DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 21, October 10, 1941 |
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Ifeats such as last Satur-,light usually turns upon \1, what else is there to a team and a few classes? a fairly general opinion
lhe
;titution and not a
Iroy.
that a university’s chief men and women to live il live.1- after graduation ation for an “awareness”
; school that by its very modern and progressive irtment. It has long been kind in the country, and of its director, Warren |w role.
urisdiction, the hitherto ‘nt of the university has }hority, and plans for its
ty’
Irt to instruct in one of is, radio, but at the same luctive start toward edu-Ithe most vital factors of adio.
(itive field and naturally i courses at the univer-active part in the field Lowledge of the inner les make even the listen-Lificant.
iat most schools do not to key stations of the is. Several of the bestir are on the staff as inwill undoubtedly con-;he development of the |iat another progressive university—A.L.L.
it a new slant on this iges of attending the es, the first of which
Id be said of them, but like other things writ-ig this or that cultural ild skip on to the next to escape this danger •efore we can only re-
L.
ires will find them en-They should be such, who present them are icialized knowledge of
ecture.
irer, Dr. Leon H. Ellis, itional relations, will In Asia,” in which he war in the Orient on bosition of the United ilict. He is eminently Idition to an extensive teamed a first-hand jworking there several i customs service and
*se on literary topics, lartistic, and some on from the series of 10 |Dr. Lionel Stevenson, jh, will discuss “The fi McClelland, instruc-Dr. Anatol Murad, is, “Watch Your Dol-|and Ways of Meeting professor of physics, isurement of Hearing
leir subjects in a non-fe understandable to isually complete their land then spend sevens from the audi-
i lectures is enriched s regular course of )und of knowledge, is interested in what joys it.—G.W._
ssions of the editor.
lifornia
OJAN
ROBERT QUENELL
Business Manager
illiam D. Nietfeld
rs
• • •. Sports Editor *. Women’s Editor
10 letter, regardless of how interesting it may be, will be published unless it is properly signed.)
Service to Draftees
Editor, Daily Trojan:
This may be a radical suggestion, but I would like to offer the following idea: why not make some arrangements whereby copies of the Daily Trojan may be sent at least once a week to ex-students and graduates who have been drafted and who are now in the United States army?
Friends and relatives of these se- --
lectees might send their names in to you to be put on the mailing list. You might even print a special blank on the feature page to be filled out and slipped in the Daily Trojan mail boxes.
It seems to me that these fellows who have had to leave school to serve their country might still be interested in what SC and the Trojans are doing and what activities are going on around the campus.
If the cost of mailing one copy of the Trojan a week to these draftees were not too great, I think it would be a good idea.—V.M.E.........
Time, Please?
Editor, Daily Trojan:
Why, oh why, can’t something be done about getting the Mudd hall chimes on Pacific Standard time? They have been chiming about three minutes ahead of schedule for the past weeks. It’s very disconcerting to students and teachers alike. —B.W.R.
Mission Aids
Persons on Skid Row'
Needy
CHICAGO, Oct. 6—(U.P)—Out on Chicago's South Side amid squalor, second hand shops and burlesque houses the Pacific Garden mission has completed its 64th year of service to forgotten men and women.
Located not very far from Jane Addams’ famed Hull hoilse, a great tradition in social service, the Pacific Garden mission has offered food, medicine and redemption since Sept. 15, 1877.
NAME SPREAD
Some of the men who took the religion the mission offered and stayed with it told listeners at the anniversary meeting fche story of their rejuvenation. Among them was an ex-gambler who became an usher at the mission after his release from prison.
Where the notorious “White House” once entertained with wine, women, and song, the Pacific Garden mission offers rest, warmth and salvation. All the stragglers, down-and-outers and tipsy men who enter for help do not stay for redemption, but among those who did remain during the years past were “Billy” Sunday, evangelist, Mel Trotter, founder of nearly ioo missions, and Henry Monroe, one-time superintendent of the mission — all converts.
