DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 6, June 14, 1941 |
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ssem
imer Session Chorus Th is Morning
[tiorT will be discussed by •ofessor of education fr.m le assembly 10:30 a.m. tnis
r. C. M. Hill Education leries Speaker
[Secondary Schools9 Unique Opportunity Is Lecture Topic
e need more effective ac-blishment of the things we al-are doing to achieve the so-'new purposes’ of education,” red Dr. Clyde M. Hill, chair-of the department of educa-at Yale university, and visit-aculty member who will de-the fifth in the series of Ed-n-Psychology lectures tomor-t 3:30 p.m. in Administration
Hill, a pioneer educator, and irator of the system of jun-ligh schools in Vermont in Iwill discuss “A Unique Oppor-
Concert Thursc
\ .] ' ............mm**,*,:.-:................ ......j
The luxurious trans-channel steamer SS Catalina that will transport Summer Session students making the annual tour to Santa Catalina island Saturday morning. A thoroughly modern vessel, the SS Catalina has dancing and refreshment facilities for travelers who make the two-hour trip.
Santa Catalina Scheduled For
Island Tour Saturday
Tickets for the first of two annual Summer Session tours for the Secondary School.'’ to Santa Catalina island are still available at the cashier’s
>DS NOT NEW
Jsis periods are no new thing lucation. In an emergency such as the present one, ed->nal methods need not be fed. but we need to make full ition of the facilities we al-have at hand,” Dr. Hill de-“This is the unique oppcr-for the secondary school— in and make full and ef-use of all the developments Lve already made.”
Music Announced For Third Roth Quartet Concert
|m
lal
Compositions by Schuman, Men-
not going to talk about delss°hn and Tscha&owsky will be defense,” Dr. Hill said, played by the Roth Quartet at the
think the present crisis is : new. Education has always Inder pressure to meet chang-
Vditions.”
‘new order’ in education be achieved without definite [on to develop the purposes |e always believed in. IICATION SEEN (high school is not going to |t of existence.” Dr. Hill af-‘because it meets a defied. although it will be-
office in the Student Union bookstore, K. K. Stonier, tour
manager, announced today.
The trip, generally regarded as the most popular in the annual series of tours arranged for Summer Session students, can be made at the reduced rate of $2.50 per person for the round trip from Wilmington by students who purchase tickets here. For those requiring transportation to the steamer dock, tickets at $3.10 per person, are available that include round-trip train fare and steamer fare.
TRAINS AVAILABLE
The two-hour ocean trip may be made on either the SS Catalina or the SS Avalon which will leave the Catalina Terminal docks in Wilmington at 9:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. respectively. Special trains to the docks will leave the Pacific Electric station at Sixth and Main streets in Los Angeles at 8:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. The homeward-bound steamer will leave Avalon at 4:30 p.m. Saturday.
Although the trip is planned primarily as a one-day excursion, those who so desire may stay on the island overnight, returning on the ships which will leave Avalon at 4:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m., and 9:15 p.m. Sunday.
SECOND TRIP SET
A second excursion to Catalina has been scheduled for four-week Summer Session students on August 19, Stonier announced, with similar reduced rates prevailing. Tickets for this trip are on sale also in the bookstore.
third in their series of chamber music concerts 8:30 p.m. Monday
*
in Bovard auditorium.
As in the past two concerts, the quartet will be accompanied by Paul A. Pisk, pianist. Mr. Pisk will discuss the music to be played at the concert at a lecture in Mudd Memorial 3:30 p.m. Monday. Monday evening’s program will in-
lodified to meet changing elude Shuman’s “String Quartet in
ns.” Dr. Hill is the author A Minor, Op 41, No. 1, “Mendels-
•al textbooks in education: sohn’s “Piano Trio in D Minor” and
unior High School Move- Tschaikowsky’s “String Quartet in
“A Decade of Progress in D Major, Op. 11.”
