Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 117, April 11, 1949 |
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X
rauer Named New Dental Dean
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
Orojan
Former instructor Here Assumes Duties June 15
XL
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, April 11, 1949
Night Phone Rl. 5472
No. 117
Establishes Negro Scholarship
Plan Bovard Show For Fund Raising
High Gear
will be established by ig Morgan, Y scholar-
TARS TO HELP
Praised
ogram
as Lp
Unity Machine Ready to Roll
by Harvey Diederich
Unity party leaders squirted a iv shots of oil into their political acliine Friday when the Steering mmittee moved into high gear r the imminent political race. The unwieldly group was broken iwn into specialized committees nich will map campaign strategy id administer policy for the party. Jack Shaffer, former independent presentative, and Zulfikar Bhut-
MEMBERS PROFIT
ream Girl of PiKA Title oes to Marilyn Lindberg
tm Gi
All political candidates interested in running on the Unity party ticket may pick up peti-noon until 4 today, tomorrow, and noon until 4 today, tomorrow and Wednesday. Petitions must be returned by Wednesday.
to, Pakistan student, u ■ill head the
Campaign committee, w hich will co-
handle finance. plans and
PUBLICITY T EAIYI
Herb Riley, veteran c )f last vear's
AS^C race, and Steve Nager, Tfc-'
vet publicity’ chairmai i, are pub-
licity cochairmen. They wili prepare
the release of “educ ational ma-
Chet Carter, vice-pre sident of the
Steering committee, a ittempted to
sret candidate nomins itions under
way. but it was decidec 1 not to drop
axiv hats until petition ns are made
available to all office hopefuls.
WIDE-OPEN
“All posts on our tic ket are wide
open,” Committee Cha .irman Omar
Kureishi said. “We wi ill not name
candidates until we’vi e considered
The Steering comrr littee agreed
that the party might € indorse other
candidates if an obv iously quali-
fiea mar. were to run on another
“It" is conceivable t hat another
candidate might subsci •ibe to Unity
party principles and run on an-
other ticket,” Kureish ii said. “We
will consider endorsen "lent on the
lerit, record,
Ervin to Discuss War Odds Drop
Today s Headlines
United Press
gtze Ceasefire Seen
Official
Nofic
Conservatives Win
House Asked to Aid Spain
Pierre, Maryjane Named Mr., Miss'
by Jerry Bres
Pierre Cossette, Phi Delta Theta, and Maryjane Woodrow, Kappa Alpha Theta, were named Mr. and Miss Trojanality Friday at a Bovard rally. The week-long contest closed with over 9000 votes sold during the last two hours of voting. The unexpected last-minute flurry of voting placed Mr.
Trojanality Cossette and Miss Tro-* janality Woodrow ahead of their j nearest competitors, Rex Reno, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Betty Brown,
Delta Gamma.
Comedian Ish Kabibble presented inscribed trophies to the winners at the noon talent rally. Ish and his band furnished the music and put on a “jOuter Sanctum” skit burlesquing radio murder mysteries.
Blonde, petite Mary Hatcher, Paramount actress, brought down the house with her sultry rendition of “So In Love-’ and "My Darling, My Darling.”
No less popular was Herky Styles, whose fast-talk routine went over big. When an onlooker came in late and sat down, Styles gave a hilarious rundown for him of what had taken place earlier on the program.
iThe hour-long show and the Trojanality contest were devised to raise funds for Trojan Chest, SC’s annual combined - charities drive. Votes at 10 cents each were sold at
MARYJANE WOODROW . . . late flurry
Kathy Fiscus Found Dead After 50 Hours
SAN MARINO, Apr. 10— (l.K)— Three-year-old Kathy Fiscus was found dead today in the abandoned well that had entombed her for 50 hours.
Kathy died in her underground; tomb, and apparently has been dead i since Friday afternoon, two hours i after she fell into an abandoned well. Dr. Paul Hanson said tonight.