NAMED ‘WHISKEY ROW*
The mission’s first home was on South Clark street in the middle of “Whiskey Row,” founded there by interested Chicagoans because the fire of 1871 left only beer-halls where churches had once flourished.
It moved again in 1882 to a spot once inhabited by the Pacific Beer garden. Dwight L. Moody suggested the “Beer” be dropped and the name kept.
DOOR NEVER CLOSED
The mission’s doors have never been closed since the day of its founding and its expanded activity now includes an employment division, a woman’s organization and a youth’s program. Expansion has meant the addition of two adjacent buildings for the group’s work.
Harry G. Saulnier, now superintendent, oversees a social service institution that during a typical month last winter dispensed 2000 free meals and 1800 free lodgings-for-the-night.
Sig Ep Mascot Bests Pledges in Privileges
by Earl Collings
“Hey look fellows, he opened the door all by himself. Now that’s what I call a smart trick.”
No, the speaker wasn’t referring to some clever act of a one and only baby but to the doggy action of Grover, the Sigma Phi Epsilon’s canine mascot. Ugly and lovable are .the two outstanding characteristics of this black and white member of the “man’s best friend” club.
Recently acquired at the Inglewood animal show during the Be Kind to Animal week, Grover is the reward of the fraternity’s extensive search for a mascot “with distinction.” Dog pounds all over Los Angeles were searched, and Inglewood was ,the last place the committee of three planned to look. RECEIVED GOOD HOME
“We passed up pedigree Pointers and whining whelps until we came to Grover .... who was wagging his tail,” explained one of the men.
The officials at the show said if the men promised to give the dog a good home, he would be theirs without charge. (Nevertheless, each of the .three donated 25 cents to the Humane society as a gratis payment.) That the promise has been kept is evidenced in the gentle increase in Grover’s size since he has been “living in.’*
OF PUZZLING BREED
Visitors puzzle over the breed of the mascot. So do the Sig Eps. As a matter of fact he has been laughingly classified as a “curbstone setter.” To a casual observer he appears to be 60 pounds of Bull Terrier trimmed with a bit of Boxer and a few hairs of Hound.
Now Grover is the trained protector of his new dominion. Any stranger advancing is rapidly sent in retreat with the command of “Sic-em, fella.” Of course the dog is quite old and couldn’t bite any of his foes, but he would surely “gum” .them uncomfortably hard. FRIGHTENS BOYS
His ferocity was fully vented the other evening on three small Negroes, who were .polishing some of the house members shoes on the front porch. Irritated by foreign presence, the ancient dog put on his most youthful appearance and sent the shine artists scrambling atop the porch wall.
ATTENDS MEETINGS
Pledges of the house have every right to be jealous of this mighty mongrel because of his complete house privilege. Although he has been in the fraternity for a shorter period than some of them, he may use .the front door at will and even attend the active chapter meeting on Monday night.
Another of Grover’s advantages is the fact that he possesses an extreme trade-in value. According to the manager of the animal show from whence he came, he may be turned in on a new 1942 model a,t any time with no depreciation.
Firecrackers Replace Fuel
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.—(U.E) — There still will be a “hot time in the old town” the night of Oct. 17 —as usual; but it won’t be as expensive to the University of New Mexico as usual.
This year, for the first time, the university asserted that a planned fireworks display will replace the traditional school “homecoming bonfire,” which, in the past, has been fueled chiefly with pieces of property — fences, porch chairs and the like—that the university had to make good to irate owners.
Things we didn’t know ’till now department—Our secret operator X-49 informs us, rather belatedly we think, of the fact that Dr. von KleinSmid outdistances President Roosevelt as far as the number of lines is concerned in the 1941 issue of Who’s Who in America. . . .
Our limited research bureau is at the library now checking on the number of lines that he actually leads by . . . well, we sent them two days ago, but no luck so far. . . .
