DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 10, June 19, 1941 |
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m >r. Rufus B. von KleinSmid nner Dance ids Summer cial Events rrangements Made >r Annual Affair Country Club laxing the social events for summer Session will be the Ll dinner dance which will be [Friday at the Hollywood Riv-xnintry club. tn to all students attending summer Session, the dinner will feature special enter- Iient acts. Among them will be ndwriting analysis expert, a ette cutter, novelty dance ;rs. a caricature cartoonist, dance numbers, and solos by [eadows. |ETS ON SALE cets for the dinner dance are le at the cashier’s window in student Union bookstore for person, according to H. W. son who is in charge of the with Miss Forrest Dutton. |ons wishing to arrange for >rtation to the dance or have I to take extra passengers sign the slip in the men's il education office, Anderson Ic for the dance will be pro-3y Hollis Peavey and his or-L Dancing will be held both ballroom and on the balcony t club which overlooks the it was announced. FACILITIES exclusive use of the club fa-after 5 p.m. on Friday has fade available to SC students i they may view the scenery oceanfront before the dinner. Lk dinner will be served at m., it was announced. Condolence Notes Sent by Friends Von KleinSmid Wires Message of Praise from New York for Veteran Football Mentor President Rufus B. von KleinSmid of the University of Southern California learned of the death of Howard Jones yesterday in New York while en route to Washington, D.C., on university business. He wired the following statement: “I am greatly shocked this mom- Audio-Visual Group Meets on Campus Rogers, Findlay Address Educators at Hancock Hall Swain Speaks Eiducation Idridge T. McSwain, associ-fessor of education at North-i university and member of :mmer Session faculty, will “What Secondary and High-cation Can Learn from the itary Schools” in the seventh Education—Psychology series i p.m. tomorrow in Admin-n 206. :izing grades and degrees as f of education, Dr. McSwain hat how one uses his educa-far more important. “Resources of the university might be interpreted in terms of material equipment or in terms of larger educational opportunity to carry on intensive study and research,” declared Dean Lester B. Rogers yesterday in opening the third annual Audio-Visual conference in Hancock auditorium. “The provisions of the Allen Hancock Foundation take care of the former here and make our concern the latter.” “The university today has a peculiar position; in former years it was the duty of a prophet to interpret the past, evaluate the present, and foretell the future. In these pho-phetless days the university has become the center for research and the setting for interpretation of new developments. In the field of audiovisual education we have a unique development of a new avenue of approach which recognizes and utilizes the interests and abilities of the learner,” Dr. Rogers stated. FINDLAY SPEAKS Bruce A. Findlay, chairman of the afternoon session on the Educa-! tional Use of Theatrical Films, stated that motion pictures are misnamed and should be called emotion pictures for they are just that. He cited the aid pictures have been to Hitler in welding the German people together. Hitler purchased 64.000 sound and motion picture propectors and placed them in every elementary school in Germany and then issued the edict that no text be used where there was a picture available. DEMONSTRATION INCLUDED “Using motion pictures is the only fundamental change in teaching since the first teacher taught the first class,” stated Mr. Findlay, in introducing the demonstrations under the direction of Miss Margaret Divizia and Miss Margaretta Stevenson. (Continued on page three) Dr. Tselos Lectures -on Frank Lloyd Wright * Dr. Dimitris Teodore Tselos, assistant professor of fine arts at New York university and member of the Summer Session faculty, will lecture on “Frank Lloyd Wright, American Architect” at 2:20 p.m. Thursday in Harris 101. ing at the news of the passjng of my colleague, Coach Howard Jones. The University of Southern California loses one of her most efficient and loyal faculty members, and I, one of my most highly prized friends. “He was not only the best coach I have ever known but the most thorough-going sportsman to whom honor in the game and its effect upon the life of young men came first. GOOD INFLUENCE ON YOUTH “He never sacrificed a man physically or morally for a chance of victory. Through the 16 years of our association he never asked a lowering of academic standards In order to secure a player, “His good influence upon the game of football in the nation has been universal and profound. He was a man of