Show rga I zf i THE :iit VOLUME XXX LOGAN UTAH FEBRUARY THURSDAY NUMgEB'12 1932 4 Carnival Looms As Wimfter’s Biggest 9 Weber Club Play Tonite ects tl The k and field a by Coacli Utah State Few letter-il- be of ' noticed ar who will Levi Myers ick men hi institution s good for the United a freshman i Mnescl and Richin ee 440 is Vilcox higll in and pole of return t s Bcllistonjs hould show er men Deb son Roxft 'ampbcll cancics left yya i last iftve of r to jd fredh- - goody higji line is vW‘ ret t tO douncemcnt ! (hat tlu in need !nl javelii jumpers' t S ml (TESTS basketball y 21 when Pi if 24 to at the 1 le cup that le Fratern- - layed their :ason with succeeded the score net defeat Delta Nu's to 19 Ae lute stated teams lost must go sing teanf ' the rules played the im by the ming back D K H ming from margin of Delta Nu's were su om by thd The beaten by e running first place 0 19 looked for going to to the fin--d with the favor of second also toll’s by tlw 18 ie v l seen gradua-b- ear Crow’s Nest FAOK BKEIl Two Yale professors went on record before a senate beer comm' tee as favoring the return of beer in an effort to save the country's youth from hard liquor Dean Clarence W Mcndell in a letter to the committee holding bearings on the 4 per tent beer bill of Senator Hiram Bingham Conn said beer developed Rep team play by bringing people of divergent types together Failing he said students turni U) bet beer to hard liquor Prof Yamlell Hen-Previously demon had said that "cutting off beer has had a bad effect upon college student life in promoting the drinking of highly intoxca- ” ting forms of distilled spirits PROFS - 1 PROHIBITION Commenting on the prohibition Judge Fin Petrie of Opan Wyo says: 'The wet and dry question you eon settle yourself if you take t drink you’re wet— inside— regard less of how you vote If you’re dry well you need a drink any- - Tlas it made any difference whether you put a man in office bscause he was on the dry or wet ticket? No and if you think so all wet" you’re (Continued On Page 3) i- ' por-ko- -- Choose Competent Cast (or Production Here we are! A new play! A new cast! Also a new date No No not a new play in basketball —nor a date for that fraternity party— but another opportunity to "Lit- see one of those exceptional tle Theater Plays’’ It is entitled ’Mrs Bumpstead Leigh” by Harry James Smith A very good cast has been chosen to take the following roles: Mrs Bumpstead Leigh Lorretta Lunt Mrs De Salle her mother Ula Peters Violet DeSalle sister of Mrs Leigh Helen Johnson Miss Ravyson Gladys Hobbs Mrs Leavitt friend of the Rawsons Della Church’ Justin Rawson his on Kenneth Trotman GeoUrey Rawson another Emerson son Abbott Mr Leavitt Reginald Anderson Kitson Butler in Raw-sonHome Ray Trotman Pete Swallow' salesman deluxe Ottis Petersoq This play which is a wholc-fcm- e American comedy is to be presented February 24 and 25 by the Community Players under th hie direction of Wllford D Porter ’s -- Short Dairying Course Feb 18 short course In dairying will at the U S A C on February 18 for the benefit of lee cream manufacturers and milk eempanies of Utah according to A J Morris professor of dairying t the college The program will include talks by President E G B Peterson Professor George Cnlne Professor A J Morris Professor W P Thomas Professor and Mrs George Q Bateman Ohristine B Clayton on dairying end related subjects Visiting of the college and dairy department and a luncheon in the Uege cafeteria have also been : Planned In the days evenU The Association extends an Invitation to all market milk people to attend the lectures The Program will begin at 1ft o’clock A he offered Utah State Agricultural Negative debating team lomposed of Rex Dibble and Darrell Crockett met the University team com- 12 of Utah affirmative posed of Omar Bunnell and Fard’- 167 rell Ryman in a M S bate in the U S A C Auditor- B S 1 mm Wednesday at o'clock The questioon of the debate was: "Re Twelve applications for graduasolved that Congiess Enact Legislation