DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 14, September 22, 1941 |
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or this development in the uni-v unlimited. With yearbooks, nagazines, essay and writing nd plays among the activities is unfortunate that these barren of talent mainly be-lack of interest.
It enthusiasm, to be sure, for rile committees, no work, and These things are called extra-lt what they really amount to jsentation of titles and false
activities, those that involve |not just being in something,
advantage of both the uni-[ts for creative talent to be icome interested and encour->nal values of the university
the policy of the Trojan to activities whenever possible, lsly those requiring real ineffort.
in opportunities for cultural £ion. Weekly lectures by es, frequent orchestral and . regular art gallery exhibi-^udent participation and en-
Low-minded Philistines may Itural,” these things are of :tical standpoint. We are in id by war and strife, and if ires afford us entertainment [as intellectual improvement ite practical importance.
irs its facilities in earnest [hat have a real, measurable ' are not emblazoned with prized by society.
for this paper to proclaim |campus groups, especially
•e.
:his tradition.
[ally, of course, will be group deserving of space iper. But we subscribe to >olicy of not frankly criti--political or otherwise — [e we are right and they
an editors have regarded ium for the expression of of their personal enemies. |and unfair usurpation of •anted them by their posi-
*e to proffer constructive directed at ideas, objec-, not individuals—unless, |this general editorial pol-
previously stated ideas of shall assume an attitude p both student body lead-Itive officials. The Daily in of the students and of Assist in the promulgation m designed to better the
ilp to strengthen and ad->es and the academic pro-
pem world of ours, It ls |oming freshman to keep of his registration in a ie enthusiastic neophyte, |nition in the extra-cur-university is an institu-|ther than a social play-
keep in mind that suc-not determined by the accumulated over a per-the scholastic standard [ugh their years of un-
|pressions of the editor.
DAILY TROJAN
ROBERT QUENELL
Business Manager
illiam D. Nietfeld
litors
......... Sports Editor
......Women’s Editor
..... Feature Editor
AFF
.............— Gordon Wilson
j McClain, Marshall Kizziah, Ritter, Alan Jacobs. ------------------Bob Brandson
5TAFF
------------ Duane Attebei
*
V
/
iHick
J
■ 1 ii [M i 1 I ^ i j
iLtli
By RALPH NICKERSON
the trojan
DATELINE
By Irene Mashler
Returning to Troy after the lighter activities of summer vacation, Trojans were caught in the swift whirl of 28th street rush week. However, the more energetic students took time out for a little weekend relaxation.
Those who sought enjoyment with no fear of awaiting homework included Jack Hutton, 1941 El Rodeo editor, who entertained several friends with a house party at his home Saturday night.
Partaking of the Hutton hospitality were Marcia Hunt, ADPi from UCLA, Ross Hutchinson and Dorothea Tilton, Amazon prexy . . . Hank Silvestri brought Mary Jo Allen . . . John Perfitt and Ray Charleton were a couple. . . .
PHI MU
The Skyroom down in San Diego was the attraction for Phi Mus and their dates Saturday night. Double-dating were newly engaged Edith Wesson and Joe Badger with Eleanor Carrell and Matt Hailey, off-campus man. . . .
Eleanor Palmer and Elmer Page relaxed from rushing at Earl Carroll’s Saturday night. . . .
Also at Earl Carroll’s was a party of Sigma Phi Delta’s . . . Kenny Gunn escorted Mary Dell Tollinger . . . AI Roberts chose Vivian Clark as his partner . . . Jean McClure and Jack McAbery watched the review. . . .
GROVE
Popular as ever, the Cocoanut Grove was selected for Saturday n^ght dancing by Trojans . . . Theta sisters Jeanette Barton and Mary Kay Bodecker arrived with Kappa Alpha brothers Max Green and Stan Green . . . Phi Psi Don Milligan danced with Charlotte Quinn on the same evening. . . .
Mary Boyland and Jerry Smith waved to friends across the room . . . Martha Proudfoot and Stan
TAU EPS
Tau Eps went western with a rushee house dance Saturday night . . . Herb Turman and Marcine Silbersteen counted the bales of hay scattered about . . . Bob Greenberg complimented Audrey Wolf on her realistic western costume . . . Leona Friedman and
Fred Nicholas tried dancing in true
western style . . . Lee Landrum and Ralph Weiner came with Rosalie Roth and Dorothy Vohs. . . . ZTA
Duane Berryman, prexy of ZTA, and Kenny Wells, Chi Phi, celebrated pledging at the Biltmore Bowl Saturday night . .
