Daily Trojan, Vol. 38, No. 72, February 11, 1947 |
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WEATHER REPORT by Uniled Press
Los Angeles and vicinity—increasing oudiness tonight and Tuesday witli casional light rain beginning late uesday afternoon or evening. Little ange in temperature.
XXXVIII
- PAGE FOUR - '
Allies Complete Treaties With Five States
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1947
Niicht Ph«ne:
RI. 5472
No. 72
tudent Foils urglary Try
Pursesnatcher Threatens Soph With Knife; Apprehended Fleeing
Though threatened by a 4-incn, pearl-handled knife in hand of a cornered suspect pursesnatcher, Thomas Hub-LAS sophomore, late yesterday afternoon combined action and a keen eye to aid Los Angeles police in apprehension of a 31-year-old Negro on a charge of
Icion of burglary.--—
Crisis Growing As British Cut All Power Use
:ked at university station after lleged attempt to snatch the :S of three members of the ck ensemble as they gathered -hearsal was Wayne Taliafer-1. & transient.
tims of the attempt, all mem* of the ensemble, were the Mis-iolet Lovelock. Magda Tetzlaff, Francisca McArthur, iaferro, according to Officers . Harper and H. W. Dunn, who the arrest, entered Hanoock rium ghortly after the three had placed their purses on ront row of seats and were ing near a double door at the of tb» Stage waiting for other rs of the group.
ECT FLEES
Ing a noise. Miss Lisa Ming-also a member of the ensem-urned and saw the man going .he door with three purses ped in a coat. Harper said. The Mlnghetti and Lovelock ran the num. who dashed through all toward the front door and the steps into the basement, the steps, he dropped one of urses. but continued through asement and out an employee's nee at the south side of the ing still carrying two purses, bble, apprised of the situation, in pursuit. Ho chased the. ntinued on Page Four)
gineers Join itional Order
lminating several years’ work he part of its members before d War II and several more 5 of waiting, the former Beta ngineering iraternity became California Delta chapter of Tau Pi Jan. 10.
th 45.000 national members and id in age to Fhi Beta Kappa, recently installed Tau Beta Pi l honorary society ol engineer->luoents, and members are only ted from uppcr-division stu-s with the highest scholarship. , is probably the most impor-event that has occurred in thc ■ge of Engineering in the past vears." Prof. Hugh G. Conley [ared.
KSON PRESIDES
twis T. Monson, former editoi Bent, the Tau Beta Pi nauonai {ication. presided over the initla-ritual and installation cere-y in Argonaut Hall, sis tine Monson as members of
LONDON. Feb. 10 — <UP) — A crisis of wartime gravity gripped England today, with enforcement of a government-ordered power cut which denied electricity to thousands of factories and millions of private consumers in homes and business establishments.
It was a crisis that threatened to become political as well as economic.
Worried Prime Minister Clement R. Attlee in a special broadcast to a oold. rigidly-rationed nation in what he termed a critical emergency, appealed:
CALLS FOR EFFORT “Do your bit as you did in tlie war and other emergencies . . . we will come through this if we pull together.”
Conservative leader Winston • Churchill, in' one of his bitterest denunciations of the Socialist-La-bor cabinet, said in a special commons debate:
“There is little doubt in my mind that things are going to get worse ... we are in the presence of an inescapable breakdown . . . SOCIALISM SEEN “What we are experiencing now Is simply socialism — or. if you will, half-baked socialism — in action. The brute fact is that socialism means mismanagement, bad housekeeping. incompetence in high places and progressive degeneration of our island life — let us hope that the nation will realize from this flagrant example the downward stairway upon which they are now thrust and down which ^hey have descended only the first few steps.”
PROJECTED BUILDINGS of the permanent type shown above have long been envisioned for the SC campus.
Announcement yesterday of 17 temporary class buildings given the school by the federal government means
that Troy's dream must give way to present-day realities of overcrowded enrollment. The contemplated structures
are not meant for permanence, however, and more solid plans must merely be held in abeyance.
