Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 12, September 30, 1947 |
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d Attack on Truman otested by Smith
tolotov Refuses to Retract “Slanderous”
[rticle Comparing Truman to Hitler
iSHINGTON, Sept. 29—(UP)—Russia has refused flatly |nvow a "wantonly slanderous" article puolished in its illed press that compared President Truman with Adolf the state department disclosed today, unprecedented personal attack on the chief executive,
|i b\ one Boiit> Grobatov for
t’iet Literary Gazette, was liged in Moscow last Thurs-S. Ambassador V Smith, the department said, [ith denounced the article as [iimax of a long “hate” cam-waged by the Soviet press 1st the United States and de-
wSr
SIDENT TRUMAN , , personal affront
tba* M b« repudiated offi-
Jet Foreign Minister V. M.
rejected th* protest that day, i%torting pointedly that lussian press, more than that Lny other country, tries to give “true facts'* of the world scene, fhe MM* department made pub-copies of Smith's letter and fotovs reply, and hinted broadly Russian censors may have tried k.eep the exchange from reaching United Stales.
„ department spokesman said Jth handed copies ol the protest rejection to American corre-pdenUs in Moscow Saturday but “nothing seems to have gotten igh.”
mith's memorandum was oouched .itingly undiplomatic language, rarned Moscow that Americans Jywhere. recardie^s of their po-brliels. would take the at-on Mr. Truman as a personal >nt.
soldier-diplomat said he had
Fluor Presents
I
Cooling Tower To Engineers
A cooling tower with an esti- j mated installation value of $12,000 has been presented to the College j of Enguieering. it was learned yes- ; terday.
The late Peter Fluor, founder of the Fluor Corporation Ltd., pre-! sen ted the tower to the um versity ! before his death. Mr. Fluor was an j ardent SC supporter and provided Jobs for student engineers during summer vacations.
In describing the cooling tower E. K. Springer, associate professor of mechanical engineering, said that it was specially designed for students doing research and investigative work and will be used in conjunction with a model tower.
“The model tower,’’ Professor Springer explained, “is a natural draft tower. Tlie Fluor tower is*an induced draft tower—that is. one that has a fan which sucks in air and gives a to circulating water.”
New
PAUL WILDMAN . . . gold plated
JEFF CRAVATH . . introductions
Kay Kyser to Present SC With Gold Platter
Ever own a gold plated phonograph recording?
SC is going to have one after bandleader Kay Kyser presents ASSC President Paul Wildman with such a collector’s item at the first formal rally of the year Friday night in Bovard auditorium. Festivities start at 7:30.
“—■—--—I Tlie Southern gentleman of mu-
Religion Group Defines Aims
Rosza to Speak At Musicians Annual Dinner
Estimated 200 Persons to Hear ‘Oscar’ Winner
With an academy award-winning composer as guest speaker and an I original musical piece for its public premier, the College of Music will j hold its annual banquet tonight at 6:30 in Scully’s restaurant.
“Tickets have sold rapidly,” declared Nick Rossi, president of Phi Mu Alpha, men's national honorary music fraternity. “We estimate an attendance of approximately 200 persons at tlie banquet,” he added.
Recognized as one of Hollywood's
Council Named; Applicants Set Record
Cabinet Appoints 35 Students, Knell Says
sic fame will appear at the rally to present the university with a , ,, .
gold-plated waxing of his recent aWe“ Ml“°s Re-
version of -Fight On," Mitch Gam- 1946 academy award wnmer for son, rally chairman vUd. fito scoring, ml! be the speaker
BIGGER N* BETTER j at the event-
“We had a terrific rally last Fri- ! * SPELLBOUND ’ COMPOSER day,” Gamson said, “and expect to Rosza won the “Oscar ’ for his An extended program ol stump- have an even bigger turnout this ■ unusual background music for the j ing for world peace, which would ; week. Besides,” he continued, “this Psychological drama “Spellbound.” i send panels of students to speak ! is going to be one of the toughest i No stranger to SC. Rosza teaches
, x , T sames of the vear for our team 1 composing for films in the cinema
before church groups in Los An- i U1 uie vedr Ior our team. °
. . A ! and, we need to muster every bit | department,
geles was proposed to faculty ad- j spirjt on campus.” ! Former SC student Peter Korn
visers by the executive cabinet of j coach Jeff Cravath is slated to ;wil1 conduct ar> octet in the first ; the student council of religion last | introduce a few of last week's stars i Public performance of his Varia-| week. i in SC's win over Washington State, itions 011 a theme by Carrie Jacobs
Representing the faculty and the ! lheie is a possibility that Jess Bond-
FRED KNE.U . . picks cou&^il
HCL Headachrt!