Hanson, who brought the pretty I blonde tot into the world three and i a half years ago, said she prob-! ably had been dead since about i 6:30 p.m. Friday.
STOPPED SPEAKING
It was at that time that she stopped speaking, two hours alter she fell into the 14-mch iron well casing while chasing her sister and cousin through a vacant lot.
Meanwhile, Dr. Robert McCullock,! the Fiscus family physician, was at the bottom of a 104-loot rescue • shaft to see how the baby's body could be removed without mangling it.
There were a few minutes when rescuers and spectators held high hopes that Kathy had lived through her long ordeal. As dusk fell and the movie studio kleig lights were j turned on. there was a sudden burst ! of activity.
VIGIL ENDS
The wating ambulance was back-| ed up to eight feet of the well. A huge crance was mpved out ot the way. A stretcher was lowered mto the tunnel next to Kathy's body. Dr. McCullock hurried to the shaft. |
Then the crowd gasped in disappointment. The stretcher sent down_ to retrieve the little girl came \ up empty
It was a bitter blow to the dozens of men who had worked 48 hours straight with no thought of pay.
iil
State Proposes Plan For Parking Squeeze'
by Don Moyer
State officials last week submitted to John Davis, ASSC president, their proposal for ending SC's “parking-space
squeeze.”
An official of the Sixth Agricultural District board, which administers the state-owned property of Exposition park, sent
President Fred D. Fagg Jr. announced Friday the appointment of Dr. John C. Brauer, director of post graduate
dental education at the University of Washington, as dean of
the SC School of Dentistry.
Dr. Brauer will take up his duties June 15. He succeeds
the late Dean Julio Endelman, 3*--*
SC faculty member for 34 years, ■
who died Nov 10 of last year ^ 1713(1 RCtll ITIS
The new dean will take charge of
the half-century-old School of Den-| *■ *■ _ ■ •
tistry, the first established in the ri*ftVTl ■ ACT I 1*1 ft
West, at a time when the univer- ■ ■VIII LQvl I I I j/
Attends President's Industrial Conference
Dr. Robert E. Vivian, dean of the School of Engineering, returned to campus Friday after a three-week trip in the East.
While in Washington, the dean attended President Truman’s Conference on Industrial Safety from Mar. 23 to Mar. 25 at the request of the president.
Following the Washington conference, he attended the inauguration of Dr. James R. Killian Jr. as 10th president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
HAS STATISTICS The dean returned to campus loaded with statistics and reports on industrial safety and hazards which were presented to the conference.
More than 2 million job accidents each year cost American industry $4x2 billion, the 1400 delegates to the conference were told.
“The regrettable part of it,” said Dean Vivian “is that 90 per cent of the accidents couid have boe i prevented had the prcnsr safety devices and techniques been employ-i ed.”
PRESIDENT SPEAK?
The president smke to the dele-j gates on the first day. and other i noted government and industrial ; leaders spoke during the four-da? meeting. Secretary of Labor Maur-1 ice Tobin directed the conference. Dean Vivian said he had “swell'* seats for the speech made at MIT by Winston Churchill. He said I the large crowd that was present for Churchill's talk received the j ''igar-smoking. wartime leader of : Britain “very enthusiastically.”
ISH KABIBBLE . wash komikable
in front of Bovard for SC's >ular man and woman stu-
Mi
341
AWS
Volleyball Came Flops Financially
iill slated for passage to-
j pionship, sponsored by the URA.
• ball champs, took the measure of 1 the SC club 15-3 and 16-4.
EPC Schedules Rally Tonight
Row candidates for tomorrow’s primary elections will be formally nominated tonight at an EPC rally in the SAE house at 8 p.m. Ail students are invited.
Nomination speeches for ASSC and AMS presidents will be limited to five minutes. Acceptance speeches for these offices may be three minutes. Speeches for all other offices will be two minutes.
