DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 89, January 16, 1942 |
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Strategy
Wednesday Lecture Treats Fundamental Propaganda Tactics
■ I a.m. daily
Speaking before the Wed- j themes:
nesday lecture audience this afternoon at 4:30 in the art and lecture room of Doheny library, Dr. Wilbert Hindman, associate professor of politi-UI WCll I# Vs Cl I U cal science, will outline the
“Strategy of Propaganda.”
This marks the first appearance of Dr. Hindman on a campus program. He came to SC 1 havin2 concluded a five-
\q III PS I 00Q Y year teaching Peri°d at Colgate uni-
m M | versity. t
MASTERY ATTAINED BY AXIS
The axis has mastered the techniques of propaganda, and has used them more efficiently and effectively than we have thus far, Dr.
Hindman pointed out yesterday in
nitiating another defense project i sketching some highlights of his the campus, the members of s*>ee_cl1 •rtar Board, honorary SC wo-
Week Approaches
‘There’s Always Tomorrow’ Selected as Theme for Series of Daily Assemblies in Auditorium
“There’s Always Tomorrow” is the general theme of Religious Emphasis week, to be held Mar. 16 to 22. Dr. Harold C. Case, pastor of Elm Park Methodist church, Scranton, Penn., will be guest speaker for the week at SC.
Assemblies, at which Dr. Case will speak, will be held in
Bovard auditorium from 9:50-10:30 1--
with the following!
!ARY GOWER — directs defense stamp sale.
Board ells Defense Today
Sales Tables Placed in Campus Buildings; Junior Women Assist
“We must meet and outdo them
n’s service organization, will con-
on the propaganda front as well as
* a special sale of defense on the he emphasized.
Imps today. BASIC IDEAS DETERMINE
llortar Board has selected sev- The ideas at .the basis of propall junior women to assist in the ganda, in the long run, determine of the stamps. Tables will be the relative efficiency of opposing r the control of Eleanor Brit- propagandists, he said. Today tech-Barbara Symmes, Elizabeth niqrss are more widely known and timers, Mary Kay Krysto, and applied than they were at the time (irlotte Quinn. of the last war, he continued.
Lary Gower, president of the Part of ,the propagandist’s job is (rd, asks that all coke and candy making people aware of the need jiey be pocketed today and paid for converting industrial production at the defense stamp windows I to military needs, he pointed out. sad. She emphasized that “stu- Today, people are willing to pay cooperation is urged in putting taxes for the speedup program of the success of the movement.” , defense needs, he illustrated, lies for the tables are several BASIC ELEMENTS GIVEN fssible places on the campus, j ^ elements in .the suc-
w be_ l^ated in Old Col- ! cessful conduct of modem war> Dl,
A( minl 1 ration b u 11 d 1 n I Hindman will give the four M’s: Jge hall, and the Student Union, j men m0ney, materiel, and minds, e v ill also be a representative j jn ^he strategy of propaganda, he
will consider the mobilization o*
sman in Harris hall.
m added convenience to minds as paramount in importance. |ers, a special table will tie set outside the Administration ling. This is to save time and )le for those who have taken
Dr. Hindman will consider briefly some of the tactics of propaganda. His emphasis will be on the
[that popular pastime on” the frategy used;. He will also attempt
to give a satisfactory definition of
this word on which there are varied
opinions as to the meaning.
>us.
oto Salon ffers Awards
annual Delta Kappa Alpha >graphic salon will be held this year, Mar. 23 to Mar. 28. ie Cinema and Musical Arts ing. The salon is composed of a studies entered by faculty luidents of SC. The first prize
The achievement and maintain-ance of allied unity through the corralling of public opinion and bolstering of morale will be one of the issues of his talk.
