Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 51, November 25, 1947 |
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DT photo by Jerry Winikur
|CK AND QUICK was the exchange of the Ol' Victory Bell back into the Trojan fold, ree emissaries from each of the rival campii trysted at Pico and Motor avenue where the reremonious surrender was completed. Pictured from left to right are Ernie Wilson, Tro-Knight president; Hans Morkisch, UCLA; Roger de Young. SC Knight; Roger Kisling-^ry. UCLA; and Ken Gallagher, UCLA student body president. The DT staff photographer 10 took this picture, Jerry Winikur, was the only other person present.
uddy-Buddy Bruins ring Back Big Bell
[Pledges of Uclan support in tne coming Notre Dame and Michigan games highlighted [return of The Bell yesterday as Ken Gallagher, Bruin student body president, formally ten ted the token of SC-UCLA victory to Trojan students.
Approximately 2000 Trojans gathered in front of Bovard auditorium at noon to receive I Bell and to hear Gallagher express Westwood’s hope for a clean sweep by the Trojans
the remainder of the grid-
Vol. XXXIX
Tl Los Angeles, Cal., Tuesday, Nov. 25, 1* K? I No. 51
-t‘-
Editorial
Just What's the Beef. Thomas?
ipaign.
“GIVE ’EM HELL”
*1 of U6 at UCLA will be root-for a Trojan victory over Notre le, and we especially hope that ]beat the hell out of Michigan Rose Bowl," Gallagher said, he had handed The Bell over Wilson, Trojan Knight lent, who represented SC ln Iceremome*.
Ison received The Bell for j-’s student body in the absence hrexy Paul Wildman. who is at-ling a conference at Stanford fersitv.
RETURNED SUNDAY Bell, which has been ln Bruin iy since UCLA’s win in the itional clash last year, was un-(dally returned to Troy on Sun-the procedure usually followed (never The Bell changes hands, filson and Gallagher had agreed et in Westwood on the day fol-the game for the purpose of Editing the transfer if the Tro-won. Wilson met the Bruin legation at noon Sunday and lucted The Bell back to campus, lt will remain as long as the Jans emerge victorious over the tins.
COAT CHANGED
lowing yesterday’s ceremonies, an turned The Bell over to ?hts. who are now busy chang-its coat of paint from UCLAs to the Cardinal and Gold. Bell was originally given to in students in 1939 by the Bruin ii. Confiscated in 1942 by SC. remained the tradiional sym-|of victory in the perennial SC-rivalry.
Today at a Glance
By United Pres*
Meyers Stripped of Pension
WASHINGTON—Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers was ordered
stripped of his decorations and pension rights as the air forces and the justice department moved in unison to prosecute him on a long list of criminal charges growing out of the recent senate war investigation.
House Backs Contempt Charges
WASHINGTON—The house moved to crack the so-called red network in Hollywood when it voted criminal contempt citations against 10 high-salaried movie writers and directors who refused to tell the un-Amepcan activities committee whether they were Communists.
French May Try Wage Hikes
PARIS—Premier Robert Schuman’s new Centrist government tonight proposed general wage increases in an effort to get 1,250.000 idle workers back at their jobs but indicated that it would “get tough” with strikers if this concession
failed.
Berkeley Rioters Draw Fines
BERKELEY—Over-exuberant college spirit cost eight University of California students from $50 to $100 in fines for setting bonfires during pre-‘*big game” celebrations here Friday night.
Stafford nes Up for jomecoming
itrusting the selection ol her |sical numbers for a NBC Sup-Club broadcast to the student lies of Troy and Notre Dame, Jo Stafford will warble chosen as campus favorites a poll of students at both schools ct week when she appears on her devoted to the SC home-
ing.
Balloting at BC is scheduled for iday and Tuesday of next week. E. Packham. producer of the net-show heard from coast to has arranged for a poll at ith Bend. Votes of the Irish and 5jans will be combined for the tabulation.
t 8upper Club show will em-from the Shrine auditorium lursday, Dec. 4. and seats for 6700 will be available for broad-sts at 4 and 8 p.m. Admission is tickets only, and activity book Iders will get first crack at the e ducats when they are distribut-next week.
The Supper Club show, with Paul Heston’s orchestra and the Starrs, is heard on the Pacific Tuesday and Thursday evenings at S. The afternoon broadcast lo tt» M*SU
Activity Book Worth One Rose Bowl Ducat
Trojans holding student activity books are to De allowed to purchase one ticket to the Rose Bowl game around Dec. 10, ticket manager John Morley said yesterday.
