Daily Trojan, Vol. 34, No. 139, May 04, 1943 |
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ive-week courses et for intersession
Printed below are a list of the courses to be offered at the tersession starting May 24 and ending June 26. Students ay take a maximum of six units work.
Classes will meet five days a week (Monday through Fri-y), unless otherwise indicated; and the regular class per-ds are 65 minutes in length.
The intersession is designed particularly for students ishing to make up eifcher subject or grade deficiencies. The gular 16-week summer session will convene June 28. *
CHITECTURE AND FINE ARTS ARCHITECTURE
s2ab.—Architectural Construction I (Sims)—3, 3 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 115.
3ab.—Building Equipment Engineering (Johnson)—2 units, 12:45 p.m., Harris 208.
b.—Architectural Construction II (Sims)r-2, 2 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 115.
8a.—Professional Practice III (Johnson)—2 units, 12:45 p.m., Harris 208. FINE ARTS
6a.—Weaving (Boylin)—2 units, 12:45-3:45 p.m., Harris 110. ACTERIOLOGY
90aL.—Bacteriological Problems (Staff)—2 units, Arr., Office. llaL.—Research Problems (Staff)—2-4 units, Arr., Office, la.—Thesis Work, (four units on completion of thesis), (Staff, Arr., Office.
OTANY
0L.—Medical Botany (Clare)—4 units, 8-12 a.m., Sci. 252, 257. HEMISTRY
30bL.—Physical Chemistry (Copeland)—4 units, Lee. 8-10:20, M.T.W.
Th., 8-9:05, F.; Lab. to be arranged, Sci. 107.
MMERCE ACCOUNTING
v—Elementary Accounting (Woodbridge)— 3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., Harris 110.
"^a.—Auditing (Campbell)—2 units, 8 a.m., Harris 110.
Oa.—Tax Accounting (Campbell)—2 units, 9:15 a.m., Harris 110. CONOMICS
b.—Principles of Economics (Murad)—3 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 102. DUCATION
I.—The Learni^f Process (Campbell)—2 units, 8 a.m., Harris 101. '.—The School and Society (Thompson)—2 units, 9:15 a.m., Harris 101. 123gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Early Childhood Education (Campbell, Noblitt)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 102.
125gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Elementary Schools (Campbell, Noblitt)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 102.
152abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Biological Sciences in Secondary Schools, Campbell, Hood)— 4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101.
153abL.—Curriculum Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in English-Speech in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101.
154abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Foreign Languages in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)— 4. 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101.
157abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Mathematics and Physical Sciences in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101.
!158abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Social Sciences in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)— 4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101.
;174gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Public School Music (Campbell, Damborg)—4, 4 units, Arr., C.&M.A. 10.
•*A special fee is required for courses bearing the designation of “gh” “bL.” Application for Directed Teaching should be made in advance the opening of the Intersession.
GINEERING
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 0.—Chemical Engineering Plant Design (Waterman)—3 unite, 10:80-12:10 p.m., Engineering 204.
CIVIL ENGINEERING j.—Surveying (Bauwens)—3 unils, 9:15 and two 4-hour field periods. Engineering 308.
0b.—Hydraulic Engineering Practice (-)—3 units, Arr., Office.
9.—Structural Design (-)—3 units, Arr., Office
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Vol. XXXIV
NAS—Z-48
Los Angeles, Tuesday, May 4, 1943
Night Phone:
RI. 5473
No.aa^
-)—2 units, Arr., Office.
S.—Reinforced Concrete Design (-ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING —Direct Current Testing (Biegler)—2 units. 12:45-4:45 M.W. and two lectures to be arranged, Engineering 100. v—Elements of Electrical Engineering (Angermann)—5 units, 9:15-11:35 and 12:45-4:45 TJh., Engineering 206.
GENERAL ENGINEERING
—Engineering Drawing and Descriptive Geometry (Baldwin)—2, 2 units, 12:45-4:45 M.WjF., Engineering 206.
a.—Analytical Mechanics (Sims)—3 units, 12:45-2:15 p.m., E.308.
b.—Analytical Mechanics (Hansen)—3 units. 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 205. .—Materials and Mechanics (Wilson)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 309. .—Strength of Materials (Wilson)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 309.
\—Engineering Economics (Fox)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 103. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
lab.—Power Plant Design (-)—2. 2 units, Arr., Office.
u—Elements of Metallography (-)—2 units, Arr., Office.
.—Special Problems (-)—1-2 units, Arr., Office.