General Hospital Joins SC
Ellis Arnall Speaks
Tense Audience To>d Ex-Governor s Plan
“I
Pharmacists Sell Super Material
by John Astengo
“There is only one freedom — the right of every man and woman to press forward making of themselves what _ «
they will as long as in the exercise of that freedom they rOF uOOkCOVQfS do not interfere with the liberty of any other person.”
That is the belief of Ellis Arnall, former governor of Georgia, who spoke at Shrine audi---
torium on Sunday night about “some things that need talking about.”
he predicted.
Speaking of racial prejudice. Arnall said that in Georgia where
A tense audience that nearly fil- one-third of the population is Ne-led the auditorium stirred uneasily before Amall appeared on the stage.
A national broadcast had implied that he might be assassinated at j the meeting, which was sponsored
New Arrangement to Give Nurses Bachelor s Degrees, Certificates
Marking the third to be affiliated - with the university, the Los Angeles County General hospital joined the ranks of nursing schools to offer their students training at SC, it was announced yesterday by officials of the county board of supervisors and the university.
Student nurses will take standard training on campus, including the standard two years of prema- i jor work, and will receive a bach- ! elors degree in addition to nurs- 1 ing certificates.
This action is part of the gen- j eral plan in nursing to present degree-earning opportunities* to student nurses and is aimed at providing leadership in the field, according to Albert S. Raubenheimer. educational vice-president. The county hospital joins with the California hospital and the Hunt-
Acquisition of New Buildings Announced
Sevenleen Iwo-slory buildings—over 81,000 square feel of precious schoolroom space—will be added lo this jam-packed campus, Ihe work lo begin within three weeks, Robert D. Fisher, financial vice-president, announced yesterday.
Buildings, of the army-barrack type, will arrive from Santa Ana in two or three weeks and will be erected between Hoover and McClintock.
Firsl lo benefit from this verilable horn of plenty during the current classroom famine will be chemistry, engineering, physics, speech, zoology, and faculty offices. The buildings will be transformed into temporary laboratories, classrooms, faculty rooms, and general offices.
Though short of the requested 25-building mark submitted by the university, the new buildings will ease a situation that kept thousands from entering school and made life miserable for the crowded thousands able to register.
Awarded to the university free by the government under the Mead act, the buildings will be set up. divided into laboratory and class rooms, and equipped with plumbing at government expense.
“I think the Mead act is a very desirable bit of federal legislation to assist the universities in offering educational benefits to returning veterans,” said the beaming financial vice-president.
Art Gilmore Joins Radio Faculty Staff
by the Modem Forum series.
While policemen in uniforms and plainclouies stood at strategic positions near the stage and at exits, Arnall spoke simply on a program for effectuating liberty and freedom.
First plank on his program was more emphasis on education.
"Education in America is a national disgrace.” he said, “yet it is the tinest investment we can make."*
Raising the health standards of the country is the second most im-; poicant thing we can do, Arnall added, decrying the fact that 40 per cent of the nation's men were rejected during the war because they were physically unable to bear arms.
Arnall next called for a recognition of the common heritage of the United States and the decentralization of industry, j “America is a young and vital country in which 250.000.000 to 275,-000.000 people can be supported on a high standard of living," he said.
After his lecture, Arnall answered a question from the floor concern-
That super, almost unbelievable durable bookcover material is again being offered b.v the College of Pharmacy to those students who arc interested in protecting their text investment from practically any imaginable accident.
Don Beavis. chairman of thc bookcover sales committee, revealed yesterday that the material is on sale now in 101 Science at SI a square yard. One yard of the material, which is fireproof, and sold against nearly everything but a direct hit by an atomic bonb, will make six attractive. transparent book-covers.
Faculty to Give Hancock Concert
Figures Reach Early Estimate Of Enrollment
Notice for Graduate nurses Two of the three options in advanced nursing education are available this semester at the California hospital school of nursing, it was announced by Hugh Carey Willett, director of admissions and registration.
They are, principles and practice of teaching in schools of nursing (4 units). S a.m. to noon. Monday and Wednesday, and principles and practice of ward administration (4 units), 11 a.m. Thursday and 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday.