Adopted Citizens Form Subject of YW Panel
Monday, “High Sky”; Tuesday, “Clues to the Discovery #of God”; Wednesday, “The Live End”; Thursday, living With Poise’”; and Friday, “Manager of Tomorrow.” LUNCHEONS PLANNED
Luncheons are scheduled to be held at 12:10 p.m. daily:
On Monday it will be in Elisa-be,th von KieinSmid hall with Dr. Case as speaker. The School of Religion, Roger Williams, and Luther clubs will be co-hosts. On Tuesday it will be in the tea room, Student Union, with Dr. Case as speaker. The faculty religious interests committee, student council on religion, and religious clubs’ advisors will act as co-hos,ts. Wednesday it will be held in the Foyer of Town and Gown; Miss Margaret Bonifield, member of the English parliament, will be the speaker. Co-hosts will be the Faculty Men’s club, Interfratemity Mothers’ club, YWCA, and the Canterbury club. Thursday it will be at Elisabeth von KieinSmid hall, with Rabbi M. Bauman, as speaker. The council of Jewish students will be hosts. Friday it will be in Elisabeth von KieinSmid hall, and Dr. Case will again speak. YMCA, Campbell club, Christian Science organization, Westminister club, Wesley club, and Lambda Delta Sigma will be the co-hosts.
STUDENT DISCUSSIONS
Forums will be held daily from 3:30-5 p.m. in the Student Union lounge. There will be student-led discussions as well as those led by faculty members.
The council on religion will hold conferences from 3-5 p.m. daily. Student conferences with Dr. Case may be made by appointment in the student council on religion of-
fice in the lounge.
“The Little Chapel of Silence” will be open daily from 7:30 a.m. ,to 5 p.m. for personal and group meditation.
Jerry Conrad will be chairman
DR. HOWARD CASE—to be main speaker lor Religious Emphasis week.
for the affair. J. Randolph Sasnett, executive secretary of the council on religion, is in charge of the affairs of the week.
Religious Council Meets
The Student Council on Religion will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow, following the various commission meetings at 3 p.m. Jerry Conrad, president of the student council, will preside at the meeting which will be held in the student lounge third floor, Student Union.
New Fad Threatens to Replace Skating
by Hal Hodges
Motorists traveling in the immediate vicinity of the University of Southern California throughout the past two weeks have contemplated with blended glee and sympathy the panorama of bewildered pedestrians pivoting, dodging, and twisting from, or actually colliding with carefree Trojan
skating addicts.
“Knowing Our Adopted Ameri-
wm be the Delta Kappa 1 cas" * the subject which wiU Pr°-
vide material for the YWCA dis-trophy, and there will also • , . .
* cussion group tomorrow at 4 p.m.
ee keys of merit awarded for at the Y house.
2s of honorable mention. |
Gale Seman, advisor of the re-
ies may be submitted by stu-and facility between Monday, .6 and Saturday, Mar. 21 at Lema department office in the la and Musical Arts building. |rints may be of any subject. |.nust be at least 8 inches by size. Finishing of the prints >e done by the individual sub-|g them.
oil tinted or hand tinted will be accepted although :olor prints will be. The name fh entry and the name of each jtant should be on the back
ligious council of UCLA and of the SC Roger Williams club, will lead the discussion, and Rosetta Thompson, student chairman, will preside. Seman has proposed these three questions for development:
1. Just what difference does being a Christian make in our personal relation to minorities?
2. How can our sincere interest and friendship for the Japanese in America become practically helpful just now?
“Now,” cry the pedestrians, “it’s our turn to laugh.” If the enthusiasm of the bicycle-movement disciples is indicative of the number of bikes soon to appear on campus, then University avenue autoists will be confronted with the dcftible menace of faculty members entering their second childhood and students just leaving their first.
Such officials as Dr. Rufus B. von KieinSmid, Dean Francis Bacon, Dr. Anatol Murad, Dr. John Nordskog, and Dr. Herbert Austin have expressed enthusiasm over the possibilities of such a fad. Dean Bacon and Doctors Murad, Austin, and Nordskog admitted that bicycling would soon be their only medium of transportation about campus.
“It may/' commented President Von Klein-Smid, “perhaps be the means of bringing transportation courtesy back to the American travelers.” He added, “It has always been an attractive and rational way
of solving transportation for the individual.”
The last few days have found a few dauntless students who have actually dared to dispute the supremacy of the roller skate, wheeling about campus. Said one of .them, Jim Marovish, “Now’s the chance for the non-skaters to hold their own. Why, I ride five miles to and from school every day, and consequently feel like a million dollars.”
Rumors of a bicycle blitzkrieg are rife. It is said that in every other backyard on “Greek row” students are to be found tinkering with old and polishing new two-wheeled vehicles. Guy Halferty has been eyeing his kid brother’s tricycle, and a group of sorority women have expressed their intention of purchasing a four-seated affair.
