The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 5, No. 12, August 06, 1926 |
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Los Angeles Trio In Assembly at Ten o’Clock
The South
California
kJAN
VOLUME V.
Los Angeles, California, Friday, August 6, 1926
NUMBER 12
METROPOLITAN OFFERING 160 STRONG COURSES
Graduate and Undergraduate Work on Schedule of Big Night School
ON COLORADO RIVER
ADDITIONS TO ARCHITECTURE BEING BUILT
New Rooms Will Be Ready For Use By Beginning of Fall Semester
NEW EXHIBITION ROOM
Twelve-Weeks Fall Quarter To 1 Additional Demand Creates Need Start Sept. 13 at Down- ; For Drafting and Mod-town Quarters eling Rooms
More than 160 evening college With work now well in progress on courses granting university credit are j the foundation, the concrete having scheduled for the 12-weeks' fall quar- been poured already, Architecture’s ter of Metropolitan College, the Tro- new additions will be a reality in time jan night school in the Transportation for the opening of the fall semester. Building, opening the week of Septem Special exhibits of paintings, pieces ber 13, according to announcement of j of sculpture, architectural drawings, Dr. T A h
F. C. S, Schiller of Oxford Joins Philosophy Department
Dr. Ralph Tyler Flewelling, on Return to Campus, Tells of Securing Services of Famous English Humanist; Three Famous Men for Next Fall
DR. STRUBLE WRITES
E
River lectur L. Ol book ready and i
subje*
schoo
Collej.
litica and (
Ne pract ing ( ing, I Horn Educ ogy, Spa ii
friezes, landscapes ,and unusual and unique examples of crafstmanship will be held in the new Exhibition Room,
G59 West 35th Street, according to announcement of Arthur C. Weather-q the same subject will be I head, Dean, while a new drawing room or publication in September j and a new modeling room are now in • distribution this fall. This the process^ of construction at the so popular as a topic for high j School. The improvements, rounding
W. MacQuarrie, director.
cture course on ‘ The Colorado Project” is a Political Science i course to be headed by Reuel ion, professor of Law, whose
debates, will be welcomed as a lecture course to history, po-science, economics, geography.
imerciai law teachers, night courses are offered
in
:an
mii
;very departnn
nclud
lineei
Economics, Music, Physical ion. Political Science, Psychol-Religious Education, Science, h, Speech, and Sociology.
GRADUATE WORK Both graduate and undergraduate work are included in the schedule, with courses especially recommended for the diploma in Americanization, for the certificate or diploma in Social Work, as well as those required for the Educational Research and Guidance Credential, the Americanization Credential, and the Supervisor ol At-(Continued on Page Two)
MANY VISITORS ” ~ ARE ON CAMPUS
A numbers of distinguished visitors have been on the Southern California Campus this week ,among them being Hardin Craig, head of the English de- j partent at the University of Iowa, Sid-new Mitchell, professor of History at l Yale, and Cardinal Goodwin of Mills College. Professor Craig has been do- j ing research work at the Huntington Library in San Marino.
out the complete building, are made necessary by the vital need for a suitable Exhibition Room, anticipated increased enrollment in both the School
of Architecture, additional free-hand ! drawing and design classes of the Col- I lege of Liberal Arts, and as a part oi the program of general development ! of the art and architectural work at U. S. c.
TWO SKYLIGHTS
Two large skylights ,soft and subdued wall covering, suitable for displaying to best advantage the artistic creations .and well-placed lighting fixtures, are features of the Exhibition Room, while the new drafting room, 30xS4 feet, is probably one of the largest drafting rooms in the West. The new modeling room, with separate storeroom, will also have distinctive offices.
Not only art students and talented faculty members on the Trojan campus will show their work at the exhibits, but “outside” artists and architects as well will display their creations.
BY MATTHEW BARR
Dr. F. C. S. Schiller, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and one of England’s leading philosophers, will join the faculty of the University of Southern California this fall, according to Dr. Ralph 1 . Flewelling) head of the Philosophy department. Doctor Flewelling, who has just returned from a trip to various European universities, discovering that Doctor Schiller was contemplating a trip to America, persuaded him to accompany him to Southern California.