,, ^ i , . . , .. , Neely, Rice Institute coach, may also
greater cooling effect j administration in a consultative ca- j appear
pacitv at the meeting were Helen LA INE, ESTES. AND HILLINGS
Experiments and comparisons on Hall Moreland, dean of women; Dr. , ' Entertainment is being lined up the cooling efliciency of the two j Neil D barren, dean of men; and • writh several acts already arranged,” types of towers will be made by
engineering students. The new tower j Sterlin« McMurrin. professor of will also be used in spray investi- philosophy.
gations. which are the study of the i Lynn Hartzler. chairman of the
The work is based on Miss Bond's “I Love Y.ou Truly” and was awarded second place in the Carrie Jacobs Bond award listings last semester. Korn is now assistant conductor of the Los Angeles Grand
Prices Continue Upward Tfend
From a record total of 238 applicants, 14 non-organized and 21 organized students have been appointed to the LAS council by the LAS cabinet, Fred Knell, president, said yesterday. An additional eight persons were named as alternates. Selections for the council were made by the LAS cabinet
of Tom Harmon, vice-president; j- —-—
Bob Latham, secretary; Bob McKee, treasurer; and Knell.
The choices were based on the i candidates general academic record, participation in extra-curricular activities and willingness to work fcr the council.
NEW MEMBER*
Knell said, however. that ‘ there ! are a number of new members who have not yet made their mark at SC. but who, through their peti-1 tions and interviews, give promise j of doing so. We feel that we have
also secured several outstanding be presented" to SC~ students’ and transfers from other universities. .
••We have tried wherever possible fnends Wednesday, Oct. 8. when to name members that would rep- i Dr- Dwight L Bohn per associate resent every school and department j professor of Spanish and chairman
. of that department, speaks on "Lin-LAS council will hold its first .
c. euistie Dictators,
meeting Thursday noon. 318 Stu- ; B
dent Union. All regulars and al
LAS to Open Fall Lectures With Bolinger
First in the annual series of nine lectures sponsored by the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences will
CHICAGO. Sept. 29 -futures prices — a kej the nation's price struct the full trading limits as the major grain excha ed trading margins tc speculation.
Livestock, wholesale
,R>—Grain ( factor in [ re—soared |
temates must attend.
| Aimed to inform students not
i enrolled in the college of the fields
. 1
it covers, the lectures will be held every Wednesday from 3:15 to 4:13
in LAS. in order that the council , . might have a thorough liaison with
day even , ^ and c00rdinate their respec. p.m„ in the art and lecture room
;es boost- tiye activities We have also man- i of the university library. ielp curb j aged to have every class ! sen ted this year.’’ he said. an ' GREEK REPRESENTATIVES
repre-
New Athletic Aides Named
le and could recall nothing to pare with it in the unsavory lgs of the late Nazi Propagan-iniief Paul Joseph Goebbels. Bolotov’s reply was brief and egoric.
I do not consider it possible to er into a discussion with you of article.” he informed Smith, the Soviet government cannot r the responsibility for this or it article and. so much the more, bnot accept the protest you have :de in that connection.”
The Soviet foreign minister said lith had a “completely perverted” ture of the Soviet press and as-*ted that it was the American sss rather which was carrying on inflammatory campaign against ssia.
cooling effects erf aeration on water, j education commission, outlined the
---—--—— i primary goal of the council as “a
desire to stimulate religious inter-| est by coordinating denominational ! and faith clubs on campus.” He said this could be accomplished by creating a program of service available to the entire student body and by promoting counseling service to students with problems of a religious nature.
Hartzler explained that the service program would include lectures forums, panel-discussions. social service groups, and study groups integrated by the council but built around such groups as CAI. the United Nations club, the Intercultural club, and the International Relations club.
Six appointments were made by the student athletic managerial board for the 1947-48 season in a meeting held yesterday afternoon. Chairman Paul Wildman announced.
Operating again as a function 'thoroughly shocked" by the of student government, the board
approved the selections which include Norm Schultz, senior football manager; Richard Ford, senior baseball manager; Ray Allen Parker. junior basketball manager; Edward Partridge, senior swimming manager; William Spencer, senior golf manager; and Lester Vlahos. senior fencing manager.