“There will be no public sale of Rose Bowl ticKets, and no applications taken for the New Year’s day game through the SC ticket office,” Morley explained.
The ticket manager stated he doubted that non-holders of activity books would have an opportunity to purchase additional tickets, but that he could issue no definite statement at this time.
“We have only 44.000 Rose Bowl tickets allocated to us.” he said, "and we must give priority to holders of student activity books and alumni and public season tickets.-
Morley said that each holder of an alumni or public season ticket will be allowed .to purchase two Rose Bowl tickets, regardless of the number of season tickets held.*
“The ticket office will begin to mail out applications to holders of these tickets the end of this week,” Morley said.
Asked where a local filling station company that is offering 50 Rose Bowl tickets as prizes is going to obtain its tickets. Morley replied that he didn't know, but that it surely wasn’t from SC.
Tickets for the Rose Bowl are distributed to the Tournament of Roses committee, the Pacific Coast conference, the University of Michigan, and to the press, in addition to SC.
Tirebiter Faces Lonely Weekend
Vacation hits the campus this week—no crash ’cause no students. All the worried expressions on Trojan faces today are doe to fretting about G.T. being lonesome from Thursday through the end of the week.
Unlike past weeks, this week will find the art and lecture room of the University echoing nothing more than caught phrases from previous LAS lectures; there will be none Wednesday.
After the four-day, turkey-filled holiday, Dec. 1 will see all students back at their posts of learning. A week from tomorrow the LAS lecture series is to be resumed. Dr. Arthur W. Adamson, assistant professor of chemistry, will expostulate on “The New Science of Nuclear Chemistry” in the art and lecture room of the University library.
At last week’s Interfraternity council meeting, the Daily Trojan was criticized for breaking the news on the recent IFC move regarding Kappa Alpha. At the same time, IFC Secretary Morey Thomas aimed a barb at this paper when he and others inferred that the council had had trouble obtaining publicity in our columns.
Along with this, Grafton Tanquary, KA, wrote a letter to this department which ran in Friday’s paper, purporting to tell the facts behind the publication of the story in question. In general, that letter was aimed in the right direction, but it was not correct when it intimated that IFC President Rea Rawlins had appealed to the editor to hush up the story. No pressure was applied on this paper before the story ran, although we later found that there was some hope of keeping the story out of the paper simply by relying on the fact that no DT reporter had been present at the meeting ln question.
No reporter had been present because the IFC has long objected to the Trojan’s sending nonorg reporters to its meetings, and it is not always possible for us to determine the affiliations of our reporters sent out on stories. President Rawlins has also repeatedly asked reporters to check their material with him before stories are written.
Although these requests are not made by other campus organizations, the Daily Trojan does not consider them unusual and, on its part, recognizes IFC’s right to know what is to be said about it. We now have a working agreement with the council whereby we will send reporters to meetings regularly. These reporters will be fraternity men as long as it is humanly possible to send them, but we retain the right to change this stipulation in an emergency. We will allow Rawlins to check with the reporter as to the projected con-
tent of a story—that rigl ^ is granted to all our news sources—but, ike the others, he must remember that ou .reporter is not bound to carry out any “instructions” from a source other than our ijwn news desk. In other words, Rawlins niay check the story, but he may not c asor anything or add anything to it unleti it meets with the approval of the top ec'torial staff of this paper. £
In the way of a sidelight we would like to add that the expressed iisapproval of our first story on the KA afi jir has baffled some very reliable neutral c^servers of the meeting, who said that, wh;*e some of the quotes, coming to us second -hand as they did, were attributed to the wrong people, on the whole the story wa;; accurate and that everything we said happened‘actually did happen.
So much for that.
The second charge, Thomas' aecusatio that we have not cooperated, is a paten misstatement. If he cares to measure inch for inch, he will fifid that i:\temities and their doings have received more column inches so far this year, on the basis of their sheer news value, than in most previous years. His one cited instance, that of a notice for a banque:, that affected perhaps 60 persons and which was probably already sold out, seem * strange. After all, other things of even greater urgency did happen that weekend, qind there is a certain definite limit past which one can no longer stretch the printed page. And we did give the banquet a skill afterwrite.
Just what is the beef, r;homas? We’ll continue to give the IFC p-oper coverage at all times, if only you keep from flinging any more such obviously untrue statements around. . -
Or are you mad because ve don’t have a picture of you to run every time you make one of your quaint little speeches?
