Southern California Trojan, Vol. 9, No. 9, July 26, 1930 |
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Vol. IX.
Los Angeles, California, Friday, July 25, 1930.
RANCE HONORS PRESIDENT
LAN PHYSICAL EDUCATION PICNIC
HYSICAL EDUCATION PICNIC HELD AT SEA BREEZE CLUB
mmer Session Students Will Gather At Beach Resort Fo» Fourth Annual Frolic; Tickets Now On Sale At Physical Education Office.
Thursday afternoon and evening, July 31, all students en-led in courses in the Department of Physical Education will lgregate at the Sea Breeze Beach Club in Santa Monica for » Fourth Annual Summer Session Physical Education Picnic. Committees made up of representatives from all the Physi-Education classes and headed by Miss Esther Weinstock of bank High school are at work to*, ke the affair the most success-
S.C. STUDENT GAINS HONORS
DR. VON KLEINSMID RAISED TO KNIGHTHOOD IN LEGION
FOR WRITfNPS Award Granted Trojan President For Distinguished * UH If III 1 fliUu Service In Foreign Relations; Diploma To Be Bestowed In Fall.
Miss Margaret S. Cunningham Awarded First Prize in Essay Contest... ELEVEN PRIZES Contest Sponsored And Financed By Burdette B. Brown.
one of all time. .
BEACH SPORTS
program of swimming and
ch sports is planned for the 6rnoon with entertainment., sur-es, and a dinner-dance in the 'ning from 7 o’clock on. he whole affair is to be of a very jjrmal nature and it is hoped that 7ry one will leave feeling well-luainted with all their fellow dents.
ickets were placed on sale Mon-and may be obtained from ^resentatives of the various sses or the Physical Education ce in Old College on the pay-jnt of one dollar and t wenty five Its. Anyone interested in having jreat time and feed with some k&t people is invited to be bent.
Transportation will be provided Physical Education students |o do not have means of reach-the beach club. For those who ve, the following directions were en by those in charge:
)rive out any of the major boule-ds to Santa Monica, and turn ■th along the coast highway. The Breeze club is situated just fth of the Santa Monica pier, be-the Palisades.
Dr. Louis Eich To Read t(The Will ” A Barrie Drama
“The Will,” a drama by James Matthew Barrie, will be read by Dr. Louis Eich, visiting professor of Speech from the University of Michigan, at a recital sponsored by the S. C. School of Speech, tomorrow, at 2 o'clock, in Bovard auditorium.
The general public, as well as all summer students, is cordially invited to attend Dr. Eich's recital, according to Grafton Petis Tanquary, acting dean of the School of Speech.
WENT ACTOKS PRESENT DRAMA
Gruach,” by Gordon Bottomlej 1 be produced for the fourth time ce its publication and awardance the Kemina-Via Heureuse prize Paris in 1923. This play, chosen Marian Van Gilder for her mas's thesis, will be presented by in Touchstone theater Thurs-•luly 31, at 8:15 p. m.
Qly once before has "Gruach” n presented in this country—at tege of Pacific, Stockton, in jL Miss Van Gilder was gradu-(d from that institution. jGruach,” a play in two scenes, (based on the same legend elut'd by Shakespeare in “Mac-and deals with the eharac-°f Macbeth and Lady Mac-h. or Gruach, in their youth, 'uach, a young girl of the line kings deposed by Duncan, is. to ■Oiairied to Conan, whose family >'es her land and wealth. Mac-
1. 'he king’s envoy, arrives with s (,f the birth of a son in the household, sees Gruach in her finery on the eve of the /®t, falls in love with her, and s to stay over for the cere-
> in spite of the disapproval of family.
Uu< I* appears in a sleep-walk-cent, Macbeth wakens her, and 1 Continued on Page Two)
S.C. Teacher And Composer Will be Soloist At Bowl
Mr. Arne Oidberg, composer, pianist and pedagouge of international standing, who is teaching Composition and Orchestration at the College of Music, University of Southern California, this summer, will be piano soloist at the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday evening, August 2, playing his own composition, Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra.
Mrs. Hilda Oidberg will play the second piano. A year and a half ago they played this same number with the Evanston Symphony Orchestra. Mrs. Oidberg has had her training under Mr. Arne Oidberg at Northwestern university and Artur Schnabel in Berlin. Mrs. Oidberg arrived from Berlin about a week ago, where she has been studying intermittently since 1924. She will return to Berlin in the fall to do concert work.