With Arnold Eddy serving in the capacity of general manager of Associated Students, the board is composed of Wildman. Wendy Harbeck. Schultz, and Wally Flanagan.
Blue Key
. . . will meet today at 12:30 p.m. in 318 Student Union. Attendance at the meeting is compulsory for all students who intend to retain active status in the SC chapter, according to Milt Dobkin. president.
Today at a Glance
By United Press
10 Director nswers Taft
WASHINGTON. Sept, 29.—«'.?>— ;k Kroll director of the CIO po-cal action committee, charged to-ht that Sen. Robert A. Taft was ffenng from an acute case of po-jltters” and had resorted to “usual smear technique'* when labeled the CIO program as imunistic.
plying to Taft's statement be-e Oregon state college students the PAC’s program was “largely animistic.” Kroll asserted that y rank and file members of the ublican party support the com-tee s aims.
utlining the committee's pro-1, Kroll said in a statement that -luded restoration of pnee con-a housing plan, a fair tax pro-fuaranteed wages, and ade-haaitb and medical caw tor
Howser Attacks Court
LOS ANGELES. Sept. 29—State Attorney General Fred Howser today attacked a recent decision of the supreme court awarding the federal government ownership of the tidelands. He spoke before the National Institute of Municipal Law Officers at its 12th annual convention.
“The decision involved principles which, if ignored, might cause to be said again the fighting words of the Declaration of Independence,” Howser warned.
Gamson said. “We are still look- I ®Pera company, ing for talent although we have se- j WALLENSTEIN GUEST cured some good acts.” ! Several prominent dignitaries
Dave Heiser and Jay Ballentine. j * ^ attend the banquet. Alfred former Pacific coast hand-balancing I Wallenstein, director of the Los An-champions, will exhibit their skill jgeles Philharmonic orchestra, is for the Trojan rooters. “Red” Rob- ilisted the guests, Rossi said,
inson. who scored an impressive hit —— at the AMS smoker last week, will present some of his “scat” songs, accompanying himself on the guitar.
Described by Gamson as ‘ the man who sounds more like Frankie Laine than Frankie Laine does,” Fred Estes will render vocal offerings.
Pat Hillings will be master of ceremonies.
Army to Aid China
NANKING. China, Sept. 30—The United States army has submitted a plan for the training and eq.lipping of 10 Chinese combat divisions to battle the communists in response to an urgent request by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, a high American source said today.
Cuba Stops Invasion
HAVANA, Sept. 29—The Cuban army announced officially tonight it had captured two troop-laden invasion ships setting out from Cuba on a million-dollar amphibious expedition to overthrow the 17-year-old dictatorship of Gen. Rafael Trujillo Molina in the Dominican Republic.
Radio Show To Star SC
Selecting SC as the initial university to be featured. Peter Potter and his nightly Chesterfield ABC record party will inaugurate a weekly “College Corner” on his Wednesday night show, heard over the Mutual-Don Lee network from 10:30 to 11.
Highlight of the weekly college night will be the introduction of campus representatives and the playing of the top three records as determined by a week-long campus poll. Ballots for the record selection are now being circulated in front of the Student Union and in all local places of business, with results to be tabulated at the end of the week.
Mr. Potter selected the Trojan campus to establish a precedent for the honoring of 22 colleges and universities throughout the nation. The noted disc jockey's program will continue with presentation of the Wednesday night ‘ College Corner” until Mar. 1.
The college program swings to the Northwest for the second show-on Oct. 15, with rhe Cougars from Washington State college drawing the spotlight.
Reports at the conclusion of the first day’s balloting on the SC campus indicate that “hill-billy" addicts are making a concerted drive to push Roy Acuff’s “The Great Speckled Bird” to the No. 1 spot on the list of Troy favorites to be played.
‘Cal Special’ Tickets Selling
Tickets on the Southern Pacific student train traveling north for the SC-Califomiit game. Oct. 25, went on sale yesterday morning in the Student Union.
The train will leave from Unio.i station Friday night, Oct. 24, at 9:05 and will arrive in Oakland at 10:15 Saturday morning. It will leave Sunday morning at 2. arriving in Los Angeles *at 3:45 p.m. Connecting busses will take students from the station to the stadium.
Besides four Pullmans for women and two for men. the train will include diners, a snack bar. a lounge car, and an observation car.
