav got where Mine width-ascept in ptaeva-and that to lha library for I was rurioiu
h was line that Urn three plan would bisk a fullj tnare tree ftp tsrwi
be removed to hto homo th latter
part of this week
Marshburn Named To
Aid in Rush Revision
Dr J H Marshburn professor
or English was selected Monday
by the Intcrfratcmlty council rush
rules revision committee to act
as Its faculty advisor In the pend-
ing change of the present pledging
system
Expressing hto views on the pro-
posed change’ Marshburn aaid that
he thought that "soma sort to de-
ferred pledging system might be
worked out satisfactorily" but that
the problem would be "a delicate
one"
Marshburn met with the com
mlttce for a vhort organization
meeting Monday afternoon
The council will meet In regu-
lar session October 31 at the Phi
Pit house
Auto Wreck Victims
Improve at Hospital
Condition of Mrs W H Mont-
gomery and her daughter Connie
who sustained Internal injuries In
an automobile accident Saturday
night enroute to Purcell waa des-
cribed as Improved Monday by at-
tendants ai the American Legion
hospital where they were taken
They were returning to their horns
from Oklahoma City when the truck
In which they were riding overturn-
ed southwest of Norman Other oc-
cupants of the truck wrre not injured
New Dance Club
Officers Will Be
Selected Tonight
Election of officers tor the nrwiy
organized Junior Otrhrei dance
dub will be held st 8 o'clock tonight
In the Women's building Helen
Gregory Norman of the sonlur
Ore heals organization announced
Monday
Names of the 31 women w ho recent-
ly organized the club arc Jcjn Part-
low Alice StclnholiA Delia Franklin
Leota Cooks and Lo Irene Crb-wll
all of Norman WUk-na Dyer Miami
Wands Mae Hayes MmknKe Mar-
jorie Hoorn and Ruth freed both
of Tulsa and Joyce liutc'iivon Eu-
taw Ala
And Margaret Kamfennn Patrirti
IFlnnertg and Marcan-t U!arn all
) of Oklahoma City Maigiiret Conk
I Pratt Kan: Elsie llnmplnii Elk
City Jeanette LocffrlhAlz 13 Campo
i Tex: Lorene Burt Dartlrivllle Vel-
'va Gorton Dover Frnnrn MrOnw-
i sn' Ponca city and Kny llarrimni
jPoteau and Mnrilia Itmilrraoii Urn-
ton La
i — - -
j Infirmary
ADMITTED: Ellnn Fmbr flnliy-
lee Sanders MnMnn horrett Vadz
'Rose Loopcr
j DISMISSED: Robert Fldh Vsda
I Rons Lonper Lloyd IMiilbert Dor
othjr McCartney
I
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Fortson, John. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 24, 1933, newspaper, October 24, 1933; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1795645/m1/1/?q=%22Education+-+Colleges+and+Universities+-+Faculty+and+Staff%22: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.