Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 21, October 11, 1948 |
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SOUTHERN
C A L' I F O R N I A
PAGE TWO
Eshleman Reports Paris Riot
Urojan
PAGE FOUR
LAS Schedules Grid Game
Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Oct. 11, 1948
Night Phone RI. 5472
No. 21
aternity
bandons
ow PAC
ig Eps Withdraw rom Committee; harge Disharmony
gma Phi Epsilon frater-Friday announced its de-n to drop out of all Row ics because of a “detri-tal group working behind rfraternity council which 1 bits its proper function-
lph Townsend, Sig Ep Ident, resigned from the manship of the IFC Political n committee, saying that he Id not participate in any ngs of political groups what- . r.”
udent politics are not of such i importance to our fraternity other fraternities that I have j to on this subject that it ' d cause the hatred and dis- ; ony on the Flow that it has e past year,” said Townsend. •IFC HAMPERED’
wnsend added that he is con-d a group is working behind on political matters that srs its proper activities.
view of the Panhellenic de-not to support the Political n committee. I feel that a organization will attempt to 1 PAC as they have IFC.”
» Panhellenic council last sday voted unanimously to re-the IPC proposal that sorority bers participate in endorsing candidates for school elections, decision has been referred to ouses for their individual con-tion.
he Row has good men to put Tor student body offices,” said nsend, “but many times the man is not endorsed because litics in IPC.”
•HOUSES DISTURBED’ Several houses feel disturbed t the fact that if these men not receive IPC endorsement.
cannot run for office. This i le past has been the first phase sharmony on the Row.
n my personal belief, these men. j ~dless of number, should have privilege of running for any they desire. This would be in the right direction toward inating machine politics, y completely dissolving politics IFC and forgetting such an :ation as PAC or any other ic connected with Row politics, would do the tiling most lnter-d parties are concerned with at present time.”
Holds at Goal
Beat Rice
7
0
GUTHRIE MILLER, Homecoming slogan contest winner last year, flashes a happy grin as he accepts two ducats to the 1947 SC-Notre Dame football tilt from Jea Morf, former ASSC vice-president. Guth's luck changed, however, as he broke his leg and was unable to attend the game. That's Johnny Davis who's smiling. The 1948 contest opens today.
Contest Heralds Troy Homecoming
Slogan wreek is here again. The annual homecoming slogan contest for SC students opens today.
The winner will receive more rewards than in the past in keeping with the Homecoming committee’s plan to better last year’s celebration as much as possible.
Guthrie Miller won the contest a*----
year ago and got two 50-yard line I
Mascot Copped In Sneak Play
I George Tirebiter has disappeared l again!
SC’s airedale mascot, victim of an | alleged snatch by Westwood ruffians just prior to last year’s SC-; UCLA grid battle, was discovered i missing from his temporary quarters j at a West Slauson avenue boarding I kennel on Saturday morning.
Trojan Knights Ken Kopecky , and Cass Sermak, who were to , bring George to the Coliseum for j his appearance at the Rice game,
I returned empty-handed from the -louse. The first office is kennel, "here they had seen neither
hide nor hair of the brute who had come from nowhere to rise to the pinnacles of canine glory at Troy.
Attendants at the dog hotel re-
tickets to the Notre Dame game, as well as the usual campus publicity. The only hitch in his luck was that he broke his leg and had to listen to the game in Ded. This year’s winner won’t get an insurance policy, but he or she will get the two tickets to the Notre Dame tussle, plus an engraved trophy bearing the winner’s name, and a ride into the Coliseum in the Homecoming queen's procession.
DEADLINE SET
Parnell Curry, chairman of the slogan committee, has set the deadline for entries as 3 p.m. Friday, and he has prescribed a 10-word limit to slogans. __
Entries will be collected in three places: 235 Student Union, in the alumni review office in the same building, and in the Delta Chi fraternity
that of Ralph Townsend, chairman of the Homecoming committee, and will be open from 1:30 to 3 p.m. i Monday through Thursday, until j Dec. 2.
COMMITTEES MEET
The student and alumni home- i coming committees will meet next : Monday to pick the winning slogan and decide the theme of Homecoming week.
Bloomer Babes Bust Bustle in Bowl Brawl
by Mai Florence
Intone of the most fiercely fought games ever seen at: 1 Troy, the Kappa Alpha Theta and Pi Beta Phi sororities j : fought to a bitter 0-0 tie last Friday afternoon on the Girl’s i j athletic field in the first annual Bloomer bowl game.
More than 2500 fans jammed their way onto the field to |
! witness the struggle. The Thetas, a*—---
question mark a week prior to the
game, carried the fight to the Pi T II I T
i Phis in the second half and all but laiKio explain
! won the contest.
WISDOM SPARKS klAAA H I* *
Sparked by Peggy “Whizzer” Wis- : |\| AA rOlfCS05 I aom, the 653 West 28th street ag-
' gregation marched deep into Pi Phi ■ ■ • ■ •
J territory in the waning minutes of ■ In IJ|/rf n Ufl/Af , the game, but sterling defensive II I I I I I I ? llv J play by Jittery Joanie Williams and
! Maxine “Hippo” Ewert halted the EarI Bunting, managing director : advance. '°f tIie National Association of
In the first half, the Pi Phis Manufacturers, will address SC students today in Bovard at
showed a concentrated attack. Jumpin’ Joanne Mahoney, who did everyhing but lead the Kappa Alpha and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity bands at half time, was the big noise. Fans are still talking about her brilliant straight arm that chilled Theta tacklers and her out-of-this world catch over her shoulder of a booming 60-yard Theta quick kick.
port that two men who posed as SC students called for the dog about four days ago. The kennel men, who had been notified by Morey Thomas, president of the Knights, to release George only to
ebate Squad tals Seventy
Among those on the alumni slo- j Kopecky ^.nd Sermak upon proper
identification, refused tc give up I the Trojan nipper to the strangers.