Independent
. . . council interviews will be held today from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. in 235 Student Union. Jack Shaffer, independent representative, announced that this is the last opportunity for those who submitted petitions to appear for inerview. Any who fail to appear will not bt considered for membership.
vater —V, (
egg prices also rose, anc Jhne of tne ' major soap manufacture^ announ- Those selected as fraternity and ced an increase in the price sorority representatives include Sid
of all its soap products. % : Hoskins, Delt; Patricia Fuqua. Del-
President Truman meS vith ad- 1 ta Zeta; Mary Vallee. Delta Gam-ministration advisors a % congre.s- ma; Patti Peter, ADPi; Sid Adair, sional leaders of Doth p ipes today Chi Phi; Davette De Arman. Chi and announced he bad ti>led chair- • Omega; Paul Shonafelt. Delta Phi men of the house anu :«nate for- Epsilon; Adele Cook, Delta Gamma, eign relations ana appVpriations Jacqueline Bek. Alpha Phi; Mary committees to meet as se jk as pos- Ellen Cullen, Gamma Phi; Mar-ent need garet Fluor. Alpha Delta Phi.
Nancy Winstanley, Delta Gam-l-fter the! ma; Grelun Landon, Delta Sigma Kansas J Phi; Ben Chadwell, Pi Kappa Al-g scales pha; Patricia Haggerty. AO Pi;
sible “to consider the u for aid to western Europf Grain prices shot uj-Chicago, Minneapolis ai City exchanges set up sli which would increase tr.< gin requirements — or ments — five cents a bi time grain prices increa over the previous Satur The action was far si government’s request th? requirements be doubled per cent of the total sel Dun and Bradstree? weighted price index O;i20 commodities jumped 2.61 todf :"'.o 281.29. The index compared to 278 ago, and 229.73 a year ag Other price developmeo;
The agriculture depai t: ported that prices receive mers during the month er 15 hit a new all-time peak cent of the 1909-1914 averse Procter and Gamble £5<ap company announced an ircre-?e of 10 per cent in the price all its soap products, but reduced She price of Crisco vegetable shorter.g.g three per cent. g
Jack Kranis. New York president)
>rs’ mar-' wn pay-|iel every 10 cents ly’s close. |t of the margin \a 33 1/3 pg price, daily
a wee*
[tent re-by fared Sept. 286 per
Herb Sauerman. Phi Sig; Joann Porter, Delta Zeta: Ertana Griffin. Alpha Gam: Trudie O’Brien, Chi Omega; Carol Kingsbakes. Chi Omega; Don Henderson. Delta Sigma Phi.
UNAFFILIATED MEMBERS The unaffiliated members are Art j Williams. Sandy Sapin. Isidor Rier- j as. George Cathcart. George Wool-, ery. Harvey Edwards, Casimir Ser-mak. Juliet Salazar. Don Evans, j Marilyn Gray. Renee Rochester. Jane Aven. Alex Rudoff. and Joseph Verdun.
Alternates to the new council include Edythe Strick. Ethel Poole, Roger Duitsman. Lois Anderson, David Barr. Jack Silverstein, Patricia Lyman, and Virginia Hyink.
• We wish to thank all those who took the time to apply and be interviewed. We are genuinely sorry that we could not see fit to name more people to the council, but any more members would have hindered our attempts to weld a eo-
Other lectures scheduled for October are: “The Motion Picture as a Means of Expression.'’ Harris C. Moore, lecturer in Cinema: Communism in China,” Dr. Theodore Hsi-En Chen, professor of Asiatic studies; and “Seeds of World War III Observed in Europe 1947.** Dr. Robert B. Pettengill, director of Teaching Institute of Economics.
The November series Includes:
• Romanticism Among German Ruins,” Dr. Harold von Hofe, professor of German; “Nervous Disordeis and the Neurotic Personality.” Dr. George Robert Bach, assistant professor of psychology; and “The Third Party in American History.” Arthur R. Kooker, assistant professor of history.
Two lectures in December wil] close the series.
Series Lists Eight Talks
of the National Meat industry jhesive unit '’ Knell concluded council, predicted that Nev^S Yorkers would be back to $1 a po% d beef before the end of the we#.
Herman Steen, executil* vice-president of the Millers iteration, suggested that America c<4ld feed needy nations abroad and fill have more food at home by turr.Jjjg more wheat into flour before shMping it abroad.
Sophomore
. . . council interviews will continue today from 2 to 5 p.m. in 155 Administration. Those students who petitioned for the council, but have not been interviewed, must do so today.