GLISH
^Introductory Course (Christensen)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m.—B. 304. -■—Readings in English and American Literature (Davenport)—2 units, 9:15 a.m.—B. 303.
.—The Elizabethan Period (Non-dramatic Literature): 1557-1626 (Davenport)—2 units, 10:30 a.m., B. 308. f.—American Literature (Christensen)—2 units, 8 a.m., B. 304.
NCR
nsive language study (Belle, Hardison, Jallade). Full time, six periods a day, five days a week.—5-6 units, B. 312.
AL STUDIES
—Problems of Modern Society (Hindman, Rodee)—3 units, 10:30 a.m., Science 167.
(Continued on Page Two)
pedal Spanish course offer practibility
Stressing Informality and practicability, an intensive proin Spanish will be included in the five-week interim Tam offered by the unversity from May 24 to June 26 to bie students to make up grade deficiencies and fulfill t requirements, vdente enrolling in the eiemen-iive-week Spanish course must oompleted Spanish la or its valent. The oourse will feature of Mexico, its civilization,
Mfe, and conversation.
tic spoken Spanish will be and three new texts will for the class, advanced five-week course bfl open to students who have leted Spanish 52b and will in-41, study of daily life, history,
geography, commercial possibilities, literature, and political and social problems of Spain and Latin America. *
“Only good students who really love Spanish should enroll in the intersession courses,” said Miss Florence Bonhard, instructor and lecturer in Spanish, who is teaching the elementary course.
Prof. Antonio Heras will instruct the advanced course.
Women to play in band
For the first time in the history #of the university, women students will play with the ‘ Troj an band in its first concert of the season.
With Dr. Lucien Cailliet, professor *of music, as conductor, and Ralph Rush assisting him, the program will be presented Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in Bovard auditorium.
Perry Krohn and Stewart Aspen, music students, will be featured as clarinet soloists. They will play “Idyl of Brittanny,” by Pillevestre, with the band playing the accompaniment.
Women instrumentalists have proved a valuable addition to the band, according to Conductor Cailliet. Not only has it given them the opportunity to gain the experience of band work formerly denied feminine musicians, but it has solved the student manpower shortage.
A paraphrase on “You’re in the Army Now/’ by Dr. Cailliet will be played by the band. Other arrangements by the maestro will also be presented.
Outstanding pieces to be presented are selections from Victor Herbert’s melodies; “Finlandia,’* Sibelius; prelude to the third act of “Lohengrin,” Richard Wagner; and Edward MacDowell’s “To a Wild Rose.”
Soloist Perry Krohn Is student leader and manager of the concert.
I. R. to hear Dr. Hindman
“Will. the cessation of military conflict mean a victory or merely a truce on the propaganda front,” Dr. Wilbert Hindman, assistant professor of political science, will discuss “Our Propaganda Front” when he addresses the International Relations club at its luncheon meeting in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall Thursday noon.
It is the sincere belief of the German people that they can wage a war successfully, simply by the wise use of propaganda, said Dr. Hindman. An illustration of this is the invasion of the smaller European countries. * A systematic scheme for propagating their doctrine and ideas has prepared the countries for submission and when an attempt at military domination was made the Germans were met with a minimum of armed resistance, according to Dr. Hindman. •
Due to wartime conditions reservations must be made by Tuesday noon in the Graduate School office or in the political science office.
Election of officers for the new term will be held.
German course offered Trojans
Students who are interested in taking an intensive German course during the five-week intersession, but who have not had previous instruction in German, should notify the German department before Thursday so that plans may be made for the insertion of such a course into the five-weeks program if the demand is Urge enough.
NROTC gets vacation
All members of the NROTC unit who are enlisted as apprentice seamen, V-l (NROTC), will be placed on active duty May 25 and returned to an inactive status on June 10, it was announced yesterday by Capt. Reed Fawell, NROTC commandant at SC. The period from June 11 to about June 30 is a vacation period for members of the naval unit.
During the 17-day active duty period, sophomores will be stationed at the section base, San Pedro, for practical training. Seniors and juniors will be stationed at the section base, San Diego, for practical training.
Captain Fawell pointed out that members of the NROTC unit will again be placed on active duty approximately July 1 to pursue their studies and training on the campus. A later directive from Captain Fawell will fix this date accurately.
Russian play shows for last time tonight
Gun powder mistaken as a headache dose, duels, vodka, money, and Russian romance will play their last parts tonight before the curtain lowers on the final performance of “Tovarich” in the Bovard auditorium “little theater.”