In the midst of the ensuing argu-I ment, a telephone message, coming | from a man who identified himself : as Arnold Eddy, director of alumni and student activities, instructed the attendants to surrender the | simple beast to the unsuspected dognapers. In an instant, Biter had gone the unknown way of Tommy Trojan’s sword.
Eddy denies any knowledge of the
gan committee are Dr. Albert F. Zecn. counselor of men; Amolld Eddy, director of alumni and student activities; and. Virgil Pinkley, editor and publisher of the Los Angeles Mirror.
The whole program of activities and Row and campus decorations will be built on the theme in the slogan. •'Troyditionally Yours” was 1946's winning slogan, and "Recall Your Joys in Halls of Troy ’ won last year.
10 a.m.
Speaking on the topic, “A Positive Price Program,” he will explain policies advocated by the 16,000 members of the NAM.
Today’s price situation is similar to “a huge national auction with consumers bidding up prices on the things they want to buy,” Mr. Bunting said, commenting on I the present inflation.
On the other side of the ledger, j Mj\ BunUng believes ls
Liz Bend, the fabulous Theta punt- I needed among all sections ox -i.e er, and Jean Lancaster, tough end, ^ree enterPrise economy to keep were standouts. ia powerful and Productive America.
Proceeds of the contest went to present lecture tour is aimed
the Intercultural club for the Fore- t0 bring a closer relationship and a ign student fund. | better understanding of the Amer-
BLF ATS ' industrial system to faculty
j and students of colleges.
Prior to the fray the members i __
of SAEs and KAs, sponsors of the . ^ ntmg ,has been a leader
Pi Phis and Thetas respectively, r.n4. NAM since 1945‘ Hls first
j duties were as vice-chairman of the
; distribution committee of the NAM.
; This committee attempted to improve distribution processes in in-
The person who cops the trophy j dastardly affair.
will enter the intercollegiate te practice tournament in No-:r with a 70-member squad. Milt Dobkin. scuad manager, uncing the results of last tryouts.
asides several members of last ’s varsity teams, the squad lias replenished with transfer stu-s, among whom are former top rs from UCLA, Iowa, Penn Pasadena city college, and
ming university.
VOCAL FRESHMEN
-e freshman squad will enter field with last year's champions irsev and Los Angeles high is. as well as one former na->1 high school champion, summing up the results of the its, Head Debate Coach Dr. Ai-Nichols said the squad shows irising strength in mep's lower ons. with somewhat less Ingth in men’s upper divisions.' omen’s teams aie still “sorely jeed” of members, though a few e made arrangements with ches to try out this week. MEETING CALLED ler women desiring to join the may make appointments for at the Speech office, or by g Ext. 428. ad Manager Milt Dobkin lias »d ail persons who partici-in tryouts and all returning members to attend a general meeting today. 3:15 to 5 pan., j 6peech B.
and the tickets this year will be subject to more publicity than any winner has received before, accord-to Curry. The slogan committee will get the lucky man or woman into the thick of national publicity which the Homecoming committee expects to attract with the campus festivities. Radio broadcasts and television shows of the proceedings arc being planned.
Starr Named Medical Chief
Dr. Paul Starr has been appointed I professor and acting chairman of the School of Medicine, Dean Bur-rel O. Raulston announced Thursday. He was a faculty member of the graduate division of the School of Medicine.
Dr. Starr came to SC in 1945 after . three years of service in the Army Medical corps. He assisted in the development of the Air corps program against rheumatic fever.
He was graduated with degrees from Harvard, Rush Medical school, j and the University of Chicago.
The new chairman is a member oi the American Association for the i Advancement of Science, the Am- : erican Medical association, and is an officer of the American Board I of .Internal Medicine. He is an au-: thority in the field of internal med-icine and has published numerous ireix>rts of his research activities.
During George’s 1947 disappearance, the block letters UCLA were shaved in his furry back and, judging from his bedraggled aspect and long period of lethargy after his mysterious reappearance, he was manhandled considerably in the process.
paraded up and down University avenue and the Row in a pregame rally. At halftime, the marching bands of the two fraternities, entertained t.he crowd,
There were no injuries in the contest. It is hoped that the game may become an annual event.
Both fraternities were in a quand-ry in regards as what to do with J the Bloomer bowl trophy that was ! | to go to the winner. According to SAE Cy Osttrup and KA Bill Bird,
J who fostered the idea of the Bloom- , er bowl, the trophy will be retained by each sorority for a six-month period.
Half-time festivities included a float reminiscent of another bowl game. Organized cheering spurred the gladiators on to their best efforts.
dustry during the war.
Mr. Bunting's lecture at SC is be-j ing sponsored by the College of ; Commerce. All 10 o’clock commerce , classes will be dismissed for the ad-i dress.
SC Gets Grant In Cancer Fight
To help fight the laboratory battle against cancer, the biochemistry department has been awarded §6600 by the National Cancer institute of the US Health Service.