Looks or Books? MC Asks SC
Major trends in living pniioaophv will be th* general subject of the 35th semi-annual philosophy forum with the first of eight lectures and discussions slated for Tuesday, Oct. T.
The aeries of Lectures will run through Nov. 36 with all programs to be held on successive Tuesday afternoons at 4:15 in Bowne hall. Mudd hall.
Dr. Sterling M. McMumn. assistant professor of pholoeophy, will discuss “Logical Empiricism” when the initial discussion of the forum is conducted during the opening of the 1947-48 first-semester program.
.Remaining topics to be discusseo include “Kierkegaard's Philosophy as a Source of Existentialism;” I “German Existentialism;” “Jear-Paul Sartre and French Existentialism:” “The Heterodoxy of Bergson “Recent Developments in Semantics;” “Karl Mannheim's Sociological Philosophy;” and “Philosophy in the Light of Recent Scientific Discovery.”
“Dixie for Governor”
by Art Williams
Which does a woman need most, beauty or brains?
Radio station KFWB's “Inquiring Microphone” program originated from the Student Union yesterday as master of ceremonies Jerry Lawrence asked unsuspecting Trojans “just which attribute means the most to a coed, pulchritude or IQ?” The program, transcribed at 1 p.m., was broadcast at 7 45 last night.
This is the first time Mr. Lawrence and his production manager, Jack Wormser, have broadcast from a university. Lawrence outlined some of the features of the tri-wTeekly show before going on the air.
“Our questions are chosen for their numan interest. We ask no world-shaking questions that call for ponderous answers. Last week we asked prominent entertainers at Malibu what business they would be
MOSCOW. Ida., Sept. 3S—tL\P>— weren't in show business. Prior to that we ! “Dixie for Governor” signs were dis-[,ers at Mike Lyman's restaurant, what they ( played and 5000 cheering football ibout tipping.” ' fans were on hand today to greet
Jji Skeele. director of the university news Coach Dixie Howell’s triumphant
.ded in preliminary programming arrangers Rau Alberts, Betty Howard. Stan Cham-Wildman. Jea Morf, Gordon Gray, and eman disclosed their opinions on the beauty ains question. No conclusion was reached. ;rs, chief announcer for campus' radio sta-Cr read the sponsor's commercial. Also on am was an unidentified blonde who an-C o” to the only question asked her. ow was transcribed by means of a tape i ^ new method of reproducing programs, [ie tape enables the producers to edit the *efore it is broadcast.
University of Idaho team on its return from its historic 19-16 defeat of Stanford.
Howell told squad members to forget about the victory and put them through a moderately severe workout for the Washington State game here next Saturday. With prospects for a complete sellout of Neale stadium for the first time in history, graduate Manager Gale Mix announced bleachers would be set up to increase the seating capacity from 15.000 to 33.000.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 12, September 30, 1947 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 39, No. 12, September 30, 1947. |
| Full text |
d Attack on Truman otested by Smith tolotov Refuses to Retract “Slanderous” [rticle Comparing Truman to Hitler iSHINGTON, Sept. 29—(UP)—Russia has refused flatly nvow a "wantonly slanderous" article puolished in its illed press that compared President Truman with Adolf the state department disclosed today, unprecedented personal attack on the chief executive, i b\ one Boiit> Grobatov for t’iet Literary Gazette, was liged in Moscow last Thurs-S. Ambassador V Smith, the department said, [ith denounced the article as [iimax of a long “hate” cam-waged by the Soviet press 1st the United States and de- wSr SIDENT TRUMAN , , personal affront tba* M b« repudiated offi- Jet Foreign Minister V. M. rejected th* protest that day, i%torting pointedly that lussian press, more than that Lny other country, tries to give “true facts'* of the world scene, fhe MM* department made pub-copies of Smith's letter and fotovs reply, and hinted broadly Russian censors may have tried k.eep the exchange from reaching United Stales. „ department spokesman said Jth handed copies ol the protest rejection to American corre-pdenUs in Moscow Saturday but “nothing seems to have gotten igh.” mith's memorandum was oouched .itingly undiplomatic language, rarned Moscow that Americans Jywhere. recardie^s of their po-brliels. would take the at-on Mr. Truman as a personal >nt. soldier-diplomat said he had Fluor Presents I Cooling Tower To Engineers A cooling tower with an esti- j mated installation value of $12,000 has been presented to the College j of Enguieering. it was learned yes- ; terday. The late Peter Fluor, founder of the Fluor Corporation Ltd., pre-! sen ted the tower to the um versity ! before