proMding for the centralir- - tion with the M S degree have been received by the Registrars ed control of Industry” office at the Utah State Agricul- The debate was characterized by ura post graduate c0igc from of bot'i students well developed speeches s One hundred and and for a few minutes it seven have applied for graduation w as thought by the audience that with a B S degree and 62 for a the big problems of unemploy-- two year Normal Certificate These students will be passed ment and depression were solved but after it was all thrashed out ' for graduation in case they have no such good new--s could be had satisfactorily met all requirements end of this year s work one side tore down the argu- The cntlre hst of app cants fol- mcrt as fast as the other built it 0A i UP M P Degree — Clarence Burn- The A C debaters Dibble and ham Logan Lemuel Floyd Clarke and the! Newton Gajindar Singh Gill Crockett are married of Utah debaters dil'jab India Wesley Keller Logan Dean F McAlister Logan Martha not let the matter drop Eager Logan David Homer The debate was very interest-- 1 ' K' Nelson Mont- and was very well presente 3 Lopn Idaho Joseph N Symons i non vl All Ino Ho Kn rn no sixty-side- j 1 iii Specialty Dances Included On The Bcrge-(Continu- Kaprice Program The work on the annual U A C students show the Kampus Kaprice has again begun The rehearsals began last Wednesday evening and the work is being busily rushed toward completion for the performance the fiist of next month The Kampus Kaprice has been been an annual student affair at the college for a number of years It was formerly airectel but the last by the Sororities three years it has been under the direction of the Associated Women Students It was formerly just a sequence of separate acts put on by the different college groups but lately it has been dcvloped into a setting a plot and a group of related acts This year the Kampus Kaprici will have more variety in specialty numbers There will be a large assortment of dancing numbers including a ‘‘tap chorus” and many others by the girls In addition this year there will be included a boys dancing act of tap and other forms of dancing next month The performance will be very different from former shows The seting and plot are unique and the main theme is a “comedy with a story” About a hundred students will be included in the cast including the music chorus The Kampus Kaprice in former years has created a great deal of studeut interest and some very fine talent has been shown by the students We wish those students in charge of the performance much success in trying to make the show this year the finest ever developed at the colA International Club To Argue Question of Debt Cancellation “The world will go to the dogs unless War Debts are cancelled” “The world will not but Europe and America will both be ruined financially and morally if war debts are cancelled" This is uot a scene from the Senate chamber as Washington the you might well think— Just setInternational Relations Club tling a world problem with James Mecbam and Davis McEutire leal ing the discussion The statements blazoned at the head of last paragraph will be the ones to set the International Relations Club members to discussing the pro and con of the war debt cancellation problem at its next regular meeting to be held Wednesday noon February 10 in the Faculty room The feature of the hour will be a debate on the problem between James Mecham and Davis McEntlre The 24 students who signed their names as active members ars eligible to attend as are also the students who signed at associate members Library Notice BRIEF CASES The Poor Nut” the Freshman play directed Wallace A Goates of by Prof the Speech Department has been selected from the two tentative casts announced last week Rehearsals are to begin immediately The cast includes: Col Horace Hulmc: Small Nornie Ray Reeder Marjorie EdMorris ith Ann Gunn John Wright Spike Dallas Hatch Mag pie Sheldon Bergeson Hub Wood roe Rigby Prof Deeming Delbert Furhlnan