The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 01, 1935, Image 1

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    or
"Read the
Nebraskan" Jf
N
T Y
EBRASKA
"Be campus
conscious"
Official Student Newspaper of the University of Nebraska
VOL. XXXI V NO. 137
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1935.
PRICE 5 CENTS.
Hi
SCHOLARSHIP CUP
GOES FARM HOUSE
5TH TIME IN ROW
Fifteen Honor Fraternities
Announced at Annual
Banquet Tuesday.
AGEE PRINCIPAL SPEAKER
Intramural Awards Made to
Greek Athletic Winners
By Harold Petz.
Supremacy in interfraternity
scholarship for the past five
years is the record of which the
Farm House can boast after
having received the Interfra
ternity Scholarship cup for placing
first in this year's list of fifteen
honor fraternities announced at
the annual inter-fraternity banquet
Tuesday evening: in the ballroom
of the Hotel Cornhusker.
Following the ag campus group
in scholarship average are Sigma
Alpha Mu, Zeta Beta Tau, Beta
Sigma Psi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Chi
Phi, Delta Sigma Lambda, Delta
Upsilon, Phi Kappa Psi. Xi Psi Phi,
Beta Theta Pi, Phi Alpha Delta,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Gam
ma Rho, and Tau Kappa Epsilon,
in the order named.
Plaques were awarded the four
teen high clubs by Trof. E. F.
Schramm, who was introduced by
Toastmaster Ray Ramsay to the
banquet gathering of some 200
fraternity men as not only the "dis
tributor of the hardware" but also
as one of the most active faculty
members in his interest in the wel
fare of the campus fraternities. He
is faculty sponsor of the inter
fraternity council, and one of the
donors of the scholarship cup with
Dean T. J. Thompson and Col. C. L
Frankfurter.
Harold Petz, director of intra
mural athletics, also came in for
his annual share in the giving out
of trophies when he took the in
ventory of intramural contests and
found that there were ten "trin
kets," as Ray called them, to be
awarded to winners in inter-fraternity
athletic competition during
the past year.
John H. Agee, president of the
Nebraska Alumni association, in
the main talk of the evening, ex
plained the workings of the associ
ation and how it is part of their
Job to help the university obtain
from the legislature adequate ap
propriations to carry on the insti
tution. He deplored the situation
of how few legislators there were
to appeal to as supporters of larger
(Continued on Page 3).
2
Traditional Festivities
Start at 9 O'clock
Thursday.
to
Ivy Jay playground bepun to
lake on a festiv appearance
Tue sday as workmen set about
putting up bleachers and com
pleting the neon's throne in
preparation for the traditional
event on the campus Thursday.
Mortar Boards in charge of the
celebration stated that activities
would begin sharply at 9 o'clock
Thursday morning with the inter
fraternity sing when fraternity
choruses will compete for the sil
ver loving cup now held by Sigma
Phi Epsilon. winner of last
years contest. Following fra
ternity competition, the queen's
procession will begin with the pre
sentation of the 1935 ruler of Ivy
Day festivities climaxing the
morning. The Ivy day poem will be
read, and Jack Pace, and Don
Easterday, Junior and senior class
presidents will plant the ivy.
Beginning the afternoon's activ
ity, will be the sorority sing at
1:30. This will be followed by the
masking of the new Mortar Board
members and the tapping of the
Innocents. The Ivy Day oration by
Marvin Schmidt, law student will
conclude the day's program.
Little Gods Galley
ALICE BEEKMAN, EDITOR OF THE AWGWAN.
By Regina HunklnV
The driving force of the
Awgwan this year has been a
smiling, good natured, blond
haired young lady, Alice Beek
Tnan officially, but "Becky" to
the games.
'LoLi ef work today? Why, 1
love to vork on the Awgwan," she
frays with a smile, and you know
he must enjoy everything he
does. "I've worked awfully hard on
lots of the ls.njes, but the campus
seems to enjoy the ones I Just sling
together, perhaps because they're
full of campus gore."
The interview was Interrupted
frequently with greetings to this
one and that one who came into
the Awgwan office for no reason
at all, or perhaps they knew there
would be someone in there who
would be glad to see thm.
She was talking of the value of
(Continued on Page 2.)
. T. CARMICIIAEL TO
INTERVIEW STUDENTS
Montgomery Ward and Co.
Director Will Be
Here Today.