Margaret S. Cunningham, graduate student at the University of Southern California, was awarded first prize in a recent essay contest on the subject “The Abundant Life,” according to the announcement made yesterday by Dr. Frank C. Touton.
The contest was sponsored and financed by Burdette B. Brown, a friend of S. C. interested in the broader aspects of education and life, who conceived the idea that it would be desirable for college students to think and to write on the problems of life, interpreting the term “The Abundant Life," according to his own intellectual resources and experiences.
ELEVEN PRIZES One prize of $25 and two prizes of $10 were offered to graduate stu-(Continued on Page Four)
FOUR LECTURES HELD THIS WEE
S. C. P. A., Announces Lunch For Teachers
The S. C. School of Citizenship and Public Administration announces a luncheon for all civic teachers and others interested in civic affairs and public administration who are attending the summer session, to be held in room 323 Student Union building, Monday, August 4, at 12 noon.
Those who are planning to attend are asked to make their reservations by stopping in room 251 Administration building or by calling Richmond 4111, station 178. Price of the luncheon is 50 cents.
Four important lectures are scheduled for the fifth week of the summer session, including three special lectures by visiting professors. The complete program for the week includes talks by Dr. Harry Thomas Collings, Dr. John Frederick Dashiell, Dr. Jose M. De Osma, and Dr. Jesse P. Rowe.
Dr. Collings will be the speaker at the weekly Tuesday morning assembly today. His lecture will be on the subject, “International Intolerance.*’ In addition Professor Alexander Stewart’s classes in Orchestra and Advanced Choral Ora-loria and Orchestral Conducting will furnish a musical program.
Thursday, at 4:00 p. m., Dr Dashiell will speak on “What We Know of the Minds of Brutes,” in
H. 206. At the same time, in H. 305, Dr. de Osma will lecture on “Espana Moderna.”
Dr. Jesse Perry Rowe’s lecture on La Brea pits, originally schedv uled for Saturday, has been advanced to Friday. The lecture wilf be given at 2:30, in Bridge 409. At 3:00 p. m., Dr. Rowe’s students will make i trip to the La Brea pits and to the Los Angeles Museum of Arts and History. Students wishing to make the trip must report to Dr. Rowe.
President R. B. von KleinSmid has been raised to Knighthood in the Legion of Honor of France, it was announced Saturday. Dr. von KleinSmid received notification of the honor bestowed upon him by cable from Paris, and through the office of M. Henri Didot, French consul in Los Angeles.
Knighthood in the Legion of Honor was bestowed upon Dr. ------*von KleinSmid in recognition of his
MODERN BANKINfl *ak°rs in t,ie of international
TO BE TOPIC OF RADIO LECTURES
Under the joint sponsorship of the University of Southern California radio education division and the Public Education committee of the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Institute of Banking, a series of radio lectures and dialogues revealing the various phases of modern banking methods will be inaugurated over KMPC Wednesday,
August 6, from 9 to 9:30 p. m., and will continue weekly until October 22.
C. E. Lones, Dale M. Tussing,
(Continued on Page Two)
STUDENT TICKETS
The usual 25-cent tickets for the Hollywood Bowl concerts, available to summer session students, are now on sale in the Students’ Store.
S. C. PRESIDENT GIVES ADDRESS
“World Citizenship” was dis-cusssed by Presidene R. B. von KleinSmid last night at Immanual Presbyterian church, at one of the sessions of the California and Arizona Presbyterian Synods now in convention in Los Angeles.
Courses Changed For Post Session By Dean Rogers
Courses in Bconomics and Commerce listed in the bulletin as being given by Professor Buchanan during the Post Session have been transferred to Professor A. Bruce Anthony, according to Dean L. B. Rogers of the summer session.
Classes affected by the change are Banking and Finance 115, and Labor Problems, Economics 102.
Because of the illness of Professor Newlands, Professor Frederick Henry Koch, of the University of North Carolina, will give a course in English—Modern Drama, English 158a, and a course in Comparative Literature, Comparative Drama 168, instead of the two courses in Comparative Literature now listed for Professor Newlands
Professor Koch is now teaching in the summer session at the University of California at Los An geles.
Relations to bring about through education better world understanding and universal peace.