Wilford Wally Mower Coach Jackson Del Iverson the announcer George Nelson Doc Willis Hess Helen Troy Pederson Betty Edith Stoddard Ohio runBoy Clyde MacFarland ners Sam Redmond Hugh Fuller Roy Theurcr Wisconsin runners Thatcher Handley Stewart Ryan Luther Squries Wisconsin trackman Elliot Budge Timekeeper Keith Rhodes Scorekeeper George Bell College officials Frank Cran ncy Hugh Fuller Platt Hind Cornell Wixon Frat men Sam Redmond Harold Wilsou Kelley Duke Hugh Fuller Frank Cran-ne- y Sorority girls Juana Peterson Faye Sonne Phyllis Flam Edith Gephart Gay Ogden Julia Alyss Worley Reggie Helen The business manager of Urn play is Erwin Clement with Frank Craney and Phyllis Lewis as assistants Rebecca Ririe stage manager and Jayne Jones assistant Willis Hess technician Phyllis ‘Lewis costumes LeRoy Sains-bur- y electrician Hel G v ret stage carpenter Ik ace H lme jgrlp Another assistant stage manthree ager assistant technicians assistant grips and two flymen are yet to be named de‘Unusual unique” fitly scribes “The Poor Nut" according to Prof Wallace A Goates the director who continues: "It is a (Continued On Page 3) 1 ARE RUINING THE TABLES IN THE READING ROOM THEREFORE STUDENTS ARE ASKED TO KEEP THEM OFF N E 17 C The monster telescope now un der construction in Paiadena Cal will astound the world ifornia with its magnitude The world's largest — it will have an object mirror nearly twenty feet in diameter and will make visible n billion and a half stars Instead now available of the to the human eye The Instrument completed will undoubtedly stand as the crowning achievement in the field of optical engineering In all probability it will be erected in Southern California under Inthe auspice of th California stitute of Technology j ’ AND seem to be directing their energy toward the number of musical invention of instrument dependent on electricity for tonal effects Last a “Congress for Radio and iJec- - By HAZEL SOWARDS trie' Music” was held ’at Munich Germany The Interest and value of the congress being in the practical demonstrations of new technical improvements and of new Instruments for making music by electricity siar - The United States Office of Education reports that American colleges and universities public and private spent 808 million dollars for higher education during MtO —er approximately ’ 140 milUoci less than the amount spent on the upkeep of the United States Army and Navy for that year A vigorous r ' Seth j j Hcrticdture at j Seth T Shaw of Logan a graduate of the Utah State Agricultural college in the department of horticulture is teaching classes at the Brigham Young University during the winter quarter in horticulture In addition he is carrying graduate work toward an M S degree at the college He is studying a problem fa ' “onion storage” under Dr A L Wilson of the horticultural department at the present time — r—— —— sued jointly by committees rep- resenting' the Federal Council of the churches of Christ in America tbs National Catholic Welfare confer ace and the Central conference of America Rabbit Them Protestant Catholic aad Jewish bodies Uk twist united in urging a more equal distriSutfan of and income and fa recommending - tbe principle gf eoeitl plan-sin- g la Industry ( un- ’ ffawft Resent N£t3l fc i Jt ' " Jf ’jC ' o--' i r' v lrft V Ir fI j ' i V for' the premier Preparations function of the school seisftn have been completed Everything is ia readiness for a great Winter carnival King Winter has set a perfect stage for a mammoth winter festival second to none ia r'o'-iou- s frolic Everything possible has been provided for comfort and pleasure of winter sports enthuProfessor F M Coe returned siasts who plan to take advantage of the glorious opportunity from a trip to Provo afforded Friday on Saturday- February ’ where he adressed a meeting of 6 i ' Free transportation has been fruit growers in the Brigham Busses leave from and reLeadership University’s Young to Bingham's - Cafe 'every Week program On Thursday he turn half hour of the et