H. T. Carmlchael, personnel dl
rector of Montgomery Ward & Co.,
will interview seniors and gradu
ates of the college of business ad
ministration today. All students
desiring to meet Mr. Carmlchael
should make arrangements with
?rof. T. T. Bullock, head of the
placement bureau of the college, at
once.
According to Mr. Bullock, Mr.
Carmlchael is particularly desirous
of interviewing students Interested
in merchandising.
PLAYS TITLE ROLE
Kirkpatrick Directs Chicago
Opera Company, Choral
Union Offering.
Barbara Darlys. dramatic so
prano of ihey Chicago Grand
Opera company, will sing the
title role of "Aida" when it
appears here on May 6, in the
coliseum with the Festival Opera
company of Chicago and the Uni
versity Choral Union, under the
direction of Howard Kirkpatrick.
Miss Darlys belongs to the In
teresting group of American ar
tists who have naa ineir enuie
musical education in this country.
She made her debut with the Chi
cago Grand Opera in Jan. 23, 1931,
in the title role of "La Giaconda,"
on but a week's notice. She had
been scheduled to sing the title
role of Aida on Chicago's Italian
day, when the Italians preferred to
hear their own beloved Raisa. Ac
ceding to their request, the man
agement asked Darlys to sing
"La Giaconda," and Mme. Raisa
to sing the Aida performance.
Hence, Lincoln music lovers will
hear her in the role she gave up
to Mme. Raisa.
Witte to be "Messenger."
Marcella Laux will take the
part of the "High Priestess," one
of the two minor roles that will
be sung by local musicians, accord
ing to Mr. Kirkpatrick. The tenor
part of a "Messenger" will be sung
bv Parvin Witte. instructor of
voice and director of the glee club.
Members of the university football
team will be seen in the roles of
guards in the production and mem
bers of the band, under the direc
tion of Billy Quick, will take part
in the Triumphal marcn. Mr.
Kirkpatrick is still on the outlook
for three pickaninnies to take part
in l.:e opera.
There will be between 300 and
350 persons in the production,
most of them university students
who will make up the chorus and
orchestra. This will be one of the
largest, if not the largest musical
show ever presented on any stage
in Lincoln, according to John K.
'Selleck, director of student activi
ties. A group of students of navia
Waters Champe will take part in
the ballet.
Cramer Will Direct.
Clarence E. Cramer, well known
Chicago producer, will have the
performance under his personal
supervision, bringing from Chi
cago all the necessary equipment
with the Festival Opera company,
including elaborate scenery, gor
geous costumes for 300 people, the
armor, trappings, lighting effects,
and all the various paraphernalia
required to stage it in a complete
and elaborate manner.
Relnld Werrenrath, the world
famous Danish baritone, will head
the cast, singing the role of
"Amonasro, King of Ethiopia."
John Pane-Gasser will sing the
part of the tenor "Rhadames," a
part which he has recently played
at the Chicago Civic Opera House,
the New York Hippodrome, and
also the largest houses of Italy and
France.
Kathryn Browne, one of Ameri
ca's favor-it? contraltos, will sing
"Amneris." She has appeared with
the Chicago Civic Opera In more
than 100 performances nationwide.
James Wolfe, who has just closed
his twelfth season at the Metro
politan, is the "Ramphia" and
Teodor Lovich will play the king.
a role in which he scored heavily
this season at the Chicago com
pany.
BARBARA DARLYS
AIDA
MONDAY
i ' -
t . ' . '
. ' f vv; ' p :
-- ' . 1
A
y - , -, j
Court tr RlBb4rt-MndM.
Prof. Fling Muses Over Trip
To French Fort Carcassonne
By Lorraine Campbell.
Prof. Wcntwortli Flint? of the French department looked
thoughtfully out of his office window the other day. The green
landscape and the clear blue and white sky reminded him of the
scenery on a trip from Paris to Carcassonne, France several years
ago. was wnwe auenaing ivkc-o
ole Alsacienne, in Paris that he.
with four other American students
started out, convinced that "one
shouldn't die without seeing Car
cassonne," the famous fortified
city in the south of France.
They drew as straight a line as
possible between the two cities and
decided, because of the condition of
their finances, to travel via bicy
cles. "Bicycles are much better de
veloped in Europe than in this
country cars being too expensive
for common use there," explained
Mr. Fling. "My vehicle had a gear
shift with three speeds, as well as a
generator which provided for a
bright head and tail light at night.