* With Dr. H. Wildon Carr, Dr. Schiller, and Dr. Flewelling on the faculty, Southern California will have a philosophy department that will have no superior in America. Dr. Schiller is a leader of the Humanistic School, and is recognized as one of the finest of English writers on philosophic subjects.
During his last visit to the United States, Dr. Schiller occupied the chair of philosophy at Cornell, and many colleges have attempted to persuade him to return to this country, but none was successful until Dr. Flew-elling visited Oxford during his European trip.
TO ATTEND CONGRESS | Dr. Flewelling, Dr. Carr and Dr. I Schiller will attend the International j Con ! Uni-
Magazine Article Will Soon Be Out, and Book is Now Being Done
Dr. Mildred Strubble, assistant professor of English in the University, has just had an article, “In Appreciation of Sully-Prudhomme,” accepted by Poet Lore magazine. It includes an article on the celebrated French poet, and the translation of a number of his
shorter The ti'E work.
poems,
nsiat.io
men
ls ar
:\g two sonne Miss Strubl
w
en ui. on
en by Dr. Stru' contain a long accou works, and the tran of his shorter poem*
)le
Ie
Wl Li
will
which which it of his life ar lation of twent and of two Ion
5-YEAR COURSE FOR DENTISTRY REQUIRED SOON
Next Year Will See Lengthening of Time Attendance Requirement
CLINIC CAMPUS BUILDING
Double Enrollment Method Will Be in Effect Here By Next Fall
The College of Dentistry, University of Southern California will inaugurate a five year course in Dentistry this fail according to Dr. Lewis E. Ford, Dean of the College ,in place of the former four-year course, this change being in conformity with the recommendation of The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, in conjunction with the Dental Education Council of America representing the American Dental Association, the American Association of Dental Schools in the United States, and the National Association of Dental Examiners. The recommendation, which is the result of a four years exhaustive study of dental education states that beginning with 1926-27 all class A dental schools in the United States and Canada should require one
ers one—“The Lion,” and “America.’ Miss Struble’s doctor’s thesis is just off the press of the University oi Washington ,being one of th6 University studies there. Its title is “A Critical Edition of Ford's ‘Perkin War-beck.’ ” the work being, as its name suggests, a complete account of the background of the play as well as an account of the drama itself and ot Ford’s life. Dr. Struble did much of her research for the thesis in the Huntington Library at San Marino.
Summer session students who have borrowed books from the library without the formality of checking them out are urgently requested to return them as soon as possible.
’es« of Philosophers at Harvard J year ot pre-den:a. preparation. lhe rsity, September thirteenth to ■ * ollege ol Dentititrj of the t niversity j seventeenth, returning to S. C. imme-i diately, in order to hold classes this ' fall. Al this Congress, the first held in more than twenty years, the Southern California faculty members will meet many of the leading philosophers of the world. '
While in Europe, Dr. Flewelling visited Oxford, Cambridge, the Sorbonne, and the Universities of Rome, Stras-burg, and Geneva. H® made extensive researches, and studied the political situation in France and Italy.
Hoose Library will be enriched by the addition of many valuable books (Continued on Page Two)
Arizona Candidates Unite In Opposing Boulder Dam
While California Politicians Urge Their Plans, Arizona Claims Scheme Would Cheat Millions of Desert Acres of Needed Water
WALLACE FRISBEY INJURED IN FALL
Wallace Frisbey, one of the most promising half milers for next year, suffered a severe injury when he fell from the second floor of one of the Exposition Park buildings while he wa* working at one of the windows. He was taken to the Osteopathic Hospital. ami later to the Santa Fe Hospital. where he is now tpw^ing iii-, [lime looking up at the ceiling. Fris-wili be in the hospital another lonth, but his friends are glad to tnow that the doctors say that he will >e a* good as ever when he gets on lie feet again.
BY REUEL L. OLSON, A. M., J. D., Ph.D.