Roses'
Trojans, Wolverines To Meet in Pasadena
by Wally Carter
Voting by telegraphic ballot, the j announcement late yesterday afterfaculty athletic representatives of , noon after the poll of the 10 PCC the Pacific Coast conference yester- ; schools had been tabulated. Al-day unanimously selected SC s un- < though the representatives voted for defeated Trojan football team to each of the 10 conference teams, represent the PCC in the Rose SC placed first on every ballot. Bowl. New Year's day. Schmidt notified Willis O. Hunter,
Made public a few hours after the j SC's director of athletics, of the
Western conference disclosed that Michigan was its solid choice as Eastern representative. Troy’s nomination surprised absolutely no one, the Trojans having ruled as the!
Pasadena bid. and for the fourth time in five years, SC tcok over the management of the Rose Bowl Classic.
“We have been handed a large
logical choice since clinching the order in being chosen to meet Mi-PCC title Saturday with a win over j chigan. currently the nation’s top the UCLA Bruins. team,'’ declared Hunter, -but, we
Victor O. Schmidt, PCC commis- : will do our best to make it a West sioner, released the official public ■ coast victory."
Michigan's selection as the West-
KAT Cops Cup
j em conference team was a foregone | conclusion a week ago when the j Wolverines cinched the Bowl bid by trouncing Wisconsin. Saturday the Ilf*. I r\ I * ■ * Wolverines completed their first un-
W Ith KPndltlOn |defeated season in 15 years by win-
■■ w j ning at the expense of Ohio State.
Before the Trojans can begin pre-
Of Theta Lips
paring for the Michigan contest, however, they must face the other jugemaut of the middlewest. Notre by Dona Breschini ! Dame. Upon notification that his
With their presentation of the [ charge of footballers would be fac-song "Theta Lips,” Kappa Alpha in? Michigan in the Rose Bowl, Tlieta sorority members last night Coach Jeff Cravath was quick to walked off with the winning trophy i reply: at the 20th annual AWS songfest held in Bovard auditorium.
Moreland hall with their singing of the “Whiffenpoof Song” and Alpha Chi Omega with their presentation of “Dream Song" were awarded the second and third prize trophies, respectively. Judges for last night's program were selected not because of their professional interest in music, as has been the tradition in past years, but because of their impartiality in casting votes.
Mrs. Ruth Grant, and Dr. Tema Schultz Claire were the amateur judges who turned in their votes at last night’s songfest.
Lois Alberts, AWS president, opened the program on the stage of Bovard auditorium against a black
"We re taking them on one at a time, and Notre Dame is next, not
Michigan.-’
Interviews Set For FBI Jobs
Mr. Lee Beckstead, in charge of Dr. Whitlo. j personnel for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is to be on campus Dec. 2 to interview men between the ages of 25 and 40 who are interested in positions as special agents for the FBI.
Positions will be open to both single and married men with good backdrop on which was a silver mu- I ?rades, character, and no po;-
sic staff with notes that held the Ice recor^s- An> basic degree prowords “AWS Songfest” in red letters. Each participating group was
vides eligibility for the position of special agent, but a degree in ac-represented by 9 to 12 womenj counting. law, or industrial manage-songsters dressed eitner in black or ! ment is preferred. At this time the white formals. Delta Delt* Delta ; FBI * interested in February grad-sorority members added a novel
QUEEN ENTRIES NAMED
Frank DeMarco, homecoming chairman of beauty incorporated, said yesterday that 57 women adorning the stage at Bovard in the queen contest would be judged “under a fool-proof point system.” Five judges selected from the audience, he said, are to be given a grading system under which “the contestant with the highest points will be chosen queen.”
DeMarco described the point system as one that “should assure the
Notre Dame Tickets Available Next Week
A limited number of tickets for the SC-Notre Dame game will probably be made available on Dec. 1 to students who did not purchase student activity books or who have not made application for tickets by mail. Ticket Manager John Morley, said yesterday.
Morley said that students who now hold activity books, season tickets, or have mail order applications in need not apply.
Students must have their yellow Identification cards with them at the time of purchase.
SYMBOLIC OF THE welcome in store for 50,0( i) alumni during Homecoming Week is the chart of a stur snt card section greeting being contemplated above by Barbara Thompson, women's football luncheon chaira’m, and Ernie Wilson, Trojan Knight president.
touch to the general attire of the evening by appearing on the stage in long-sleeve white blouses and floor-length black formal skirts.
Before the announcing of the evening's winners by Lois Alberts, Ja-clyn Sprague, general chairman of the songfest, gave a short speech thanking ea ch of her committee heads for the wonderful job they had done in making the 20th annual AWS Songfest one of the best that has ever been presented at SC.