Of the grant. $5000 is to be used ior two graduate fellowships. Students will study the reactions of cancer cells to radio-active isotopes and also compare their effects on normal and abnormal cancerous tissue.
The remaining $1600 will be used by Mrs. Merle Lewis, graduate student, to do research on the effects of various types and amounts cf i Bob Church to Bill Pemberton, proteins in cancerous white blood After that the “Chislers” never cells. She will work under the di- j threatened and played like a “bunch rection of Dr. John Mohl, faculty of statues.’’ according to a Painter member and chief chemist at the j partisan. Pemberton crossed the goal Los Angeles county hospital. j line again in the last quarter on a
The biochemistry department has pass from Mitch Crawley.
Painters Smear Sculptors, 12-0
Artistically speaking, the football game played Friday noon between the Painters and the Sculptors was a success.
In the colorful contest the Painters whitewashed the Sculptors, 12-0, to take the lead in the Fine Arts Paint Pot seiies. The winners complained that they were unable to convert because of the absence of goal posts on the Exposition park lawn.
The last two minutes of the game furnished the most excitement, since they were played while an annoyed park caretaker tried to shoe the athletic artists off of his scar-rad turf.
The Painters were smeared in the first quarter by the rugged Sculptor line, which held like seven blocks of granite. The “Daubers” then went over the heads of tne opposition to score on a long pass from
Classical Film Series Planned
been given 12 grants by the government and industry amounting to $85,000.
I
Claiming that the Painters “were lucky to brush by,” the Sculptors have demanded a rematch.
A series of nine outstanding motion pictures, supplemented by discussions led by prominent Hollywood historians, will be shown by the cinema department over an eight-week period, it was announced last Friday.
The series will open on Oct. 14 when Douglas Fairbanks Sr. will be featured in an old epic, “Mark of 1 Zorro.” Fairbanks, dashing cellu-! ioid hero of the silent movie era, is considered by many to have been the most agile actor in movie history.
TICKETS GO FOR S2.50
Each of the nine programs will start at 8:30 p.m. in Hancock auditorium. The programs will average approximately two hours. Tickets for the series may be purchased at the ticket office or the cinema office Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Price for the entire series is $2.50.
Since the subscriptions are limited to the seating capacity of the auditorium, sales will be made to university personnel on a first-come, first-serve basis. All seats are unreserved.
PEOPLE TURNED AWAY
A test run was made last Thursday evening when “All Quiet on the Western Front” was shown to a capacity house. No admission was charged and the auditorium was filled by 8 o'clock. When the doors were closed, 500 people had been turned away.
This enthusiastic reception caused the cinema department to announce their plan of showing an entire series of film classics.
Tearn to T ravel Via Wild Blue
SC’s football team will travel to the Orgen game at Portland Saturday by air, Willis O. Hunter, director of inter-collegiate athletics, informed the Daily Trojan Friday.
Two planes have been chartered from United Airlines for the trip.
It will be the first time in the history of the Trojans that they have flown to a game instead of using the more conventional form of travel, the train. Other major football teams throughout the nation have flown to distant contests.
The football team will not be the first SC team to travel by air, the basketball and baseball teams flew to contests last year.
Stanford Ducat Purchase Starts
Stanford game tickets and railroad reservations for the excursion into Indian country are on sale today in the ticket office at 3526 University avenue.
This office, the only one open for business in the current remodeling zone, will stop sales this Friday and return unsold tickets to Stanford.
Rugged migratory fans can make the round trip by chair car for $15.53. Pullman accommodations are available for those who want to travel horizontally. The chargc for single lowers is $30.82, and single
Air Reservations ToCamePlanned
Viking airlines is taking reservations for charter planes flying to San Francisco Saturday for the Stanford game. Round-trip tickets for one plane, which has 28 seats, will cost S24, tax included. Tickets for other planes seating 21 wi'l go for $32.
The planes wi’l leave Burbank’s Lockheed airport at 9:30 Saturday morning and arrive in San Francisco at 11:30. Returning planes will leave San Francisco at 11:30 Returning planes will leave San Francisco at 9:30 Sunday morning. The airline will furnish transportation from Palo Alto to I the airport.
Reservations may be made at 6130 Selma avenue, Hollywood, or by ca'ling HU. 21139.
Tough Defense Saves Day As Rugged Owls Threaten
bv Mai Florence
Shakespeare once said that a man in his lifetime plays many parts, and this is certainly true of the 1948 Trojan football team. Last Saturday at the Coliseum the Trojans placed the role of Horatio at the bridge in contrast to the
courtesies they extended Ohio State two weeks ago and consequently they turned back the*_.__’__
I
ASME Chief Will Address SC Engineers
E- G. Bailey, president of the American Society of Mechanical en-
j stubborn Rice Owls, 7-0.
Much has been written about the lethargic SC eleven this year, but ; no one can deny that the Trojans have guts. The Trojan forward wall repulsed three Rice drives inside the iocals’ 10-yard stripe and two others inside of their own 25-yard line.
Thanks to yeoman-like defensive work on the part of Don Doll, Don Regers, Harold Hatfield, and others, i the Troy gained its first intersec-i tional win of the year.