Professor of Law
‘ hose who are ^i\iiur their attention to statements now being made bv candidates for public office in California are impressed with the unanimity oi opinion in favor of the Boulder Canyon dam. As the voters of California have come to think of the Boulder Canyon dam as the one and only means to secure water from the Colorado river it is not surprising that candidates addressing Southern California audiences are agreed in their approval of this project.
HANK LEFEBVRE WILL BE AT
PACIFIC MILITARY ACADEMY
iiss Hong Goes
To Northwestern
Henry Lefebvre, who starred for three seasons at fullback at the University of Southern California, will have charge next year of athletics at the Pacific Military Academy at Culver City. Lefebvre received his gold football last fall for having earned three football letters. He is one of the five gridsters who completed their careers this spring and is the second to sign up for a coaching job. Capt. Hobbs Adams recently signed to coach at Monrovia high next season.
NOTICE
TEACHERS
Anna Helga Hong, professor of art luring the summer session, will leave lortly for Northwestern University take a position as professor and
>ad of the art department there. For- _
kerly in charge of Fine Arts at the Will all teachers registered with the |tate Normal School at Lewiston. Ida Appointment Office kindly report at Miss Hong was connected last that office as to whether or not they timmer with the extension depart- are registered in Post Session and as lent of the University of California to their new address.
EVOLUTION HELPS OUR CONCEPT OF GOD, SAYS BROOKS
of Southern California is the third largest dental school in America, has always been rated class “A” and judging from the number now making application for admission and already enrolled it is not expected that the lengthening of the course will adversely affect the enrollent.
TWO ENROLLMENTS In conformity with this new ruling, there will be two methods of enrollment. The first allows the student entering direct from high school to register with the dental college for the five year course, the first year to (Continued on Page Two)
ESSAY BOOK WILL BE OUT tOR FALL USE AS TEXTBOOK
Chapel Speaker Says Our Ideas ! “Century Readings in the English are Magnified By the Essay, by Professor
Science Theory Louis Wann
TENOR IN APPEARANCE PROOF NOW BEING READ
“Glory of Life in Incomplete Only Adequate Essay Collection
Fulfillment as Yet,
States Speaker
Marshalling in review before the student body some of the highlights
For Colleges in the United States
of the evolutionary theory and dwelling upon the enlarged significance
which he declared it gave to the con-, Readjngs in the English Essay-ception of God, Dr. Raymond Cum mings Brooks of Pomona College, vis |
And it must be admitted that if California was the only state concerned in the development of this steam, public opinion has very properly been focused upon the Boulder dam. In these days nothing is achieved without central ization of purpose.
But current news items from Arizona indicate as great and intense a centralization of purpose. However, the point of view of leaders of opinion in Arizona is opposed to that of the people of Southern California. Arizona candidates are now before the electorate of that State assert-
With work on his volume now in an advanced state, the proof-reading being now in the process of completion, Dr. Louis Wann’s anthology, “Century
will
be ready for use as a textbook by the opening of the regular fall semester, iting professor in the Biblical Litera-! ccordlng to po8itivc information by
ture department during the Summer:^ publishers. It will be the only Session, stated in the last of the Tues- collection of essays jn the country
day assemblies that “The glory of that is adequate to the demands of col-life is in the unfulfilled. |ege C|asses an<j as SUCh has an im-
“The three dimensions are notj portant niche to fill... Dr. Wann is pro-enough for the unfolding of the hu-i fessor of English in the University, man spirit,” he said. “The philosophy | conducting classes during the summer
of evolution strengthens belief in immortality, it gives us a fresh foundation for discovering values, it puts us into a living universe where there are no dead clods, where everything is throbbing with life and pulsating with activity. From the electron to the star there is this inherent manifestation.
“Power is not put into the universe
id was also art supervisor of the in Bernardino public schools.