delivered a talk over radio sta- - nine a m and day beglnning when the tion KSL on “Pruning the Orch last dog is hung ending from the raftefm ard" in the girl’s camp however - late Professor Coe discussed the sta- it may be Arrangements ' have tus of the cherry and apricot been made whereby - the pangs industries at the Provo meeting of hunger and thirst may tp aaLs-fie- d to the utmost by parting with and suggosted ways and means of increasing the consumption of a very few shekles at in payment for’ hot these fruits to keep pace with camp sandwitchee coffee -- pie caked late increasing production in the candy or almost any atoety-jiy-sirestates of which Utah is one He to sustain tba hungry--morta- l Hot pans will ha providd g44 suggested advertising to increase demand together with the produc- every time one feeto the sMIitf tion of a high quality product winter' creeping over- him sjl 'be Pollard Leonard Senior in must do is to pluck one ’' o( those coot-fo- rt Horticulture from Emmett Idaho from a bush and of--oettlo in' the glow ' heat : 'it proHe ducesin The accompanied Professor Coe ' girl'soamjr effl he reports two feet of snow on the open and a fUs fa 18a Davis Experimental farm at Farm ample fireplaceroaring a day WR of Ington where some pruning work aid to those dampedod spirits '44 was done Friday- lQgrtlwig C Prof Coe Addresses Convention - tiefeia d - rc Seniors! February lth the el Setter teat have After names of net pete Ufa f-- ter CM fated M be pembe fa Wfe" This fuad must be yrTt tare yen eaa (ptt-- ft 1 smer ?e f- yeti e-- -' ' ' tv- - rt T r f 27"! fit' tv t Ir hi r f 17 ) ( ' ) 1 t1 t tli rr Each Valley Headiest Snow Fall in foil: uaty was as M Inches KC test 9800 test 74 UkI-’ The predf t ”t I V r t fag January - ihr r i i r T T V'' 4 'SI Hktzrj UfchSrjl!“:r DJ d Organize Club ut i - Sevier Students Look-O- '9 -- Fruit Growers Cache Valley is now covered with the heaviest snow cover in its history according to several of the old settlers The snow cover in the valley averages from 26 inches at Logan to 40 inches on the pass west of Pctersboro This snow cover contains from 5 to ? inches of water The snow cover on the mount-tainOn Jan 18 students of Sevier from which the late sumCounty met iu conjunction with mer streams flow comes in not County Agent S R Boswell and so heavy in proportion The month organized the 3evier County club ly snow survey on Mt Logan Officers elected were Rex Lowe made by the Utah State Agriculpresident Gay Ogden vice presi- tural Ex peri cent Station on Jandent Lucille Christensen secre- uary 80 reveals a snow cover contary Allen Hansen chairman of taining more than twice as much entertainment committee and D water as on February 1 193L C Winget publicity manager Taken alone this does not menu This club was organized for tho much because 1931 was such an purpose of promoting interest in abnormally low year The snow the work eboth socially and schol- cover on January 30 1932 was 54 inches deep at 7000 feet eleastically at the U S A C Members from Sevier County vation and contained 135 inches are: Owen Despain Allen Hansen of water At 8000 feet elevation Parker Fillmore Jim Fillmore it was 73 inches deep containing Fred Jensen Thatcher Handley 182 inches' of water and at 9000 Rex Lowe La Rue Miller Edith feet elevation it was 71 Inches Anne Gunn Gay Ogden Gwendo- deep containing 201 Inches of lyn Domguard Rue Jensen Wil- water Compared to the average of ford Hansen Roy Hess Floyd the past 8 years the snow cover Dunn Onn Christensen Dean at 7000 feet elevation is- 149 Poulson Juana Peterson Leah per cent of normal- - at 8000 feet Peterson Jess Sevy Zelda Lar - 158 per cent of normal and at sen Stanley Vergess Dean Tuft 9000 feet 121 per cent of normal D C Winget Lucille Christensen It should be noted that the snow Clark Lee Alfred Anderson Stan- cover on tho high elevations is Fred ley Bohman Swalberg relatively lower than that on the and Dwain Pearson lower elevations 'i The snow cover at 7000 and 0000 when a fellow Nowadays