The latest list released by the Election Primary committee revealed several changes and additions to lists previously published. One committee member refused to divulge the new list, saying that Prof.
Sidney Duncan, head of the Committee on Student Affairs, had complained to him about previous EPC publicity. He said he would release the information Monday. Later, the | list was given out by the EPC sec-; retary.
Nancy Stearns, Betty Ydarra, and Benice Mepham have joined Betty j Garfinkle for the ASSC secretary ! nomination. John Bradley has been j added to the list of candidates for i sophomore class president. Others I nominated for this post are Jack ; Crawford, Stan Tomlinson, Jim | Eddy, Gale Peck, and Ted Johnson.
Bill Paynter has dropped from the | architecture president nominee list,
| leaving Paul Tay. Sam Spence has been added to Bruce Saban tor music president, and Chuck Posner | Trovet President F. has been scratched from the IR ■ announced Friday tl
Other candidates not previously controversial race-de named are Doug Morgan, Bill Bird,' originated by Bob P and Ted Switzer, AMS president; j O'Sullivan made Mourry Avins and Stan Jolley, vet- j ment after final t ! erans’ representative; Tom Shea Trovet membership j and Joe Noble, yell king; and Bill j revealed an overwhe Beal, education president. in support of the res<
Primary elections will be held to- : Padgett asked tl j morrow and Wednesday. Booths are j Senate go on record ! expected to be open from 9 to 4. . asking information
a lettter to Davis suggesting that the associated students lease state property bounded by Exposition boulevard and Santa Barbara on the north aajid south; and Menlo and Vermont avenues on the east and west.
The state recently bought the property with the intention of using it for Coliseum parking.
Although Davis refused to allow a Daily Trojan reporter to read the letter, it was learned the board suggested that students could lease the property for a small sum and use it for student parking.
Since the associated students are not an incorporated body, they could not bid on or operate the parking lot. The university or a private individual would have to underwrite the bid and be responsible for the management of the lot.
The university, it was said, would jeopardize its nonprofit standing if it undertook the responsibility for the lot. Any money now taken as profit from the rent of associated student parking lots (during coliseum events) goes into a fund for student loans, which does not change the nonprofit satus.
JOHN BRAUER . . . pedodontist
sity plans an extensive development program for dental facilities, includ- , ing plans for new buildings.
TAUGHT HERE
Dr. Brauer engaged in private practice of children's dentistry in
Los Ar. Ie.^ before jrining the staff of the University of Washington. While practicing in LA, he conducted refresher courses in children's and preventive dentistry at SC.
Famed as a specialist in pedodon-;les <children’s dentistry), Dr. Brauer is president of the American Academy of E£dftdsntics and chairman of the American Board of Ped-odontics. He is also attached to the department of children’s dentistry at the University of Washington, where he has been on the faculty for two years.
LIEUTENANT COLONEL
During World JVar II, Dr. Brauer was chief of the dental standards branch of the surgeon general's office where he was in charge of professional services and policies of the Army’s 15,COO dentists. He held the rank of lieutenant colonel and was awarded the Legion of Merit.
He was bom in Sterling. Neb., in 1905. A graduate of the Universities of Nebraska and Michigan, Dr. Brauer formerly taught at Nebraska and Emory university in Atlanta, Ga.
Faculty Seeks Troydale Loan
The negotiation with an anonymous party for a $75,000 loan for purchase of land at the Troydale site is being conducted at the present time. Dr. Harvey -1. Locke, head of the Faculty Housing committee. announced Friday.
The loan will be used to set up a revolving fund for the development of future home sites. An offer to purchase 150 acres of the 290.94 total in the Baldwin hills area has been made by the committee.
Residents will be faculty, staff of the university, and persons approved by a membership committee.
Preliminary plans include areas set aside for multiple dwelling units and single family residences. A park, school, playgrounds, and a small commercial district are also planned.