CLASSIFIED ADS
Rooms For Rent
SINGLE Apt. $30 mo. Studio rooms $20. Sleeping rooms $15. All tile. Phone service. 2380 Scarff, 8 minutes from campus. PR. 79183. Professional and Graduate Students Only. 9-17-1 mo.
FINE room near campus. Instructors or graduates. 3909% Flower Drive, corner 39th street. 9-17, 22, 23
LARGE sunny front room. Kitchenette. Near bath. Parking space. Garage available. All utilities. 1195 W. 28th Street. RI. 2986. Prefer men students. 9-17
$5—Nice, clean upper housekeeping rooms. Private entrance. Utilities paid. Garage. 1219 W. 37th Street.
LARGE, single room for men. Free telephone. Phone AX. 9340. 4056 Halldale. 14464
9-23
Room and Board
BOARD and room for 2 to 4 graduate students. Parking space. 1032 West 46th St.
9-17-25
$1 JUST Opened, Swell Food $1.* New furniture. Airy rooms. Twin beds. Free
* phone. Graduates. 2 7 2 7 Menlo Avenue. Phone RO. 0567. 9-17
Board and Room
BOARD and room in beautiful home for graduate and undergraduate men students. Close to campus. Excellent meals. Reasonable rates. Parking. 911 West 35th Street. 14466
9-26
For Rent
FOUR room flat. Delightful neighborhood, suitable for faculty. Owner’s furniture. 2367 Scarff street. Call 9 to 11 a.m., 7 to 9 p.m. 9-17
1 BLOCK from U. S. C. New Monterey furniture. Telephone. Bath. Shower. Near 30th and Hoover at 3015 Severance St. 14467
9-29
$45—4 ROOM upper duplex. Tile trimmed kitchen. Attractive dinette. General Electric refrigerator. 2 bedrooms. Garage. 1040 W. 38th Street. 14465
9-23
Transportation Wanted
FROM Wilmington. Vivian Dunphy. 1902 No. Avalon,
Student Choice
Surveys conducted on college campuses to determine student entertainment throughout the Pacific coast reveal that “Joe College’' and his “honey” find more pleasure in inexpensive leisure than in strictly high-brow entertainment.
From the north comes the report that Cal students find their greatest pleasure in bowling and in parking on Grizzly Peak. A few dissenting students contend that the tops in entertainment is an evening spent in the university’s library—it’s cheap and proves to be unbeatable as a date bureau.
Farmhands from Stanford, clad only in their Mexican gabardines and T-shirts, find reclining in Lake Lagunita’s boat-house or parking on the smooth slopes of the Indians’ golf course interesting pasttimes, while more casual members of the red and white group find the Top o’ the Mark and Peacock court more intriguing haunts.
Troy, the metropolitan university of the West, frolics in an area which extends from Santa Barbara to Palm Springs, from Laguna Beach to Arrowhead.
Sorority girls diligently sign their names to publicity date lists, marking their destinations as “Grove” or “Ciro’s,” then sojourn to Joe’s, Homer’s, or such night spots as can be afforded by an NYA-worker escort.
“Here Comes Mr. Jordan’ that every humor-bent mati ware, though, that opening' judgment. Watch out for tl It’s easy to be kind to thi] is way above that of the usus weak parlor comedies. The fi: has one marvel of an idea aboi a champion prizefighter’s searcl through heaven and earth for a] satisfactory replacement body.
Why complain then? — It’s just] that this story of heavenly doings on earth was nearly perfect fori creating something special, a film' comedy that might have ranked with movies of Chaplin and Rene Clair. Instead, the producers told this first-rate idea with second-rate plot material.
The writers were true to their inspiration in the early scenes, and they are rare. A skittery heavenly messenger (Edward Everett Horton) brings about the body dilemma. Seeing ene of his charges hurtling toward earth in a plane, the messenger snuffs out his life before the crash.
This kind act was a terrible mistake, for the plane traveler was scheduled in tlie heavenly books to recover and live for years. The obvious solo tion is to return the crash victim to earth.
If the body in the plane hadn’t been cremated and if the crash victim (Robert Montgomery) were not a prizefighter, ail would be simple routine. But the prizefighter is exacting about the quality of trade-in exterior aligned to him.