Training’* and “Making the the High School.” f the educators mentioned os Who in America,” Dr.
taken the lead in inter- Participating artists in the third
conferences on education concert will be Fari Roth and
s sponsor and delegate to Rachmael Weinstock, violins; Jul-ld Congress on Education ius Shair, viola; Oliver Edel, ’cello;
locracy. . and Paul A. Pisk, pianist.
Tickets for the event are now on sale at the cashier's office in the student union bookstore.
Annual Fishing Trip Saturday
Early Reservations Recommended
r Tissue Regarded Cause of Deafness
,v,al surveys report 2.000,000 children in the United I with impaired hearing.
roximately one-half of children suffering from ear s could be aided or entirely cured by a comparatively
operation. . i----—
|e children are reluctant to the system does not receive the
>afness or do not realize proper vitamins. Experiments now
[Iiction only five per cent show that with the correct amounts
'ted ... of vitamin B which have an affin-
|rv 30 draftees rejected in ity for building up weak tissues, the
examinations during the trouble is eliminated over a period
hid War 40 are now turned of time.
Id of these ten per cent
>f car troubles . . . CARELESSNESS SCORED
[ere highlight observations Attempts of parents to use rem-
tors, physicians, and au- ec*ies used by their grandparents,
expressed during the cur- suc^ as quinine improperly admin-
ijns of the five-day Na- istered, are enough in themselves
rkshop conference of So- ^o cause deafness, said Dr. Gug-
:ers, Teachers, and Par- genheim. The same careless use of
e Hard of Hearing on the attempted remedies in maternity
cases were cited to shdw inherent
OSSIBLE tendencies of deafness in children
been found that fifty birth,
f children under 13 years Although little is done for chil-
y be relieved of deafness,” dren of pre-school age, PTA health
Louis Guggenheim, clin- groups are conducting clinics and
ssor of the SC School of aids to ed
Recommending that anglers make their reservations immediately and plan on bringing home a sack full of “big ones,” Coach H. W. Anderson announced last night that only a few more tickets are available for the third annual deep sea fishing trip off Balboa Saturday.
Men and women students and faculty members are invited to make the trip, Anderson said, indicating that eight instructors already have made reservations.
ROTATING SYSTEM
Rated as one of the finest boats in the Balboa sport fishing fleet, the “Dixie Lee,” on which the trip will be made, has both bow and stern bait tanks, Anderson said. A rotating system will be employed to give all fishermen a chance at the “hot spots” and crew members will clean all fish taken.
Tickets for the trip are on sale at the cashier’s office in the Student Union bookstore at $2 each.
Tackle may be rented at the dock for 25 cents.
CATCHES EXCELLENT
Capt. A1 Forgit, skipper of the “Dixie Lee,” informed Coach Anderson last night that excellent fishing was expected next weekend and that albacore and macherel were being taken in pleasing quantities by anglers last Sunday.
Since galley service has been discontinued, anglers are to bring their own lunches. Soft drinks will be j eral guitar solos at the luncheon available on board the boat. * also.
Retracing Trail Of Coronado'
Is Lecture Topic
Dr. Geo. P. Hammond Will Relate Experiences On Mexican Journey
Relating interesting experiences and adventures of the expedition of which he was a member, Dr. George P. Hammond will present this week’s Social Science lecture, “Retracing the Coronado Trail in Mexico,” 3:30 p.m. Thursday in 206 Administration.
As dean of the graduate school and a member of the history department at University of New Mexico, Dr. Hammond was one of the six men commissioned • to retrace the route of the early Spanish explorer. The trip, which was to provide background information for the 400th anniversary celebration of Coronado’s discovery of New Mexico, was financed by the federal government and the state of New Mexico.
CORONADO S CAPITAL
Describing his trip, Dr. Hammond said that the group journeyed to Campostela, Coronado’s cap-itol city when he was governor of New Galicia, and set out on the 1200-mile journey to New Mexico. Although the trip was scheduled to last two weeks, the party took more time than originally planned.