Group s participating in last night's program and the songs they presented were Gamma Phi Beta, “With Someone Like Y^u;” Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall, “With A Song in My Heart;” Kappa Alpha Theta, “Theta Lips;” Kappa Delta, “Kappa Delta Sweetheart;” Kappa Kappa Gamma, “Give Your Heart To a Kappa Girl;” Moreland hall “Whiffenpoof Song;” Pi Beta Phi, “Pi Phi Sweetheart;” Harris plaza, “Friends;” Zeta Tau Alpha. “Zeta Memories;” Alpha Chi Omega. ‘Dream Song;” Willard hall. “Kappa Sigma Dream Girl;” Alpha Delta Pi. “Wishing Wells;” Alpha Epsilon Phi, “Alpha Epsilon Phi Standards;” Alpha Gamma Delta, “Dream Pictures;” Alpha Omicron Pi, “Alpha Omicron Rose;” Alpha Phi, “Among the Stars Above;” Chi Omega. “We’re Southern-Bom;” Delta Delta Delta, “Whispering Pines;” and Delta Gamma. “The Hope in Our Hearts.”
uates only. Starting salary for the position is S4525 per year.
Mr. Beckstead will interview applicants from 9:30 to 4:30 on Dec. 2. Applications for interviews may be made in the university employment office. 320 Student Union.
Education
Notice
All applicants for teaching or administration credential* who expect to complete requirements for the university recommendation for the credential in January should make application for the credential at once. Blanks may be obtained from the Credential Secretary, 357 Administration building. The deadline for filing applications is Dec. 20.
Helen Wells Frahm. Credential Secretary, School of Education.
ASSC Senate
. . . rules committee meets at 9 a.m. today in ASSC President Paul Wildman’s office. Cliff Lyddon, Walt Mazzone, Herb Hynson, Ted Schaffer, Bob Butz, and Jesse Unruh are requested to attend the meeting.
prettiest girl of being queen.” He said that judges were to work independently of one another.
Coeds, aspiring to be queen, will be judged for such qualities as voice, personality, stage presence, carriage, taste in dress, and that
Frank DeMarco requests all queen contestants to meet at noon today in 418 Student Union for an indoctrination class.
strange cross between charm and allure which is indispensable to beauty, DeMarco said.
At the time of the judging, judges will be given numbered cards on which individual scores of" each beauty will be written. Contestants will appear on the stage in groups of 10, and from these groups judges (Continued on Page Four)
Ross to
New Art Institute
Accepting the position of director | temporary art of 141 forms including of the newly formed Institute of | fabric and sculp -ire.
Modem Art, Kenneth Ross has re- Located at .^t41^ Rodeo road, signed from the teaching staff of Beverly Hills, thi institute is plan-
the university.
Mr. Ross, lecturer in fine arts, has been with the university for two years. He received his art training in Europe, making three trips to Florence, Paris, and London, where he spent last summer.
He is art critic for the Pasadena Star News and was formerly director of the Pasadena Institute of Art.
The institute which Mr. Ross will head is incorporated in California as a non-profit, free, cultural institution devoted to showing con-
ning to open i£ January with a Picasso and D^acvoix exhibition. This will be th* first showing of Picasso in the r'.uthland. Delacroix was a 19th centii y romanticist who worked in abstractions.
“The institute ’Mil not be just an art gallery. One^of its main functions will be fi*ther education in art,” said Mr. I^wss. It will not be affiliated with s.iy schools but will work in close coc- eration with them.
“The institute* will have more direct meaning f universities than for laymen, be uise students are
eager to learn. \ group of prominent southern Caii-
‘ Southern California is one of t fomians, plans to have its exhibits the richest and fastest growing com- | show some of the influences of art munities in the country, yet we are and the results of those influences, very poor culturally. It is rather 1 It also hopes to be able to sponsor paradoxical that there are few ex- traveling exhibits, which up to the hibits of modem art in southern present have never been shown in California, yet some of the greatest Los Angeles because of the lack ol private collections in the country j interest and funds, are in this area.” said Mr. Ross. “The institute is an effort tc The collections of Edward G. Rob- raise our culture to the standard inson, Dr. and Mrs. Leslie Maitland, that should exist in a part of the and the huge pre-Columbian col- country as rich and influential in lection of Walter Arensberg will be the manufacturing field as the made available to the institute, southland area. For a cit\ o be Other sources of modem art will be healthy, culture must not ;ag be-used, bringing the best in art from hind the progressive standar s o the cultural centers of the nation, living set by the community, stated The institute, conceived by a Mr. Ross.