I Her work hero this summer has in-juded the conducting of classes in pme Art. American Art .and Art Ap kciatiofi.
ing their unqualified opposition to the
Boulder Canyon dam. The dominant from outside—there isn’t any outside, note sounded by Arizona office seekers ! Where, then, is God? In the electron, favors either the construction of a
storage dam at Glen Canyon with a J Christ. This is a living universe, not
diversion dam at Bridge Canyon, or fixed, not finished, with imperfection
i
a single dam at Bridge Canyon. justified by incompleteness. This is a
Why is there this disagreement spiritual universe that cannot be un-
! concerning the location of the first derstood in mechanistic or material-
TERM PAPERS and Theses Typed, dam to be constructed as a part of istic terms, but only through the idea
Bring Papers up to Cashier's Office, the proposed development of the of boundless energy. It adds a much above Associated Students’ Store. (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on Page Four)
EDITH M. WEIR, Appointment Secretary.
and post sessions following a year spent at New York University as exchange professor of English.
The book as now completed is the result of seven years’ work on it by Dr. Wann, who has been teaching essay courses during that time, particularly the one known as “The English Essay” (English 66). Finding all the existing texts inadequate by reason of their brevity or elementary nature, he assembled the present volume in in the brain of Plato, in the heart of the effort to provide a comprehensive
collection of essays that would cover the entire field of development, both in England and America, and include all the types of the essay.
100 DIFFERENT AUTHORS With this aim in mind he has included one hundred different authors (Continued on Page Four)
Object Description
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| Title | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 5, No. 12, August 06, 1926 |
| Description | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 5, No. 12, August 06, 1926. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text |
Los Angeles Trio In Assembly at Ten o’Clock The South California kJAN VOLUME V. Los Angeles, California, Friday, August 6, 1926 NUMBER 12 METROPOLITAN OFFERING 160 STRONG COURSES Graduate and Undergraduate Work on Schedule of Big Night School ON COLORADO RIVER ADDITIONS TO ARCHITECTURE BEING BUILT New Rooms Will Be Ready For Use By Beginning of Fall Semester NEW EXHIBITION ROOM Twelve-Weeks Fall Quarter To 1 Additional Demand Creates Need Start Sept. 13 at Down- ; For Drafting and Mod-town Quarters eling Rooms More than 160 evening college With work now well in progress on courses granting university credit are j the foundation, the concrete having scheduled for the 12-weeks' fall quar- been poured already, Architecture’s ter of Metropolitan College, the Tro- new additions will be a reality in time jan night school in the Transportation for the opening of the fall semester. Building, opening the week of Septem Special exhibits of paintings, pieces ber 13, according to announcement of j of sculpture, architectural drawings, Dr. T A h F. C. S, Schiller of Oxford Joins Philosophy Department Dr. Ralph Tyler Flewelling, on Return to Campus, Tells of Securing Services of Famous English Humanist; Three Famous Men for Next Fall DR. STRUBLE WRITES E River lectur L. Ol book ready and i subje* schoo Collej. litica and ( Ne pract ing ( ing, I Horn Educ ogy, Spa ii friezes, landscapes ,and unusual and unique examples of crafstmanship will be held in the new Exhibition Room, G59 West 35th Street, according to announcement of Arthur C. Weather-q the same subject will be I head, Dean, while a new drawing room or publication in September j and a new modeling room are now in • distribution this fall. This the process^ of construction at the so popular as a topic for high j School. The improvements, rounding W. MacQuarrie, director. cture course on ‘ The Colorado Project” is a Political Science i course to be headed by Reuel ion, professor of Law, whose debates, will be welcomed as a lecture course to history, po-science, economics, geography. imerciai law teachers, night courses are offered in :an mii ;very departnn nclud lineei Economics, Music, Physical ion. Political Science, Psychol-Religious Education, Science, h, Speech, and Sociology. GRADUATE WORK Both graduate and undergraduate work are included in the schedule, with courses especially recommended for the diploma in Americanization, for the certificate or diploma in Social Work, as well as those required for the Educational Research and Guidance Credential, the Americanization Credential, and the Supervisor ol At-(Continued on Page Two) MANY VISITORS ” ~ ARE ON CAMPUS A numbers of distinguished visitors have been on the Southern California Campus this week ,among them being Hardin Craig, head of the English de- j partent at the University of Iowa, Sid-new