“In fact, if five of the party had not been young and healthy people who were able to push the station wagon or lift it out of ruts, we might have been months in returning,” Dr. Hammond said.
ROADS POOR
The roads traveled were unpaved and south of Sonora, where there were no grades, the rains had washed out such roads as had existed.
Dr. Hammond considered fortunate the fact that the party was not set upon by bandits. That such a danger existed was indicated by the offer of Mexican military authorities to provide an escort for the party.
Dr. Hammond is a member of the visiting faculty staff for the Summer Session and is offering courses in the field of history during the current term.
Dr. Allan Hancock
Montgomery Speaker At PE Luncheon
Prof. G. Millage Montgomery, principal of Susan M. Dorsey high school, will be the speaker at the Physical Education department's weekly luncheon meeting in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow at 12:10 p.m. Dick Lim, Summer Session student, will play sev-
A wide variety of attractions are offered the island visitor, including dancing in the Casino to the music of Hal Grayson’s orchestra, visits to the famous aviary, swimming, golf, liding and boating. In addition, glass-bottom boat trips and sight-seeing tours will be offered at reduced rates.
The privilege of dancing is limited to those who stay overnight but all other activities take place during the afternoon, including trips to the submarine gardens.
Luncheon To Fete Faculty Members
Visiting faculty members and heir wives together with Deans of the University’s 24 schools and colleges will be honored as guests of President and Mrs. Rufus B. von KleinSmid and Dean and Mrs. Les-
ter Rogers at a dinner event Thursda1
Second Annual Reading Conference Ends Today
Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid and Dr. Lester B. Rogers, dean of the Summer School, will speak at the closing session of the two-day Second Annual Reading Conference at
3 p.m. today in Bovard auditorium. ______
Sponsored by the School of Edu-
cation, the conference included discussions by educators and speech
authorities on methods of teaching reading to students, with emphasis on corrective methods ^for those students who are slow in acquiring reading skill.
Dr. Nila B. Smith, professor of education, noted for her textbooks in the field of reading instruction, is chairman of the conference. All meetings of the conference are open to the public withouot charge, she announced.
mont street. Elementary school teachers will hear a discussion on “Administration of Elementary Reading Instruction,” presented by Miss Parrot at 2 p.m. in Bovard.
Dr. Henry E. Garrett, associate
professor of education at Columbia university, will preside at the meeting for secondary school teachers at 2 p m. in Porter hall of Law building when Miss Hovious will speak on “Meeting Reading Problems in the Seventh and Eighth Grades and in the Secondary
South s Writers Topic of Talk By Dr. Greever
South’s Contribution Will Be Described By SC Educator
Background and reasons for the belief that the South has not contributed its full share to American Literature will be discussed by Dr. Garland Greever, professor of English, 3:30 p.m. today, when he lectures on “The Influence of the South on American Literature” in the Bowne room of Mudd Memorial.
Dr. Greever holds that general conditions in the South were not favorable to the production of literature since there were no great urban centers, no great public libraries.
“There were some very good private libraries but the Southerners cultivated their art within limits. They shied away from literature as a professional instrument. The same was true of music,” Dr. Greever said, citing the example of Thomas Jefferson who hired as workers at Monticello men who were musicians as well in order that he might have a little cultural (Continued on page four)
Anotl the Hj comb in: motion to Sumi and faci clock ai 8 p.m. charge.
The coi is expects the last ditorium Thursday reservatioi visiting fs who are President KleinSmidl Lester B. in the To1 SOLO N1 Included) gram of t^ be solo Jackson, Russo on “Saga of] motion pic1 by the shows a 9.000 miles Hong Korn Hawaii, MU lands as and M&co, ing native tumes of eac hour in lei PROGRAM
Thursday’s cock enseml Organ Fu* Andante
From Harp Solo, Cat^
Adagio Path] Allegretto ai
from S3 Violin Solo,
Fire Dance_1 from!