I
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 51, November 25, 1947 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 51, November 25, 1947. |
| Full text | fc" y. .vK Li** Tt^ 'A ’■ PCC Little Sends t fl I I f 0 R n.l I fl '' " Wwm f Wzrmmm '£Im$r DT photo by Jerry Winikur CK AND QUICK was the exchange of the Ol' Victory Bell back into the Trojan fold, ree emissaries from each of the rival campii trysted at Pico and Motor avenue where the reremonious surrender was completed. Pictured from left to right are Ernie Wilson, Tro-Knight president; Hans Morkisch, UCLA; Roger de Young. SC Knight; Roger Kisling-^ry. UCLA; and Ken Gallagher, UCLA student body president. The DT staff photographer 10 took this picture, Jerry Winikur, was the only other person present. uddy-Buddy Bruins ring Back Big Bell [Pledges of Uclan support in tne coming Notre Dame and Michigan games highlighted [return of The Bell yesterday as Ken Gallagher, Bruin student body president, formally ten ted the token of SC-UCLA victory to Trojan students. Approximately 2000 Trojans gathered in front of Bovard auditorium at noon to receive I Bell and to hear Gallagher express Westwood’s hope for a clean sweep by the Trojans the remainder of the grid- Vol. XXXIX Tl Los Angeles, Cal., Tuesday, Nov. 25, 1* K? I No. 51 -t‘- Editorial Just What's the Beef. Thomas? ipaign. “GIVE ’EM HELL” *1 of U6 at UCLA will be root-for a Trojan victory over Notre le, and we especially hope that ]beat the hell out of Michigan Rose Bowl" Gallagher said, he had handed The Bell over Wilson, Trojan Knight lent, who represented SC ln Iceremome*. Ison received The Bell for j-’s student body in the absence hrexy Paul Wildman. who is at-ling a conference at Stanford fersitv. RETURNED SUNDAY Bell, which has been ln Bruin iy since UCLA’s win in the itional clash last year, was un-(dally returned to Troy on Sun-the procedure usually followed (never The Bell changes hands, filson and Gallagher had agreed et in Westwood on the day fol-the game for the purpose of Editing the transfer if the Tro-won. Wilson met the Bruin legation at noon Sunday and lucted The Bell back to campus, lt will remain as long as the Jans emerge victorious over the tins. COAT CHANGED lowing yesterday’s ceremonies, an turned The Bell over to ?hts. who are now busy chang-its coat of paint from UCLAs to the Cardinal and Gold. Bell was originally given to in students in 1939 by the Bruin ii. Confiscated in 1942 by SC. remained the tradiional sym- of victory in the perennial SC-rivalry. Today at a Glance By United Pres* Meyers Stripped of Pension WASHINGTON—Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers was ordered stripped of his decorations and pension rights as the air forces and the justice department moved in unison to prosecute him on a long list of criminal charges growing out of the recent senate war investigation. House Backs Contempt Charges WASHINGTON—The house moved to crack the so-called red network in Hollywood when it voted criminal contempt citations against 10 high-salaried movie writers and directors who refused to tell the un-Amepcan activities committee whether they were Communists. French May Try Wage Hikes PARIS—Premier Robert Schuman’s new Centrist government tonight proposed general wage increases in an effort to get 1,250.000 idle workers back at their jobs but indicated that it would “get tough” with strikers if this concession failed. Berkeley Rioters Draw Fines BERKELEY—Over-exuberant college spirit cost eight University of California students from $50 to $100 in fines for setting bonfires during pre-‘*big game” celebrations here Friday night. Stafford nes Up for jomecoming itrusting the selection ol her sical numbers for a NBC Sup-Club broadcast to the student lies of Troy and Notre Dame, Jo Stafford will warble chosen as campus favorites a poll of students at both schools ct week when she appears on her devoted to the SC home- ing. Balloting at BC is scheduled for iday and Tuesday of next week. E. Packham. producer of the net-show heard from coast to has arranged for a poll at ith Bend. Votes of the Irish and 5jans will be combined for the tabulation. t 8upper Club show will em-from the Shrine auditorium lursday, Dec. 4. and seats for 6700 will be available for broad-sts at 4 and 8 p.m. Admission is tickets only, and activity book Iders will get first crack at the e ducats when they are distribut-next week. The Supper Club show, with Paul Heston’s orchestra and the Starrs, is heard on the Pacific Tuesday and Thursday evenings at S. The afternoon broadcast lo tt» M*SU Activity Book Worth One Rose Bowl Ducat Trojans holding student activity books are to De allowed to purchase one ticket to the Rose Bowl game around Dec. 10, ticket manager John Morley said yesterday. “There will be no public sale of Rose Bowl ticKets, and no applications taken for the New Year’s day game through the SC ticket office,” Morley explained. The ticket manager stated he doubted that non-holders of activity books would have an opportunity to purchase additional tickets, but that he could issue no definite statement at this time. “We have only 44.000 Rose Bowl tickets allocated to us.” he said, "and we must give priority to holders of student activity books and alumni and public season tickets.