Mitchell, professor of History at l Yale, and Cardinal Goodwin of Mills College. Professor Craig has been do- j ing research work at the Huntington Library in San Marino. out the complete building, are made necessary by the vital need for a suitable Exhibition Room, anticipated increased enrollment in both the School of Architecture, additional free-hand ! drawing and design classes of the Col- I lege of Liberal Arts, and as a part oi the program of general development ! of the art and architectural work at U. S. c. TWO SKYLIGHTS Two large skylights ,soft and subdued wall covering, suitable for displaying to best advantage the artistic creations .and well-placed lighting fixtures, are features of the Exhibition Room, while the new drafting room, 30xS4 feet, is probably one of the largest drafting rooms in the West. The new modeling room, with separate storeroom, will also have distinctive offices. Not only art students and talented faculty members on the Trojan campus will show their work at the exhibits, but “outside” artists and architects as well will display their creations. BY MATTHEW BARR Dr. F. C. S. Schiller, Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and one of England’s leading philosophers, will join the faculty of the University of Southern California this fall, according to Dr. Ralph 1 . Flewelling) head of the Philosophy department. Doctor Flewelling, who has just returned from a trip to various European universities, discovering that Doctor Schiller was contemplating a trip to America, persuaded him to accompany him to Southern California. * With Dr. H. Wildon Carr, Dr. Schiller, and Dr. Flewelling on the faculty, Southern California will have a philosophy department that will have no superior in America. Dr. Schiller is a leader of the Humanistic School, and is recognized as one of the finest of English writers on philosophic subjects. During his last visit to the United States, Dr. Schiller occupied the chair of philosophy at Cornell, and many colleges have attempted to persuade him to return to this country, but none was successful until Dr. Flew-elling visited Oxford during his European trip. TO ATTEND CONGRESS Dr. Flewelling, Dr. Carr and Dr. I Schiller will attend the International j Con ! Uni- Magazine Article Will Soon Be Out, and Book is Now Being Done Dr. Mildred Strubble, assistant professor of English in the University, has just had an article, “In Appreciation of Sully-Prudhomme,” accepted by Poet Lore magazine. It includes an article on the celebrated French poet, and the translation of a number of his shorter The ti'E work. poems, nsiat.io men ls ar :\g two sonne Miss Strubl w en ui. on en by Dr. Stru' contain a long accou works, and the tran of his shorter poem* )le Ie Wl Li will which which it of his life ar lation of twent and of two Ion 5-YEAR COURSE FOR DENTISTRY REQUIRED SOON Next Year Will See Lengthening of Time Attendance Requirement CLINIC CAMPUS BUILDING Double Enrollment Method Will Be in Effect Here By Next Fall The College of Dentistry, University of Southern California will inaugurate a five year course in Dentistry this fail according to Dr. Lewis E. Ford, Dean of the College ,in place of the former four-year course, this change being in conformity with the recommendation of The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, in conjunction with the Dental Education Council of America representing the American Dental Association, the American Association of Dental Schools in the United States, and the National Association of Dental Examiners. The recommendation, which is the result of a four years exhaustive study of dental education states that beginning with 1926-27 all class A dental schools in the United States and Canada should require one ers one—“The Lion,” and “America.’ Miss Struble’s doctor’s thesis is just off the press of the University oi Washington ,being one of th6 University studies there. Its title is “A Critical Edition of Ford's ‘Perkin War-beck.’ ” the work being, as its name suggests, a complete account of the background of the play as well as an account of the drama itself and ot Ford’s life. Dr. Struble did much of her research for the thesis in the Huntington Library at San Marino. Summer session students who have borrowed books from the library without the formality of checking them out are urgently requested to return them as soon as possible. ’es« of Philosophers at Harvard J year ot pre-den:a. preparation. lhe rsity, September thirteenth to ■ * ollege ol Dentititrj of the t niversity j seventeenth, returning to S. C. imme-i diately, in order to hold classes this ' fall. Al this Congress, the first held in more than twenty years, the Southern California faculty members will meet many of the leading philosophers of the world. ' While in Europe, Dr. Flewelling visited Oxford, Cambridge, the Sorbonne, and the Universities of Rome, Stras-burg, and Geneva. H® made extensive researches, and studied