Stevenson Tells Of Novel Rise
Dr. Lionel Stevenson, head of the English department, closed the two-day research roundtable talks Friday evening with a lecture on the “Intellectual Novel of the 19th Century.”
Explaining the rise of the intellectual novel in English literature. Dr. Stevenson told how the personality and opinion of the author is projected into the works.
The appointment of the lecturer for the research roundtables each year goes to the faculty representative who accomplishes the most outstanding work during the preceding year.
He is a fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the author of numerous articles and texts on laboratory studies in psychology and psychometric methods.
Dr. Livingston was made president-elect of the American Psychological Association in their Boston convention last year.
In the two-day research roundtable talks which ended with Dr. Stevenson’s lecture, graduate students presented mere than 100 papers which represented a year’s work in their fields.
They contained examples of the most recent knowledge in more than 18 fields of learning.
Trovet Vote Results
Race Data Opposed
; not pertinent to a student’s
or academic qualifications. He the Senate to recommend and the administration to delete ions calling for such informa- 1 irom its admission forms, irty-two per cent of the Tro-j irmbership voted on the issue.) )f a total of 166 votes. 137 were :n favor of the resolution and 29 against it.'
an pointed out that the s, many of whom are fra- i
temity men, vot?d on the issue from a moral and not a political standpoint.
An average of three new members have joined Trovets each day since the polling began, he said. “They say they have joined because they approve of Trovets taking a stand on such an issue and they approve of the manner in which tne organization is seeking members’ approval before taking a definite stand.”
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 117, April 11, 1949 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 117, April 11, 1949. |
| Full text |
0 i \ X rauer Named New Dental Dean SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Orojan Former instructor Here Assumes Duties June 15 XL Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, April 11, 1949 Night Phone Rl. 5472 No. 117 Establishes Negro Scholarship Plan Bovard Show For Fund Raising High Gear will be established by ig Morgan, Y scholar- TARS TO HELP Praised ogram as Lp Unity Machine Ready to Roll by Harvey Diederich Unity party leaders squirted a iv shots of oil into their political acliine Friday when the Steering mmittee moved into high gear r the imminent political race. The unwieldly group was broken iwn into specialized committees nich will map campaign strategy id administer policy for the party. Jack Shaffer, former independent presentative, and Zulfikar Bhut- MEMBERS PROFIT ream Girl of PiKA Title oes to Marilyn Lindberg tm Gi All political candidates interested in running on the Unity party ticket may pick up peti-noon until 4 today, tomorrow, and noon until 4 today, tomorrow and Wednesday. Petitions must be returned by Wednesday. to, Pakistan student, u ■ill head the Campaign committee, w hich will co- handle finance. plans and PUBLICITY T EAIYI Herb Riley, veteran c )f last vear's AS^C race, and Steve Nager, Tfc-' vet publicity’ chairmai i, are pub- licity cochairmen. They wili prepare the release of “educ ational ma- Chet Carter, vice-pre sident of the Steering committee, a ittempted to sret candidate nomins itions under way. but it was decidec 1 not to drop axiv hats until petition ns are made available to all office hopefuls. WIDE-OPEN “All posts on our tic ket are wide open,” Committee Cha .irman Omar Kureishi said. “We wi ill not name candidates until we’vi e considered The Steering comrr littee agreed that the party might € indorse other candidates if an obv iously quali- fiea mar. were to run on another “It" is conceivable t hat another candidate might subsci •ibe to Unity party principles and run on an- other ticket,” Kureish ii said. “We will consider endorsen "lent on the lerit, record, Ervin to Discuss War Odds Drop Today s Headlines United Press gtze Ceasefire Seen Official Nofic Conservatives Win House Asked to Aid Spain Pierre, Maryjane Named Mr., Miss' by Jerry Bres Pierre Cossette, Phi Delta