- Morley said that each holder of an alumni or public season ticket will be allowed .to purchase two Rose Bowl tickets, regardless of the number of season tickets held.* “The ticket office will begin to mail out applications to holders of these tickets the end of this week,” Morley said. Asked where a local filling station company that is offering 50 Rose Bowl tickets as prizes is going to obtain its tickets. Morley replied that he didn't know, but that it surely wasn’t from SC. Tickets for the Rose Bowl are distributed to the Tournament of Roses committee, the Pacific Coast conference, the University of Michigan, and to the press, in addition to SC. Tirebiter Faces Lonely Weekend Vacation hits the campus this week—no crash ’cause no students. All the worried expressions on Trojan faces today are doe to fretting about G.T. being lonesome from Thursday through the end of the week. Unlike past weeks, this week will find the art and lecture room of the University echoing nothing more than caught phrases from previous LAS lectures; there will be none Wednesday. After the four-day, turkey-filled holiday, Dec. 1 will see all students back at their posts of learning. A week from tomorrow the LAS lecture series is to be resumed. Dr. Arthur W. Adamson, assistant professor of chemistry, will expostulate on “The New Science of Nuclear Chemistry” in the art and lecture room of the University library. At last week’s Interfraternity council meeting, the Daily Trojan was criticized for breaking the news on the recent IFC move regarding Kappa Alpha. At the same time, IFC Secretary Morey Thomas aimed a barb at this paper when he and others inferred that the council had had trouble obtaining publicity in our columns. Along with this, Grafton Tanquary, KA, wrote a letter to this department which ran in Friday’s paper, purporting to tell the facts behind the publication of the story in question. In general, that letter was aimed in the right direction, but it was not correct when it intimated that IFC President Rea Rawlins had appealed to the editor to hush up the story. No pressure was applied on this paper before the story ran, although we later found that there was some hope of keeping the story out of the paper simply by relying on the fact that no DT reporter had been present at the meeting ln question. No reporter had been present because the IFC has long objected to the Trojan’s sending nonorg reporters to its meetings, and it is not always possible for us to determine the affiliations of our reporters sent out on stories. President Rawlins has also repeatedly asked reporters to check their material with him before stories are written. Although these requests are not made by other campus organizations, the Daily Trojan does not consider them unusual and, on its part, recognizes IFC’s right to know what is to be said about it. We now have a working agreement with the council whereby we will send reporters to meetings regularly. These reporters will be fraternity men as long as it is humanly possible to send them, but we retain the right to change this stipulation in an emergency. We will allow Rawlins to check with the reporter as to the projected con- tent of a story—that rigl ^ is granted to all our news sources—but, ike the others, he must remember that ou .reporter is not bound to carry out any “instructions” from a source other than our ijwn news desk. In other words, Rawlins niay check the story, but he may not c asor anything or add anything to it unleti it meets with the approval of the top ec'torial staff of this paper. £ In the way of a sidelight we would like to add that the expressed iisapproval of our first story on the KA afi jir has baffled some very reliable neutral c^servers of the meeting, who said that, wh;*e some of the quotes, coming to us second -hand as they did, were attributed to the wrong people, on the whole the story wa;; accurate and that everything we said happened‘actually did happen. So much for that. The second charge, Thomas' aecusatio that we have not cooperated, is a paten misstatement. If he cares to measure inch for inch, he will fifid that i:\temities and their doings have received more column inches so far this year, on the basis of their sheer news value, than in most previous years. His one cited instance, that of a notice for a banque:, that affected perhaps 60 persons and which was probably already sold out, seem * strange. After all, other things of even greater urgency did happen that weekend, qind there is a certain definite limit past which one can no longer stretch the printed page. And we did give the banquet a skill afterwrite. Just what is the beef, r;homas? We’ll continue to give the IFC p-oper coverage at all times, if only you keep from flinging any more such obviously untrue statements around. . - Or are you mad because ve don’t have a picture of you to run