Wore Identification Feathers.
Since they had decided that each
should ride at his leisure, to some
spot determined upon for the night
the travelers wore black berets
with bright red feathers in order
TO PRESENT ALL
El
45 Annual Society Meeting
Draws Scholars From
All Nebraska.
Drawing scholars and teach
ers lrom au sections or me
state, the Nebraska Academy
of Sciences will present a pro
gram in all phases and branches
of science at its forty-fifth annual
meeting to be held Friday and Sat
urday at the university, according
to Nels A. Bengston. president of
the organization and chairman of
the geography department here,
The convention of the Academy,
which is affiliated with the Amer
ican Association for the Advance
ment of Science, is being conducted
Jointly with the Nebraska Section
of the Mathematical association of
America the Nebraska council of
Geography Teachers, Nebraska
Science Teachers association, and
the Nebraska Dietetic association
Including talks by prominent
school faculty members, students
and governmental department di
rectors, the schedule of gathering
will get under way Friday morn
ing following registration of dele
gates at 8:30 o clock in the cor
ridor of Bessey hall.
Meet from 9 to 11.
Meetings of the various sections
will hold sway from 9 until 11
o'clock that morning. At that time
the first general session will gather
at Morrill hall auditorium and will
hear R. L. Von Treba, regional di
rector of Soil Erosion Service,
United States department of agri
culture, speak on "Soil Erosion
Control in Nebraska." Clayton
Watkins. state director of Plains
Shelter Belt Project, United States
department of agriculture, will
sshare the morning spotlight with
his discussion of the Shelter Belt
Project
Following sectional meetings
which begin at 1 o'clock in the aft
ernoon and last three hours, J. B.
Kincer, chief, division of climate
and crop weather, United States
weather bureau, will address an
other general session on the sub
ject, "Man and his Climate with
(Continued on Page 4.)
MI INSPECTION 10
TAKE PLACE MAY 8. 9
Col. McMaster and Maj. Van
Vliet Preside Over
Annual Event.
Annual inspection of the uni
versity R. O. T. C. corps will take
place May 8 and 9 with Col.
George H. McMaster and Maj. Van
Vliet of the seventh corps area at
Omaha inspecting officers, accord
ing to Col. W. H. Oury, head of the
university military department.
The excellent rating which Ne
braska baa held for the past five
years Is expected to be re-attained
by Col. Oury, who reports that the
cadet companies appear very
promising.
Classes will be dismissed Thurs
day at 3 p. m., when the formal
parade and inspection will be
called.
There will be a skeleton parade
Monday, May 6 at 8 p. m., with
first call at 4:50 p. m.
STAT ACADEMY
E PHASES
Sign for Senior Organization
I wish to enroll as a member of the senior class, and
express my willingness to eo-opcrate in organization of the
senior class, and to participate in their activities.
Nan
ic
Add ress
This l a coupon to be turned
located in the principal buildings on
to make mire that they all stayed
on the same road. "If in doubt
about our way, we would ask a
farmer "Have you seen a fellow
with a bright red feather in his
beret? He would always remember
if one of us had passed."
"Among the souvenirs I brought
back from Europe is a small frag
ment from an immense vase a
homely bird suspended upon a
twig. We spent the first night of
our trip at Montargis in which we
all slept in one room. For some un
known reason, we commenced
scuffling in the morning soon after
awakening, and in the confusion,
one of the homliest vases I have
ever seen crashed to the floor from
the mantel. This little souvenir is
one of the more costly of my mem
oirs." He recalled a lunch of red Hol
( Continued on Fage 4.)
GAMMA ALPHA CH1S
POSTPONE MEETING
Results of Advertising
Contest to Appear
Thursday.
Regular meeting of Gamma
Alpha Chi, women's advertising
sorority, has been postponed from
Thursday to one week from Thurs
day, according to President Vir
ginia Selleck.
Results of the best ad contest
which is being sponsored by the
sorority will be published in Thurs
day's Nebraskan. Selection of the
best ads appearing in Nebraska
community newspapers during
July will be made by Clifford
Crooks, market research director
of the Nebraska Farmer; Prof.
Gayle C. Walker, director of the
school of Journalism; and Prof. F.
C. Blood, Gamma Alpha Chi spon
sor. Preliminary selection was
made by committee members from
the sorority.