Students who would like to register for either of these courses are requested to report to Professor Willett in 105 Owens hall.
KERMAN TALMADGE . . . throne shaky
j A program of selections for vio-: lm and piano will be presented in Hancock auditorium tomorrow evening by Anton Maaskoff. violinist,
and Lillian Steuber, pianist, mem- ..............
I bers of the College of Music fac- ington Memorial hospital schools ulty. of nursing in providing this plan
Tickets for the concert, which to students, begins at 8:30. may be obtained Under the plan, student nurses by calling Richmond 4111. station obtain university approval by sub-451. Those wishing to attend are mission of credits for admission in
Supervising a special course in the r^dio department. Art Gilmore, popular radio announcer for four major networks, joined the SC faculty yesterday as part of a program initiation team were Dr. Philip i designed to meet the necessity of
Ziegler, former dean of the Col- a “diversified educational back-
___ ,. ing the “mess that Georgia is in.”
ground for professional radio an- j ........... ..... _6.„ _______A
nouncing.”
Gilmore, whose students will be required to pass auditions before becoming permanent members of his class, is announcer for such Hollywood radio shows as Dr.
Christian. Red Ryder. Meet Me At Parkie's. and Stars Over Hollywood.
Commenting on Gilmore s appointment to the faculty, William signal corps servicemen now attend
of Engineering; Prof. David M. kon. head of the civil engineer-department; Prof. Thomas T. k head of the mechanical engi-fing department: Dr. George T. ness, visiting professor of elec-Ll engineering: and David L. Elas, president of the Califor-|Beta chapter at the California Ifcute of Technology.
|CT OFFICERS
completion of the initiation ►nony. Monson organized the Continued on Page Four,
“The supreme court will unseat Herman Talmadge. the pretender,”
New Guard Unit Seeks Signalers
gro. there cannot be prosperity without letting everyone share in
that prosperity. _____ ______
"But prejudice is not restricted to ! urged to reserve tickets and pick the regular Way and are selected any special section of America,” he them up at the box office before for training by the hospitals. In (Continued on Page Two) ‘ 8:15 p.m. addition to regular premajor work
_______ and work at the hospitals. stu->
dents take a minimum c* 28 upper | division units of strictly academic I j character, out of their usual field j j of study.
"The administration hopes that I other hospital schools may wish to ; seek to affiliate themselves with the university,” Dr. 'Raubenheimer
KFI to Broadcast Program in Bovard
Stressing figures which would indicate that the number of new students fell within approximately 10 of an estimated amount that j the university can accomodate. Registrar Howard W. Patmore said yesterday that this semester's enrollment is about equal to that of last fajl.
Closing of the entire campus to the addition of new enrollees would have resulted if the figure had surpassed the registration office estimate, Mr. Patmore announced.
The simplified method of chang-j ing classes will continue in effect | for the rest of this week and is i to be followed by all students wishing to change their present pro-I gram.
For changes of program which involve the addition of a restricted class the student should go to 207 Physical Education building to determine if there is room in the desired class. If the class has no vacancies the change cannot be made.
Printed lists of limited sections that are still open will be given to students when they receive their change of program cards.
Department heads have the authority this semester to transfer students, at their request, from one class to another section of the same course without going through the change of program procedure .
(Continued on Page Two)
pncils to Sponsor it Together' Dance
I “get acquainted" dance will be I in the Student Union lounge r 2‘30 to 5:00 on Friday after-*• sponsored by the combined U committee of the religious |jci!, LAS council. ISA council, the four class councils, rs. Ruth Grant, executive sec-ry of the YWCA. will be the
PS*.
llO-cent admission, to be dona-bo the SC War Memorial Fund, to aoUeeted at tha ***.