every time you make one of your quaint little speeches? Roses' Trojans, Wolverines To Meet in Pasadena by Wally Carter Voting by telegraphic ballot, the j announcement late yesterday afterfaculty athletic representatives of , noon after the poll of the 10 PCC the Pacific Coast conference yester- ; schools had been tabulated. Al-day unanimously selected SC s un- < though the representatives voted for defeated Trojan football team to each of the 10 conference teams, represent the PCC in the Rose SC placed first on every ballot. Bowl. New Year's day. Schmidt notified Willis O. Hunter, Made public a few hours after the j SC's director of athletics, of the Western conference disclosed that Michigan was its solid choice as Eastern representative. Troy’s nomination surprised absolutely no one, the Trojans having ruled as the! Pasadena bid. and for the fourth time in five years, SC tcok over the management of the Rose Bowl Classic. “We have been handed a large logical choice since clinching the order in being chosen to meet Mi-PCC title Saturday with a win over j chigan. currently the nation’s top the UCLA Bruins. team,'’ declared Hunter, -but, we Victor O. Schmidt, PCC commis- : will do our best to make it a West sioner, released the official public ■ coast victory." Michigan's selection as the West- KAT Cops Cup j em conference team was a foregone conclusion a week ago when the j Wolverines cinched the Bowl bid by trouncing Wisconsin. Saturday the Ilf*. I r\ I * ■ * Wolverines completed their first un- W Ith KPndltlOn defeated season in 15 years by win- ■■ w j ning at the expense of Ohio State. Before the Trojans can begin pre- Of Theta Lips paring for the Michigan contest, however, they must face the other jugemaut of the middlewest. Notre by Dona Breschini ! Dame. Upon notification that his With their presentation of the [ charge of footballers would be fac-song "Theta Lips,” Kappa Alpha in? Michigan in the Rose Bowl, Tlieta sorority members last night Coach Jeff Cravath was quick to walked off with the winning trophy i reply: at the 20th annual AWS songfest held in Bovard auditorium. Moreland hall with their singing of the “Whiffenpoof Song” and Alpha Chi Omega with their presentation of “Dream Song" were awarded the second and third prize trophies, respectively. Judges for last night's program were selected not because of their professional interest in music, as has been the tradition in past years, but because of their impartiality in casting votes. Mrs. Ruth Grant, and Dr. Tema Schultz Claire were the amateur judges who turned in their votes at last night’s songfest. Lois Alberts, AWS president, opened the program on the stage of Bovard auditorium against a black "We re taking them on one at a time, and Notre Dame is next, not Michigan.-’ Interviews Set For FBI Jobs Mr. Lee Beckstead, in charge of Dr. Whitlo. j personnel for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, is to be on campus Dec. 2 to interview men between the ages of 25 and 40 who are interested in positions as special agents for the FBI. Positions will be open to both single and married men with good backdrop on which was a silver mu- I ?rades, character, and no po;- sic staff with notes that held the Ice recor^s- An> basic degree prowords “AWS Songfest” in red letters. Each participating group was vides eligibility for the position of special agent, but a degree in ac-represented by 9 to 12 womenj counting. law, or industrial manage-songsters dressed eitner in black or ! ment is preferred. At this time the white formals. Delta Delt* Delta ; FBI * interested in February grad-sorority members added a novel QUEEN ENTRIES NAMED Frank DeMarco, homecoming chairman of beauty incorporated, said yesterday that 57 women adorning the stage at Bovard in the queen contest would be judged “under a fool-proof point system.” Five judges selected from the audience, he said, are to be given a grading system under which “the contestant with the highest points will be chosen queen.” DeMarco described the point system as one that “should assure the Notre Dame Tickets Available Next Week A limited number of tickets for the SC-Notre Dame game will probably be made available on Dec. 1 to students who did not purchase student activity books or who have not made application for tickets by mail. Ticket Manager John Morley, said yesterday. Morley said that students who now hold activity books, season tickets, or have mail order applications in need not apply. Students must have their yellow Identification cards with them at the time of purchase. SYMBOLIC OF THE welcome in store for 50,0( i) alumni during Homecoming Week is the chart of a stur snt card section greeting being contemplated above by Barbara Thompson, women's football luncheon chaira’m, and Ernie Wilson, Trojan Knight president. touch to the general attire of the evening by appearing on the stage in long-sleeve white blouses and floor-length black formal skirts. Before the announcing of the evening's winners by Lois Alberts, Ja-clyn Sprague, general chairman of the songfest, gave a short speech