“The bikes are coming,” warn the cyclists, “and they’ll be here to Stay.” Time will tell.
to Dine Tomorrow
Father, Son Banquet Hears Babe Ruth at Annual Gathering
Town and Gown will be giv-en over to the sports world tomorrow evening, when many noted sportsmen and sports-writers gather at the annual Father and Son banquet, where the 1941 SC football team will be honored by the Trojaneers, Trojan club members, and their sons.
Highlight of the evening’s program will be the appearance of Babe Ruth, former New York Yankee slugger, who holds practically every home-run record in the books. The big “Bambino,” most popular player in the history of baseball, is out here from the east to portray himself in the motion picture depicting the life of his former teammate, the late Lou Gehrig, and he accepted an invitation to come and say a few words at tomorrow’s banquet.
MAKES FORECAST
Another attraction of the Trojan club’s annual affair will be a forecast of the 1942 football situation at SC by Coach Sam Barry and Ben Sohn, former Trojan guard, who played in the Duke and Tennessee Rose bowl games.
Isidore Dockweiler and President Rufus B. von KieinSmid will address guests early in the evening. Elmer Bromley is scheduled to appear as master of ceremonies after the opening of the banquet by Trojan club president, Rex Hardy.
DRAW FOR FOOTBALLS
Capt. Bob de Lauer will conduct a drawing for several footballs autographed by the members of last fall’s grid squad. These balls will be given out to the winning boys of high school age in attendance.
Other events on the program include the presentation of the Barrett and Davis-Teschke awards to two outstanding football players; a burlesque newsreel, including the pictures of the Oregon State-Duke Rose bowl game; and speeches by several of Los Angeles’ top sports-writers.
RESERVATIONS ASKED
Although many invitations to the banquet have been accepted, there are still some varsity members who have not made reservations, according to Miss Patsy Burr, alumni office secretary. She requests that all acceptances be handed in as soon as possible.
Besides members of the football team and club, guests will include freshman football players who entered school last February, and fathers of the members of the varsity football squad.
3. What causes so much protest h picture. The cost will be i and unhappiness in our Negro nts for each picture. population?
rds will be presented Monday, j * •
130, at 7:30 pjn.
il Welfare Worker iks to Sociologists
Walter Muelder, social wel-
Knights Convene
Trojan Knights will hold a dinner meeting at 5:30 p.m. today at the Xi Psi Phi fraternity house, 880 West Adams boulevard, Dwight Hart, president of the hoAorary
eader, will speak today at 12 service organization, announced yes«
Sociology luncheon club ir kreation hall of the Elisabeth
terday.
Mi
Cailliet Directs Orchestra Concert in Bovard Today
The university orchestra, under the direction of Dr. Lucien Cailliet, presents its first concert of the spring semester this noon in Bovard auditorium.
The first half of the program, designed primarily to acquaint music appreciation students with the various instruments in the orchestra and with some of the methods of orchestration, will feature demonstrations by several members of the orchestra and by its instrumental sections.
In the latter half of the program Dr. Cailliet will present his own variations on “Pop Goes the Weasel,” followed by the popular “On the Trail,” by Ferde Grofe, and Morton Gould’s modem “Pav-anne.”
Athletes Report Today for Sweater Measures
to SC Campus for Interviews
Returning to the campus for the umpteenth time to interview prospects eligible for enlistment in the marine corps reserve, Lt. George A. Gililland, liaison officer, will be in 224 Student Union today from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Because of the recent expansion of the enlistment quota, Lieutenant Gililland especially wil! desire to see freshmen during his visit today. Applications may still be filed by men interested in the officer's training program.
The men who apply must be citizens of the United States, be between the ages of 18 and 27, have five letters of recommendation, a photograph, and a birth certificate. Candidates are required to pass a rigid physical, and must not be more than 76 or less than 66 inches tall.
Reds Move Up to Annihilate Trapped Army
Russian Warship in Surprise Attack Sinks Enemy Ships
MOSCOW, Mar. 10.—End-less columns of Russian troops and transports were reported moving up to the Staraya Russa front tonight to complete annihilation of the trapped 16th German army, suicide outposts of which were fighting to the last man.
The Red army offensive blazed with renewed fury all the way south to the Crimea, where a Soviet warship stole into a German-held harbor to sink several ships and shell land positions, and Russian marines in a surprise landing seized a strongly-fortified village.