his death. Mr. Fluor was an j ardent SC supporter and provided Jobs for student engineers during summer vacations. In describing the cooling tower E. K. Springer, associate professor of mechanical engineering, said that it was specially designed for students doing research and investigative work and will be used in conjunction with a model tower. “The model tower,’’ Professor Springer explained, “is a natural draft tower. Tlie Fluor tower is*an induced draft tower—that is. one that has a fan which sucks in air and gives a to circulating water.” New PAUL WILDMAN . . . gold plated JEFF CRAVATH . . introductions Kay Kyser to Present SC With Gold Platter Ever own a gold plated phonograph recording? SC is going to have one after bandleader Kay Kyser presents ASSC President Paul Wildman with such a collector’s item at the first formal rally of the year Friday night in Bovard auditorium. Festivities start at 7:30. “—■—--—I Tlie Southern gentleman of mu- Religion Group Defines Aims Rosza to Speak At Musicians Annual Dinner Estimated 200 Persons to Hear ‘Oscar’ Winner With an academy award-winning composer as guest speaker and an I original musical piece for its public premier, the College of Music will j hold its annual banquet tonight at 6:30 in Scully’s restaurant. “Tickets have sold rapidly,” declared Nick Rossi, president of Phi Mu Alpha, men's national honorary music fraternity. “We estimate an attendance of approximately 200 persons at tlie banquet,” he added. Recognized as one of Hollywood's Council Named; Applicants Set Record Cabinet Appoints 35 Students, Knell Says sic fame will appear at the rally to present the university with a , ,, . gold-plated waxing of his recent aWe“ Ml“°s Re- version of -Fight On" Mitch Gam- 1946 academy award wnmer for son, rally chairman vUd. fito scoring, ml! be the speaker BIGGER N* BETTER j at the event- “We had a terrific rally last Fri- ! * SPELLBOUND ’ COMPOSER day,” Gamson said, “and expect to Rosza won the “Oscar ’ for his An extended program ol stump- have an even bigger turnout this ■ unusual background music for the j ing for world peace, which would ; week. Besides,” he continued, “this Psychological drama “Spellbound.” i send panels of students to speak ! is going to be one of the toughest i No stranger to SC. Rosza teaches , x , T sames of the vear for our team 1 composing for films in the cinema before church groups in Los An- i U1 uie vedr Ior our team. ° . . A ! and, we need to muster every bit department, geles was proposed to faculty ad- j spirjt on campus.” ! Former SC student Peter Korn visers by the executive cabinet of j coach Jeff Cravath is slated to ;wil1 conduct ar> octet in the first ; the student council of religion last introduce a few of last week's stars i Public performance of his Varia- week. i in SC's win over Washington State, itions 011 a theme by Carrie Jacobs Representing the faculty and the ! lheie is a possibility that Jess Bond- FRED KNE.U . . picks cou&^il HCL Headachrt! ,, ^ i , . . , .. , Neely, Rice Institute coach, may also greater cooling effect j administration in a consultative ca- j appear pacitv at the meeting were Helen LA INE, ESTES. AND HILLINGS Experiments and comparisons on Hall Moreland, dean of women; Dr. , ' Entertainment is being lined up the cooling efliciency of the two j Neil D barren, dean of men; and • writh several acts already arranged,” types of towers will be made by engineering students. The new tower j Sterlin« McMurrin. professor of will also be used in spray investi- philosophy. gations. which are the study of the i Lynn Hartzler. chairman of the The work is based on Miss Bond's “I Love Y.ou Truly” and was awarded second place in the Carrie Jacobs Bond award listings last semester. Korn is now assistant conductor of the Los Angeles Grand Prices Continue Upward Tfend From a record total of 238 applicants, 14 non-organized and 21 organized students have been appointed to the LAS council by the LAS cabinet, Fred Knell, president, said yesterday. An additional eight persons were named as alternates. Selections for the council were made by the LAS cabinet of Tom Harmon, vice-president; j- —-— Bob Latham, secretary; Bob McKee, treasurer; and Knell. The choices were based on the i candidates general academic record, participation in extra-curricular activities and willingness to work fcr the council. NEW MEMBER* Knell said, however. that ‘ there ! are a number of new members who have not yet made their mark at SC. but who, through their peti-1 tions and interviews, give promise j of doing so. We feel that we have also secured several outstanding be presented" to SC~ students’ and transfers from other universities. . ••We have tried wherever possible fnends Wednesday, Oct. 8. when to name members that would rep- i Dr- Dwight L Bohn per associate resent every school and department j professor of Spanish and chairman . of that department, speaks on "Lin-LAS council will hold its first . c. euistie Dictators, meeting Thursday noon. 318 Stu- ; B dent Union. All regulars and al LAS to Open Fall Lectures With Bolinger First in the annual series of nine lectures sponsored by the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences will CHICAGO. Sept. 29 -futures prices — a kej the nation's price struct the full trading limits as the major grain excha ed trading margins tc speculation. Livestock, wholesale ,R>—Grain ( factor in [ re—soared temates must attend. Aimed to inform students not i enrolled in the college of the fields . 