ENGllCTEEK
Convocation, Banquet, Field
Day, Open House Feature
Two-Day Program.
Hounding out the finishing
touches on the engineers' week
plans today, engineers' week
committccm .i arc preparing
for one of the university s old
est traditions. With its history re
lating back to charter day over
forty-one years ago. engineer's
week will commence its activities
Thursday evening, May 2, and will
follow for a full day on Friday,
May 3.
In order to take part in and at
tend the program, engineering stu
dents of the university will be dis
missed from classes on Thursday,
and those after eleven o'clock on
Friday. Classes up to eleven Fri
day and all those on Saturday are
to be attended, according to Dean
O. J. Ferguson of the engineering
college.
Four principal events feature
the two day program with open
house on Thursday evening, engi
neers convocation Friday morning,
field day in the afternoon and the
engineers banquet in the evening.
Open House Thursday.
Open house commences at seven
o'clock Thursday evening with the
presentation of a large number of
exhibits and demonstrations by the
various departments of the engi
neering college. Convocation at
eleven Friday morning will present
Erick Floor, engineer on the Loup
river public power and irrigation
project at Columbus. He will ad
dress the engineers in Temple on
the Loup valley propect and will
use illustrated drawings in connec
tion. Field day follows at 12 o'clock
with a picnic at Pioneers park.
After a box lunch, a sport program
will be commenced with the fea
ture event of the afternoon being
baseball games between teams
from the various departments. A
professor's "fib-telling" contest
also stands out as an interesting
event on the program.
Cochran to Speak.
Climaxing the day with an engi
neer's banquet at 6:30, Gov. Roy L.
Cochran will give the principal
address of the evening. Governor
Cochran is a graduate of the engi
neering college and a former state
(Continued on Page 2.)
in at one of the ballot boxes
the campus.
COUNCIL
ROUNDS
OUT FINAL PLANS
E
T
Harold Sumption Cast
Title Role of Last
1935 Drama.
in
PLAY CLOSES SATURDAY
Shakespearean Star Show
Director; to Act Part
of 'Brutus.'
Ticket prices will be reduced
for the University Players'
post-season production, "Julius
Caesar," which will open in the
Temple theater this evening for
a four-davs run, from 50 to 75
cents, to 35 and 50 cents, according
to Charles Steadman, Players busi
ness manager. Hart Jenks, famous
Shakespearean actor, is directing
the play and is cast in one of the
leading roles.
Mr. Jenks has piayea in -juiius
Caesar" with the Chicago Civic
Shakespeare society both in the
roles of "Marcus Brutus" and of
'Julius Caesar" and will play
"Marcus Brutus" in this produc
tion. He is also directing the per
formance.
Harold Sumption, a member of
the speech department, will play
"Julius Caesar, and the two out
standing feminine roles will be
filled by Mary Kay Throop Mc
Donald and Dorothy Zimmer. They
will play "Portia," "Brutus' " wife
and "Calpurnia," "Caesar's" wife,
respectively.
Hill in "Cassius" Role.
Irving Hill is cast in the part of
"Cassius," and Armand Hunter is
to play "Mark Antony." Margaret
Straub will be seen in the part of
the boy "Lucius," a page. Dwight
Loder will play "Flavius," Claire
Wolfe. "Marullus," and Roy Squire,
a soothsayer.
Those who will appear in the
play as senators, commoners,
guards, attendants, etc., are the
following: Elsa Swift. Elizabeth
Betzer, Genevieve Dalling. Veron
ica Villnave, Molly Carpenter,
Leila Irwin, Blanche Carr, Gwen
dolyn Meyerson, Irene Barry, Flor
ence Smeerin, Harriet Leeson.
Mary Dean, Sid Baker, Albert
Nore, Dwight Perkins, Allen Gate
wood, Paul Bogen, Gregg Howard,
Smith Davifi, Milan Wisen, Rich
ard Rider, Henry Kelpe, Don Buell,
Waldeman Mueller, Delford Brum
mer, Don Boehn, Elwood Randal,
Lucile Todd, Charles Fair, and Ar
nold Gadeken.
Y.M., Y.W. STAFFS TO
SERVE ICE CREAM AT
T
Social Will Begin Promptly
At 8 O'clock North of
Library.