REDS ON OFFENSIVE
(The midnight communique broadcast by the Moscow radio said “our troops continued to wage offensive battles against the German forces. As the result of blows inflicted by our units the enemy was dislodged from several inhabited localities and suffered heavy losses in manpower and equipment.” It said 30 German and 11 Russian planes were lost yesterday).
The government newspaper Iz-vestia leported that the Germans had deported 400,000 Ukrainians to the reich for mobilization into forced labor battalions. Most of them were peasants from the Volhynia, Podolia, and Kiev government districts, fated for servitude on German farms, it said. NAZIS ESTABLISH ‘ESTATES*
Izvestia also said that the German occupation forces had established 570 large “estates” in the western Ukraine, reducing the peasant inhabitants to serfdom.
(Stockholm dispatches reaching London said the Russians were approaching Kharkov from three sides, and that the once great industrial city was virtually surrounded. London heard the Moscow radio report that Soviet troops in the Kharkov-Kursk area were driving ahead against fierce opposition.)
REDS NEAR NAZI LINE
Russians in the Staraya , Russa area were reported within striking distance of the German lines running east of Lake Peipus, raising a threat to German communications between the Leningrad and central fronts.
Reports that many Soviet women were new active members of the fighting services, and were serving on the front lines shoulder to shoulder with their menfolk, were broadcast by the Moscow radio speaker.
Is!
I
Sti to] to|
Disl nairej term gram room* tomorl quest* Raub« Collei Scien<
univei fill oui what tj the nei
A sai at the Studf low thi; tion mi and spi during beg 11.
REQU1
This in lowe number subjectsj tain prc lected Dean R4 Pui gram is tunity ti work in I thus mi to take war effd plan, sti four-ye years. SIX-1 The interfere! summer fered foi ated pr( Dean all studf give care plan which graduate to the sei Bulletin! are now tion officl
Cas
End
Final “Stage next weel tryouts toi William ducting The plai itself, has wishing appointme at once.
Those previous only fUe that they “By susi center of viding it again be ‘little theal ‘You Can’t | plained producer, idea of DcJ the sound “The acc in this am minates ms
Newma
Father r lead a disci at a Newml row evening Union lounj
QUESTIONNAIRE ON PLANS FOR A
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 89, January 16, 1942 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 89, January 16, 1942. |
| Full text | Outlines Strategy Wednesday Lecture Treats Fundamental Propaganda Tactics ■ I a.m. daily Speaking before the Wed- j themes: nesday lecture audience this afternoon at 4:30 in the art and lecture room of Doheny library, Dr. Wilbert Hindman, associate professor of politi-UI WCll I# Vs Cl I U cal science, will outline the “Strategy of Propaganda.” This marks the first appearance of Dr. Hindman on a campus program. He came to SC 1 havin2 concluded a five- \q III PS I 00Q Y year teaching Peri°d at Colgate uni- m M versity. t MASTERY ATTAINED BY AXIS The axis has mastered the techniques of propaganda, and has used them more efficiently and effectively than we have thus far, Dr. Hindman pointed out yesterday in nitiating another defense project i sketching some highlights of his the campus, the members of s*>ee_cl1 •rtar Board, honorary SC wo- Week Approaches ‘There’s Always Tomorrow’ Selected as Theme for Series of Daily Assemblies in Auditorium “There’s Always Tomorrow” is the general theme of Religious Emphasis week, to be held Mar. 16 to 22. Dr. Harold C. Case, pastor of Elm Park Methodist church, Scranton, Penn., will be guest speaker for the week at SC. Assemblies, at which Dr. Case will speak, will be held in Bovard auditorium from 9:50-10:30 1-- with the following! !ARY GOWER — directs defense stamp sale. Board ells Defense Today Sales Tables Placed in Campus Buildings; Junior Women Assist “We must meet and outdo them n’s service organization, will con- on the propaganda front as well as * a special sale of defense on the he emphasized. Imps today. BASIC IDEAS DETERMINE llortar Board has selected sev- The ideas at .the basis of propall junior women to assist in the ganda, in the long run, determine of the stamps. Tables will be the relative efficiency of opposing r the control of Eleanor Brit- propagandists, he said. Today tech-Barbara Symmes, Elizabeth niqrss are more widely known and timers, Mary Kay Krysto, and applied than they were at the time (irlotte Quinn. of the last war, he continued. Lary Gower, president of the Part of ,the propagandist’s job is (rd, asks that all coke and candy making people aware of the need jiey be pocketed today and paid for converting