the political situation in France and Italy. Hoose Library will be enriched by the addition of many valuable books (Continued on Page Two) Arizona Candidates Unite In Opposing Boulder Dam While California Politicians Urge Their Plans, Arizona Claims Scheme Would Cheat Millions of Desert Acres of Needed Water WALLACE FRISBEY INJURED IN FALL Wallace Frisbey, one of the most promising half milers for next year, suffered a severe injury when he fell from the second floor of one of the Exposition Park buildings while he wa* working at one of the windows. He was taken to the Osteopathic Hospital. ami later to the Santa Fe Hospital. where he is now tpw^ing iii-, [lime looking up at the ceiling. Fris-wili be in the hospital another lonth, but his friends are glad to tnow that the doctors say that he will >e a* good as ever when he gets on lie feet again. BY REUEL L. OLSON, A. M., J. D., Ph.D. Professor of Law ‘ hose who are ^i\iiur their attention to statements now being made bv candidates for public office in California are impressed with the unanimity oi opinion in favor of the Boulder Canyon dam. As the voters of California have come to think of the Boulder Canyon dam as the one and only means to secure water from the Colorado river it is not surprising that candidates addressing Southern California audiences are agreed in their approval of this project. HANK LEFEBVRE WILL BE AT PACIFIC MILITARY ACADEMY iiss Hong Goes To Northwestern Henry Lefebvre, who starred for three seasons at fullback at the University of Southern California, will have charge next year of athletics at the Pacific Military Academy at Culver City. Lefebvre received his gold football last fall for having earned three football letters. He is one of the five gridsters who completed their careers this spring and is the second to sign up for a coaching job. Capt. Hobbs Adams recently signed to coach at Monrovia high next season. NOTICE TEACHERS Anna Helga Hong, professor of art luring the summer session, will leave lortly for Northwestern University take a position as professor and >ad of the art department there. For- _ kerly in charge of Fine Arts at the Will all teachers registered with the tate Normal School at Lewiston. Ida Appointment Office kindly report at Miss Hong was connected last that office as to whether or not they timmer with the extension depart- are registered in Post Session and as lent of the University of California to their new address. EVOLUTION HELPS OUR CONCEPT OF GOD, SAYS BROOKS of Southern California is the third largest dental school in America, has always been rated class “A” and judging from the number now making application for admission and already enrolled it is not expected that the lengthening of the course will adversely affect the enrollent. TWO ENROLLMENTS In conformity with this new ruling, there will be two methods of enrollment. The first allows the student entering direct from high school to register with the dental college for the five year course, the first year to (Continued on Page Two) ESSAY BOOK WILL BE OUT tOR FALL USE AS TEXTBOOK Chapel Speaker Says Our Ideas ! “Century Readings in the English are Magnified By the Essay, by Professor Science Theory Louis Wann TENOR IN APPEARANCE PROOF NOW BEING READ “Glory of Life in Incomplete Only Adequate Essay Collection Fulfillment as Yet, States Speaker Marshalling in review before the student body some of the highlights For Colleges in the United States of the evolutionary theory and dwelling upon the enlarged significance which he declared it gave to the con-, Readjngs in the English Essay-ception of God, Dr. Raymond Cum mings Brooks of Pomona College, vis And it must be admitted that if California was the only state concerned in the development of this steam, public opinion has very properly been focused upon the Boulder dam. In these days nothing is achieved without central ization of purpose. But current news items from Arizona indicate as great and intense a centralization of purpose. However, the point of view of leaders of opinion in Arizona is opposed to that of the people of Southern California. Arizona candidates are now before the electorate of that State assert- With work on his volume now in an advanced state, the proof-reading being now in the process of completion, Dr. Louis Wann’s anthology, “Century will be ready for use as a textbook by the opening of the regular fall semester, iting professor in the Biblical Litera-! ccordlng to po8itivc information by ture department during the Summer:^ publishers. It will be the only Session, stated in the last of the Tues- collection of essays jn the country day assemblies that “The glory of that is adequate to the demands of col-life is in the unfulfilled. ege C asses an |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1926-08-06~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume211/uschist-dt-1926-08-06~001.tif |
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