Tonight’s play, produced by the drama department under Prof. William DeMille, will close
after a five-week run, as originally scheduled.
Trojans who wish to attend the final show tonight must have their student body tickets at the student body store today or they may purchase tickets at the box office for 40 cents.
Reports from backstage indicate that the play has met with student and presidential favor. President Rufus B. von KleinSmid congratulated Director DeMille on the production as the best he has seen at SC for many seasons. Two students in minor roles, who wish to remain anonymous, have received calls from Hollywood studios, and Phyllis Perry, feminine star of the play, has acquired a stack of fan letters commending her performance.
Written ln 1933, the play has been performed from Warsaw to Warners, where it was filmed, in hundreds of shows.
The light Russian drama exemplifies the type of play Professor DeMille believes should be presented by colleges. It has a gay-hearted plot with just enough dramatic moments to keep the scenes active and full of suspense, he said.
Captain Fawell buys first bid
Capt. Reed M. Fawell, commandant of the SC NROTC unit, yesterday bought the first bid to the combined Flight Prep, NROTC, and all-U dance, scheduled by the Fighting Top,. NROTC social club, for Saturday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
At the dance, which Is the first of its kind to be given at SC, Leta Galentine, ASSC vice-president and date of Herb Johnson, commander of NROTC company 1, will draw the lucky ticket for the awarding of two $25 war bonds.
The navy affair will be the last dance before exams, and the entire proceeds will go to the Navy Relief society.
Paul Martin’s orchestra, which ls heard three times a week over NBC, will provide music, with vocals by Jeanne Durrell.
Bids will sell for $2.20 at the bookstore.
Americans
capture
Mateur
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS,
North Africa, May 3—(U.P.)— American troops today captured Mateur, key to tht whole axis Bizerte-Tunis defense system, in a 15-mile break-through which crumbled the enemy’s north Tunisian mountain line.
This spectacular thrust
severed the only Axis rail link between Tunis and Bizerte and drove the Germans to the rim of the inner bastions of the two ports where
MATEUR, Tunisia, May 3.— (6:20 p.m.)—(U.R)—American reconnaissance troops today passed through Mateur and fanned out to the east and north, one group taking a road along the west side of Lake Achkel, from whieh they could hear the smash of American bombs on axis-held Bizerte.
they must make a last stand with heir backs to the sea.
(The Algiers radio said the Germans were fleeing on beyond Mateur under heavy allied air attack and with the Americans in close pursuit.) The seizure of Mateur came after French troops drove along the rugged north coast, skirting Lake Achkel, to within 14 miles of Bizerte itself, placing the great naval harbor under immediate threat by allied spearheads on two sides. Mateur is 20 miles south of Bizerte.
. The Americans’ most important triumph oi the African war pot them in a valley running 31 miles southeast to Tunis with only a single range of hills between them and the capital, and in ft position to outflank the Germans' mountain positions in the Med-jerda valley to the south.
It came after the Americans had hammered for days against the deeply emplaced Axis mountain po-sitions west and ^outhwest of Mateur, winning hill after hill in costly fighting.
College women sought as aides
GOOD WORK REFLECTED ... as Friend Sicily Ann Maloy helps Nurse's Aide Marilyn Johnson get off to the California hospital, where she spends a large share of her time. Miss Johnson is the first SC woman to complete nurse's aide
training. —Courtesy L.A. Examiner
With 3000 trained nurses leaving every month for military service, the shortage of nurses in the country is becoming acute. To relieve this shortage the American Red Cross has taken on the job of training nurses aides to assist the remaining nurses in hospitals, clinics, and blood donor centers.
A particular appeal is being made to university women to take this training. They are the type of women that the Red Cross feels is especially suited to do this kind of work. Any women who are interested should call the local chapter of the Red Cross, FI-5261 or call in person at the headquarters, 1200 South Vermont.
Los Angeles has been one of the cities suffering most from the existing shortage of nurses. One local hospital recently lost 30 nurses in one week to the armed services. Although the number of nurses is decreasing, the number of civilians seeking hospitalization has increased during the war.