Theta, and Maryjane Woodrow, Kappa Alpha Theta, were named Mr. and Miss Trojanality Friday at a Bovard rally. The week-long contest closed with over 9000 votes sold during the last two hours of voting. The unexpected last-minute flurry of voting placed Mr. Trojanality Cossette and Miss Tro-* janality Woodrow ahead of their j nearest competitors, Rex Reno, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Betty Brown, Delta Gamma. Comedian Ish Kabibble presented inscribed trophies to the winners at the noon talent rally. Ish and his band furnished the music and put on a “jOuter Sanctum” skit burlesquing radio murder mysteries. Blonde, petite Mary Hatcher, Paramount actress, brought down the house with her sultry rendition of “So In Love-’ and "My Darling, My Darling.” No less popular was Herky Styles, whose fast-talk routine went over big. When an onlooker came in late and sat down, Styles gave a hilarious rundown for him of what had taken place earlier on the program. iThe hour-long show and the Trojanality contest were devised to raise funds for Trojan Chest, SC’s annual combined - charities drive. Votes at 10 cents each were sold at MARYJANE WOODROW . . . late flurry Kathy Fiscus Found Dead After 50 Hours SAN MARINO, Apr. 10— (l.K)— Three-year-old Kathy Fiscus was found dead today in the abandoned well that had entombed her for 50 hours. Kathy died in her underground; tomb, and apparently has been dead i since Friday afternoon, two hours i after she fell into an abandoned well. Dr. Paul Hanson said tonight. Hanson, who brought the pretty I blonde tot into the world three and i a half years ago, said she prob-! ably had been dead since about i 6:30 p.m. Friday. STOPPED SPEAKING It was at that time that she stopped speaking, two hours alter she fell into the 14-mch iron well casing while chasing her sister and cousin through a vacant lot. Meanwhile, Dr. Robert McCullock,! the Fiscus family physician, was at the bottom of a 104-loot rescue • shaft to see how the baby's body could be removed without mangling it. There were a few minutes when rescuers and spectators held high hopes that Kathy had lived through her long ordeal. As dusk fell and the movie studio kleig lights were j turned on. there was a sudden burst ! of activity. VIGIL ENDS The wating ambulance was back- ed up to eight feet of the well. A huge crance was mpved out ot the way. A stretcher was lowered mto the tunnel next to Kathy's body. Dr. McCullock hurried to the shaft. Then the crowd gasped in disappointment. The stretcher sent down_ to retrieve the little girl came \ up empty It was a bitter blow to the dozens of men who had worked 48 hours straight with no thought of pay. iil State Proposes Plan For Parking Squeeze' by Don Moyer State officials last week submitted to John Davis, ASSC president, their proposal for ending SC's “parking-space squeeze.” An official of the Sixth Agricultural District board, which administers the state-owned property of Exposition park, sent President Fred D. Fagg Jr. announced Friday the appointment of Dr. John C. Brauer, director of post graduate dental education at the University of Washington, as dean of the SC School of Dentistry. Dr. Brauer will take up his duties June 15. He succeeds the late Dean Julio Endelman, 3*--* SC faculty member for 34 years, ■ who died Nov 10 of last year ^ 1713(1 RCtll ITIS The new dean will take charge of the half-century-old School of Den- *■ *■ _ ■ • tistry, the first established in the ri*ftVTl ■ ACT I 1*1 ft West, at a time when the univer- ■ ■VIII LQvl I I I j/ Attends President's Industrial Conference Dr. Robert E. Vivian, dean of the School of Engineering, returned to campus Friday after a three-week trip in the East. While in Washington, the dean attended President Truman’s Conference on Industrial Safety from Mar. 23 to Mar. 25 at the request of the president. Following the Washington conference, he attended the inauguration of Dr. James R. Killian Jr. as 10th president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. HAS STATISTICS The dean returned to campus loaded with statistics and reports on industrial safety and hazards which were presented to the conference. More than 2 million job accidents each year cost American industry $4x2 billion, the 1400 delegates to the conference were told. “The regrettable part of