industrial production at the defense stamp windows I to military needs, he pointed out. sad. She emphasized that “stu- Today, people are willing to pay cooperation is urged in putting taxes for the speedup program of the success of the movement.” , defense needs, he illustrated, lies for the tables are several BASIC ELEMENTS GIVEN fssible places on the campus, j ^ elements in .the suc- w be_ l^ated in Old Col- ! cessful conduct of modem war> Dl, A( minl 1 ration b u 11 d 1 n I Hindman will give the four M’s: Jge hall, and the Student Union, j men m0ney, materiel, and minds, e v ill also be a representative j jn ^he strategy of propaganda, he will consider the mobilization o* sman in Harris hall. m added convenience to minds as paramount in importance. ers, a special table will tie set outside the Administration ling. This is to save time and )le for those who have taken Dr. Hindman will consider briefly some of the tactics of propaganda. His emphasis will be on the [that popular pastime on” the frategy used;. He will also attempt to give a satisfactory definition of this word on which there are varied opinions as to the meaning. >us. oto Salon ffers Awards annual Delta Kappa Alpha >graphic salon will be held this year, Mar. 23 to Mar. 28. ie Cinema and Musical Arts ing. The salon is composed of a studies entered by faculty luidents of SC. The first prize The achievement and maintain-ance of allied unity through the corralling of public opinion and bolstering of morale will be one of the issues of his talk. Adopted Citizens Form Subject of YW Panel Monday, “High Sky”; Tuesday, “Clues to the Discovery #of God”; Wednesday, “The Live End”; Thursday, living With Poise’”; and Friday, “Manager of Tomorrow.” LUNCHEONS PLANNED Luncheons are scheduled to be held at 12:10 p.m. daily: On Monday it will be in Elisa-be,th von KieinSmid hall with Dr. Case as speaker. The School of Religion, Roger Williams, and Luther clubs will be co-hosts. On Tuesday it will be in the tea room, Student Union, with Dr. Case as speaker. The faculty religious interests committee, student council on religion, and religious clubs’ advisors will act as co-hos,ts. Wednesday it will be held in the Foyer of Town and Gown; Miss Margaret Bonifield, member of the English parliament, will be the speaker. Co-hosts will be the Faculty Men’s club, Interfratemity Mothers’ club, YWCA, and the Canterbury club. Thursday it will be at Elisabeth von KieinSmid hall, with Rabbi M. Bauman, as speaker. The council of Jewish students will be hosts. Friday it will be in Elisabeth von KieinSmid hall, and Dr. Case will again speak. YMCA, Campbell club, Christian Science organization, Westminister club, Wesley club, and Lambda Delta Sigma will be the co-hosts. STUDENT DISCUSSIONS Forums will be held daily from 3:30-5 p.m. in the Student Union lounge. There will be student-led discussions as well as those led by faculty members. The council on religion will hold conferences from 3-5 p.m. daily. Student conferences with Dr. Case may be made by appointment in the student council on religion of- fice in the lounge. “The Little Chapel of Silence” will be open daily from 7:30 a.m. ,to 5 p.m. for personal and group meditation. Jerry Conrad will be chairman DR. HOWARD CASE—to be main speaker lor Religious Emphasis week. for the affair. J. Randolph Sasnett, executive secretary of the council on religion, is in charge of the affairs of the week. Religious Council Meets The Student Council on Religion will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow, following the various commission meetings at 3 p.m. Jerry Conrad, president of the student council, will preside at the meeting which will be held in the student lounge third floor, Student Union. New Fad Threatens to Replace Skating by Hal Hodges Motorists traveling in the immediate vicinity of the University of Southern California throughout the past two weeks have contemplated with blended glee and sympathy the panorama of bewildered pedestrians pivoting, dodging, and twisting from, or actually colliding with carefree Trojan skating addicts. “Knowing Our Adopted Ameri- wm be the Delta Kappa 1 cas" * the subject which wiU Pr°- vide material for the YWCA dis-trophy, and there will also • , . . * cussion group tomorrow at 4 p.m. ee keys of merit awarded for at the Y house. 2s of honorable mention. Gale Seman, advisor of the re- ies may be submitted by stu-and facility between Monday, .6 and Saturday, Mar. 21 at Lema department office in the la and Musical Arts building. rints may be of any subject. .nust be at least 8 inches by size. Finishing of the prints >e done by the individual sub- g them. oil tinted or hand tinted will be accepted although :olor prints will be. The name fh entry and the name of each jtant should be on the back ligious council of UCLA and of the SC Roger Williams club, will lead the discussion, and Rosetta Thompson, student chairman, will preside. Seman has proposed these three questions for development: 1. Just what difference does being a Christian make in our personal relation to minorities? 