whom any institution could be enthusiastically proud. “We shall all miss him greatly.” BRUCE STATEMENT Dr. Henry W. Bruce, vice-presi-dent at SC and one of the Trojan officials instrumental in bringing Howard Jones to SC in 1925, said: “In the death of Howard Jones, the University community has suffered a great loss. Students, faculty and alumni throughout the world mourn his passing. His coaching genius and his steadfast devotion to the finest principles of intercollegiate sport will be sorely missed from the game he loved so well. “His exploits on the gridiron brought fame and renown to the great University where he spent so many fruitful years. All of Southern California was enriched by his genius and high standards of sportsmanship. The youth of the city and of the nation have lost a great benefactor. His place will be hard to fill.” SHARES GRIEF Hugh Baillie, president of the United Press and a former Trojan football star, sent this statement: “In common with many thousands of people throughout the country, I share the university’s grief at the untimely loss of our Headman. Hundreds of citizens are more valuable to their country in this time of crisis for having learned discontinued on page three) Pi Omega Pi Pledges Friday The SC chapter of Pi Omega Pi, national honorary business education fraternity, will hold its pledging banquet 7 p.m. Friday at the Chapman Park hotel. All pledges are asked to be present at the hotel by 5:30 p.m. for a written examination preceding the banquet. Reservations for the banquet must be made with Henrietta Martin in Administration 355 by 5 p.m. Wednesday. mpus Chorus Broadcasts Public funeral services for Coach Howard Jones, who died of heart attack Sunday morning, will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday in First Methodist Church of Hollywood. Headmans Coaching Record Reviewed The sports world lost one of its greatest figures Sunday with the death of Coach Howard H. Jones who was to start his 17th season at SC this fall. he of the largest choral Ists ever presented in Sou-jalifomia, the 115-voice Sum-ssion Chorus will broadcast >w evening from 8 to 8:30 er KFWB. r the direction of Harold i, visiting choral director [ayne university, the chorus 11 a cappella selections. “Nina” a falk song arranged by Max Krone of the SC music faculty; “Autumn” by Gretchaninoff, and two spirituals arranged by Noble Cain, “Ole Arks a Movin” and i “Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray.” Today at 1:30 p.m. over station KRKD Summer Session student Ruth-Ann Hartmann will interview Dr. Alexander Lowry, visiting pro- in the field of chemistry. At 1:30 tomorrow over KRKD, an original radio mystery drama by Summer Session student Ken Wallace will be presented by the SC division of Radio-Television. Cast for the mystery entitled “The Curio,” concerning murder in a Brit- Respected and admired as one of the greatest coaches in football today in view of his amazing record, Jones had a reputation for being a firm believer in football as a means of molding character and men. REMARKABLE RECORD During his 29 years of coaching, his teams have won 193 games, lost 63, and tied 20. The victory strings of four Notre Dame teams were broken by Jones’ elevens, with the 1931 Cardinal and Gold’s squads last quarter 16-14 victory over the Irish considered one of the most sensational games in football history. Twenty All-American players were selected from among his teams during his coaching career. YALE ALUMNUS Before coming to Troy, Jones coached at five other universities. Following his graduation from Yale in 1908, he was appointed head football coach at Syracuse university where his team won five, lost two, and tied one. In 1909, Jones returned to Yale to coach one of the greatest football teams in ’ history. Besides going through its 10-game schedule undefeated and unscored upon, the Eli eleven had a record of not having allowed an opponent within its 25-yard line. Six members of the 1909 Yale team were selected for All-American honors by Walter Camp. They were Captain Ted Coy, Steve PJ41-(Continued on page three) Second Concert to Be Given Directed by Dr. Lucien Cailliet, associate professor of music, the Summer Session orchestra will present its second concert of the term at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in Bovard auditorium. ♦ t Compositions and arrangements by members of the SC School of Music faculty will be featured. Among them will be special arrangements of Rachmaninoff’s and Massenet’s music by Dr. Cailliet and compositions by Dr. Ernst Toch and Mabel Woodworth. Calvine Inman, cellist, and Roderick Krohn, violinist, wiU be soloists on the program. The concert program is: Three Preludes. .Rachmanlnoff-Cailllet a. C-sbarp minor b. G major e. O minor Caprice .......... Mabel Woodworth Pinocchio (a merry overture ...................... Ernst Toth Concerto for cello and orchestra ..................... Saint Saeng Calvine Inman Angelus .......... Massenet-CaiUiet (Choral text by Dr. Max T Krone) Concerto for vloltn and orchestra .................... Tschalkowsky Roderick Krohn Les Preludes ................ Llszi Famed C Succumb Heart At Trojan Cridders to Us] at Funeral Services H Internment to Be in Public funeral services for Howard guided the destinies of Trojan football] will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Church, Highland and Franklin, Hollywj be the Rev. Dr. Glenn R. Phillips, a Roth Quartet to End Series Works of Ravel, Franck, and Debussy were presented last night by the Roth String Quartet in its fourth program of the Chamber Music Concerts in Bovard auditorium. The compositions included Debussy’s Andantino from String Quartet and “En Bateau” and Tucker Discusses Shakespeare “Shakespeare in America’* will be the topic discussed by Dr. William J. Tucker this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. in Bowne Hall as one of the series on the Significant Aspects of American Literature. Dr. Tucker was born in Ireland and raduated from Dublin university. He spent four years in Australia as head of the English department in Riverview College at Sydney. Since 1921 he has been at the University of Arizona. He is teaching in the Summer Ses- Dr. Hesseltine Predicts More Centralization Historian to Speak on Regions, Sections at Weekly Lecture Death of individual states as an effective force in the United States is predicted by Dr. William B. Hesseltine, visiting professor of history from Wisconsin university, .Who will speak at the weekly Social Science lecture Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in Administration 206. Dr. Hesseltine, who has been a member of the history department at Wisconsin for the past ten years, will take on “Regions, Sections, and Classes in American History.” STATES LESS IMPORTANT “States are becoming less and less important in America because they are divisions that serve no purpose today,’’ Dr. Hesseltine declares. “The states as governing units will have to be ignored and the power concentrated in the hands of the central government.” He believes that the country can be more easily and effectively governed from Washington through dividing the country into various districts of administration for the various governmental functions such as the federal reserve and power districts. REGIONS IMPORTANT “The ‘United States’ is a complete misnomer,” Dr. Hesseltine asserts. “The nation is rather one of United Regions which, from the earliest settlement to the present day, have been the dominant factors in American history.” “The conflicting interests of the regions have been compromised in the constitution, in political parties, and congressional agitations. Compromise of regional interests has been the cohesive force which has made the nation possible. This complexity of regional interests and the constant necessity for compromise between them has been the balance which has kept the nation on an even keel,” he states. “We have thus avoided the excesses of Democracy” which Alexander Hamilton feared and we have escaped the monarchy and dictatorship which alarmed Thomas Jefferson. This willingness to compromise has made American democracy work,’* says Dr. Hesseltine. For this reason, Dr. Hesseltine feels that Frederick Jackson Turner’s ‘frontier hypothesis’ explaining j every factor in American life as a result of the long existence of the American frontier, or ‘class struggle* theories represented by Karl Marx are inadequate in interpreting American history. years. Membersl fornia foot the servit Interme town, Ohi< parents are will accomj town. T. A. D. Jones, will ing in Hoj services. H Sawyer, been ill. ven early will stop at rangements | morning. HEART A: Death cai coach as tack at 11:] home, 4402 Hollywood, anda George Jones is si former Mrs.i the sister of| All-Americj West Point,! Clark, 24, aj VACATION Clark wasl a vacation his father’s flew here >1 at the hom* of Jones’ d< Although gestion SatuJ morning Jones had phoned Dr. just as the BORN IN Following Keyes annot had died of congestion ii a blood clot, plained of hj Bom in 23, 1885, Jon< .athletics at ceived his pi the Phillips- Exeter, N. H: (Coi Youth Band Tomorrl A program presented tom^ Session high s| youth chorus i| starting at 12: The first bers will be cl Lindgren, Lon] final composite by William G< Colo. The cho^ der the direct Hirt. The clinic 60 persons of ty-five studeni and junior col chorus. The program!
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Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 10, June 19, 1941 |