takes feet on January 30' this year is a girl on an auto ride the girl the measurement of resometimes has to walk home But cord highest 9000 fate there wen but at twenty-fiv- e years ago it was even In 1921 on same date t$ inches worse Then when a fellow took of water as compared wEh 23J a- - girl on an auto ride both in- inches this year variably had to walk home The accumulation duri--v 1 £r'V mw--’ If pft-- 2 H ( ly 'Cir k ( Winners ” Last Friday January 24 memclub met in the bers of the faculty room where they discussed a number of plans for the rest of the winter and spring quarters The invitation given by Director Petersen to have a party ai his canyon home next spring was accepted This party is to be in club members May and all can participate It was decided by the club to give the campfire program during the Leaders’ School to be held on the campus in March This program will be very interesting and ev- ery club member should partici- pate in It The motion that the club have an informal dancing party each year carried well After the first part of the meeting was over D P Murray State Club Leader presented Miss Eva Beutler with a medal given by the Utah State Farm Bureau for her superior leadership in club work Allen Hatch was presented with a silver medal that he won at the Qgden Livestock Show for livestock judging set won The Parker deak-pe- n was preby Clyde McFarland sented to him This is a very beautiful peq which can be used for- either a pocket or desk pen Charles Warnick also received recognition for having won the Union Pacific Scholarship contest from this county We are all glad that these students have achieved success and we want to congratulate them The next meeting of the club will be on Feb 22 Now don’t forget it club members Feb 22 w0 r ’ If Inclement Weather Necessitates Postponement 8:00 a m Bell Will Be Rung v Ralph Wanlass in Charge Medals Presented “4-H- Vi ' T’ 0X7 0 Throngs Expected To Swarm For Snow JamfewQ to Saw Teaching till gw I ir?rl 'if t " endorsement of employment inauraaoe and test against the uUSeaCrg "dole” to donor! b tbs social insumnoe mere mst--y ' ' Floyd Davis Executive Secretary U S A C Alumni association has recently issued his first “UTAH STATE AGRICULTURAL of the COLLEGE BULLETIN season It is a four page pamphlet carrying potent bits of campus and alumni news The contents are masterful in their power The message is plain and well told and the subjects discussed arc vital to the heart of each of the five thousand readers ‘ who are receiving the bulletin Several beautiful campus scenes break the straight readthe general ing and help to make layout- - attractive and vital An especially fine page is that on there are three- smaU scenes of the main building and the subject matter is featuring the aim3 of an Institution Its message is very well done It is clear concise and to the point A review of the 1931 football season shows the upward trend of Aggie football and displays clearly the superior type of Aggie Athletes and coaching Tho column entitled '‘Did You Know” —is a new feature in alumni publications but it sure to gain favor It is a series of sentences suggesting the whereabouts and of prominent Aggies activities Several of them will be treated in each publication Some fine slants on' “Why Endow an Institution?” are given in a splendid short message to alumni and other readers Mr Davis deserves nothing but praise for the high quality work displayed in his first bulletin It is rapidly on the road to great popularity as an alumni publication and a means of contacting friends and alumni throughout the world It is sent through the mail to five thousand individuals Carrying a message vital to them all Vn half-billi- German Inventors According to Professor Myer the of the Speech department for the Sons prelimenary of America Revolution Oratorical contest will be held next Thurs- day February 11 at 4 o’clock in the Little Theater at the college The S A R contest gives op- portunity for everyone It is too late to enter