Marking the first time that the i Is also associate conductor of the said.
program originates outside of sta- i San Francisco symphony during its j---—
tion KFI Studios. “KFI Hollywood I 1947 concert tour. . ^
Bowl Auditions” broadcast will come Selectior! of winning contestants | | H S U T 3 n C e MOteS Key positions are open for ex- | from Bovard auditorium Feb. 17, at and awarding of scholarships is in . , _
9:30 p.m. the hands of widely noted musical J 0ffTf|0Q |PI flTTOr
Sener. head of the radio depart- m6 SC by activation of the 40th | in cooperation with the universi- j personages, ment and director of radio station si6nal company, California national • ty. the program will be the first The panel includes Julian Biodet- Veterans who have paid tlieir KUSC. said: guard, at the armory in Exposition broadcast of the semi-finals, from ; sky, violinist; Emanuel Bay, pian- national service life insurance pre-
•*The addition of Mr. Gilmore to Pai'k. which three artists will be selected 1st; Dr. Man7 Can- More, composer; miums were asked yesterday to dis-
the instruction staff is another Capt. H. M. Hays, graduate stu- for final competition of the audi- prof. Leon Raines, vocalist: Eudice regard any possible notices they step by tlie university toward meet- , dent of the College of Engineer- tions. j Shapiro, violinist; ard Mario Ca.s- may be receiving that the insur-
ing the need in educational radio 1 in8- who 15 organizing the company,' Tickets for the broadcast may be j telnuovo-Tedesco, composer. j ance has lapsed,
for professional radio people with ' stated that until quotas are filled, obtained by students at the cash-a background of educational exper- ' World War II veterans will be j jer's window in the University ience.” I enlisted at the grade held when Bookstore. beginning Thursday
Gilmore's course is planned honorably discharged from service, morning, Feb. 13. especially to acquaint the student < Applications for the signal corps Faculty members may make re-
with the intricacies of radio an- unit should be made at the Tues- servation through the offices of All advertising for the Daily Tro-nouncing and to assist him to learn day and Thursday meetings at 7:30 KUSC in Hancock hall before 9 jan must be in the hands of Bob the fundamentals which under- P-ni. in the armory. Pay varies p.m. Feb. 12. Doors to Bovard will Perkins, business manager, no later score success in the field. from 52 50 Per dri11 ni&ht for pri- : close 15 minutes before broadcast than 10 a.m. of the day before pub-
His book. “Radio Announcing.” I vates to $5.50 for masted sergeants, j time. lication. according
written in collaboration with Glenn A summer camp of two weeks for M. Middleton producer of the Amos ' the members of the national guard is James Sample, conductor of the made to prevent advertising copy have gone to New York and have ’n Andy show will be fallowed as will offer full pay to the partici- New York City Opera company and, from straggling in and disrupting , not yet been credited to the proper a study outlin* j pant*. the Utah State symphony. Sample [ space allocations. district,"
Advertising Deadline Set by D.T. Manaqer
Outlining the veterans administration's immense job of straightening out some 19.000.000 accounts. Charles Martin, in charge of the V.A. contact unit at SC. stated that a great number of veterans may receive such notices within the next few weeks.
“Accounts are now being decen-to the Trojan i tralized into 13 branch offices,” Musical director of the auditions business office. This move has been : Martin explained. “Many checks
Gould Tells Band Plans
An activity-packed spring semester program is planned for the concert and varsity bands by Bill Gould. Trojan band director, who yesterday issued a call for all aspirants to report this week.
Two campus concerts and a series of radio broadcasts will highlight the activities of the concert band which is made up of 60 select musicians. The band will open the season by playing at the Southern California School Bard and Orchestra clinic, Mar. 8. followed by two spring concerts and a tour through southern California communities. Auditions for positions | in the concert band will continue | throughout the week. Only a few | berths remain to be filled.
"New students who wish to participate in musical activities ars presented with a great opportunity tc take part in the bigger varsity j band.” Gould said, “for at the present time the band is undergoing enlargement.” 1
Commenting upon the eight requested buildings that “got away,’' Fisher said, “it has turned out that the $100,000,000 provided by th* act is wholly inadequate to the job at hand.”
First building to be erected on campus will be devoted to general offices. It will go between the present veteran’s affairs office and Owens hall
on 36th street.
The next five will provide laboratories for inorganic chemistry, chemistry and physics, two additional physics buildings, and a fine arts building. A sad note to some will be the news that the five will go into the present parking lot at the corner of Hoover and 37th streets.