2. How can our sincere interest and friendship for the Japanese in America become practically helpful just now? “Now,” cry the pedestrians, “it’s our turn to laugh.” If the enthusiasm of the bicycle-movement disciples is indicative of the number of bikes soon to appear on campus, then University avenue autoists will be confronted with the dcftible menace of faculty members entering their second childhood and students just leaving their first. Such officials as Dr. Rufus B. von KieinSmid, Dean Francis Bacon, Dr. Anatol Murad, Dr. John Nordskog, and Dr. Herbert Austin have expressed enthusiasm over the possibilities of such a fad. Dean Bacon and Doctors Murad, Austin, and Nordskog admitted that bicycling would soon be their only medium of transportation about campus. “It may/' commented President Von Klein-Smid, “perhaps be the means of bringing transportation courtesy back to the American travelers.” He added, “It has always been an attractive and rational way of solving transportation for the individual.” The last few days have found a few dauntless students who have actually dared to dispute the supremacy of the roller skate, wheeling about campus. Said one of .them, Jim Marovish, “Now’s the chance for the non-skaters to hold their own. Why, I ride five miles to and from school every day, and consequently feel like a million dollars.” Rumors of a bicycle blitzkrieg are rife. It is said that in every other backyard on “Greek row” students are to be found tinkering with old and polishing new two-wheeled vehicles. Guy Halferty has been eyeing his kid brother’s tricycle, and a group of sorority women have expressed their intention of purchasing a four-seated affair. “The bikes are coming,” warn the cyclists, “and they’ll be here to Stay.” Time will tell. to Dine Tomorrow Father, Son Banquet Hears Babe Ruth at Annual Gathering Town and Gown will be giv-en over to the sports world tomorrow evening, when many noted sportsmen and sports-writers gather at the annual Father and Son banquet, where the 1941 SC football team will be honored by the Trojaneers, Trojan club members, and their sons. Highlight of the evening’s program will be the appearance of Babe Ruth, former New York Yankee slugger, who holds practically every home-run record in the books. The big “Bambino,” most popular player in the history of baseball, is out here from the east to portray himself in the motion picture depicting the life of his former teammate, the late Lou Gehrig, and he accepted an invitation to come and say a few words at tomorrow’s banquet. MAKES FORECAST Another attraction of the Trojan club’s annual affair will be a forecast of the 1942 football situation at SC by Coach Sam Barry and Ben Sohn, former Trojan guard, who played in the Duke and Tennessee Rose bowl games. Isidore Dockweiler and President Rufus B. von KieinSmid will address guests early in the evening. Elmer Bromley is scheduled to appear as master of ceremonies after the opening of the banquet by Trojan club president, Rex Hardy. DRAW FOR FOOTBALLS Capt. Bob de Lauer will conduct a drawing for several footballs autographed by the members of last fall’s grid squad. These balls will be given out to the winning boys of high school age in attendance. Other events on the program include the presentation of the Barrett and Davis-Teschke awards to two outstanding football players; a burlesque newsreel, including the pictures of the Oregon State-Duke Rose bowl game; and speeches by several of Los Angeles’ top sports-writers. RESERVATIONS ASKED Although many invitations to the banquet have been accepted, there are still some varsity members who have not made reservations, according to Miss Patsy Burr, alumni office secretary. She requests that all acceptances be handed in as soon as possible. Besides members of the football team and club, guests will include freshman football players who entered school last February, and fathers of the members of the varsity football squad. 