the contest and many new contestants are reques- ted and expected to apply All of the contestants will stand an equal chance in the contest regardless of the time they have been on the list of applicants The final day of the contest id February 24 The contest will be held in the Student Body Assembly and the award of a gold medal will be presented by the association of the Sons of the American Revolution Bulletin To Grads iuwivu Logan Ira Deloss 1 M Ahmni Secretary Issues First News -- of students the Utah State Agricultural college have made the "A" honor roll for the fall quarter according to W H Eell registrar of the college These students carried 15 or more hours of work and maintained straight "A” grades in nil of the work The list follows Artholla Baker Ethel Bryson Venice L Carlson Carol Christensen Maurine Christensen Anthony Coletti J R Dmble Bessie !- Everton Doris Farr Arthur Fife Delbert J Fugal Edith Funk Eugene Gardner D M Hammond Alfred B Hart Flora Hart Beatrice L Hogenson Arland A Larsen Jessie Larson Howard E Law Cleve H Milligan Ida Vec S Monson Edith Perkins Dean F Peterson Jr Ruth Peterson Lowell R Rich Mathias C Richards R Welling Roskeiley Rum Roskelley Marie Singleton Henry D Snedden G Fred Somers Mir- lege iam Stewart Golden L Stoker Lynn M Thatcher Ross S Tyson Ralph Wanlass and Bruce G Whitaker t j excellent way in which it was Zobell Wilson dered It was one of the first Price S B senior college debates of the yearl Degree George Emerson Abbott Treruonton James Clay-- I und thcrefore ton Almond Downey Idaho Ariel A Andersen Hyrum George W Anderson Lognn Jessie Anderson John M Anderson River Ogden Heights Rthelynnc Ashton Vernal Camilla Bair Logan Zelda Bartlett Burley Idaho Rcla Bateman Midvale Carl F Bclliston Nephi? Rulon C on Page 3) ren-- 4P try-ou- ts for - Thirty eight Students Win Positions on “A ” Honor Roll Community Players FEB II Degree The pln “Mr Prim Passes B is to be presented bv the Webji ulub of the U S A C under the direction of Miss Anna Boss of lhc !’Iech department of the Lo gan ”‘?h The Pav is t0 be P‘c' seated m the A C auditorium to- night and tomorrow night "Mr Pint Passes By" is a delightful three act comedy of errors and was written by A A Milne Miss Boss directed the pliv presented by the Weber club lust winter and bus had much experience in dramatic fields v srene of the Marden House Hue r g i and and ls the place to w hch TMr' ?araway Plm’ le‘” esented b Lo'vc Cutler- comes as an u clc°mc gutst hc part of Ge0'ec Mardcn t0 be °rtraed bj Orville Winkelcr Mr inkeler has had much experience on the I stage and was ir "The Gvpv Trad” Weber club play of last year Mr Marden is an old loncd man of about 40 years and has many old fashioned ideas Lila Peters who is portraying the Marden s part of George charming and understanding wife Olydia has had much dramatic experience She very fittingly trayed the part of an aged lady in the Varsity play "Allison’s House Miss Peters is a member of thu Jesters club and directed a one act play which was presented m Student Body assembly She s (Continued On Page 3) Thirty-eigh- For Students Apply for i im 1rj clSSGS Jl)V Directed by Miss Anna Bo Tj- $ A R PRELIMS Graduation The college en iiat Ail A p pi y DEBATERS MEET —Tomorrow De-Gre- Many Seniors OF U STATE-- U -- -: V (T- H— “Ji-ilfr- i banquet ms dwe sored by the Aggie Spun fa t-- C jr of the Spun from Uaivrj’'y f Utah Saturday evening at l’iVt'l the Blue Bird Coven weft ’ for fifty guests’ About $" -- Jr girls from Utah were peer The color scheme Wout in red and wbite ore On the white eevff' P ft favors small silk jpetute" I a gold spur and a red X 1’ C A delightful jr'j - '1 t or Woe "A” at ft toast-t-e Bstey Ram L tbefuas tho A' e f th i f 'ti Vr'wih ' faoe Ufa Utah or Aggie girl' Tho tables were red and white srir''I‘ The University — school and epur girls responded ky t Miss Rath IV I mistress Klee 2 4 f j ft 4 ' ft ft I fnetite I :Ty1 t t VV Alter tLi ! ' 'ft-1 - ( ' fS'r - i't v ft J Natie?' baS’ game te star " j - |