RADIO FARE . . . Our new colleague Arnie Lieberman has turned psuedo-iproducer of radio shows . . . namely, “Football Party,” which gets a weekly airing over NBC blue network on Friday nights ... •
Hank McCune, show’s m.c., is a former UCLA man, which leads us. to doubt the authenticity of the relationship between the two. . . .
Lieberman tells us that they were in quite a sweat last Friday night . . . seems both Dwain Oakley and Doug Essick almost missed the boat for the show. . . .
Oakley showed at two minutes before the broadcast, while Essick slid under the wire at 8:59:30, or a half minute before “air time.” Lieberman contends that from now on, the show’s going to be broadcast from Vine street so that latecomers won’t have to run down those tricky aisles in Studio B.
WE WUZ ROBBED ... Newspaper columnists, radio commentators, the “average” man, doubt-full SC rooters, and about 60,000 fans in the coliseum Saturday are still bemoaning the fact that the Trojans were thoroughly taken....
One of the better quips, from a downtown daily, was relayed to us by John Biewener, varsity track man . . . Johnny tells us that the sports writer had this to say:
“The score of the titanic struggle between SC and Ohio State really wasn’t decided until the second minute of the game.”
Other friends have been so kind as to give us this one:
Overheard at the coliseum in the $1.10 seats about the last of the fourth quarter when one of the SC men was flat:
She—“I wonder what could have hapipened to him?”
He—“Well, he may have committed suicide.”
BUDDING STUDENT . . . We’ve heard of women studying for pre-med, pre-law, and pre-(fix), but were slightly amazed last week when we met a winsome miss who someday plans to be an optometrist. She’s Marion Reed, a sophomore transfer from Pasadena junior college. . .. .
Marion relates that she’s stuck in a few tough courses . . . calculus, physics, etc., but then, that’s what comes from such high aspirations . . .
PINNED BY PREXY . . . Sophomore class president Zack Farmer is the proud recipient of congratulations this week, having taken the big step by pinning his Delta Tau Delta badge on Beverly Kelley. . . .
We’re beginning to wonder department . . . Congratulations to the lucky guy that won that autographed football at the Blue Key dance last Saturday night. . . .
But we’re wondering ... the ball was autographed by team members, but the hitch is, Bob de Lauer spells his name with a small “d,” not a capital letter . , . and all the time I thought he’d been signing his own O and M checks.
Organ
PROGRAM
Thursday, Oct. 9 12:10 p.m.
BOVARD AUDITORIUM PROGRAM Andante from the Fifth Symphony ...............................Beethoven
Of the nine symphonies of Beethoven, perhaps the fifth is the best known and most often performed. The entire symphony is sttirdy, square cut as if hewn from granite. The harmonies, which in Beethoven’s day were revolutionary,
m tne
American Society of Mechanical
Engineers’ neon-lighted bulletin board.”
This shingle met the public’s eye last Saturday, and the fire works
started!
Not that the mechanicals didn’t expect comments and reverberations resulting from their eye-arresting sign board with its gaudy red-neon letters which they nailed up last Friday afternoon, but to have the electricals show such disrespect as to post a sign on it, in fact the
on Sunday when none was around to admire it. On Monday morning it wasn’t In its place where several items of interest to the ASME — AND a very serviceable lock.
“No more marauders, this will keep Indians out,” Jimmy Nelson, student chairman of the mechanicals, is reported to have said.
Feuding between the two branch-
% VJt \ \ SS*
NO\
CORDA
exquisite pe
Toujours Moi
"always me"
perfume - - cologne - - dusting powder -ensembles containing cologne and perfui also soaps and miniature
1.35 te
Tzigane
gypsy
perfume - - eau de toilette -
Possession
perfume and eau de toilette
Jet
- cologne -
3.75 to I
2.75 to
perfume - - cologne - toilet water - - bath der - - talc - - and combination sets .