DIPLOMA CONFERRED
The diploma and decoration which have been awarded Dr. von KleinSmid will be conferred at a special convocation by M. Paschal Bonettl, formerly minister of fine arts and attache of the ministry of education of France, who will arrive as a special emmisary from France early in the fall.
Through his efforts in the field of International relations Dr. von KleinSmid has earned many national and international honors. Thru his work he has made education for world peace a great, and rapidly growing factor, in modern educa tion.
The Los Angeles University of International Relations, affiliated with the University of Southern California, was established largely through the efTorts of President von KleinSmid, who inaugurated a group of university courses especially suited to the development of an understanding of international problems and questions of world importance. Since its establishment two years ago the University of International Relations has expanded into one of the most important divisions of the university.
EDITOR TO GIVE RADIO LECTURES
Plan Music Program At Graduate Meet
Dr. Arnold Wagner, outlining principles of music, will be the speaker at the regular weekly meeting of the Graduate Administrative Luncheon club, Thursday, In the Social Hall of the Student Union.
Catherine Bauder will sing selections illustrating points in Dr. Wagner’s talk.
At the last meeting of the club, more than 250 students and faculty members hc-aid Dr. O. T. Hamilton, visiting professor of education from the University of Indiana, deliver the principle addreits. Plans are being made for the final meeting of the session, at wh'ch more than 500 persons are expected to be present.
Calvin Coolidge, the United States Senate, aud Anglo-American relations are to be discussed by James Mussatti, editor of the California Tax Digest and former professor of history at the University of Southern California, in a series of three educational radio lectures on August 4, 11, and 18, from 9 to 9:30 p. m. over radio KMPC.
The former 8. C. professor will give a short biographical sketch of the ex-presldent during his first radio talk August 4 and will summarize Mr. Coolidge’s contributions to American politics.
The evolution of the Senate and of the rules governing that body with special emphasis being placed on the struggle between President Hoover and the present Senate will comprise the topic for the second of Mr. Mussatti's series August 11.
A discussion of Anglo-American relations from the time of the Civil war up until the present disarmament conference will on August IX conclude the S. C. group of historical radio lectures.
FOOTBALL TICKETS
Football tickets for the 1930 season will go on sale Auguai l, according to Arnold E<*dy, general manager.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Southern California Trojan, Vol. 9, No. 9, July 26, 1930 |
| Description | Southern California Trojan, Vol. 9, No. 9, July 26, 1930. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | Vol. IX. Los Angeles, California, Friday, July 25, 1930. RANCE HONORS PRESIDENT LAN PHYSICAL EDUCATION PICNIC HYSICAL EDUCATION PICNIC HELD AT SEA BREEZE CLUB mmer Session Students Will Gather At Beach Resort Fo» Fourth Annual Frolic; Tickets Now On Sale At Physical Education Office. Thursday afternoon and evening, July 31, all students en-led in courses in the Department of Physical Education will lgregate at the Sea Breeze Beach Club in Santa Monica for » Fourth Annual Summer Session Physical Education Picnic. Committees made up of representatives from all the Physi-Education classes and headed by Miss Esther Weinstock of bank High school are at work to*, ke the affair the most success- S.C. STUDENT GAINS HONORS DR. VON KLEINSMID RAISED TO KNIGHTHOOD IN LEGION FOR WRITfNPS Award Granted Trojan President For Distinguished * UH If III 1 fliUu Service In Foreign Relations; Diploma To Be Bestowed In Fall. Miss Margaret S. Cunningham Awarded First Prize in Essay Contest... ELEVEN PRIZES Contest Sponsored And Financed By Burdette B. Brown. one of all time. . BEACH SPORTS program of swimming and ch sports is planned for the 6rnoon with entertainment., sur-es, and a dinner-dance in the 'ning from 7 o’clock on. he whole affair is to be of a very jjrmal nature and it is hoped that 7ry one will leave feeling well-luainted with all their fellow dents. ickets were placed on sale Mon-and may be obtained from ^resentatives of the various sses or the Physical Education ce in Old College on the pay-jnt of one dollar and t wenty five Its. Anyone interested in having jreat time and feed with some k&t people is invited to be bent. Transportation will be provided Physical Education students o do not have means of reach-the beach club. For those who ve, the following directions were en by those in charge: )rive out any of the major boule-ds to Santa Monica, and turn ■th along the coast highway. The Breeze club is situated just