Full text | m >r. Rufus B. von KleinSmid nner Dance ids Summer cial Events rrangements Made >r Annual Affair Country Club laxing the social events for summer Session will be the Ll dinner dance which will be [Friday at the Hollywood Riv-xnintry club. tn to all students attending summer Session, the dinner will feature special enter- Iient acts. Among them will be ndwriting analysis expert, a ette cutter, novelty dance ;rs. a caricature cartoonist, dance numbers, and solos by [eadows. |ETS ON SALE cets for the dinner dance are le at the cashier’s window in student Union bookstore for person, according to H. W. son who is in charge of the with Miss Forrest Dutton. |ons wishing to arrange for >rtation to the dance or have I to take extra passengers sign the slip in the men's il education office, Anderson Ic for the dance will be pro-3y Hollis Peavey and his or-L Dancing will be held both ballroom and on the balcony t club which overlooks the it was announced. FACILITIES exclusive use of the club fa-after 5 p.m. on Friday has fade available to SC students i they may view the scenery oceanfront before the dinner. Lk dinner will be served at m., it was announced. Condolence Notes Sent by Friends Von KleinSmid Wires Message of Praise from New York for Veteran Football Mentor President Rufus B. von KleinSmid of the University of Southern California learned of the death of Howard Jones yesterday in New York while en route to Washington, D.C., on university business. He wired the following statement: “I am greatly shocked this mom- Audio-Visual Group Meets on Campus Rogers, Findlay Address Educators at Hancock Hall Swain Speaks Eiducation Idridge T. McSwain, associ-fessor of education at North-i university and member of :mmer Session faculty, will “What Secondary and High-cation Can Learn from the itary Schools” in the seventh Education—Psychology series i p.m. tomorrow in Admin-n 206. :izing grades and degrees as f of education, Dr. McSwain hat how one uses his educa-far more important. “Resources of the university might be interpreted in terms of material equipment or in terms of larger educational opportunity to carry on intensive study and research,” declared Dean Lester B. Rogers yesterday in opening the third annual Audio-Visual conference in Hancock auditorium. “The provisions of the Allen Hancock Foundation take care of the former here and make our concern the latter.” “The university today has a peculiar position; in former years it was the duty of a prophet to interpret the past, evaluate the present, and foretell the future. In these pho-phetless days the university has become the center for research and the setting for interpretation of new developments. In the field of audiovisual education we have a unique development of a new avenue of approach which recognizes and utilizes the interests and abilities of the learner,” Dr. Rogers stated. FINDLAY SPEAKS Bruce A. Findlay, chairman of the afternoon session on the Educa-! tional Use of Theatrical Films, stated that motion pictures are misnamed and should be called emotion pictures for they are just that. He cited the aid pictures have been to Hitler in welding the German people together. Hitler purchased 64.000 sound and motion picture propectors and placed them in every elementary school in Germany and then issued the edict that no text be used where there was a picture available. DEMONSTRATION INCLUDED “Using motion pictures is the only fundamental change in teaching since the first teacher taught the first class,” stated Mr. Findlay, in introducing the demonstrations under the direction of Miss Margaret Divizia and Miss Margaretta Stevenson. (Continued on page three) Dr. Tselos Lectures -on Frank Lloyd Wright * Dr. Dimitris Teodore Tselos, assistant professor of fine arts at New York university and member of the Summer Session faculty, will lecture on “Frank Lloyd Wright, American Architect” at 2:20 p.m. Thursday in Harris 101. ing at the news of the passjng of my colleague, Coach Howard Jones. The University of Southern California loses one of her most efficient and loyal faculty members, and I, one of my most highly prized friends. “He was not only the best coach I have ever known but the most thorough-going sportsman to whom honor in the game and its effect upon the life of young men came first. GOOD INFLUENCE ON YOUTH “He never sacrificed a man physically or morally for a chance of victory. Through the 16 years of our association he never asked a lowering of academic standards In order to secure a player, “His good influence upon the game of football in the nation has been universal and profound. He was a man of whom any institution could be enthusiastically proud. “We