1.10 to IQ
Also
see the boudoir luxuries froi Farm Shop, London, England, sachets ■ soaps - toilet water;
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 21, October 10, 1941 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 21, October 10, 1941. |
| Full text | Ifeats such as last Satur-,light usually turns upon \1, what else is there to a team and a few classes? a fairly general opinion lhe ;titution and not a Iroy. that a university’s chief men and women to live il live.1- after graduation ation for an “awareness” ; school that by its very modern and progressive irtment. It has long been kind in the country, and of its director, Warren w role. urisdiction, the hitherto ‘nt of the university has }hority, and plans for its ty’ Irt to instruct in one of is, radio, but at the same luctive start toward edu-Ithe most vital factors of adio. (itive field and naturally i courses at the univer-active part in the field Lowledge of the inner les make even the listen-Lificant. iat most schools do not to key stations of the is. Several of the bestir are on the staff as inwill undoubtedly con-;he development of the iat another progressive university—A.L.L. it a new slant on this iges of attending the es, the first of which Id be said of them, but like other things writ-ig this or that cultural ild skip on to the next to escape this danger •efore we can only re- L. ires will find them en-They should be such, who present them are icialized knowledge of ecture. irer, Dr. Leon H. Ellis, itional relations, will In Asia,” in which he war in the Orient on bosition of the United ilict. He is eminently Idition to an extensive teamed a first-hand jworking there several i customs service and *se on literary topics, lartistic, and some on from the series of 10 Dr. Lionel Stevenson, jh, will discuss “The fi McClelland, instruc-Dr. Anatol Murad, is, “Watch Your Dol- and Ways of Meeting professor of physics, isurement of Hearing leir subjects in a non-fe understandable to isually complete their land then spend sevens from the audi- i lectures is enriched s regular course of )und of knowledge, is interested in what joys it.—G.W._ ssions of the editor. lifornia OJAN ROBERT QUENELL Business Manager illiam D. Nietfeld rs • • •. Sports Editor *. Women’s Editor 10 letter, regardless of how interesting it may be, will be published unless it is properly signed.) Service to Draftees Editor, Daily Trojan: This may be a radical suggestion, but I would like to offer the following idea: why not make some arrangements whereby copies of the Daily Trojan may be sent at least once a week to ex-students and graduates who have been drafted and who are now in the United States army? Friends and relatives of these se- -- lectees might send their names in to you to be put on the mailing list. You might even print a special blank on the feature page to be filled out and slipped in the Daily Trojan mail boxes. It seems to me that these fellows who have had to leave school to serve their country might still be interested in what SC and the Trojans are doing and what activities are going on around the campus. If the cost of mailing one copy of the Trojan a week to these draftees were not too great, I think it would be a good idea.—V.M.E......... Time, Please? Editor, Daily Trojan: Why, oh why, can’t something be done about getting the Mudd hall chimes on Pacific Standard time? They have been chiming about three minutes ahead of schedule for the past weeks. It’s very disconcerting to students and teachers alike. —B.W.R. Mission Aids Persons on Skid Row' Needy CHICAGO, Oct. 6—(U.P)—Out on Chicago's South Side amid squalor, second hand shops and burlesque houses the Pacific Garden mission has completed its 64th year of service to forgotten men and women. Located not very far from Jane Addams’ famed Hull hoilse, a great tradition in social service, the Pacific Garden mission has offered food, medicine and redemption since Sept. 15, 1877. NAME SPREAD Some of the men who took the religion the mission offered and stayed with it told listeners at the anniversary meeting fche story of their rejuvenation. Among them was an ex-gambler who became an usher at the mission after his release from prison. Where the notorious “White House” once entertained with wine, women, and song, the Pacific Garden mission offers rest, warmth and salvation. All the stragglers, down-and-outers and tipsy men who enter for help do not stay for