fth of the Santa Monica pier, be-the Palisades. Dr. Louis Eich To Read t(The Will ” A Barrie Drama “The Will,” a drama by James Matthew Barrie, will be read by Dr. Louis Eich, visiting professor of Speech from the University of Michigan, at a recital sponsored by the S. C. School of Speech, tomorrow, at 2 o'clock, in Bovard auditorium. The general public, as well as all summer students, is cordially invited to attend Dr. Eich's recital, according to Grafton Petis Tanquary, acting dean of the School of Speech. WENT ACTOKS PRESENT DRAMA Gruach,” by Gordon Bottomlej 1 be produced for the fourth time ce its publication and awardance the Kemina-Via Heureuse prize Paris in 1923. This play, chosen Marian Van Gilder for her mas's thesis, will be presented by in Touchstone theater Thurs-•luly 31, at 8:15 p. m. Qly once before has "Gruach” n presented in this country—at tege of Pacific, Stockton, in jL Miss Van Gilder was gradu-(d from that institution. jGruach,” a play in two scenes, (based on the same legend elut'd by Shakespeare in “Mac-and deals with the eharac-°f Macbeth and Lady Mac-h. or Gruach, in their youth, 'uach, a young girl of the line kings deposed by Duncan, is. to ■Oiairied to Conan, whose family >'es her land and wealth. Mac- 1. 'he king’s envoy, arrives with s (,f the birth of a son in the household, sees Gruach in her finery on the eve of the /®t, falls in love with her, and s to stay over for the cere- > in spite of the disapproval of family. Uu< I* appears in a sleep-walk-cent, Macbeth wakens her, and 1 Continued on Page Two) S.C. Teacher And Composer Will be Soloist At Bowl Mr. Arne Oidberg, composer, pianist and pedagouge of international standing, who is teaching Composition and Orchestration at the College of Music, University of Southern California, this summer, will be piano soloist at the Hollywood Bowl on Saturday evening, August 2, playing his own composition, Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra. Mrs. Hilda Oidberg will play the second piano. A year and a half ago they played this same number with the Evanston Symphony Orchestra. Mrs. Oidberg has had her training under Mr. Arne Oidberg at Northwestern university and Artur Schnabel in Berlin. Mrs. Oidberg arrived from Berlin about a week ago, where she has been studying intermittently since 1924. She will return to Berlin in the fall to do concert work. Margaret S. Cunningham, graduate student at the University of Southern California, was awarded first prize in a recent essay contest on the subject “The Abundant Life,” according to the announcement made yesterday by Dr. Frank C. Touton. The contest was sponsored and financed by Burdette B. Brown, a friend of S. C. interested in the broader aspects of education and life, who conceived the idea that it would be desirable for college students to think and to write on the problems of life, interpreting the term “The Abundant Life" according to his own intellectual resources and experiences. ELEVEN PRIZES One prize of $25 and two prizes of $10 were offered to graduate stu-(Continued on Page Four) FOUR LECTURES HELD THIS WEE S. C. P. A., Announces Lunch For Teachers The S. C. School of Citizenship and Public Administration announces a luncheon for all civic teachers and others interested in civic affairs and public administration who are attending the summer session, to be held in room 323 Student Union building, Monday, August 4, at 12 noon. Those who are planning to attend are asked to make their reservations by stopping in room 251 Administration building or by calling Richmond 4111, station 178. Price of the luncheon is 50 cents. Four important lectures are scheduled for the fifth week of the summer session, including three special lectures by visiting professors. The complete program for the week includes talks by Dr. Harry Thomas Collings, Dr. John Frederick Dashiell, Dr. Jose M. De Osma, and Dr. Jesse P. Rowe. Dr. Collings will be the speaker at the weekly Tuesday morning assembly today. His lecture will be on the subject, “International Intolerance.*’ In addition Professor Alexander Stewart’s classes in Orchestra and Advanced Choral Ora-loria and Orchestral Conducting will furnish a musical program. Thursday, at 4:00 p. m., Dr Dashiell will speak on “What We Know of the Minds of Brutes,” in H. 206. At the same time, in H. 305, Dr. de Osma will lecture on “Espana Moderna.” Dr. Jesse Perry Rowe’s lecture on La Brea pits, originally schedv uled for Saturday, has been advanced to Friday. The lecture wilf be given at 2:30, in Bridge 409. At 3:00 p. m., Dr. Rowe’s students will make i trip to the La Brea pits and to the Los Angeles Museum of Arts and History. Students wishing to make the trip must report to Dr. Rowe. President R. B. von KleinSmid has been raised to Knighthood in the Legion of Honor of France, it was announced Saturday. Dr. von KleinSmid received notification of the honor bestowed upon him by cable from Paris, and