1 it covers, the lectures will be held every Wednesday from 3:15 to 4:13 in LAS. in order that the council , . might have a thorough liaison with day even , ^ and c00rdinate their respec. p.m„ in the art and lecture room ;es boost- tiye activities We have also man- i of the university library. ielp curb j aged to have every class ! sen ted this year.’’ he said. an ' GREEK REPRESENTATIVES repre- New Athletic Aides Named le and could recall nothing to pare with it in the unsavory lgs of the late Nazi Propagan-iniief Paul Joseph Goebbels. Bolotov’s reply was brief and egoric. I do not consider it possible to er into a discussion with you of article.” he informed Smith, the Soviet government cannot r the responsibility for this or it article and. so much the more, bnot accept the protest you have :de in that connection.” The Soviet foreign minister said lith had a “completely perverted” ture of the Soviet press and as-*ted that it was the American sss rather which was carrying on inflammatory campaign against ssia. cooling effects erf aeration on water, j education commission, outlined the ---—--—— i primary goal of the council as “a desire to stimulate religious inter- est by coordinating denominational ! and faith clubs on campus.” He said this could be accomplished by creating a program of service available to the entire student body and by promoting counseling service to students with problems of a religious nature. Hartzler explained that the service program would include lectures forums, panel-discussions. social service groups, and study groups integrated by the council but built around such groups as CAI. the United Nations club, the Intercultural club, and the International Relations club. Six appointments were made by the student athletic managerial board for the 1947-48 season in a meeting held yesterday afternoon. Chairman Paul Wildman announced. Operating again as a function 'thoroughly shocked" by the of student government, the board approved the selections which include Norm Schultz, senior football manager; Richard Ford, senior baseball manager; Ray Allen Parker. junior basketball manager; Edward Partridge, senior swimming manager; William Spencer, senior golf manager; and Lester Vlahos. senior fencing manager. With Arnold Eddy serving in the capacity of general manager of Associated Students, the board is composed of Wildman. Wendy Harbeck. Schultz, and Wally Flanagan. Blue Key . . . will meet today at 12:30 p.m. in 318 Student Union. Attendance at the meeting is compulsory for all students who intend to retain active status in the SC chapter, according to Milt Dobkin. president. Today at a Glance By United Press 10 Director nswers Taft WASHINGTON. Sept, 29.—«'.?>— ;k Kroll director of the CIO po-cal action committee, charged to-ht that Sen. Robert A. Taft was ffenng from an acute case of po-jltters” and had resorted to “usual smear technique'* when labeled the CIO program as imunistic. plying to Taft's statement be-e Oregon state college students the PAC’s program was “largely animistic.” Kroll asserted that y rank and file members of the ublican party support the com-tee s aims. utlining the committee's pro-1, Kroll said in a statement that -luded restoration of pnee con-a housing plan, a fair tax pro-fuaranteed wages, and ade-haaitb and medical caw tor Howser Attacks Court LOS ANGELES. Sept. 29—State Attorney General Fred Howser today attacked a recent decision of the supreme court awarding the federal government ownership of the tidelands. He spoke before the National Institute of Municipal Law Officers at its 12th annual convention. “The decision involved principles which, if ignored, might cause to be said again the fighting words of the Declaration of Independence,” Howser warned. Gamson said. “We are still look- I ®Pera company, ing for talent although we have se- j WALLENSTEIN GUEST cured some good acts.” ! Several prominent dignitaries Dave Heiser and Jay Ballentine. j * ^ attend the banquet. Alfred former Pacific coast hand-balancing I Wallenstein, director of the Los An-champions, will exhibit their skill