DOLL SPARKS With George Murphy at the helm, | . ,
Troy pieced together a drive in the gineers’ w u e on campus at noon | second equarter that provided the j today to speak before engineering margin of victory. Starting on their j students in 206 Administration own 20-yard stripe, the Trojans | building. All 12 o'clock mechanical marched 80 yards in 19 plays lor engineering classes will be dismiss-tho touchdown. Don Doll, who was e<^ f°r the talk, a one-man riot for the Trojans Sat- Bailey, considered one of the fore-urday, provided the touchdown with niost mechanical engineers in the a 23-yard sprint off left tackle. j nation, has concentrated on devel-Punctuating the drive were two cping processes for the more ef-Murphy to Stillwell passes that ate J ficient utilization of coal. He has up 21 yards, pieced together with j patented a large number of meter timely lipe slants by Bill Martin i and boiler inventions, and Art Battle. ; Academic honors Bailey has re-
SC GETS BREAK . ceived include doctor of engineer-
Troy rarely threatened after that : ing degrees from Lehigh and Ohio because, for one reason, they never state universities, and a doctor of had their hands on the ball. The 1 science degree from Lafayette col-game was hardly two minutes old lege.
when the Trojans got a break that j WINS HONORS
they didn't capitalize on. Boyd Hachten and Hatfield came roaring t
into block Huey Keeney’s punt in ____ ^ ,
the first series of downs, and BUI 1930’ the iff® medal frora 0iuo Beu fell on the elusive pigskin on state in 1936- the medal in
the Owl 14-yard stripe. Three I i942- ar*d the Percy Nlchols award-punches at the" line by Battle, and He * a member of the board of one by Doll netted the Troys only trustees at Lafayette college and nine yards and the stubborn Owls also of the American Society for took over the ball on their own Engineering Education, five-yard line. ! In the fields of pulverized coal-
Although the Owls were a con- firing and boiler and furnace design, stant threat in the first haU, it he developed practical innovations wasn’t until the third and fourth for the slag-tap furnace, two-stage quarters that the Houston boys j furnace, open-pass boiler, intertube made things miserable for SC. Be- burner, coai pulverizer, and the di-fore we dismiss the Trojans in the rect firing of pulverized coal in second half, it must be mentioned high-capacity boilers, that the locals drove to the Owl 35- j More than 100 patents have been yard line in the third period from issued in his name ,and he has their own 14 before relinquishing 1 written more than 35 technical pap-the ball. An 11-yard thrust by Mar- ers and trade paper articles, tin, plus two 13-yard gallops by OHIO ST\TE GRAD
Battle, and sandwiched in between line bucks by Murphy and Al Cantor placed the locals on this spot.. . ,. . . But Troy died here and from then a P^ on coal sampling which
: later became the basis of procedure
He was awarded the Longstreth medal from Franklin institute in
OHIO
! Bailey was graduated from Ohio 'state in 1903. In 1909 he published
uppers will cost $26.92. Students can double up in a lower for $27.66 a-piece.
Game tickets cost $1.50, and student purchases are limited to a single pasteboard. Buyers must present their identification cards. Additional reserved seats are on sale at the regular price of $3.00.
The north-bound special will run in two sections. The lead cars will leave Union station at 9:20 p.m. and ! Glendale at 9:40 p.m., Friday, Oct.
. 22. The second section will trail it i by io minutes. Arrival in Palo Alto is scheduled for shortly after 10 Saturday morning..
Both sections will roll into San j Francisco after the contest, leaving Palo Alto at 5:30 p.m. and arriving Saturday’s in the Bay city one hour later. Departure for the return trip is set for 2:10 Sunday morning.
! on in it was all Rice.
WYATT BREAKS LOOSE From the SC 47, Gordon Wyatt ; broke loose around right end for 37 yards and a first down on Troy’s 8. Plunges by Rote and Bobby Lantrip. who was a constant thorn in 1 SC's side, failed to make the required yardage and the undaunted Troys took over on downs. Doll sent
i adopted by both American and ; British engineers.
I During the period of 1909 to 1915, ! he developed a boiler meter in which the steam-flow and air-flow pens recorded on the same scaie, thus giving instantaneous indication of steam output and excess combustion air. This meter is now used
(Continued on Page 3) ‘extensively all over the Wv^ld.
Band Beats Out Beneke Blues ★ ★ ★ ★ Theta Chis Trill Song
by Dan Bagott
Out-of-State
. . . Trojans wishing to vote in the fall elections may get the necessary information at 233 SU.
The office has applications foi ballots and a list of persons who may be contacted for particulars about eligi*'’litm’ out-of-state
votinsr
“Carry On,” a new football song that had its initial introduction at Friday night’s rally on the Row, made a second auspicious debut at ame in the Coliseum.
Accompanied by the blasts of electric horns in the rooting sec-: tion, a group of silver-voiced Theta i Chis warbled the song and then were joined in the chorus a second time by the entire rooting section.
Also new to the 49.531 fans pres-
from that formation, and then they formed a question mark from which they played the new “mystery,, song of the “Stop the Music” radio show.
The two sheeted dancers offered as a clue to the title of the song brought a laugh, if nothing else, from the crowd. The few guessej that were made ranged from thi “Ghost Song” to the “Ku Klu* Klan Waltz.”
Animated card stunts were featured by the card section until it
ent was the block T, for Trojans, stopped penorming in order to give formed by the bootball band in t^e stage to the band, massed in place of the customary SC. | r,he center of the field. Jukebox
Stepping out with the new 164 1 addicts cheered the band’s rendi-steps per minute cadence, the band i tion of Tex Beneke’s “St. Louis went into an R, for Rice, doffed Blues March” before the musicians their hats and bowed to the stands j filed into their seats.