redemption, but among those who did remain during the years past were “Billy” Sunday, evangelist, Mel Trotter, founder of nearly ioo missions, and Henry Monroe, one-time superintendent of the mission — all converts. NAMED ‘WHISKEY ROW* The mission’s first home was on South Clark street in the middle of “Whiskey Row,” founded there by interested Chicagoans because the fire of 1871 left only beer-halls where churches had once flourished. It moved again in 1882 to a spot once inhabited by the Pacific Beer garden. Dwight L. Moody suggested the “Beer” be dropped and the name kept. DOOR NEVER CLOSED The mission’s doors have never been closed since the day of its founding and its expanded activity now includes an employment division, a woman’s organization and a youth’s program. Expansion has meant the addition of two adjacent buildings for the group’s work. Harry G. Saulnier, now superintendent, oversees a social service institution that during a typical month last winter dispensed 2000 free meals and 1800 free lodgings-for-the-night. Sig Ep Mascot Bests Pledges in Privileges by Earl Collings “Hey look fellows, he opened the door all by himself. Now that’s what I call a smart trick.” No, the speaker wasn’t referring to some clever act of a one and only baby but to the doggy action of Grover, the Sigma Phi Epsilon’s canine mascot. Ugly and lovable are .the two outstanding characteristics of this black and white member of the “man’s best friend” club. Recently acquired at the Inglewood animal show during the Be Kind to Animal week, Grover is the reward of the fraternity’s extensive search for a mascot “with distinction.” Dog pounds all over Los Angeles were searched, and Inglewood was ,the last place the committee of three planned to look. RECEIVED GOOD HOME “We passed up pedigree Pointers and whining whelps until we came to Grover .... who was wagging his tail,” explained one of the men. The officials at the show said if the men promised to give the dog a good home, he would be theirs without charge. (Nevertheless, each of the .three donated 25 cents to the Humane society as a gratis payment.) That the promise has been kept is evidenced in the gentle increase in Grover’s size since he has been “living in.’* OF PUZZLING BREED Visitors puzzle over the breed of the mascot. So do the Sig Eps. As a matter of fact he has been laughingly classified as a “curbstone setter.” To a casual observer he appears to be 60 pounds of Bull Terrier trimmed with a bit of Boxer and a few hairs of Hound. Now Grover is the trained protector of his new dominion. Any stranger advancing is rapidly sent in retreat with the command of “Sic-em, fella.” Of course the dog is quite old and couldn’t bite any of his foes, but he would surely “gum” .them uncomfortably hard. FRIGHTENS BOYS His ferocity was fully vented the other evening on three small Negroes, who were .polishing some of the house members shoes on the front porch. Irritated by foreign presence, the ancient dog put on his most youthful appearance and sent the shine artists scrambling atop the porch wall. ATTENDS MEETINGS Pledges of the house have every right to be jealous of this mighty mongrel because of his complete house privilege. Although he has been in the fraternity for a shorter period than some of them, he may use .the front door at will and even attend the active chapter meeting on Monday night. Another of Grover’s advantages is the fact that he possesses an extreme trade-in value. According to the manager of the animal show from whence he came, he may be turned in on a new 1942 model a,t any time with no depreciation. Firecrackers Replace Fuel ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.—(U.E) — There still will be a “hot time in the old town” the night of Oct. 17 —as usual; but it won’t be as expensive to the University of New Mexico as usual. This year, for the first time, the university asserted that a planned fireworks display will replace the traditional school “homecoming bonfire,” which, in the past, has been fueled chiefly with pieces of property — fences, porch chairs and the like—that the university had to make good to irate owners. Things we didn’t know ’till now department—Our secret operator X-49 informs us, rather belatedly we think, of the fact that Dr. von KleinSmid outdistances President Roosevelt as far as the number of lines is concerned in the 1941 issue of Who’s Who in America. . . . Our limited research