SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 11, No. 11, July 27, 1961 |
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SocrtHorr* Oaili'Torr^ìa
SUMMER A TROJAN
VOI. X4 LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 27. I »61 NO II
Avant Garde to Invade Troy
Football Coach From Glendale To Start Here
Mike Giddings ¡»ead football coach at Glendale College the past year, wa* hired recently a* as assistant foot ba !l ooach for USC. His appointment was announced by John McKay, head foot ba II coach, and Jess Hill, director of athletics, after a meet-' of the Glendale board of education.
Giddings coached Glendale College to its best record in history seven wins and two losses. Until he went there, the school had won only two games in two yeai-s.
He previously had three sue-cssful •years coaching at Monrovia High School, where he had a 28-1 record. The school had never won a “B" title until Giddings' teams won two in two years in 1957-58 with * 17-0 record. He coached the varsky in 1959 to its first title sine*? 1951 with an 11-1 season.
A graduate of South Pasadena High School in 1951, Giddings was graduated from Berkeley in 1955. He played guard and cackle at Gal, lettering in 1953-54.
He then entered t U e Marine Corps, serving six monphs at Quantico, Va., and one-and-a-halt
Dramas To Show Problems
Life in the modern age. through the searching eye> <tf ttwee avanr garde playwrights, will be presented tonight at 8\1«»
in Stop Gap Theater.
The plays, dealing with c>om-plications of life ranging fr<«rr» religion to communication arel old age. will also be run on Friday arvi Saturday nights by 'h.» dranrva department.
Two PrMniere«*
Included on the bill are K-4-ward A 1-bee‘s “The Sandb< Paul Arnold's “Tbe Tailor” and Michel de Ghetrierode's “W.*n-en at the Tomb." Tickets are an sale in the Ticket Office. 2NO SU. and the drama office, 37'» S. Homer St. Remaining ticket»-et.s will be sold at the door The event will be rhe Coast premiere for both the works by Arnold and de Ghel-derode. Atbee’s “Sandbox” was performed at USC last year w*i has received critical acclaim f MVjp« the nation.
.Von-C «»nf»>fTnity 'The Sandbox” is a thinly veiled attack on American social conduct in the Age of Miracles. Essentially, it portrays Albee's bitterness toward conformity.
'l’he plays of Eugene Ionesco ( series of cliches, empty formu- professor of drama and oompar- irtsipidy and yourh-fascinarion
represent an attempt to find a i las an*+»jargon bhat are used in ! ative literature for the summer through the hilarious non-eon-
TROUBLEMAKER -Spry grandmother in Edward Albee's "Sandbox" makes life un-comforteble for relatives waiting for her
death. The play is one of four av*nt garde works that will run in Stop Gap Theater. Tickets are now on sale for one dollar.
Ionesco Wants New Words, Reviewer Corrigan Claims
language that will express man's daily Ike only allow us to vague- noleiJ th9, jonesco is
existential condition, critic Rob- j ly touch at each other, if we nw deliberale|y obscure
vears at' Cainp Pendleton with er’ Co,T*an ,oW 8 CampuS 8U* "*h his language, but. instead taken by 1
a raider battalion. He dis- yes,erdaf' ^ , I them ** "e ^ . believes that a work of art “is «« P^ce
charged as a 1st Lieutenant.
Asking whether Ionesco's
Dr. Corrigan, editor of the an expression of an inoommu-
formity of bis leading lady, an 86-year-old grandmother who is her relatives to a to die.
Arnold, on the other hand, hocuses rhe essential lotvelwve^s
Giddings also plaved footl>all ,ePresenl a new direction -pulane Drama Keview. said that . nicable reality" that paradoxtc-
auring his two v > a r s in the 01 a erKi ^or theater- ( Ionesco has revealed the inade- ally can at times be oommuni- ,:>tt man 385 theme oi his not-
‘ ' Dr. Corrigan said that the avant | so-funnv "Tailor."' Imprisonel
corps.
He is the son of E. W
quacy of modern theater to ex- cated garde playwright ba* realized : press needs but has not
Gid- that the social language does found the answer himself,
dings of Downey, a Trojan Club not provide the words «common
member, and Mrs. Katherine to ail man. ! has been searching
Giddings of Laguna Beach. I “Ionesco has realized that the tor 1 metaphor rhai will be
symbolic of all men after all
“Ionesco's language has (Continual '*« ♦(
by the impotent master of a I "long-ago" castle. tt*e tailor ( C«»ntinu«»tl mi Page " J)
Postsession Will Hold Weekend Enrollment
Registration for cl re four-week Students in special 10- and postsession will be held tom or- 12-week programs in education row and Saturday in che Registration and Admission Building.
3454 University Ave.. Registrar
and business wiM also remain on campus.
Libraries will
David W. Evans announced yesterday.