Nimrod _______
from ‘Ei Preludes in Tambourin
Known foi of outstandinl world’s great is a distinct cock Foundati search with campus. Capti
Bruno Walter, rated the most er and celloisl popular conductor in the current appearances Hollywood Bowl series, will be guest fomia to the] speaker 'at the annual School of ! total more
Bruno Walter To Be Speaker At Music Dinner
The persoi Ensemble inch rector; Ambrose Bingham, viol Martin Rudei ine Jackson, mour, piano; commentator; cock, ’cello.
Music Summer Session banquet Tuesday, July 22, in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
The attendance of Mr. Walter, who will make four bowl appearances this year, was made possible by Dr. Max Krone of the School of Music faculty.
Peter Merenblum, director of the famed California Junior Symphony and a gifted violinist, will be the guest artist and Rod Mount, Summer Session student, will present a number of impersonations during the evening, William Gould, banquet chairman, said. Prof. Max van Lewen Swarthout will be master of
ceremonies. _
In answer to
Hal McCormac, ticket chairman, rectors of the
asked that all students and facul- cp0rts p-0gra'
ty members planning to attend the doubles toum:‘
banquet purchase their tickets lm- ',
,. . , ... .______ ,. and women baci1
mediately so that advance seating .
requirements may be met. Tickets scheduled,.
are on sale in the School of Music j comPetltion, in
office and in the cashier’s office in nameRts which i
Doubles To Tour
Object Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 33, No. 6, June 14, 1941 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 33, No. 6, June 14, 1941. |
| Subject (naf corporate name) | University of Southern California |
| Coverage date | 1941-06-13/1941-06-15 |
| Publisher (of the original version) | University of Southern California |
| Place of publication (of the original version) | Los Angeles, California |
| Publisher (of the digital version) | University of Southern California. Libraries |
| Date created | 1941-06-14 |
| Date issued | 1941-06-14 |
| Type |
images text |
| Format (aat) | newspapers |
| Language | English |
| Legacy record ID | uschist-dt-m57653 |
| Part of collection | University of Southern California History Collection |
| Part of subcollection | The Daily Trojan, 1912- |
| Rights | University of Southern California |
| Access conditions | Send requests to address or e-mail given. Phone (213) 821-2366; fax (213) 740-2343. |
| Repository name | University of Southern California University Archives |
| Repository address | Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189 |
| Repository email | specol@usc.edu |
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 6, June 14, 1941 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 6, June 14, 1941. |
| Full text | ssem imer Session Chorus Th is Morning [tiorT will be discussed by •ofessor of education fr.m le assembly 10:30 a.m. tnis r. C. M. Hill Education leries Speaker [Secondary Schools9 Unique Opportunity Is Lecture Topic e need more effective ac-blishment of the things we al-are doing to achieve the so-'new purposes’ of education,” red Dr. Clyde M. Hill, chair-of the department of educa-at Yale university, and visit-aculty member who will de-the fifth in the series of Ed-n-Psychology lectures tomor-t 3:30 p.m. in Administration Hill, a pioneer educator, and irator of the system of jun-ligh schools in Vermont in Iwill discuss “A Unique Oppor- Concert Thursc \ .] ' ............mm**,*,:.-:................ ......j The luxurious trans-channel steamer SS Catalina that will transport Summer Session students making the annual tour to Santa Catalina island Saturday morning. A thoroughly modern vessel, the SS Catalina has dancing and refreshment facilities for travelers who make the two-hour trip. Santa Catalina Scheduled For Island Tour Saturday Tickets for the first of two annual Summer Session tours for the Secondary School.'’ to Santa Catalina island are still available at the cashier’s >DS NOT NEW Jsis periods are no new thing lucation. In an emergency such as the present one, ed->nal methods need not be fed. but we need to make full ition of the facilities we al-have at hand,” Dr. Hill de-“This is the unique oppcr-for the secondary school— in and make full and ef-use of all the developments Lve already made.” Music Announced For Third Roth Quartet Concert m lal Compositions by Schuman, Men- not going to talk about delss°hn and Tscha&owsky will be defense,” Dr. Hill said, played by the Roth Quartet at the think the present crisis is : new. Education has always Inder pressure to meet chang- Vditions.” ‘new order’ in education be achieved without definite [on to develop the purposes e always believed in. IICATION SEEN (high school is not going to t of existence.” Dr. Hill af-‘because it meets a defied. although it will be- office in the Student Union bookstore, K. K. Stonier, tour manager, announced today. The trip, generally regarded as the most popular in the annual series of tours arranged for Summer Session students, can be made at the reduced rate of $2.50 per person for the round trip from Wilmington by students who purchase tickets here. For those requiring transportation to the steamer dock, tickets at $3.10 per person, are available that include round-trip train fare and steamer fare. TRAINS AVAILABLE The two-hour ocean trip may be made on either the SS Catalina or the SS Avalon which will leave the Catalina Terminal docks in Wilmington at 9:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. respectively. Special trains to the docks will leave the Pacific Electric station at Sixth and Main streets in Los Angeles at 8:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. The homeward-bound steamer will leave Avalon at 4:30 p.m. Saturday. Although the trip is planned primarily as a one-day excursion, those who so desire may stay on the island overnight, returning on the ships which will leave Avalon at 4:30 p.m., 5:30 p.m., and 9:15 p.m. Sunday. SECOND TRIP SET A second excursion to Catalina has been scheduled for four-week Summer Session students on August 19, Stonier announced, with similar reduced rates prevailing. Tickets for this trip are on sale also in the bookstore. third in their series of chamber music concerts 8:30 p.m. Monday * in Bovard auditorium. As in the past two concerts, the quartet will be accompanied by Paul A. Pisk, pianist. Mr. Pisk will discuss the music to be played at the concert at a lecture in Mudd Memorial 3:30 p.m. Monday. Monday evening’s program will in- lodified to meet changing elude Shuman’s “String Quartet in ns.” Dr. Hill is the author A Minor, Op 41, No. 1, “Mendels- •al textbooks in education: sohn’s “Piano Trio in D Minor” and unior High School Move- Tschaikowsky’s “String Quartet in “A Decade of Progress in D Major, Op. 11.” Training’* and “Making the the High School.” f the educators mentioned os Who in America,” Dr. taken the lead in inter- Participating artists in the third conferences on education concert will be Fari Roth and s sponsor and delegate to Rachmael Weinstock, violins; Jul-ld Congress on Education ius Shair, viola; Oliver Edel, ’cello; locracy. . and Paul A. Pisk, pianist. Tickets for the event are now on sale at the cashier's office in the student union bookstore. Annual Fishing Trip Saturday Early Reservations Recommended r Tissue Regarded Cause of Deafness ,v,al surveys report 2.000,000 children in the United I with impaired hearing. roximately one-half of children suffering from ear s could be aided or entirely cured by a comparatively operation. . i----— e children are reluctant to the system does not receive the >afness or do not realize proper vitamins. Experiments now [Iiction only five per cent show that with the correct amounts 'ted ... of vitamin B which have an affin- rv 30 draftees rejected in ity for building up weak tissues, the examinations during the trouble is eliminated over a period hid War 40 are now turned of time. Id of these ten per cent >f car troubles . . . CARELESSNESS SCORED [ere highlight observations Attempts of parents to use rem- tors, physicians, and au- ec*ies used by their grandparents, expressed during the cur- suc^ as quinine improperly admin- ijns of the five-day Na- istered, are enough in themselves rkshop conference of So- ^o cause deafness, said Dr. Gug- :ers, Teachers, and Par- genheim. The same careless use of e Hard of Hearing on the attempted remedies in maternity cases were cited to shdw inherent OSSIBLE tendencies of deafness in children been found that fifty