through the office of M. Henri Didot, French consul in Los Angeles. Knighthood in the Legion of Honor was bestowed upon Dr. ------*von KleinSmid in recognition of his MODERN BANKINfl *ak°rs in t,ie of international TO BE TOPIC OF RADIO LECTURES Under the joint sponsorship of the University of Southern California radio education division and the Public Education committee of the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Institute of Banking, a series of radio lectures and dialogues revealing the various phases of modern banking methods will be inaugurated over KMPC Wednesday, August 6, from 9 to 9:30 p. m., and will continue weekly until October 22. C. E. Lones, Dale M. Tussing, (Continued on Page Two) STUDENT TICKETS The usual 25-cent tickets for the Hollywood Bowl concerts, available to summer session students, are now on sale in the Students’ Store. S. C. PRESIDENT GIVES ADDRESS “World Citizenship” was dis-cusssed by Presidene R. B. von KleinSmid last night at Immanual Presbyterian church, at one of the sessions of the California and Arizona Presbyterian Synods now in convention in Los Angeles. Courses Changed For Post Session By Dean Rogers Courses in Bconomics and Commerce listed in the bulletin as being given by Professor Buchanan during the Post Session have been transferred to Professor A. Bruce Anthony, according to Dean L. B. Rogers of the summer session. Classes affected by the change are Banking and Finance 115, and Labor Problems, Economics 102. Because of the illness of Professor Newlands, Professor Frederick Henry Koch, of the University of North Carolina, will give a course in English—Modern Drama, English 158a, and a course in Comparative Literature, Comparative Drama 168, instead of the two courses in Comparative Literature now listed for Professor Newlands Professor Koch is now teaching in the summer session at the University of California at Los An geles. Relations to bring about through education better world understanding and universal peace. DIPLOMA CONFERRED The diploma and decoration which have been awarded Dr. von KleinSmid will be conferred at a special convocation by M. Paschal Bonettl, formerly minister of fine arts and attache of the ministry of education of France, who will arrive as a special emmisary from France early in the fall. Through his efforts in the field of International relations Dr. von KleinSmid has earned many national and international honors. Thru his work he has made education for world peace a great, and rapidly growing factor, in modern educa tion. The Los Angeles University of International Relations, affiliated with the University of Southern California, was established largely through the efTorts of President von KleinSmid, who inaugurated a group of university courses especially suited to the development of an understanding of international problems and questions of world importance. Since its establishment two years ago the University of International Relations has expanded into one of the most important divisions of the university. EDITOR TO GIVE RADIO LECTURES Plan Music Program At Graduate Meet Dr. Arnold Wagner, outlining principles of music, will be the speaker at the regular weekly meeting of the Graduate Administrative Luncheon club, Thursday, In the Social Hall of the Student Union. Catherine Bauder will sing selections illustrating points in Dr. Wagner’s talk. At the last meeting of the club, more than 250 students and faculty members hc-aid Dr. O. T. Hamilton, visiting professor of education from the University of Indiana, deliver the principle addreits. Plans are being made for the final meeting of the session, at wh'ch more than 500 persons are expected to be present. Calvin Coolidge, the United States Senate, aud Anglo-American relations are to be discussed by James Mussatti, editor of the California Tax Digest and former professor of history at the University of Southern California, in a series of three educational radio lectures on August 4, 11, and 18, from 9 to 9:30 p. m. over radio KMPC. The former 8. C. professor will give a short biographical sketch of the ex-presldent during his first radio talk August 4 and will summarize Mr. Coolidge’s contributions to American politics. The evolution of the Senate and of the rules governing that body with special emphasis being placed on the struggle between President Hoover and the present Senate will comprise the topic for the second of Mr. Mussatti's series August 11. A discussion of Anglo-American relations from the time of the Civil war up until the present disarmament conference will on August IX conclude the S. C. group of historical radio lectures. FOOTBALL TICKETS Football tickets for the 1930 season will go on sale Auguai l, according to Arnold E<*dy, general manager. |
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| Archival file | uaic_Volume1028/uschist-dt-1930-07-26~001.tif |
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