The Montana Kaimin, March 6, 1934

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The Montana Kaimin, March 6, 1934 University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM) 3-6-1934 The onM tana Kaimin, March 6, 1934 Associated Students of the State University of Montana Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper Recommended Citation Associated Students of the State University of Montana, "The onM tana Kaimin, March 6, 1934" (1934). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 1401. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/1401 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STATE UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA, MISSOULA, MONTANA TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1934 VOLUME XXXIII. No. 39 Petitions Circulated to Obtain Committee Plans Judges Choose Kappas Downtown Men Student Backing for Track Meet To Have Lecture Sponsor Picture By R. Haliburton And Phi Delts Winners Thursday Is Set as Final Day of Signing; 500 Names Must Be Secured “Emperor Jones” In Support of Interscholastic Noted Author, Traveller May Come Of Varsity Vodvil Acts Grizzly Snpporters Book Famous Play To Missoula Next Month, To Help Establish Athletic Tickets to the thirty-first Interscholastic Track and Field meet may Says Dick Shaw Management Gratified With Quality of Production and Satisfaction! Scholarship Fund be purchased for $1 this year provided 500 or more students sign the Expressed By Audience; Profits Still Undetermined; State University students will be petitions now in circulation agreeing to pay the dollar at the beginning “Richard Haliburton, world-famous traveller, author and lecturer, will WiH'Be Given to A. S. U. M. Fund given the chance to support their foot­ of the spring quarter in addition to the regular fees. This will allow speak to the students of the State Uni­ ball team during winter quarter, and admission to both afternoons of the®— versity the latter part of March or Kappa Kappa Gamma, presenting “Good Heayens! ’’ and Phi Delta still receive the same high class en­ meet Petitions must be signed be- the first pprt of April if present plans Theta with “Tony Pastor’s Varieties’’ won the silver loving cups and tertainment given them during the fore Thursday. last football season. The opportunity OME people are registering for Acceptance materialize,” says Dick Shaw, chair­ $25 prizes given to the best acts at Varsity Vodvil last Friday night. In case more than five hundred dol­ will be presented at the Wilma theater courses to be followed next quarter man of the Outside Entertainment S lars is taken in the surplus will be Mary Kohn, Missoula, and Phil Pollard, Red Lodge, were managers of Friday and Saturday nights when a and at the same time dropping one or committee. The lecture will be held used to send track representatives to Notices Sent ; ^those numbers.' In addition to those group- of men Interested in the Grizzly more for this quarter. Rather a strange in the Missoula County high school some invitational or national meet. I prizes there were several other gifts football team will offer Paul Robeson feeling, we should think—to work for auditorium. Students will be ad­ The petition will be invalid if less [donated by local merchants. In Eugene O’Neill's play "Emperor a whole quarter a t ' something for To Students mitted by presenting their A. S. U. M. Joyce Prize than five hundred signatures are.re­ Dick Shaw, manager of the show, Jones.” The profits derived from the which one had registered with every books. ceived. | said, "The management is gratified show will be used to establish schol­ good intention, and maybe some eager­ Haliburton's most popular book, | Free cokes will be given to each Applicants to Fulfill Requirements To Be Given with the high quality of the produc­ arships for worthy Montana athletes. ness and expectation, in just the same “The Royal Road to Romance,” tells member of the group having the larg­ Before Being Allowed tion and the general satisfaction ex­ The play itself has run on the legit­ manner in which he is now registering how he worked, begged, borrowed, est percentage of signers. Petitions To Work and bought his way around the world. pressed by the audience.” imate stage in New York and Chicago for more, and then to drop it just as For Writing will be collected Thursday. In “The Flying Carpet” he flys from The financial result is not definitely for several seasons with the same cast the date of completion is near. There ‘This plan was started in 1932,” Notices of acceptance for jobs under Hollywood to TImbuctoo and then into known, but the show more than broke as is presented in the