Tonight on the lawn north of li
brary hall students and faculty
members will meet at one of the
most unusual parties of the year,
an ice cream social, sponsored by
the Y. W. and V. M. social staffs,
according to Evelyn Diamond,
general chairman In charge of ar
rangements. The affair will begin
promptly at 8 o'clock.
Japanese lanterns will light the
scene and the guests will be served
ice cream and cake for a nominal
fee at small tables placed thruout
the grounds. The colonial aspect of
the party 'will be re-enforced by a
small band playing old fashioned
tunes. v
Members of the Y. ' W. social
staff will play the part of wait
resses. They are Evelyn Diamond,
Nora DeCory, Dorcas Crawford,
Dorothy Beers, Iris Knox, Hazel
Bier, Lillian Seibold, Eleanor Bell,
Edna Lee, Alice Tcrrill, and Ruth
Longstreet.
Prof, and Mrs. O. W. Reinmuth,
and Miss Bernice Miller will chap
eron the affair, it was revealed
Tuesday.
Definite committees working on
arrangements are Nora DeCory,
arrangement of the grounds; El
eanor Bell, orchestra; Hazel Bier
and Lillian Seibold. supplies; and
Dorcas Crawford, Dorothy Beers,
and Iris Knox, refreshments.
Banquet Speaker
j0t
t X
V
e
PLAYERS
DC
K T PRICE
FOR
JULIUS
CAESAR
CwrtT Uncala Journal.
John H. Age.
PERSHING RIFLES TO
HOLD MEETING TODAY
Group to Decide Whether
Delegation Will Be
Sent to Meet.
Pershing Rifles will hold a spe
cial meeting at 6 o'clock Wednes
day in Nebraska hall to make final
decision as to whether or not the
Nebraska chapter will send dele
gates to the competitive drill held
in Iowa City Saturday afternoon,
Captain Elon Standevan stated
when the group convened Tuesday
at 5 o'clock.
. If the Nebraska chapter enters
the contest, It will send three
squads which will leave Lincoln
Friday afternoon.
Pledges taken in during the past
years wno nave missed otner mi
tiation services and who have ful
filled their probation duties by
May 7 will be installed as active
members on that date. The cere
mony will follow a regular 5
o'clock meeting at which election
of officers for the coming year will
be elected.
Rallyinq Farmers to Tour
Downtown Lincoln on
Hayracks.
ART GUILD WILL DISPLAY
'Goddess of Agriculture'
To Be Presented
Friday.
Climaxing their year's work
in a big demonstration week,
students of ag college will pre
face the Farmer's Fair, which
includes the pageant, two
dances, exibits from every depart
ment of the college, a baseball
game, a livestock parade, the
snorpheus show, and other minor
events, with an advertising stunt in
the form of a hayride rally Wed
nesday night. May 1.
"Every student in the college is
on a committee and the co-operation
towards the betterment of the
fair this year has been splendid,"
stated Katherine Jones, co-promoter
of the affair, "and I for one am
willing to reiterate the proverbial,
'it will be a bigger and better fair
than ever before'."
"Si and Mirandy."
Garbed in the traditional aprons
and overalls of the more traditional
Mirandy and SI, the ag students
will mount their hay toting chari
ots shortly before midnight on
Wednesday evening for the Fair
rally. The group will proceed from
the Holdrege campus to Antelope
park for a brief period of dancing
and then travel via the primitive
method to the down town section
of Lincoln. The return trip will in
clude the city campus and sorority
row.
With the gala ag college dance
event at which the Goddess of
Agriculture will be presented sche'
duled for Thursday evening. May
2, and the first performance of
"American Panorama," the his
torical pageant of the develop
ment of the country from its dis
covery down to the present, to be
given on Friday, the ag campus
(Continued on Page 2.1
RUSHING DISCUSSED
AT TASSEL MEETING
Pepsters Gather Tuesday;
Report on Phi Sigma
Chi Convention.
Tassels, women's pep society,
discussed rushing parties for the
organization when members met
Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock in
Ellen Smith hall. Elizabeth
Shearer, Tassels president, stated
that nothing definitely was decided
because ag representatives were
unable to be present at the meet
ing. Further discussions will be
held at further meetings.
A report was made at the meet
ing of the convention of Phi Sigma
Chi, women's national pep group
which was held in Lincoln last
weekend. The report Included an
nouncement that Elizabeth Shearer
was elected secretary-treasurer of
the national organization.
STUDENT COUNCIL POSTS.
Student Council.
Four seniors-at-large, two
men and two women.