In an effort to combat the local problem, the Los Angeles chapter of the Red Cross is seeking 2300 new recruits to take the volunteer nurse’s aide training course. Duties of the Red Cross aide include taking temperatures, pulses, and respirations, giving bed baths, making beds, feeding patients, admitting ind discharging patents, and other routine jobs.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 34, No. 139, May 04, 1943 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 34, No. 139, May 04, 1943. |
| Full text | ive-week courses et for intersession Printed below are a list of the courses to be offered at the tersession starting May 24 and ending June 26. Students ay take a maximum of six units work. Classes will meet five days a week (Monday through Fri-y), unless otherwise indicated; and the regular class per-ds are 65 minutes in length. The intersession is designed particularly for students ishing to make up eifcher subject or grade deficiencies. The gular 16-week summer session will convene June 28. * CHITECTURE AND FINE ARTS ARCHITECTURE s2ab.—Architectural Construction I (Sims)—3, 3 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 115. 3ab.—Building Equipment Engineering (Johnson)—2 units, 12:45 p.m., Harris 208. b.—Architectural Construction II (Sims)r-2, 2 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 115. 8a.—Professional Practice III (Johnson)—2 units, 12:45 p.m., Harris 208. FINE ARTS 6a.—Weaving (Boylin)—2 units, 12:45-3:45 p.m., Harris 110. ACTERIOLOGY 90aL.—Bacteriological Problems (Staff)—2 units, Arr., Office. llaL.—Research Problems (Staff)—2-4 units, Arr., Office, la.—Thesis Work, (four units on completion of thesis), (Staff, Arr., Office. OTANY 0L.—Medical Botany (Clare)—4 units, 8-12 a.m., Sci. 252, 257. HEMISTRY 30bL.—Physical Chemistry (Copeland)—4 units, Lee. 8-10:20, M.T.W. Th., 8-9:05, F.; Lab. to be arranged, Sci. 107. MMERCE ACCOUNTING v—Elementary Accounting (Woodbridge)— 3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., Harris 110. "^a.—Auditing (Campbell)—2 units, 8 a.m., Harris 110. Oa.—Tax Accounting (Campbell)—2 units, 9:15 a.m., Harris 110. CONOMICS b.—Principles of Economics (Murad)—3 units, 10:30 a.m., Harris 102. DUCATION I.—The Learni^f Process (Campbell)—2 units, 8 a.m., Harris 101. '.—The School and Society (Thompson)—2 units, 9:15 a.m., Harris 101. 123gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Early Childhood Education (Campbell, Noblitt)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 102. 125gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Elementary Schools (Campbell, Noblitt)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 102. 152abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Biological Sciences in Secondary Schools, Campbell, Hood)— 4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101. 153abL.—Curriculum Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in English-Speech in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101. 154abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Foreign Languages in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)— 4. 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101. 157abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Mathematics and Physical Sciences in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)—4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101. !158abL.—Curriculum, Methods, Observation, and Directed Teaching in Social Sciences in Secondary Schools (Campbell-Hood)— 4, 4 units, 3:15 p.m., Harris 101. ;174gh.—Observation and Directed Teaching in Public School Music (Campbell, Damborg)—4, 4 units, Arr., C.&M.A. 10. •*A special fee is required for courses bearing the designation of “gh” “bL.” Application for Directed Teaching should be made in advance the opening of the Intersession. GINEERING CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 0.—Chemical Engineering Plant Design (Waterman)—3 unite, 10:80-12:10 p.m., Engineering 204. CIVIL ENGINEERING j.—Surveying (Bauwens)—3 unils, 9:15 and two 4-hour field periods. Engineering 308. 0b.—Hydraulic Engineering Practice (-)—3 units, Arr., Office. 9.—Structural Design (-)—3 units, Arr., Office SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Vol. XXXIV NAS—Z-48 Los Angeles, Tuesday, May 4, 1943 Night Phone: RI. 5473 No.aa^ -)—2 units, Arr., Office. S.—Reinforced Concrete Design (-ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING —Direct Current Testing (Biegler)—2 units. 12:45-4:45 M.W. and two lectures to be arranged, Engineering 100. v—Elements of Electrical Engineering (Angermann)—5 units, 9:15-11:35 and 12:45-4:45 TJh., Engineering 206. GENERAL ENGINEERING —Engineering Drawing and Descriptive Geometry (Baldwin)—2, 2 units, 12:45-4:45 M.WjF., Engineering 206. a.—Analytical Mechanics (Sims)—3 units, 12:45-2:15 p.m., E.308. b.—Analytical Mechanics (Hansen)—3 units. 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 205. .—Materials and Mechanics (Wilson)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 309. .—Strength of Materials (Wilson)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 309. \—Engineering Economics (Fox)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m., E. 103. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING lab.