Summer Trojan, Vol. 5, No. 6, July 18, 1950 |
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Predict campus leaflet bombing raid today
EXPERT TO BARE KOREA STORY
southern California
No. 6
72
Tuesday, July 18, 1950
Siobs to strafe with meal stubs
Lower Slobovia will pay its war debt to the U.S. by buying free meals for 40 Trojans today, according to the publicity agent for the SC Coop.
Red and green capsules will rain down on campus at 11, but Lower Slobovia isn’t mixed up in it. Pure publicity stunt. •--* 6000 capsules containing promotional leaflets will be dumped out
Dusk concert wifi be held on Bovard steps
A twilight band concert sponsored by the Trovets Living War Memorial will be played on the steps of Bovard auditorium Thursday evening at 5.
Tlie Summer Session band will be following a growing tradition Which began last year.
The ‘Prayer and Dream’’ sequence from “Hansel and Gretel" by Humperdinck will be the best-known selection on the program, according to Clarence Sawhill. band director.
Henry Cowell, important contemporary composer, will lead tne band during his own number, "Schoon-three."
“Bolero,” by Walter Smith, will be rendered by a trumpet trio; “Moods Interlude,” Herbert. Fred, will be among the other works.
of a low-flying plane. Five thousand riine hundred sixty of them will be red, and will have no intrinsic value. The othe'r 40 green ones, though, will be good for a free meal in the non-profit cafeteria located in the basement of the University Methodist church.
A Rochdale-type cooperative student organization dedicated primarily to serving meals at low prices, the coop also sponsors dances and social meetings. Lai-t year, by using a rotating student-labor system to ■'Cut costs, it nanaged to serve 1000 diners a week.
Wanna know how to drive a tank?
Channel trip to slip hip
Barring the unexpected appearance of Russian submarines in the Santa Catalina channel, students, faculty members and thfcir families will weigh anchor from Long Beach at noon Saturday, July 29, for the University Recreation association’s Catalina trip.
Free dancing at the Casino ballroom is only one of the many attract ions of the trip according to Alex D. Aloia, URA chairman, whose sole purpose in life is to eep summer students and faculty entertained.
Boats will leave Catalina at 11:30 >.m. for the return journey by star-ight. Tickets for the trip can be ^cured in 104 Physical Education uilding.
“Do-si-do and around you go” ill echo from the Student lounge night as the first all-university 'uare dance ball gets under way. ‘art Myles will be calling the do-i-do’s and his band will be back-*g him up with rustic rhythms. This calico cotillion is open to students, faculty, staff, and •iends of the university, Aloia said.
Comments on the Korean war, straight from the mouth of one who knows, will be heard today and tomorrow at 3:15, 133 Founders hall. Dr. No-Yong Park, who was born in Manchuria and went to school in Korea, China, and Japan, before coming to college in the U.S., has entitled his lectures “America’s Role in Eastern Asia.”
* An authority on Asiatic affairs, Dr No-Yong Park is a graduate of Harvard and the University of Minnesota.
Novelist Pearl Buck has said ‘ required reading for the white race” of one of his books prophesizing the fate of Western powers in Asia, “Retreat of the West.”
Far Eastern problems are the life study of Dr. No-Yong Park who has been a special lecturer at the Institute of International Understanding; for the past ten years.
n /
.... the 13th Armored division off§rs to teach you all about tanks, and to pay you while learning as America readies her armored reserve.
Local armor reserves comb SC for officers
College men may qualify for reserve commissions in the 13th Armored division of the organized Reserve corps by attending the division’s Officer Candidate school one weekend each month for 10 months, Capt. Floyd McCann announced yesterday. ^ The reserve unit is also seeking
Trojans for vacancies in .special services, intelligence, operations
What's
Going On
PROBLEMS A PRESENT - DAY
novelist has to face will be discussed by Frederic Morton, lecturer in English at New York university and himself a novelist, Thursday afternoon at 3:15, 133 Founders hall. Morton’s lecture is one of a series presented every Thursday by the department of English.
* * *
A THREE-WAY CORRECTIVE reading aid show will be on exhibit in Speech D Friday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Sponsored by the test panel committee of the class in corrective reading, the exhibit will be contributed to by the American Childhood Education association, the California Test Bureau, and the California Teachers association.
Mrs. Zettie W. Cole, chairman of the panel committee, said that the show will immediately follow a panel on the use of tests in corrective reading.
* * *
POETRY BY NEGRO writers will highlight the weekly meeting of the Tlialian Reading club tonight in 401 Student union at 7:30 p.m. The group will also attempt 1o present Pulitzer prizewinner Gwendolyn Brooks’ poem "Annie Allen.”