CRAIG WOOI
Winner of the National the Masters’ and the politan OpenTthree
most coveted toum.am<
* . ■ ».
golf. From beginner to it's ChestorfielcL
p;\>V v \ v :
.......J
Hw
Smokers everywhere lit COOLER MILDER BETTE
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 14, September 22, 1941 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 14, September 22, 1941. |
| Full text | or this development in the uni-v unlimited. With yearbooks, nagazines, essay and writing nd plays among the activities is unfortunate that these barren of talent mainly be-lack of interest. It enthusiasm, to be sure, for rile committees, no work, and These things are called extra-lt what they really amount to jsentation of titles and false activities, those that involve not just being in something, advantage of both the uni-[ts for creative talent to be icome interested and encour->nal values of the university the policy of the Trojan to activities whenever possible, lsly those requiring real ineffort. in opportunities for cultural £ion. Weekly lectures by es, frequent orchestral and . regular art gallery exhibi-^udent participation and en- Low-minded Philistines may Itural,” these things are of :tical standpoint. We are in id by war and strife, and if ires afford us entertainment [as intellectual improvement ite practical importance. irs its facilities in earnest [hat have a real, measurable ' are not emblazoned with prized by society. for this paper to proclaim campus groups, especially •e. :his tradition. [ally, of course, will be group deserving of space iper. But we subscribe to >olicy of not frankly criti--political or otherwise — [e we are right and they an editors have regarded ium for the expression of of their personal enemies. and unfair usurpation of •anted them by their posi- *e to proffer constructive directed at ideas, objec-, not individuals—unless, this general editorial pol- previously stated ideas of shall assume an attitude p both student body lead-Itive officials. The Daily in of the students and of Assist in the promulgation m designed to better the ilp to strengthen and ad->es and the academic pro- pem world of ours, It ls oming freshman to keep of his registration in a ie enthusiastic neophyte, nition in the extra-cur-university is an institu- ther than a social play- keep in mind that suc-not determined by the accumulated over a per-the scholastic standard [ugh their years of un- pressions of the editor. DAILY TROJAN ROBERT QUENELL Business Manager illiam D. Nietfeld litors ......... Sports Editor ......Women’s Editor ..... Feature Editor AFF .............— Gordon Wilson j McClain, Marshall Kizziah, Ritter, Alan Jacobs. ------------------Bob Brandson 5TAFF ------------ Duane Attebei * V / iHick J ■ 1 ii [M i 1 I ^ i j iLtli By RALPH NICKERSON the trojan DATELINE By Irene Mashler Returning to Troy after the lighter activities of summer vacation, Trojans were caught in the swift whirl of 28th street rush week. However, the more energetic students took time out for a little weekend relaxation. Those who sought enjoyment with no fear of awaiting homework included Jack Hutton, 1941 El Rodeo editor, who entertained several friends with a house party at his home Saturday night. Partaking of the Hutton hospitality were Marcia Hunt, ADPi from UCLA, Ross Hutchinson and Dorothea Tilton, Amazon prexy . . . Hank Silvestri brought Mary Jo Allen . . . John Perfitt and Ray Charleton were a couple. . . . PHI MU The Skyroom down in San Diego was the attraction for Phi Mus and their dates Saturday night. Double-dating were newly engaged Edith Wesson and Joe Badger with Eleanor Carrell and Matt Hailey, off-campus man. . . . Eleanor Palmer and Elmer Page relaxed from rushing at Earl Carroll’s Saturday night. . . . Also at Earl Carroll’s was a party of Sigma Phi Delta’s . . . Kenny Gunn escorted Mary Dell Tollinger . . . AI Roberts chose Vivian Clark as his partner . . . Jean McClure and Jack McAbery watched the review. . . . GROVE Popular as ever, the Cocoanut Grove was selected for Saturday n^ght dancing by Trojans . . . Theta sisters Jeanette Barton and Mary Kay Bodecker arrived with Kappa Alpha brothers Max Green and Stan Green . . . Phi Psi Don Milligan danced with Charlotte Quinn on the same evening. . . . Mary Boyland and Jerry Smith waved to friends across the room . . . Martha Proudfoot and Stan TAU EPS Tau Eps went western with a rushee house dance Saturday night . . . Herb Turman and Marcine Silbersteen counted the bales of hay scattered about . . . Bob Greenberg complimented Audrey Wolf on her realistic western costume . . . Leona Friedman and Fred Nicholas tried dancing in true western style . . . Lee Landrum and Ralph Weiner came with Rosalie Roth and Dorothy Vohs. . . . ZTA Duane Berryman, prexy of ZTA, and Kenny Wells, Chi Phi, celebrated pledging at the Biltmore Bowl Saturday night . . CLASSIFIED ADS Rooms For Rent SINGLE Apt. $30 mo. Studio rooms $20. Sleeping rooms $15. All tile. Phone service. 