—Power Plant Design (-)—2. 2 units, Arr., Office. u—Elements of Metallography (-)—2 units, Arr., Office. .—Special Problems (-)—1-2 units, Arr., Office. GLISH ^Introductory Course (Christensen)—3 units, 10:30-12:10 p.m.—B. 304. -■—Readings in English and American Literature (Davenport)—2 units, 9:15 a.m.—B. 303. .—The Elizabethan Period (Non-dramatic Literature): 1557-1626 (Davenport)—2 units, 10:30 a.m., B. 308. f.—American Literature (Christensen)—2 units, 8 a.m., B. 304. NCR nsive language study (Belle, Hardison, Jallade). Full time, six periods a day, five days a week.—5-6 units, B. 312. AL STUDIES —Problems of Modern Society (Hindman, Rodee)—3 units, 10:30 a.m., Science 167. (Continued on Page Two) pedal Spanish course offer practibility Stressing Informality and practicability, an intensive proin Spanish will be included in the five-week interim Tam offered by the unversity from May 24 to June 26 to bie students to make up grade deficiencies and fulfill t requirements, vdente enrolling in the eiemen-iive-week Spanish course must oompleted Spanish la or its valent. The oourse will feature of Mexico, its civilization, Mfe, and conversation. tic spoken Spanish will be and three new texts will for the class, advanced five-week course bfl open to students who have leted Spanish 52b and will in-41, study of daily life, history, geography, commercial possibilities, literature, and political and social problems of Spain and Latin America. * “Only good students who really love Spanish should enroll in the intersession courses,” said Miss Florence Bonhard, instructor and lecturer in Spanish, who is teaching the elementary course. Prof. Antonio Heras will instruct the advanced course. Women to play in band For the first time in the history #of the university, women students will play with the ‘ Troj an band in its first concert of the season. With Dr. Lucien Cailliet, professor *of music, as conductor, and Ralph Rush assisting him, the program will be presented Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in Bovard auditorium. Perry Krohn and Stewart Aspen, music students, will be featured as clarinet soloists. They will play “Idyl of Brittanny,” by Pillevestre, with the band playing the accompaniment. Women instrumentalists have proved a valuable addition to the band, according to Conductor Cailliet. Not only has it given them the opportunity to gain the experience of band work formerly denied feminine musicians, but it has solved the student manpower shortage. A paraphrase on “You’re in the Army Now/’ by Dr. Cailliet will be played by the band. Other arrangements by the maestro will also be presented. Outstanding pieces to be presented are selections from Victor Herbert’s melodies; “Finlandia,’* Sibelius; prelude to the third act of “Lohengrin,” Richard Wagner; and Edward MacDowell’s “To a Wild Rose.” Soloist Perry Krohn Is student leader and manager of the concert. I. R. to hear Dr. Hindman “Will. the cessation of military conflict mean a victory or merely a truce on the propaganda front,” Dr. Wilbert Hindman, assistant professor of political science, will discuss “Our Propaganda Front” when he addresses the International Relations club at its luncheon meeting in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall Thursday noon. It is the sincere belief of the German people that they can wage a war successfully, simply by the wise use of propaganda, said Dr. Hindman. An illustration of this is the invasion of the smaller European countries. * A systematic scheme for propagating their doctrine and ideas has prepared the countries for submission and when an attempt at military domination was made the Germans were met with a minimum of armed resistance, according to Dr. Hindman. • Due to wartime conditions reservations must be made by Tuesday noon in the Graduate School office or in the political science office. Election of officers for the new term will be held. German course offered Trojans Students who are interested in taking an intensive German course during the five-week intersession, but who have not had previous instruction in German, should notify the German department before Thursday so that plans may be made for the insertion of such a course into the five-weeks program if the demand is Urge enough. NROTC gets vacation All members of the NROTC unit who are enlisted as apprentice seamen, V-l (NROTC), will be placed on active duty May 25 and returned to an inactive status on June 10, it was announced yesterday by Capt. Reed Fawell, NROTC commandant at SC. The period from June 11 to about June 30 is a vacation period for members of the naval unit. During the 17-day active duty period, sophomores will be stationed at the section base, San Pedro, for practical training. Seniors and juniors will be stationed at the section base, San Diego, for practical training. Captain Fawell pointed out that members of the NROTC unit will again be placed on active duty approximately July 1 to pursue their studies and training on the campus. A later directive from Captain Fawell will fix this date accurately. Russian play shows for last time tonight Gun powder mistaken as a headache dose, duels, vodka, money, and Russian romance will play their last parts tonight before the curtain lowers on the