I
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 21, October 11, 1948 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 40, No. 21, October 11, 1948. |
| Full text | SOUTHERN C A L' I F O R N I A PAGE TWO Eshleman Reports Paris Riot Urojan PAGE FOUR LAS Schedules Grid Game Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Oct. 11, 1948 Night Phone RI. 5472 No. 21 aternity bandons ow PAC ig Eps Withdraw rom Committee; harge Disharmony gma Phi Epsilon frater-Friday announced its de-n to drop out of all Row ics because of a “detri-tal group working behind rfraternity council which 1 bits its proper function- lph Townsend, Sig Ep Ident, resigned from the manship of the IFC Political n committee, saying that he Id not participate in any ngs of political groups what- . r.” udent politics are not of such i importance to our fraternity other fraternities that I have j to on this subject that it ' d cause the hatred and dis- ; ony on the Flow that it has e past year,” said Townsend. •IFC HAMPERED’ wnsend added that he is con-d a group is working behind on political matters that srs its proper activities. view of the Panhellenic de-not to support the Political n committee. I feel that a organization will attempt to 1 PAC as they have IFC.” » Panhellenic council last sday voted unanimously to re-the IPC proposal that sorority bers participate in endorsing candidates for school elections, decision has been referred to ouses for their individual con-tion. he Row has good men to put Tor student body offices,” said nsend, “but many times the man is not endorsed because litics in IPC.” •HOUSES DISTURBED’ Several houses feel disturbed t the fact that if these men not receive IPC endorsement. cannot run for office. This i le past has been the first phase sharmony on the Row. n my personal belief, these men. j ~dless of number, should have privilege of running for any they desire. This would be in the right direction toward inating machine politics, y completely dissolving politics IFC and forgetting such an :ation as PAC or any other ic connected with Row politics, would do the tiling most lnter-d parties are concerned with at present time.” Holds at Goal Beat Rice 7 0 GUTHRIE MILLER, Homecoming slogan contest winner last year, flashes a happy grin as he accepts two ducats to the 1947 SC-Notre Dame football tilt from Jea Morf, former ASSC vice-president. Guth's luck changed, however, as he broke his leg and was unable to attend the game. That's Johnny Davis who's smiling. The 1948 contest opens today. Contest Heralds Troy Homecoming Slogan wreek is here again. The annual homecoming slogan contest for SC students opens today. The winner will receive more rewards than in the past in keeping with the Homecoming committee’s plan to better last year’s celebration as much as possible. Guthrie Miller won the contest a*---- year ago and got two 50-yard line I Mascot Copped In Sneak Play I George Tirebiter has disappeared l again! SC’s airedale mascot, victim of an alleged snatch by Westwood ruffians just prior to last year’s SC-; UCLA grid battle, was discovered i missing from his temporary quarters j at a West Slauson avenue boarding I kennel on Saturday morning. Trojan Knights Ken Kopecky , and Cass Sermak, who were to , bring George to the Coliseum for j his appearance at the Rice game, I returned empty-handed from the -louse. The first office is kennel, "here they had seen neither hide nor hair of the brute who had come from nowhere to rise to the pinnacles of canine glory at Troy. Attendants at the dog hotel re- tickets to the Notre Dame game, as well as the usual campus publicity. The only hitch in his luck was that he broke his leg and had to listen to the game in Ded. This year’s winner won’t get an insurance policy, but he or she will get the two tickets to the Notre Dame tussle, plus an engraved trophy bearing the winner’s name, and a ride into the Coliseum in the Homecoming queen's procession. DEADLINE SET Parnell Curry, chairman of the slogan committee, has set the deadline for entries as 3 p.m. Friday, and he has prescribed a 10-word limit to slogans. __ Entries will be collected in three places: 235 Student Union, in the alumni review office in the same building, and in the Delta Chi fraternity that of Ralph Townsend, chairman of the Homecoming committee, and will be open from 1:30 to 3 p.m. i Monday through Thursday, until j Dec. 2. COMMITTEES MEET The student and alumni home- i coming committees will meet next : Monday to pick the winning slogan and decide the theme of Homecoming week. Bloomer Babes Bust Bustle in Bowl Brawl by Mai Florence Intone of the most fiercely fought games ever seen at: 1 Troy, the Kappa Alpha Theta and Pi Beta Phi sororities j : fought to a bitter 0-0 tie last Friday afternoon on the Girl’s i j athletic field in the first annual Bloomer bowl game. More than 2500 fans jammed their way onto the field to ! witness the struggle. The Thetas, a*—--- question mark a week prior to the game, carried the fight to the Pi T II I T i Phis in the second half and all but laiKio explain ! won the contest. WISDOM SPARKS klAAA H I* * Sparked by Peggy “Whizzer” Wis- : \ AA rOlfCS05 I aom, the 653 West 28th street ag- ' gregation marched deep into Pi Phi ■ ■ • ■ • J territory in the waning minutes of ■ In IJ /rf n Ufl/Af , the game, but sterling defensive II I I I I I I ? llv J play by Jittery Joanie Williams and ! Maxine “Hippo” Ewert halted the EarI Bunting, managing director : advance. '°f tIie National Association of In the first half, the Pi Phis Manufacturers, will address SC students today in Bovard at showed a concentrated attack. Jumpin’ Joanne Mahoney, who did everyhing but lead the Kappa Alpha and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity bands at half time, was the big noise. Fans are still talking about her brilliant straight arm that chilled Theta tacklers and her out-of-this world catch over her