birth, f children under 13 years Although little is done for chil- y be relieved of deafness,” dren of pre-school age, PTA health Louis Guggenheim, clin- groups are conducting clinics and ssor of the SC School of aids to ed Recommending that anglers make their reservations immediately and plan on bringing home a sack full of “big ones,” Coach H. W. Anderson announced last night that only a few more tickets are available for the third annual deep sea fishing trip off Balboa Saturday. Men and women students and faculty members are invited to make the trip, Anderson said, indicating that eight instructors already have made reservations. ROTATING SYSTEM Rated as one of the finest boats in the Balboa sport fishing fleet, the “Dixie Lee,” on which the trip will be made, has both bow and stern bait tanks, Anderson said. A rotating system will be employed to give all fishermen a chance at the “hot spots” and crew members will clean all fish taken. Tickets for the trip are on sale at the cashier’s office in the Student Union bookstore at $2 each. Tackle may be rented at the dock for 25 cents. CATCHES EXCELLENT Capt. A1 Forgit, skipper of the “Dixie Lee,” informed Coach Anderson last night that excellent fishing was expected next weekend and that albacore and macherel were being taken in pleasing quantities by anglers last Sunday. Since galley service has been discontinued, anglers are to bring their own lunches. Soft drinks will be j eral guitar solos at the luncheon available on board the boat. * also. Retracing Trail Of Coronado' Is Lecture Topic Dr. Geo. P. Hammond Will Relate Experiences On Mexican Journey Relating interesting experiences and adventures of the expedition of which he was a member, Dr. George P. Hammond will present this week’s Social Science lecture, “Retracing the Coronado Trail in Mexico,” 3:30 p.m. Thursday in 206 Administration. As dean of the graduate school and a member of the history department at University of New Mexico, Dr. Hammond was one of the six men commissioned • to retrace the route of the early Spanish explorer. The trip, which was to provide background information for the 400th anniversary celebration of Coronado’s discovery of New Mexico, was financed by the federal government and the state of New Mexico. CORONADO S CAPITAL Describing his trip, Dr. Hammond said that the group journeyed to Campostela, Coronado’s cap-itol city when he was governor of New Galicia, and set out on the 1200-mile journey to New Mexico. Although the trip was scheduled to last two weeks, the party took more time than originally planned. “In fact, if five of the party had not been young and healthy people who were able to push the station wagon or lift it out of ruts, we might have been months in returning,” Dr. Hammond said. ROADS POOR The roads traveled were unpaved and south of Sonora, where there were no grades, the rains had washed out such roads as had existed. Dr. Hammond considered fortunate the fact that the party was not set upon by bandits. That such a danger existed was indicated by the offer of Mexican military authorities to provide an escort for the party. Dr. Hammond is a member of the visiting faculty staff for the Summer Session and is offering courses in the field of history during the current term. Dr. Allan Hancock Montgomery Speaker At PE Luncheon Prof. G. Millage Montgomery, principal of Susan M. Dorsey high school, will be the speaker at the Physical Education department's weekly luncheon meeting in the Foyer of Town and Gown tomorrow at 12:10 p.m. Dick Lim, Summer Session student, will play sev- A wide variety of attractions are offered the island visitor, including dancing in the Casino to the music of Hal Grayson’s orchestra, visits to the famous aviary, swimming, golf, liding and boating. In addition, glass-bottom boat trips and sight-seeing tours will be offered at reduced rates. The privilege of dancing is limited to those who stay overnight but all other activities take place during the afternoon, including trips to the submarine gardens. Luncheon To Fete Faculty Members Visiting faculty members and heir wives together with Deans of the University’s 24 schools and colleges will be honored as guests of President and Mrs. Rufus B. von KleinSmid and Dean and Mrs. Les- ter Rogers at a dinner