The postsession will begin on Monday and will continue through Friday, August 25. La.e Shave,. annoimce<L registration will be accepted only on Monday and Tuesday of next week, Evaas said
remain open
their surface differences have been stripped away." rhe critic said, explaining that Ionesco believes that there is an essential condition tivai Ls common to all men
“He has developed a contextual type of drama in which the emotional situation has been made supei ¿or to the plot," Dr. Corrigan continued. "A special language is required to develop
She said rbat the libraries will be closed Sundays until the fall
Registration will be field ftotn **"^er begins. On August 28, ' 8:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. tomor- ri>e we<?kday closmg ^ wiU ** I row and from 8:30 a.m. «m*| 7 pm" fnd chai^e to 5,
noon on Saturday, he added. pm' ln ^Pt®n»ber.
Approximately 8,000 students Th* commons cafeteria will ‘ were enrolled in the summer ses- remain open full time for the sion, more than 1,000 students possession, serving meals from above last year’s total. Evans • a.m. to 6:45 p.m. The SCellar, said that an additional 70(3 reg- upstairs dining room and Stu-»trations for the postsesarion ate c^et>( Union cafeteria will all be expected during the weekend. c,0:**d during August, another record. The Grill will be open- from
Applications for the postses- 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. during the sion were made earlier in dhe postsession, and the Faculty year by many students, lie said. Center will also remain open.
Charlie Chaplin Films To Be Shown Tonight
Two Charlie Chaplin films will actor and the star billing -vasi
be run tonight at 7:30 in Cine ?iven to Miss Dressier.
108. 35th St. and Hoover Blvd.. It was through this film ttv»t as the last offering of the Sum- Chaplin acquired bis wide ree-
mer Cinema Soiree ognition among the movie-going
The Chaplin night will featuie public. The story of the cvy
the little clown’s first feature- ( slicker and the country girl inlength film. ‘The Kid." which volved t h e whole Keystone
was released in 1921. troupe and took 14 weeks t-*
Made on a budget of .<*600.000. shoot, at a time when films
the picture grossed more than were being made weekly and
$2 million. It co-stars Jackie even daily.
Coogan in his first role and one The movie was an adaptation which launched him to fame. of Miss Dressler's earlier stage
The film is considered more success. ‘TiUie’s Nightmare.'’ dramatic than the previous Critic Arthur Knight report« The xwblication schedule for Chaplin films, deriving its hu- in The Liveliest Art" thait
Che Summer Tiojan will be mor from situation and panto- Chaplin's beginning salary with
changed from bi-weekly to week-.' mime rather than from the ear- Keystone when he joined in De-
ly l>eginning next week. Her Chaplin slapstick and horse- cember. 1913 was $150 a week.
For the past six weeks, rhe play. A year later, he was being pai-1
student newspaper ha* been "Tillies Punctured Romance.'* $1.250 a week and in two mot e
publishe-i *»» Mondays and an earlier comedy that Chaplin years was signed by First Na-
Thursdavbut in will appear ' made in 1914 while sttfl with tional for SI million to deliver
only on Tuesdays dorirkg the Mack Sennet t, well also
four-week postsession. shown.
weekdays from S a.m. to 10 this type of unresolved action." p.m and Saturdays from 8 a.m. 1 The otitic. wt»o is a visiting
to 5 p.m. during the posisession, '---------------------------------------
administrative assistant Karen
Editor Gives Paper Dates
be eight films.
Admission to rhe feature wiW
The Daily Trojan student j Co-starring with Chaplin in be 50 eents. The cinema soiree newspaper for the fall and spring the film are Marie Dressier and has been sponsored by the local
semesters, will resume publication to mid-September.
Mabel Normand. At this time, chapter of national cinema fr*-Chaplin was still a supporting , ternity Delta Kappa Alpha
Object Description
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| Title | SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 11, No. 11, July 27, 1961 |
| Description | SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 11, No. 11, July 27, 1961. |
| Full text |
SocrtHorr* Oaili'Torr^ìa SUMMER A TROJAN VOI. X4 LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 27. I »61 NO II Avant Garde to Invade Troy Football Coach From Glendale To Start Here Mike Giddings ¡»ead football coach at Glendale College the past year, wa* hired recently a* as assistant foot ba !l ooach for USC. His appointment was announced by John McKay, head foot ba II coach, and Jess Hill, director of athletics, after a meet-' of the Glendale board of education. Giddings coached Glendale College to its best record in history seven wins and two losses. Until he went there, the school had won only two games in two yeai-s. He previously had three sue-cssful •years coaching at Monrovia High School, where he had a 28-1 record. The school had never won a “B" title until Giddings' teams won two in two years in 1957-58 with * 17-0 record. He coached the varsky in 1959 to its first title sine*? 1951 with an 11-1 season. A graduate of South Pasadena High School in 1951, Giddings was graduated from Berkeley in 1955. He played guard and cackle at Gal, lettering in 1953-54. He then entered t U e Marine Corps, serving six monphs at Quantico, Va., and one-and-a-halt Dramas To Show Problems Life in the modern age. through the searching eye> |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1320/uschist-dt-1961-07-27~001.tif |
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