shoulder of a booming 60-yard Theta quick kick. port that two men who posed as SC students called for the dog about four days ago. The kennel men, who had been notified by Morey Thomas, president of the Knights, to release George only to ebate Squad tals Seventy Among those on the alumni slo- j Kopecky ^.nd Sermak upon proper identification, refused tc give up I the Trojan nipper to the strangers. In the midst of the ensuing argu-I ment, a telephone message, coming from a man who identified himself : as Arnold Eddy, director of alumni and student activities, instructed the attendants to surrender the simple beast to the unsuspected dognapers. In an instant, Biter had gone the unknown way of Tommy Trojan’s sword. Eddy denies any knowledge of the gan committee are Dr. Albert F. Zecn. counselor of men; Amolld Eddy, director of alumni and student activities; and. Virgil Pinkley, editor and publisher of the Los Angeles Mirror. The whole program of activities and Row and campus decorations will be built on the theme in the slogan. •'Troyditionally Yours” was 1946's winning slogan, and "Recall Your Joys in Halls of Troy ’ won last year. 10 a.m. Speaking on the topic, “A Positive Price Program,” he will explain policies advocated by the 16,000 members of the NAM. Today’s price situation is similar to “a huge national auction with consumers bidding up prices on the things they want to buy,” Mr. Bunting said, commenting on I the present inflation. On the other side of the ledger, j Mj\ BunUng believes ls Liz Bend, the fabulous Theta punt- I needed among all sections ox -i.e er, and Jean Lancaster, tough end, ^ree enterPrise economy to keep were standouts. ia powerful and Productive America. Proceeds of the contest went to present lecture tour is aimed the Intercultural club for the Fore- t0 bring a closer relationship and a ign student fund. better understanding of the Amer- BLF ATS ' industrial system to faculty j and students of colleges. Prior to the fray the members i __ of SAEs and KAs, sponsors of the . ^ ntmg ,has been a leader Pi Phis and Thetas respectively, r.n4. NAM since 1945‘ Hls first j duties were as vice-chairman of the ; distribution committee of the NAM. ; This committee attempted to improve distribution processes in in- The person who cops the trophy j dastardly affair. will enter the intercollegiate te practice tournament in No-:r with a 70-member squad. Milt Dobkin. scuad manager, uncing the results of last tryouts. asides several members of last ’s varsity teams, the squad lias replenished with transfer stu-s, among whom are former top rs from UCLA, Iowa, Penn Pasadena city college, and ming university. VOCAL FRESHMEN -e freshman squad will enter field with last year's champions irsev and Los Angeles high is. as well as one former na->1 high school champion, summing up the results of the its, Head Debate Coach Dr. Ai-Nichols said the squad shows irising strength in mep's lower ons. with somewhat less Ingth in men’s upper divisions.' omen’s teams aie still “sorely jeed” of members, though a few e made arrangements with ches to try out this week. MEETING CALLED ler women desiring to join the may make appointments for at the Speech office, or by g Ext. 428. ad Manager Milt Dobkin lias »d ail persons who partici-in tryouts and all returning members to attend a general meeting today. 3:15 to 5 pan., j 6peech B. and the tickets this year will be subject to more publicity than any winner has received before, accord-to Curry. The slogan committee will get the lucky man or woman into the thick of national publicity which the Homecoming committee expects to attract with the campus festivities. Radio broadcasts and television shows of the proceedings arc being planned. Starr Named Medical Chief Dr. Paul Starr has been appointed I professor and acting chairman of the School of Medicine, Dean Bur-rel O. Raulston announced Thursday. He was a faculty member of the graduate division of the School of Medicine. Dr. Starr came to SC in 1945 after . three years of service in the Army Medical corps. He assisted in the development of the Air corps program against rheumatic fever. He was graduated with degrees from Harvard, Rush Medical school, j and the University of Chicago. The new chairman is a member oi the American Association for the i Advancement of Science, the Am- : erican Medical association, and is an officer of the American Board I of .Internal Medicine. He is an au-: thority in the field of internal med-icine and has published numerous ireix>rts of his research activities. During George’s 1947 disappearance, the block letters UCLA were shaved in his furry back and, judging from his bedraggled aspect and long period of lethargy after his mysterious reappearance, he was manhandled considerably in the process. paraded up and down University avenue and the Row in a pregame rally. At halftime, the marching bands of the two fraternities, entertained t.he crowd, There were no injuries in the contest. It is hoped that the game may become an annual event. Both fraternities were in a quand-ry in regards as what to do with J the Bloomer bowl trophy that was ! to go to the winner. According to SAE Cy Osttrup and KA Bill Bird, J who fostered the idea of the Bloom- , er bowl, the trophy will be retained by each sorority for a six-month period. Half-time festivities included a float reminiscent of another bowl game. Organized cheering spurred the gladiators on to their best efforts. dustry during the war. Mr. Bunting's lecture at SC is be-j ing sponsored by the College of ; Commerce. All 10 o’clock commerce , classes will be dismissed for the ad-i dress. SC Gets Grant In Cancer Fight To help fight the laboratory battle against cancer, the biochemistry department has been awarded §6600 by the National Cancer institute of the US Health Service. Of the grant. $5000 is to be used ior two graduate fellowships. Students will study the reactions of cancer cells to radio-active isotopes and also compare their effects on normal and abnormal cancerous tissue. The remaining $1600 will be used by Mrs. Merle Lewis, graduate student, to do research on the effects of various types and amounts cf i Bob Church to Bill Pemberton, proteins in cancerous white blood After that the “Chislers” never cells. She will work under the di- j threatened and played like a “bunch rection of Dr. John Mohl, faculty of statues.’’ according to a Painter member and chief chemist at the j partisan. Pemberton crossed the goal Los Angeles county hospital. j line again in the last quarter on a The biochemistry department has pass from Mitch Crawley. Painters Smear Sculptors, 12-0 Artistically speaking, the football game played Friday noon between the Painters and the Sculptors was a success. In the colorful contest the Painters whitewashed the Sculptors, 12-0, to take the lead in the Fine Arts Paint Pot seiies. The winners complained that they were unable to convert because of the absence of goal posts on the Exposition park lawn. The last two minutes of the game furnished the most excitement, since they were played while an annoyed park caretaker tried to shoe the athletic artists off of his scar-rad turf. The Painters were smeared in the first quarter by the rugged Sculptor line, which held like seven blocks of granite. The “Daubers” then went over the heads of tne opposition to score on a long pass from Classical Film Series Planned been given 12 grants by the government and industry amounting to $85,000. I Claiming that the Painters “were lucky to brush by,” the Sculptors have demanded a rematch. A series of nine outstanding motion pictures, supplemented by discussions led by prominent Hollywood historians, will be shown by the cinema department over an eight-week period, it was announced last Friday. The series will open on Oct. 14 when Douglas Fairbanks Sr. will be featured in an old epic, “Mark of 1 Zorro.” Fairbanks, dashing cellu-! ioid hero of the silent movie era, is considered by many to have been the most agile actor in movie history. TICKETS GO FOR S2.50 Each of the nine programs will start at 8:30 p.m. in Hancock auditorium. The programs will average approximately two hours. Tickets for the series may be purchased at the ticket office or the cinema office Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Price for the entire series is $2.50. Since the subscriptions are limited to the seating capacity of the auditorium, sales will be made to university personnel on a first-come, first-serve basis. All seats are unreserved. PEOPLE TURNED AWAY A test run was made last Thursday evening when “All Quiet on the Western Front” was shown to a capacity house. No admission was charged and the auditorium was filled by 8 o'clock. When the doors were closed, 500 people had been turned away. This enthusiastic reception caused the cinema department to announce their plan of showing an entire series of film classics. Tearn to T ravel Via Wild Blue SC’s football team will travel to the Orgen game at Portland Saturday by air, Willis O. Hunter, director of inter-collegiate athletics, informed the Daily Trojan Friday. Two planes have been chartered from United Airlines for the trip. It will be the first time in the history of the Trojans that they have flown to a game instead of using the more conventional form of travel, the train. Other major football teams throughout the nation have flown to distant contests. The football team will not be the first SC team to travel by air, the basketball and baseball teams flew to contests last year. Stanford Ducat Purchase Starts Stanford game tickets and railroad reservations for the excursion into Indian country are on sale today in the ticket office at 3526 University avenue. This office, the only one open for business in the current remodeling zone, will stop sales this Friday and return unsold tickets to Stanford. Rugged migratory fans can make the round trip by chair car for $15.53. Pullman accommodations are available for those who want to travel horizontally. The chargc for single lowers is $30.82, and single Air Reservations ToCamePlanned Viking airlines is taking reservations for charter planes flying to San Francisco Saturday for the Stanford game. Round-trip tickets for one plane, which has 28 seats, will cost S24, tax included. Tickets for other planes seating 21 wi'l go for $32. The planes wi’l leave Burbank’s Lockheed airport at 9:30 Saturday morning and arrive in San Francisco at 11:30. Returning planes will leave San Francisco at 11:30 Returning planes will leave San Francisco at 9:30 Sunday morning. The airline will furnish transportation from Palo Alto to I the airport. Reservations may be made at 6130 Selma avenue, Hollywood, or by ca'ling HU. 21139. Tough Defense Saves Day As Rugged Owls Threaten bv Mai Florence Shakespeare once said that a man in his lifetime plays many parts, and this is certainly true of the 1948 Trojan football team. Last Saturday at the Coliseum the Trojans placed the role of Horatio at the bridge in contrast to the courtesies they extended Ohio State two weeks ago and consequently they turned back the*_.