screen version. will probably be a good many of the Annual Award Has Been Offered |eTe said Ken Duff, A. S. U. M. business the Federal Emergency Relief admin­ central Europe. "The Glorious Ad­ The play was first presented in 1920 petitioners who will find that their By Missoula Attorney | manager. “Previous to that time the istration are being sent out today to venture” traces the route Ulysses fol­ Women’s Acts as a drama and distinguished Eugene only choice in the matter is to iqake annual meets were not making ex­ more than two hundred students who lowed on his return from Troy, and Since 1905 “And So----- ” presented by the O’Neill as a playwright. "Emperor good or to take a flunk. Even if one’s penses. The Missoula Chamber of have met the qualifications necessary in “New Worlds to Conquer” he ex­ -------------- Alpha Chi Omega ‘sorority showed a Jones” was adapted and presented in reason is sound the signatures neces­ Commerce in years previous to '32 had to secure the employment. plores the Mayan ruins in Central The Annie Lewis Joyce Memorial lonesome man and woman brought to- January, 1933, by the Metropolitan sary for the acceptance of a drop are been making up the deficit but this The notices contain four provisions prize will be awarded this year for gether by the “three little cupids.” It Opera company and was highly suc­ difficult to secure because of the sus­ America. could not go on indefinitely. Very which the applicants for the jobs must This program is the second of a the best short story written by an un­ was featured by song and dance num­ cessful. picion with which members of the few season tickets were sold to stu­ agree to before they may go to work. series of outside entertainments dergraduate of the State University. bers, including several popular pieces. Paul Robeson, the leading figure in faculty are inclined to look upon stu­ dents at the current price of $2.50 and The first of the provisions states that brought to the University students by The choice will be made at the recom­ Independent women in “Land of the the show, is a huge Negro who has dents who ask for anything out of the it was thought that perhaps the solu­ the student must remain eligible. The i the fund voted for in a referendum mendation of the Department of Eng­ Shining Mountains” gave a review of the distinction of having been picked ordinary in their manner of securing tion to the difficulty could be brought hours and aptitudes for the work to submitfbd to the student body last lish. The judges have not yet been the history of Montana from the time on Walter Camp’s All-American foot­ an education. These instructors are about by offering season tickets to be done, must be of such a nature spring. Dr. Harry F. Ward, professor announced. of the Indians up to “Copper, Silver ball teams in 1916 and 1917 from Rut­ often justified in this attitude; there the students at a price of $1 payable that they can be fitted to the available of Christian Ethics at Union Semin­ and Gold” days, representing the State gers. He possesses a baritone voice are always those stiidentB who will The proceeds of the Joyce endow- at spring quarter registration time, job by the assigning agencies. The ary, New York, N. Y., spoke here Feb­ ment of $200 are to be bestowed in I University. Indian, cowboy, tree and which has thrilled audiences the world slip and slide a subject and then try providing 600 students paid it. third provision states that “the char­ ruary 1 on Soviet Russia. school-day choruses were given. over. to get out of the bad grade. On the the form of a medal or- otherwise, at This plan has proved successful. acter of the work when once assigned The Kappa Kappa Gamma act gave Supporting Robeson is Dudley Dlg- other hand, legitimate reasons for the option of the winner. Second and Five hundred twenty-two paid th eimu8t merit it8 continued employ- the audience an idea of what the as­ ges, formerly of the Theater Guild, dropping a course are not so rare that third prizes will be a year’s subscrip­ first year, the required number sub- ment.” tronomer sees—the moon lady, the who plays the role of Smlthers, the they rate a place in Ripley’s cartoon, tion to the Frontier and Midland. scribed last year and we hope the moonbeams, th e . stars, the dawn and Cockney trader. and it is rather discouraging to a well- A student must report immediately Co-ed Group Three typewritten copies of the same attitude will be prevalent this the sunrays, performing in their The show will run for afternoon and meaning student to be stalled by a to the timekeeper, Dick Thomas, and manuscript must be left with H.
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