jgeles Philharmonic orchestra, is for the Trojan rooters. “Red” Rob- ilisted the guests, Rossi said, inson. who scored an impressive hit —— at the AMS smoker last week, will present some of his “scat” songs, accompanying himself on the guitar. Described by Gamson as ‘ the man who sounds more like Frankie Laine than Frankie Laine does,” Fred Estes will render vocal offerings. Pat Hillings will be master of ceremonies. Army to Aid China NANKING. China, Sept. 30—The United States army has submitted a plan for the training and eq.lipping of 10 Chinese combat divisions to battle the communists in response to an urgent request by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, a high American source said today. Cuba Stops Invasion HAVANA, Sept. 29—The Cuban army announced officially tonight it had captured two troop-laden invasion ships setting out from Cuba on a million-dollar amphibious expedition to overthrow the 17-year-old dictatorship of Gen. Rafael Trujillo Molina in the Dominican Republic. Radio Show To Star SC Selecting SC as the initial university to be featured. Peter Potter and his nightly Chesterfield ABC record party will inaugurate a weekly “College Corner” on his Wednesday night show, heard over the Mutual-Don Lee network from 10:30 to 11. Highlight of the weekly college night will be the introduction of campus representatives and the playing of the top three records as determined by a week-long campus poll. Ballots for the record selection are now being circulated in front of the Student Union and in all local places of business, with results to be tabulated at the end of the week. Mr. Potter selected the Trojan campus to establish a precedent for the honoring of 22 colleges and universities throughout the nation. The noted disc jockey's program will continue with presentation of the Wednesday night ‘ College Corner” until Mar. 1. The college program swings to the Northwest for the second show-on Oct. 15, with rhe Cougars from Washington State college drawing the spotlight. Reports at the conclusion of the first day’s balloting on the SC campus indicate that “hill-billy" addicts are making a concerted drive to push Roy Acuff’s “The Great Speckled Bird” to the No. 1 spot on the list of Troy favorites to be played. ‘Cal Special’ Tickets Selling Tickets on the Southern Pacific student train traveling north for the SC-Califomiit game. Oct. 25, went on sale yesterday morning in the Student Union. The train will leave from Unio.i station Friday night, Oct. 24, at 9:05 and will arrive in Oakland at 10:15 Saturday morning. It will leave Sunday morning at 2. arriving in Los Angeles *at 3:45 p.m. Connecting busses will take students from the station to the stadium. Besides four Pullmans for women and two for men. the train will include diners, a snack bar. a lounge car, and an observation car. Independent . . . council interviews will be held today from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. in 235 Student Union. Jack Shaffer, independent representative, announced that this is the last opportunity for those who submitted petitions to appear for inerview. Any who fail to appear will not bt considered for membership. vater —V, ( egg prices also rose, anc Jhne of tne ' major soap manufacture^ announ- Those selected as fraternity and ced an increase in the price sorority representatives include Sid of all its soap products. % : Hoskins, Delt; Patricia Fuqua. Del- President Truman meS vith ad- 1 ta Zeta; Mary Vallee. Delta Gam-ministration advisors a % congre.s- ma; Patti Peter, ADPi; Sid Adair, sional leaders of Doth p ipes today Chi Phi; Davette De Arman. Chi and announced he bad ti>led chair- • Omega; Paul Shonafelt. Delta Phi men of the house anu :«nate for- Epsilon; Adele Cook, Delta Gamma, eign relations ana appVpriations Jacqueline Bek. Alpha Phi; Mary committees to meet as se jk as pos- Ellen Cullen, Gamma Phi; Mar-ent need garet Fluor. Alpha Delta Phi. Nancy Winstanley, Delta Gam-l-fter the! ma; Grelun Landon, Delta Sigma Kansas J Phi; Ben Chadwell, Pi Kappa Al-g scales pha; Patricia Haggerty. AO Pi; sible “to consider the u for aid to western Europf Grain prices shot uj-Chicago, Minneapolis ai City exchanges set up sli which would increase tr.< gin requirements — or ments — five cents a bi time grain prices increa over the previous Satur The action was far si government’s request th? requirements be doubled per cent of the total sel Dun and Bradstree? weighted price index O;i20 commodities jumped 2.61 todf :"'.o 281.29. The index compared to 278 ago, and 229.73 a year ag Other price developmeo; The agriculture depai t: ported that prices receive mers during the month er 15 hit a new all-time peak cent of the 1909-1914 averse Procter and Gamble £5 |
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