2380 Scarff, 8 minutes from campus. PR. 79183. Professional and Graduate Students Only. 9-17-1 mo. FINE room near campus. Instructors or graduates. 3909% Flower Drive, corner 39th street. 9-17, 22, 23 LARGE sunny front room. Kitchenette. Near bath. Parking space. Garage available. All utilities. 1195 W. 28th Street. RI. 2986. Prefer men students. 9-17 $5—Nice, clean upper housekeeping rooms. Private entrance. Utilities paid. Garage. 1219 W. 37th Street. LARGE, single room for men. Free telephone. Phone AX. 9340. 4056 Halldale. 14464 9-23 Room and Board BOARD and room for 2 to 4 graduate students. Parking space. 1032 West 46th St. 9-17-25 $1 JUST Opened, Swell Food $1.* New furniture. Airy rooms. Twin beds. Free * phone. Graduates. 2 7 2 7 Menlo Avenue. Phone RO. 0567. 9-17 Board and Room BOARD and room in beautiful home for graduate and undergraduate men students. Close to campus. Excellent meals. Reasonable rates. Parking. 911 West 35th Street. 14466 9-26 For Rent FOUR room flat. Delightful neighborhood, suitable for faculty. Owner’s furniture. 2367 Scarff street. Call 9 to 11 a.m., 7 to 9 p.m. 9-17 1 BLOCK from U. S. C. New Monterey furniture. Telephone. Bath. Shower. Near 30th and Hoover at 3015 Severance St. 14467 9-29 $45—4 ROOM upper duplex. Tile trimmed kitchen. Attractive dinette. General Electric refrigerator. 2 bedrooms. Garage. 1040 W. 38th Street. 14465 9-23 Transportation Wanted FROM Wilmington. Vivian Dunphy. 1902 No. Avalon, Student Choice Surveys conducted on college campuses to determine student entertainment throughout the Pacific coast reveal that “Joe College’' and his “honey” find more pleasure in inexpensive leisure than in strictly high-brow entertainment. From the north comes the report that Cal students find their greatest pleasure in bowling and in parking on Grizzly Peak. A few dissenting students contend that the tops in entertainment is an evening spent in the university’s library—it’s cheap and proves to be unbeatable as a date bureau. Farmhands from Stanford, clad only in their Mexican gabardines and T-shirts, find reclining in Lake Lagunita’s boat-house or parking on the smooth slopes of the Indians’ golf course interesting pasttimes, while more casual members of the red and white group find the Top o’ the Mark and Peacock court more intriguing haunts. Troy, the metropolitan university of the West, frolics in an area which extends from Santa Barbara to Palm Springs, from Laguna Beach to Arrowhead. Sorority girls diligently sign their names to publicity date lists, marking their destinations as “Grove” or “Ciro’s,” then sojourn to Joe’s, Homer’s, or such night spots as can be afforded by an NYA-worker escort. “Here Comes Mr. Jordan’ that every humor-bent mati ware, though, that opening' judgment. Watch out for tl It’s easy to be kind to thi] is way above that of the usus weak parlor comedies. The fi: has one marvel of an idea aboi a champion prizefighter’s searcl through heaven and earth for a] satisfactory replacement body. Why complain then? — It’s just] that this story of heavenly doings on earth was nearly perfect fori creating something special, a film' comedy that might have ranked with movies of Chaplin and Rene Clair. Instead, the producers told this first-rate idea with second-rate plot material. The writers were true to their inspiration in the early scenes, and they are rare. A skittery heavenly messenger (Edward Everett Horton) brings about the body dilemma. Seeing ene of his charges hurtling toward earth in a plane, the messenger snuffs out his life before the crash. This kind act was a terrible mistake, for the plane traveler was scheduled in tlie heavenly books to recover and live for years. The obvious solo tion is to return the crash victim to earth. If the body in the plane hadn’t been cremated and if the crash victim (Robert Montgomery) were not a prizefighter, ail would be simple routine. But the prizefighter is exacting about the quality of trade-in exterior aligned to him. CRAIG WOOI Winner of the National the Masters’ and the politan OpenTthree most coveted toum.am< * . ■ ». golf. From beginner to it's ChestorfielcL p;\>V v \ v : .......J Hw Smokers everywhere lit COOLER MILDER BETTE |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1226/uschist-dt-1941-09-22~001.tif |
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