final performance of “Tovarich” in the Bovard auditorium “little theater.” Tonight’s play, produced by the drama department under Prof. William DeMille, will close after a five-week run, as originally scheduled. Trojans who wish to attend the final show tonight must have their student body tickets at the student body store today or they may purchase tickets at the box office for 40 cents. Reports from backstage indicate that the play has met with student and presidential favor. President Rufus B. von KleinSmid congratulated Director DeMille on the production as the best he has seen at SC for many seasons. Two students in minor roles, who wish to remain anonymous, have received calls from Hollywood studios, and Phyllis Perry, feminine star of the play, has acquired a stack of fan letters commending her performance. Written ln 1933, the play has been performed from Warsaw to Warners, where it was filmed, in hundreds of shows. The light Russian drama exemplifies the type of play Professor DeMille believes should be presented by colleges. It has a gay-hearted plot with just enough dramatic moments to keep the scenes active and full of suspense, he said. Captain Fawell buys first bid Capt. Reed M. Fawell, commandant of the SC NROTC unit, yesterday bought the first bid to the combined Flight Prep, NROTC, and all-U dance, scheduled by the Fighting Top,. NROTC social club, for Saturday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Foyer of Town and Gown. At the dance, which Is the first of its kind to be given at SC, Leta Galentine, ASSC vice-president and date of Herb Johnson, commander of NROTC company 1, will draw the lucky ticket for the awarding of two $25 war bonds. The navy affair will be the last dance before exams, and the entire proceeds will go to the Navy Relief society. Paul Martin’s orchestra, which ls heard three times a week over NBC, will provide music, with vocals by Jeanne Durrell. Bids will sell for $2.20 at the bookstore. Americans capture Mateur ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, May 3—(U.P.)— American troops today captured Mateur, key to tht whole axis Bizerte-Tunis defense system, in a 15-mile break-through which crumbled the enemy’s north Tunisian mountain line. This spectacular thrust severed the only Axis rail link between Tunis and Bizerte and drove the Germans to the rim of the inner bastions of the two ports where MATEUR, Tunisia, May 3.— (6:20 p.m.)—(U.R)—American reconnaissance troops today passed through Mateur and fanned out to the east and north, one group taking a road along the west side of Lake Achkel, from whieh they could hear the smash of American bombs on axis-held Bizerte. they must make a last stand with heir backs to the sea. (The Algiers radio said the Germans were fleeing on beyond Mateur under heavy allied air attack and with the Americans in close pursuit.) The seizure of Mateur came after French troops drove along the rugged north coast, skirting Lake Achkel, to within 14 miles of Bizerte itself, placing the great naval harbor under immediate threat by allied spearheads on two sides. Mateur is 20 miles south of Bizerte. . The Americans’ most important triumph oi the African war pot them in a valley running 31 miles southeast to Tunis with only a single range of hills between them and the capital, and in ft position to outflank the Germans' mountain positions in the Med-jerda valley to the south. It came after the Americans had hammered for days against the deeply emplaced Axis mountain po-sitions west and ^outhwest of Mateur, winning hill after hill in costly fighting. College women sought as aides GOOD WORK REFLECTED ... as Friend Sicily Ann Maloy helps Nurse's Aide Marilyn Johnson get off to the California hospital, where she spends a large share of her time. Miss Johnson is the first SC woman to complete nurse's aide training. —Courtesy L.A. Examiner With 3000 trained nurses leaving every month for military service, the shortage of nurses in the country is becoming acute. To relieve this shortage the American Red Cross has taken on the job of training nurses aides to assist the remaining nurses in hospitals, clinics, and blood donor centers. A particular appeal is being made to university women to take this training. They are the type of women that the Red Cross feels is especially suited to do this kind of work. Any women who are interested should call the local chapter of the Red Cross, FI-5261 or call in person at the headquarters, 1200 South Vermont. Los Angeles has been one of the cities suffering most from the existing shortage of nurses. One local hospital recently lost 30 nurses in one week to the armed services. Although the number of nurses is decreasing, the number of civilians seeking hospitalization has increased during the war. In an effort to combat the local problem, the Los Angeles chapter of the Red Cross is seeking 2300 new recruits to take the volunteer nurse’s aide training course. Duties of the Red Cross aide include taking temperatures, pulses, and respirations, giving bed baths, making beds, feeding patients, admitting ind discharging patents, and other routine jobs. |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1252/uschist-dt-1943-05-04~001.tif |
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