__’__ I ASME Chief Will Address SC Engineers E- G. Bailey, president of the American Society of Mechanical en- j stubborn Rice Owls, 7-0. Much has been written about the lethargic SC eleven this year, but ; no one can deny that the Trojans have guts. The Trojan forward wall repulsed three Rice drives inside the iocals’ 10-yard stripe and two others inside of their own 25-yard line. Thanks to yeoman-like defensive work on the part of Don Doll, Don Regers, Harold Hatfield, and others, i the Troy gained its first intersec-i tional win of the year. DOLL SPARKS With George Murphy at the helm, . , Troy pieced together a drive in the gineers’ w u e on campus at noon second equarter that provided the j today to speak before engineering margin of victory. Starting on their j students in 206 Administration own 20-yard stripe, the Trojans building. All 12 o'clock mechanical marched 80 yards in 19 plays lor engineering classes will be dismiss-tho touchdown. Don Doll, who was e<^ f°r the talk, a one-man riot for the Trojans Sat- Bailey, considered one of the fore-urday, provided the touchdown with niost mechanical engineers in the a 23-yard sprint off left tackle. j nation, has concentrated on devel-Punctuating the drive were two cping processes for the more ef-Murphy to Stillwell passes that ate J ficient utilization of coal. He has up 21 yards, pieced together with j patented a large number of meter timely lipe slants by Bill Martin i and boiler inventions, and Art Battle. ; Academic honors Bailey has re- SC GETS BREAK . ceived include doctor of engineer- Troy rarely threatened after that : ing degrees from Lehigh and Ohio because, for one reason, they never state universities, and a doctor of had their hands on the ball. The 1 science degree from Lafayette col-game was hardly two minutes old lege. when the Trojans got a break that j WINS HONORS they didn't capitalize on. Boyd Hachten and Hatfield came roaring t into block Huey Keeney’s punt in ____ ^ , the first series of downs, and BUI 1930’ the iff® medal frora 0iuo Beu fell on the elusive pigskin on state in 1936- the medal in the Owl 14-yard stripe. Three I i942- ar*d the Percy Nlchols award-punches at the" line by Battle, and He * a member of the board of one by Doll netted the Troys only trustees at Lafayette college and nine yards and the stubborn Owls also of the American Society for took over the ball on their own Engineering Education, five-yard line. ! In the fields of pulverized coal- Although the Owls were a con- firing and boiler and furnace design, stant threat in the first haU, it he developed practical innovations wasn’t until the third and fourth for the slag-tap furnace, two-stage quarters that the Houston boys j furnace, open-pass boiler, intertube made things miserable for SC. Be- burner, coai pulverizer, and the di-fore we dismiss the Trojans in the rect firing of pulverized coal in second half, it must be mentioned high-capacity boilers, that the locals drove to the Owl 35- j More than 100 patents have been yard line in the third period from issued in his name ,and he has their own 14 before relinquishing 1 written more than 35 technical pap-the ball. An 11-yard thrust by Mar- ers and trade paper articles, tin, plus two 13-yard gallops by OHIO ST\TE GRAD Battle, and sandwiched in between line bucks by Murphy and Al Cantor placed the locals on this spot.. . ,. . . But Troy died here and from then a P^ on coal sampling which : later became the basis of procedure He was awarded the Longstreth medal from Franklin institute in OHIO ! Bailey was graduated from Ohio 'state in 1903. In 1909 he published uppers will cost $26.92. Students can double up in a lower for $27.66 a-piece. Game tickets cost $1.50, and student purchases are limited to a single pasteboard. Buyers must present their identification cards. Additional reserved seats are on sale at the regular price of $3.00. The north-bound special will run in two sections. The lead cars will leave Union station at 9:20 p.m. and ! Glendale at 9:40 p.m., Friday, Oct. . 22. The second section will trail it i by io minutes. Arrival in Palo Alto is scheduled for shortly after 10 Saturday morning.. Both sections will roll into San j Francisco after the contest, leaving Palo Alto at 5:30 p.m. and arriving Saturday’s in the Bay city one hour later. Departure for the return trip is set for 2:10 Sunday morning. ! on in it was all Rice. WYATT BREAKS LOOSE From the SC 47, Gordon Wyatt ; broke loose around right end for 37 yards and a first down on Troy’s 8. Plunges by Rote and Bobby Lantrip. who was a constant thorn in 1 SC's side, failed to make the required yardage and the undaunted Troys took over on downs. Doll sent i adopted by both American and ; British engineers. I During the period of 1909 to 1915, ! he developed a boiler meter in which the steam-flow and air-flow pens recorded on the same scaie, thus giving instantaneous indication of steam output and excess combustion air. This meter is now used (Continued on Page 3) ‘extensively all over the Wv^ld. Band Beats Out Beneke Blues ★ ★ ★ ★ Theta Chis Trill Song by Dan Bagott Out-of-State . . . Trojans wishing to vote in the fall elections may get the necessary information at 233 SU. The office has applications foi ballots and a list of persons who may be contacted for particulars about eligi*'’litm’ out-of-state votinsr “Carry On,” a new football song that had its initial introduction at Friday night’s rally on the Row, made a second auspicious debut at ame in the Coliseum. Accompanied by the blasts of electric horns in the rooting sec-: tion, a group of silver-voiced Theta i Chis warbled the song and then were joined in the chorus a second time by the entire rooting section. Also new to the 49.531 fans pres- from that formation, and then they formed a question mark from which they played the new “mystery,, song of the “Stop the Music” radio show. The two sheeted dancers offered as a clue to the title of the song brought a laugh, if nothing else, from the crowd. The few guessej that were made ranged from thi “Ghost Song” to the “Ku Klu* Klan Waltz.” Animated card stunts were featured by the card section until it ent was the block T, for Trojans, stopped penorming in order to give formed by the bootball band in t^e stage to the band, massed in place of the customary SC. r,he center of the field. Jukebox Stepping out with the new 164 1 addicts cheered the band’s rendi-steps per minute cadence, the band i tion of Tex Beneke’s “St. Louis went into an R, for Rice, doffed Blues March” before the musicians their hats and bowed to the stands j filed into their seats. I |
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