bureau is at the library now checking on the number of lines that he actually leads by . . . well, we sent them two days ago, but no luck so far. . . . RADIO FARE . . . Our new colleague Arnie Lieberman has turned psuedo-iproducer of radio shows . . . namely, “Football Party,” which gets a weekly airing over NBC blue network on Friday nights ... • Hank McCune, show’s m.c., is a former UCLA man, which leads us. to doubt the authenticity of the relationship between the two. . . . Lieberman tells us that they were in quite a sweat last Friday night . . . seems both Dwain Oakley and Doug Essick almost missed the boat for the show. . . . Oakley showed at two minutes before the broadcast, while Essick slid under the wire at 8:59:30, or a half minute before “air time.” Lieberman contends that from now on, the show’s going to be broadcast from Vine street so that latecomers won’t have to run down those tricky aisles in Studio B. WE WUZ ROBBED ... Newspaper columnists, radio commentators, the “average” man, doubt-full SC rooters, and about 60,000 fans in the coliseum Saturday are still bemoaning the fact that the Trojans were thoroughly taken.... One of the better quips, from a downtown daily, was relayed to us by John Biewener, varsity track man . . . Johnny tells us that the sports writer had this to say: “The score of the titanic struggle between SC and Ohio State really wasn’t decided until the second minute of the game.” Other friends have been so kind as to give us this one: Overheard at the coliseum in the $1.10 seats about the last of the fourth quarter when one of the SC men was flat: She—“I wonder what could have hapipened to him?” He—“Well, he may have committed suicide.” BUDDING STUDENT . . . We’ve heard of women studying for pre-med, pre-law, and pre-(fix), but were slightly amazed last week when we met a winsome miss who someday plans to be an optometrist. She’s Marion Reed, a sophomore transfer from Pasadena junior college. . .. . Marion relates that she’s stuck in a few tough courses . . . calculus, physics, etc., but then, that’s what comes from such high aspirations . . . PINNED BY PREXY . . . Sophomore class president Zack Farmer is the proud recipient of congratulations this week, having taken the big step by pinning his Delta Tau Delta badge on Beverly Kelley. . . . We’re beginning to wonder department . . . Congratulations to the lucky guy that won that autographed football at the Blue Key dance last Saturday night. . . . But we’re wondering ... the ball was autographed by team members, but the hitch is, Bob de Lauer spells his name with a small “d,” not a capital letter . , . and all the time I thought he’d been signing his own O and M checks. Organ PROGRAM Thursday, Oct. 9 12:10 p.m. BOVARD AUDITORIUM PROGRAM Andante from the Fifth Symphony ...............................Beethoven Of the nine symphonies of Beethoven, perhaps the fifth is the best known and most often performed. The entire symphony is sttirdy, square cut as if hewn from granite. The harmonies, which in Beethoven’s day were revolutionary, m tne American Society of Mechanical Engineers’ neon-lighted bulletin board.” This shingle met the public’s eye last Saturday, and the fire works started! Not that the mechanicals didn’t expect comments and reverberations resulting from their eye-arresting sign board with its gaudy red-neon letters which they nailed up last Friday afternoon, but to have the electricals show such disrespect as to post a sign on it, in fact the on Sunday when none was around to admire it. On Monday morning it wasn’t In its place where several items of interest to the ASME — AND a very serviceable lock. “No more marauders, this will keep Indians out,” Jimmy Nelson, student chairman of the mechanicals, is reported to have said. Feuding between the two branch- % VJt \ \ SS* NO\ CORDA exquisite pe Toujours Moi "always me" perfume - - cologne - - dusting powder -ensembles containing cologne and perfui also soaps and miniature 1.35 te Tzigane gypsy perfume - - eau de toilette - Possession perfume and eau de toilette Jet - cologne - 3.75 to I 2.75 to perfume - - cologne - toilet water - - bath der - - talc - - and combination sets . 1.10 to IQ Also see the boudoir luxuries froi Farm Shop, London, England, sachets ■ soaps - toilet water; |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1222/uschist-dt-1941-10-10~001.tif |
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