event Thursda1 Second Annual Reading Conference Ends Today Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid and Dr. Lester B. Rogers, dean of the Summer School, will speak at the closing session of the two-day Second Annual Reading Conference at 3 p.m. today in Bovard auditorium. ______ Sponsored by the School of Edu- cation, the conference included discussions by educators and speech authorities on methods of teaching reading to students, with emphasis on corrective methods ^for those students who are slow in acquiring reading skill. Dr. Nila B. Smith, professor of education, noted for her textbooks in the field of reading instruction, is chairman of the conference. All meetings of the conference are open to the public withouot charge, she announced. mont street. Elementary school teachers will hear a discussion on “Administration of Elementary Reading Instruction,” presented by Miss Parrot at 2 p.m. in Bovard. Dr. Henry E. Garrett, associate professor of education at Columbia university, will preside at the meeting for secondary school teachers at 2 p m. in Porter hall of Law building when Miss Hovious will speak on “Meeting Reading Problems in the Seventh and Eighth Grades and in the Secondary South s Writers Topic of Talk By Dr. Greever South’s Contribution Will Be Described By SC Educator Background and reasons for the belief that the South has not contributed its full share to American Literature will be discussed by Dr. Garland Greever, professor of English, 3:30 p.m. today, when he lectures on “The Influence of the South on American Literature” in the Bowne room of Mudd Memorial. Dr. Greever holds that general conditions in the South were not favorable to the production of literature since there were no great urban centers, no great public libraries. “There were some very good private libraries but the Southerners cultivated their art within limits. They shied away from literature as a professional instrument. The same was true of music,” Dr. Greever said, citing the example of Thomas Jefferson who hired as workers at Monticello men who were musicians as well in order that he might have a little cultural (Continued on page four) Anotl the Hj comb in: motion to Sumi and faci clock ai 8 p.m. charge. The coi is expects the last ditorium Thursday reservatioi visiting fs who are President KleinSmidl Lester B. in the To1 SOLO N1 Included) gram of t^ be solo Jackson, Russo on “Saga of] motion pic1 by the shows a 9.000 miles Hong Korn Hawaii, MU lands as and M&co, ing native tumes of eac hour in lei PROGRAM Thursday’s cock enseml Organ Fu* Andante From Harp Solo, Cat^ Adagio Path] Allegretto ai from S3 Violin Solo, Fire Dance_1 from! Nimrod _______ from ‘Ei Preludes in Tambourin Known foi of outstandinl world’s great is a distinct cock Foundati search with campus. Capti Bruno Walter, rated the most er and celloisl popular conductor in the current appearances Hollywood Bowl series, will be guest fomia to the] speaker 'at the annual School of ! total more Bruno Walter To Be Speaker At Music Dinner The persoi Ensemble inch rector; Ambrose Bingham, viol Martin Rudei ine Jackson, mour, piano; commentator; cock, ’cello. Music Summer Session banquet Tuesday, July 22, in the Foyer of Town and Gown. The attendance of Mr. Walter, who will make four bowl appearances this year, was made possible by Dr. Max Krone of the School of Music faculty. Peter Merenblum, director of the famed California Junior Symphony and a gifted violinist, will be the guest artist and Rod Mount, Summer Session student, will present a number of impersonations during the evening, William Gould, banquet chairman, said. Prof. Max van Lewen Swarthout will be master of ceremonies. _ In answer to Hal McCormac, ticket chairman, rectors of the asked that all students and facul- cp0rts p-0gra' ty members planning to attend the doubles toum:‘ banquet purchase their tickets lm- ', ,. . , ... .______ ,. and women baci1 mediately so that advance seating . requirements may be met. Tickets scheduled,. are on sale in the School of Music j comPetltion, in office and in the cashier’s office in nameRts which i Doubles To Tour |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1219/uschist-dt-1941-06-14~001.tif |
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