3. What causes so much protest h picture. The cost will be i and unhappiness in our Negro nts for each picture. population? rds will be presented Monday, j * • 130, at 7:30 pjn. il Welfare Worker iks to Sociologists Walter Muelder, social wel- Knights Convene Trojan Knights will hold a dinner meeting at 5:30 p.m. today at the Xi Psi Phi fraternity house, 880 West Adams boulevard, Dwight Hart, president of the hoAorary eader, will speak today at 12 service organization, announced yes« Sociology luncheon club ir kreation hall of the Elisabeth terday. Mi Cailliet Directs Orchestra Concert in Bovard Today The university orchestra, under the direction of Dr. Lucien Cailliet, presents its first concert of the spring semester this noon in Bovard auditorium. The first half of the program, designed primarily to acquaint music appreciation students with the various instruments in the orchestra and with some of the methods of orchestration, will feature demonstrations by several members of the orchestra and by its instrumental sections. In the latter half of the program Dr. Cailliet will present his own variations on “Pop Goes the Weasel,” followed by the popular “On the Trail,” by Ferde Grofe, and Morton Gould’s modem “Pav-anne.” Athletes Report Today for Sweater Measures to SC Campus for Interviews Returning to the campus for the umpteenth time to interview prospects eligible for enlistment in the marine corps reserve, Lt. George A. Gililland, liaison officer, will be in 224 Student Union today from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Because of the recent expansion of the enlistment quota, Lieutenant Gililland especially wil! desire to see freshmen during his visit today. Applications may still be filed by men interested in the officer's training program. The men who apply must be citizens of the United States, be between the ages of 18 and 27, have five letters of recommendation, a photograph, and a birth certificate. Candidates are required to pass a rigid physical, and must not be more than 76 or less than 66 inches tall. Reds Move Up to Annihilate Trapped Army Russian Warship in Surprise Attack Sinks Enemy Ships MOSCOW, Mar. 10.—End-less columns of Russian troops and transports were reported moving up to the Staraya Russa front tonight to complete annihilation of the trapped 16th German army, suicide outposts of which were fighting to the last man. The Red army offensive blazed with renewed fury all the way south to the Crimea, where a Soviet warship stole into a German-held harbor to sink several ships and shell land positions, and Russian marines in a surprise landing seized a strongly-fortified village. REDS ON OFFENSIVE (The midnight communique broadcast by the Moscow radio said “our troops continued to wage offensive battles against the German forces. As the result of blows inflicted by our units the enemy was dislodged from several inhabited localities and suffered heavy losses in manpower and equipment.” It said 30 German and 11 Russian planes were lost yesterday). The government newspaper Iz-vestia leported that the Germans had deported 400,000 Ukrainians to the reich for mobilization into forced labor battalions. Most of them were peasants from the Volhynia, Podolia, and Kiev government districts, fated for servitude on German farms, it said. NAZIS ESTABLISH ‘ESTATES* Izvestia also said that the German occupation forces had established 570 large “estates” in the western Ukraine, reducing the peasant inhabitants to serfdom. (Stockholm dispatches reaching London said the Russians were approaching Kharkov from three sides, and that the once great industrial city was virtually surrounded. London heard the Moscow radio report that Soviet troops in the Kharkov-Kursk area were driving ahead against fierce opposition.) REDS NEAR NAZI LINE Russians in the Staraya , Russa area were reported within striking distance of the German lines running east of Lake Peipus, raising a threat to German communications between the Leningrad and central fronts. Reports that many Soviet women were new active members of the fighting services, and were serving on the front lines shoulder to shoulder with their menfolk, were broadcast by the Moscow radio speaker. Is! I Sti to] to Disl nairej term gram room* tomorl quest* Raub« Collei Scien< univei fill oui what tj the nei A sai at the Studf low thi; tion mi and spi during beg 11. REQU1 This in lowe number subjectsj tain prc lected Dean R4 Pui gram is tunity ti work in I thus mi to take war effd plan, sti four-ye years. SIX-1 The interfere! summer fered foi ated pr( Dean all studf give care plan which graduate to the sei Bulletin! are now tion officl Cas End Final “Stage next weel tryouts toi William ducting The plai itself, has wishing appointme at once. Those previous only fUe that they “By susi center of viding it again be ‘little theal ‘You Can’t plained producer, idea of DcJ the sound “The acc in this am minates ms Newma Father r lead a disci at a Newml row evening Union lounj QUESTIONNAIRE ON PLANS FOR A |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1229/uschist-dt-1942-01-16~001.tif |
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