As they arrive, the next five will become classrooms and engineering buildings. Engineering will receive three of them. The five will b* West of the present engineering: building near the comer of 37th street and McClintock.
A chemistry and physics laboratory will take one more back of the hangar at Hoover and 37th street.
THREE LABS
Zology, botany, and bacteriology laboratories will claim three of tha new buildings. Out will go the present houses in the middle of the block on 37th street between McClintock and Hoover.
The speech department h a» been awarded one of the new stmctures to be divided into small units for use in speech and hearing correction. The new speech building will go up east of tha medical fraternity house on 37th place between McClintock and Hoover.
To complete the profile chan get on SC's campus, a general classroom building will be erected at the comer of Hoover and 37th
place.
ARRIVE SOON Ten of the 17 awarded structures will begin to arrive in two or three weeks, according to Fisher. They are the standard 30 ft. by 80 ft., two-story barrack houses. All will be used for classroom, laboratory, or office use. The present Mead act forbids their use as living quarters, thus discouraging those who might have hoped for additional dormatories.
Be a Buddy, Pal, Share Your D.T.
With over 15,000 student* attending S C and the newsprint shortage still with us, H is impossible for the Daily Trojan to publish a large enough edition t* supply everyone on campus with a copy. You can help ease this situation by sharing your paper or returning it to the box in the foyer of the Student Union when you're through with it. Thanks.
Object Description
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| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 38, No. 72, February 11, 1947 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 38, No. 72, February 11, 1947. |
| Full text |
WEATHER REPORT by Uniled Press Los Angeles and vicinity—increasing oudiness tonight and Tuesday witli casional light rain beginning late uesday afternoon or evening. Little ange in temperature. XXXVIII - PAGE FOUR - ' Allies Complete Treaties With Five States 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1947 Niicht Ph«ne: RI. 5472 No. 72 tudent Foils urglary Try Pursesnatcher Threatens Soph With Knife; Apprehended Fleeing Though threatened by a 4-incn, pearl-handled knife in hand of a cornered suspect pursesnatcher, Thomas Hub-LAS sophomore, late yesterday afternoon combined action and a keen eye to aid Los Angeles police in apprehension of a 31-year-old Negro on a charge of Icion of burglary.--— Crisis Growing As British Cut All Power Use :ked at university station after lleged attempt to snatch the :S of three members of the ck ensemble as they gathered -hearsal was Wayne Taliafer-1. & transient. tims of the attempt, all mem* of the ensemble, were the Mis-iolet Lovelock. Magda Tetzlaff, Francisca McArthur, iaferro, according to Officers . Harper and H. W. Dunn, who the arrest, entered Hanoock rium ghortly after the three had placed their purses on ront row of seats and were ing near a double door at the of tb» Stage waiting for other rs of the group. ECT FLEES Ing a noise. Miss Lisa Ming-also a member of the ensem-urned and saw the man going .he door with three purses ped in a coat. Harper said. The Mlnghetti and Lovelock ran the num. who dashed through all toward the front door and the steps into the basement, the steps, he dropped one of urses. but continued through asement and out an employee's nee at the south side of the ing still carrying two purses, bble, apprised of the situation, in pursuit. Ho chased the. ntinued on Page Four) gineers Join itional Order lminating several years’ work he part of its members before d War II and several more 5 of waiting, the former Beta ngineering iraternity became California Delta chapter of Tau Pi Jan. 10. th 45.000 national members and id in age to Fhi Beta Kappa, recently installed Tau Beta Pi l honorary society ol engineer->luoents, and members are only ted from uppcr-division stu-s with the highest scholarship. , is probably the most impor-event that has occurred in thc ■ge of Engineering in the past vears." Prof. Hugh G. Conley [ared. KSON PRESIDES twis T. Monson, former editoi Bent, the Tau Beta Pi nauonai {ication. presided over the initla-ritual and installation cere-y in Argonaut Hall, sis tine Monson as members of LONDON. Feb. 10 — |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1290/uschist-dt-1947-02-11~001.tif |
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