thanking ea ch of her committee heads for the wonderful job they had done in making the 20th annual AWS Songfest one of the best that has ever been presented at SC. Group s participating in last night's program and the songs they presented were Gamma Phi Beta, “With Someone Like Y^u;” Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall, “With A Song in My Heart;” Kappa Alpha Theta, “Theta Lips;” Kappa Delta, “Kappa Delta Sweetheart;” Kappa Kappa Gamma, “Give Your Heart To a Kappa Girl;” Moreland hall “Whiffenpoof Song;” Pi Beta Phi, “Pi Phi Sweetheart;” Harris plaza, “Friends;” Zeta Tau Alpha. “Zeta Memories;” Alpha Chi Omega. ‘Dream Song;” Willard hall. “Kappa Sigma Dream Girl;” Alpha Delta Pi. “Wishing Wells;” Alpha Epsilon Phi, “Alpha Epsilon Phi Standards;” Alpha Gamma Delta, “Dream Pictures;” Alpha Omicron Pi, “Alpha Omicron Rose;” Alpha Phi, “Among the Stars Above;” Chi Omega. “We’re Southern-Bom;” Delta Delta Delta, “Whispering Pines;” and Delta Gamma. “The Hope in Our Hearts.” uates only. Starting salary for the position is S4525 per year. Mr. Beckstead will interview applicants from 9:30 to 4:30 on Dec. 2. Applications for interviews may be made in the university employment office. 320 Student Union. Education Notice All applicants for teaching or administration credential* who expect to complete requirements for the university recommendation for the credential in January should make application for the credential at once. Blanks may be obtained from the Credential Secretary, 357 Administration building. The deadline for filing applications is Dec. 20. Helen Wells Frahm. Credential Secretary, School of Education. ASSC Senate . . . rules committee meets at 9 a.m. today in ASSC President Paul Wildman’s office. Cliff Lyddon, Walt Mazzone, Herb Hynson, Ted Schaffer, Bob Butz, and Jesse Unruh are requested to attend the meeting. prettiest girl of being queen.” He said that judges were to work independently of one another. Coeds, aspiring to be queen, will be judged for such qualities as voice, personality, stage presence, carriage, taste in dress, and that Frank DeMarco requests all queen contestants to meet at noon today in 418 Student Union for an indoctrination class. strange cross between charm and allure which is indispensable to beauty, DeMarco said. At the time of the judging, judges will be given numbered cards on which individual scores of" each beauty will be written. Contestants will appear on the stage in groups of 10, and from these groups judges (Continued on Page Four) Ross to New Art Institute Accepting the position of director temporary art of 141 forms including of the newly formed Institute of fabric and sculp -ire. Modem Art, Kenneth Ross has re- Located at .^t41^ Rodeo road, signed from the teaching staff of Beverly Hills, thi institute is plan- the university. Mr. Ross, lecturer in fine arts, has been with the university for two years. He received his art training in Europe, making three trips to Florence, Paris, and London, where he spent last summer. He is art critic for the Pasadena Star News and was formerly director of the Pasadena Institute of Art. The institute which Mr. Ross will head is incorporated in California as a non-profit, free, cultural institution devoted to showing con- ning to open i£ January with a Picasso and D^acvoix exhibition. This will be th* first showing of Picasso in the r'.uthland. Delacroix was a 19th centii y romanticist who worked in abstractions. “The institute ’Mil not be just an art gallery. One^of its main functions will be fi*ther education in art,” said Mr. I^wss. It will not be affiliated with s.iy schools but will work in close coc- eration with them. “The institute* will have more direct meaning f universities than for laymen, be uise students are eager to learn. \ group of prominent southern Caii- ‘ Southern California is one of t fomians, plans to have its exhibits the richest and fastest growing com- show some of the influences of art munities in the country, yet we are and the results of those influences, very poor culturally. It is rather 1 It also hopes to be able to sponsor paradoxical that there are few ex- traveling exhibits, which up to the hibits of modem art in southern present have never been shown in California, yet some of the greatest Los Angeles because of the lack ol private collections in the country j interest and funds, are in this area.” said Mr. Ross. “The institute is an effort tc The collections of Edward G. Rob- raise our culture to the standard inson, Dr. and Mrs. Leslie Maitland, that should exist in a part of the and the huge pre-Columbian col- country as rich and influential in lection of Walter Arensberg will be the manufacturing field as the made available to the institute, southland area. For a cit\ o be Other sources of modem art will be healthy, culture must not ;ag be-used, bringing the best in art from hind the progressive standar s o the cultural centers of the nation, living set by the community, stated The institute, conceived by a Mr. Ross. I |
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