it,” said Dean Vivian “is that 90 per cent of the accidents couid have boe i prevented had the prcnsr safety devices and techniques been employ-i ed.” PRESIDENT SPEAK? The president smke to the dele-j gates on the first day. and other i noted government and industrial ; leaders spoke during the four-da? meeting. Secretary of Labor Maur-1 ice Tobin directed the conference. Dean Vivian said he had “swell'* seats for the speech made at MIT by Winston Churchill. He said I the large crowd that was present for Churchill's talk received the j ''igar-smoking. wartime leader of : Britain “very enthusiastically.” ISH KABIBBLE . wash komikable in front of Bovard for SC's >ular man and woman stu- Mi 341 AWS Volleyball Came Flops Financially iill slated for passage to- j pionship, sponsored by the URA. • ball champs, took the measure of 1 the SC club 15-3 and 16-4. EPC Schedules Rally Tonight Row candidates for tomorrow’s primary elections will be formally nominated tonight at an EPC rally in the SAE house at 8 p.m. Ail students are invited. Nomination speeches for ASSC and AMS presidents will be limited to five minutes. Acceptance speeches for these offices may be three minutes. Speeches for all other offices will be two minutes. The latest list released by the Election Primary committee revealed several changes and additions to lists previously published. One committee member refused to divulge the new list, saying that Prof. Sidney Duncan, head of the Committee on Student Affairs, had complained to him about previous EPC publicity. He said he would release the information Monday. Later, the list was given out by the EPC sec-; retary. Nancy Stearns, Betty Ydarra, and Benice Mepham have joined Betty j Garfinkle for the ASSC secretary ! nomination. John Bradley has been j added to the list of candidates for i sophomore class president. Others I nominated for this post are Jack ; Crawford, Stan Tomlinson, Jim Eddy, Gale Peck, and Ted Johnson. Bill Paynter has dropped from the architecture president nominee list, leaving Paul Tay. Sam Spence has been added to Bruce Saban tor music president, and Chuck Posner Trovet President F. has been scratched from the IR ■ announced Friday tl Other candidates not previously controversial race-de named are Doug Morgan, Bill Bird,' originated by Bob P and Ted Switzer, AMS president; j O'Sullivan made Mourry Avins and Stan Jolley, vet- j ment after final t ! erans’ representative; Tom Shea Trovet membership j and Joe Noble, yell king; and Bill j revealed an overwhe Beal, education president. in support of the res< Primary elections will be held to- : Padgett asked tl j morrow and Wednesday. Booths are j Senate go on record ! expected to be open from 9 to 4. . asking information a lettter to Davis suggesting that the associated students lease state property bounded by Exposition boulevard and Santa Barbara on the north aajid south; and Menlo and Vermont avenues on the east and west. The state recently bought the property with the intention of using it for Coliseum parking. Although Davis refused to allow a Daily Trojan reporter to read the letter, it was learned the board suggested that students could lease the property for a small sum and use it for student parking. Since the associated students are not an incorporated body, they could not bid on or operate the parking lot. The university or a private individual would have to underwrite the bid and be responsible for the management of the lot. The university, it was said, would jeopardize its nonprofit standing if it undertook the responsibility for the lot. Any money now taken as profit from the rent of associated student parking lots (during coliseum events) goes into a fund for student loans, which does not change the nonprofit satus. JOHN BRAUER . . . pedodontist sity plans an extensive development program for dental facilities, includ- , ing plans for new buildings. TAUGHT HERE Dr. Brauer engaged in private practice of children's dentistry in Los Ar. Ie.^ before jrining the staff of the University of Washington. While practicing in LA, he conducted refresher courses in children's and preventive dentistry at SC. Famed as a specialist in pedodon-;les |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1317/uschist-dt-1949-04-11~001.tif |
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