shall all miss him greatly.” BRUCE STATEMENT Dr. Henry W. Bruce, vice-presi-dent at SC and one of the Trojan officials instrumental in bringing Howard Jones to SC in 1925, said: “In the death of Howard Jones, the University community has suffered a great loss. Students, faculty and alumni throughout the world mourn his passing. His coaching genius and his steadfast devotion to the finest principles of intercollegiate sport will be sorely missed from the game he loved so well. “His exploits on the gridiron brought fame and renown to the great University where he spent so many fruitful years. All of Southern California was enriched by his genius and high standards of sportsmanship. The youth of the city and of the nation have lost a great benefactor. His place will be hard to fill.” SHARES GRIEF Hugh Baillie, president of the United Press and a former Trojan football star, sent this statement: “In common with many thousands of people throughout the country, I share the university’s grief at the untimely loss of our Headman. Hundreds of citizens are more valuable to their country in this time of crisis for having learned discontinued on page three) Pi Omega Pi Pledges Friday The SC chapter of Pi Omega Pi, national honorary business education fraternity, will hold its pledging banquet 7 p.m. Friday at the Chapman Park hotel. All pledges are asked to be present at the hotel by 5:30 p.m. for a written examination preceding the banquet. Reservations for the banquet must be made with Henrietta Martin in Administration 355 by 5 p.m. Wednesday. mpus Chorus Broadcasts Public funeral services for Coach Howard Jones, who died of heart attack Sunday morning, will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday in First Methodist Church of Hollywood. Headmans Coaching Record Reviewed The sports world lost one of its greatest figures Sunday with the death of Coach Howard H. Jones who was to start his 17th season at SC this fall. he of the largest choral Ists ever presented in Sou-jalifomia, the 115-voice Sum-ssion Chorus will broadcast >w evening from 8 to 8:30 er KFWB. r the direction of Harold i, visiting choral director [ayne university, the chorus 11 a cappella selections. “Nina” a falk song arranged by Max Krone of the SC music faculty; “Autumn” by Gretchaninoff, and two spirituals arranged by Noble Cain, “Ole Arks a Movin” and i “Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray.” Today at 1:30 p.m. over station KRKD Summer Session student Ruth-Ann Hartmann will interview Dr. Alexander Lowry, visiting pro- in the field of chemistry. At 1:30 tomorrow over KRKD, an original radio mystery drama by Summer Session student Ken Wallace will be presented by the SC division of Radio-Television. Cast for the mystery entitled “The Curio,” concerning murder in a Brit- Respected and admired as one of the greatest coaches in football today in view of his amazing record, Jones had a reputation for being a firm believer in football as a means of molding character and men. REMARKABLE RECORD During his 29 years of coaching, his teams have won 193 games, lost 63, and tied 20. The victory strings of four Notre Dame teams were broken by Jones’ elevens, with the 1931 Cardinal and Gold’s squads last quarter 16-14 victory over the Irish considered one of the most sensational games in football history. Twenty All-American players were selected from among his teams during his coaching career. YALE ALUMNUS Before coming to Troy, Jones coached at five other universities. Following his graduation from Yale in 1908, he was appointed head football coach at Syracuse university where his team won five, lost two, and tied one. In 1909, Jones returned to Yale to coach one of the greatest football teams in ’ history. Besides going through its 10-game schedule undefeated and unscored upon, the Eli eleven had a record of not having allowed an opponent within its 25-yard line. Six members of the 1909 Yale team were selected for All-American honors by Walter Camp. They were Captain Ted Coy, Steve PJ41-(Continued on page three) Second Concert to Be Given Directed by Dr. Lucien Cailliet, associate professor of music, the Summer Session orchestra will present its second concert of the term at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in Bovard auditorium. ♦ t Compositions and arrangements by members of the SC School of Music faculty will be featured. Among them will be special arrangements of Rachmaninoff’s and Massenet’s music by Dr. Cailliet and compositions by Dr. Ernst Toch and Mabel Woodworth. Calvine Inman, cellist, and Roderick Krohn, violinist, wiU be soloists on the program. The concert program is: Three Preludes. .Rachmanlnoff-Cailllet a. C-sbarp minor b. G major e. O minor Caprice .......... Mabel Woodworth Pinocchio (a merry overture ...................... Ernst Toth Concerto for cello and orchestra ..................... Saint Saeng Calvine Inman Angelus .......... Massenet-CaiUiet (Choral text by Dr. Max T Krone) Concerto for vloltn and orchestra .................... Tschalkowsky Roderick Krohn Les Preludes ................ Llszi Famed C Succumb Heart At Trojan Cridders to Us] at Funeral Services H Internment to Be in Public funeral services for Howard guided the destinies of Trojan football] will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Church, Highland and Franklin, Hollywj be the Rev. Dr. Glenn R. Phillips, a Roth Quartet to End Series Works of Ravel, Franck, and Debussy were presented last night by the Roth String Quartet in its fourth program of the Chamber Music Concerts in Bovard auditorium. The compositions included Debussy’s Andantino from String Quartet and “En Bateau” and Tucker Discusses Shakespeare “Shakespeare in America’* will be the topic discussed by Dr. William J. Tucker this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. in Bowne Hall as one of the series on the Significant Aspects of American Literature. Dr. Tucker was born in Ireland and raduated from Dublin university. He spent four years in Australia as head of the English department in Riverview College at Sydney. Since 1921 he has been at the University of Arizona. He is teaching in the Summer Ses- Dr. Hesseltine Predicts More Centralization Historian to Speak on Regions, Sections at Weekly Lecture Death of individual states as an effective force in the United States is predicted by Dr. William B. Hesseltine, visiting professor of history from Wisconsin university, .Who will speak at the weekly Social Science lecture Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in Administration 206. Dr. Hesseltine, who has been a member of the history department at Wisconsin for the past ten years, will take on “Regions, Sections, and Classes in American History.” STATES LESS IMPORTANT “States are becoming less and less important in America because they are divisions that serve no purpose today,’’ Dr. Hesseltine declares. “The states as governing units will have to be ignored and the power concentrated in the hands of the central government.” He believes that the country can be more easily and effectively governed from Washington through dividing the country into various districts of administration for the various governmental functions such as the federal reserve and power districts. REGIONS IMPORTANT “The ‘United States’ is a complete misnomer,” Dr. Hesseltine asserts. “The nation is rather one of United Regions which, from the earliest settlement to the present day, have been the dominant factors in American history.” “The conflicting interests of the regions have been compromised in the constitution, in political parties, and congressional agitations. Compromise of regional interests has been the cohesive force which has made the nation possible. This complexity of regional interests and the constant necessity for compromise between them has been the balance which has kept the nation on an even keel,” he states. “We have thus avoided the excesses of Democracy” which Alexander Hamilton feared and we have escaped the monarchy and dictatorship which alarmed Thomas Jefferson. This willingness to compromise has made American democracy work,’* says Dr. Hesseltine. For this reason, Dr. Hesseltine feels that Frederick Jackson Turner’s ‘frontier hypothesis’ explaining j every factor in American life as a result of the long existence of the American frontier, or ‘class struggle* theories represented by Karl Marx are inadequate in interpreting American history. years. Membersl fornia foot the servit Interme town, Ohi< parents are will accomj town. T. A. D. Jones, will ing in Hoj services. H Sawyer, been ill. ven early will stop at rangements | morning. HEART A: Death cai coach as tack at 11:] home, 4402 Hollywood, anda George Jones is si former Mrs.i the sister of| All-Americj West Point,! Clark, 24, aj VACATION Clark wasl a vacation his father’s flew here >1 at the hom* of Jones’ d< Although gestion SatuJ morning Jones had phoned Dr. just as the BORN IN Following Keyes annot had died of congestion ii a blood clot, plained of hj Bom in 23, 1885, Jon< .athletics at ceived his pi the Phillips- Exeter, N. H: (Coi Youth Band Tomorrl A program presented tom^ Session high s| youth chorus i| starting at 12: The first bers will be cl Lindgren, Lon] final composite by William G< Colo. The cho^ der the direct Hirt. The clinic 60 persons of ty-five studeni and junior col chorus. The program! |
Filename | uschist-dt-1941-06-19~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1218/uschist-dt-1941-06-19~001.tif |