Two Junior men and three
funior women from Arts and
Science college.
Two Junior men from Engi
neering college.
One Junior man and one
junior woman from Business
Administration college.
One junior man and one
junior woman from College of
Agriculture.
One junior man and three
junior women from Teacher
college.
On Junior man from Phar
macy college.
On Junior man from Dentis
try college.
On junior man from Law
college.
Two junior women-at-larg.
On man or woman from
Graduate college.
Publication Board.
On sophomor member.
On junior member.
On stnlar member.
DEMONSTRATION
WEEK PRECEDES
ANNUAL AG
Al
SPRING
ELECTION
CANDIDATES
MAY
FILE WEDNESDAY
25 Student Council Posts
To Be Filled at
May Vote.
FILINGS CLOSE MAY 10
Three Publications Board
Members to Be
Elected.
Filings for the twenty-five
student council positions and
the three publication board
positions will begin at 8 o'clock
Wednesday morning in t lio
Student Activities' office in the
coliseum. Jack Fischer, student
council president announced that
filings would last until Friday,
May 10, at 5 o'clock.
Council positions are open to
two senior men-at-large and two
senior women-at-large. Of the ten
positions to be filled by Junior men.
two will be selected from the arts
and science college, two from en
gineering, one from ag, one from
dentistry, one from teachers, one
from pharmacy, one from law, and
one from business administration.
Then ten junior women are also
selected according to colleges.
Three are taken from teachers,
three from arts and science, one
from ag, one from business admin
istration, and two are elected at
large. One graduate student,
either man or woman, is also to be
elected. The three members of the
publication board are selected ac
cording to colleges, one member
from the sophomore class, one
junior and one senior.
Eligibility Outlined.
Eligibility for membership In the
student council is based on the fol
lowing requirements: The candi
date must be a member of the col
lege or class he represents. Regu
lar university rules govern the
candidate's college, school, or
class. Each candidate must have
a scholastic average of at least 7
percent for all preceding semes
ters, and shall have no standing
delinquencies. Class designations
apply to next year.
"Students and factions filing for
council positions ' should consider
the qualifications of the prospec
tive candidates in regard to in
clination, ability, and time. One of
the greatest faults to be found with
those aspiring to membership on
the student council is that they
don't have time to competently fill
the positions," Jack Fisher state I
when announcing the filings.
FRESHMAN CABINET
CONVENES TUESDAY
Group Discusses Plans
For May Morning
Breakfast.
Members of the freshman cabi
net of the Y. W. C. A. met Tues
day evening at 7 o'clock in Ellon
Smith hall to make plans for the
May morning breakfast which will
be held Sunday, May 12 at 8
o'clock on the lawn of the Chi
Omega house.
The cabinet has charge of dec
orations and the menu, and the
group decided Tuesday night that
a color scheme would be worked
out in pastel shades.
The breakfast is an annual af
fair of the Y. W. C. A. attended by
both active and alumna members
of the organization.
Copy Briefs
by
FRED NICKLAS.
SHARE the Wealth Huey Long
isn't going to get his share of
federal PWA money. Not if Sec
retary Iokes has anything to say
about it Long, who believes in
some sort of a "dividing-up"
scheme, but wants no such treat
ment of the iay-so, has irked the
secretary of interior.
It all (started when the blus
tery Louisiana senator persuad
ed his state legislature to place
in his hands administration of
PWA funds designated for his
constituency. Henceforth the
cabinet member scratched his
adversary's state from the loan
and grant list.
Thereupon Long hastened back
to Washington to take a few pokes
at Secretary Ickes. And the pokes
came from both directions. But the
two combatants, like rubber balls,
bounce back at each other each
time a blow Is dealt. Extremely
amusing and unrestrained verbiage
characterizes their continued con
flict MEANWHILE Governor Eugene
Talmadge of Georgia, has bee.i
firing a few shots at Roosevelt and
the new deal. He too, la a likely
loser. At least he's lost well over
$200,000 federal money. And Sec
retary Ickea waa responsible for
that, too. Talmadge, one riust re
member, was not long ago, re
elected after a strenuous anti-new
deal campaign.
m m
But Secretary Ickes has the
advantage. He'a one of the three
who get to spend the 4 billion
dollar wtf k-relief fund, and he'a
head maa of the PWA treasury,
and he's a member of the presi
.(Conunued on Fag 4.)