Nearly 50 students participate in the reading and discussion of literature at each meeting.
• * *
THE LITTLfl CHAPEL of Silence is tlie meeting place of the Christian Science organization every Tuesday afternoon at 3 15.
• • +
NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL honorary, and Phi Deita Kappa, will (Continued on Page 4)
DEE COOPER
Immoral 3-act play due soon
Sub-titled an “Immoral Comedy in Three Acts,” the drama department’s summer opus “Laburnam Grove” will be presented by Dr. Herber M. Stahl, visiting leiturer in drama, July 27, 28, and 29 in Bovard auditorium.
The play depicts the anguish experienced by a well-to-do English family who live on Shooter's Green, Laburnam Grove. Quiet, home-loving George Radfern is plagued by sponging relatives and his daughter's foppish young suitor.
This melee of trouble becomes a maelstorm when criminals and representatives of Scotland Yard enter the plot.
The cast will include Robert Wallace, Abigail Dunn, Dee Cooper, Elaine Peterson, Sherman Martin, Edward Earle, Jeff Whitten, Robert Browning, and Rory Guy.
Tickets may be purchased in ad-vance a the SC ticket office in the Student Union for 50 cents. No seats will be reserved.
supply, personnel, communications, and in tank, armored infantry, and artillery battalions, McCann, a member of Brig. Gen. J. T. Robert’s special staff, said. McCann is also an SC student and president of Trovets.
He said that students interested in knowing more about reserve opportunities may meet with him at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Trovet office, 405 Student Union.
The 13th Armored wil! hold summer training maneuvers from Aug. 6 to Aug. 20. Personnel attending camp will get full pay for their rank and will receive travel pay.
SC students in the division include Charles Daley, Marty Grey, Henry Challenge'-, Louis Burton, and Robert Houston.
Players group digs up songs for new show
Vaudeville that goes back beyond the '20s will be back with a flavor of the new tossed in Thursday evening, July 27, when the Crescent theater puts on an all -student variety show in the student lounge.
“We dug back into the 18th century for then-popular, now- forgotten songs to use in the show along with new unpublished ballads and novelty tunes written by campus composers. Some of these new songs are exceptionally good,” said Stan Palmer, producer and director of the show.
The dramatic group which wroks under Alexander Aloia, instructor in physical education, is known for its unusual presentation of productions in the half-moon or crescent staging which has the audience seated on three sides of the stage. No curtain is used with black-out employed between scenes.
Composed of students interested in drama as a recreational activity, the Crescent theater group has presented several successful plays ih the past year including Lillian Hel-man's “The Little Foxes” and the first Los Angeles showing of Noel Cowards “’Present Laughter.” Palmer obtained much of his experience working with Army extravaganzas in Munich.
Bill Rowlson, who rolls his eyes with the best of them according to Palmer, will be featured in the first part of the show, cutting up with song-and-dance in the old Jolson-Jessel fashion. Son.e of these new songs will be acted out in skit style.
No admission will be charged.
Registration continues
Cellar signups satisfy
Fall pre-registration continued virtually hitcniess today despite lines at the doors to the Student Union cellar, the new registration area, and increased parking problems.
Registration materials are available at Door B, Owens annex. The veterans’ station and fee readers are in the west end of Commons. Payment of fees is still made in the bursar's office, liowever.
The following is the schedule of registration. Absolutely no exceptions will be made, according to Assistant Registrar John Salmond. Juniors, seniors, and graduate students may register on the following days from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. according to their initials:
Today, July 18 a.m. E—J
July 18 p.m. K—M
Tomorrow July 19 a.m. N—R Freshman and sophomores will register as follows.
Tomorrow July 19 p.m. S—Z
Thursday, July 20 a.m. A—H July 20 p.m. I—R
All students and any initial: Friday, July 21 a.m.
July 21 p.m.
Saturday, July 2*2 a.m. until noon.
ARCH ITEM 'Tl'llE:
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Chans* time of 355al4 (0321) to 8-11 S4 TTli: 3551.1. (0322) to 8-11:50 TTli. CHEMISTR?:
Course number for class members 090411 through 09129 should rend: lylal..
Course number an<l credit lor cU»* numbers 091 IH and 0916K should :-«d: 1011.1. (4).
(Continued on Page ll
Object Description
Description
| Title | Summer Trojan, Vol. 5, No. 6, July 18, 1950 |
| Full text |
Predict campus leaflet bombing raid today EXPERT TO BARE KOREA STORY southern California No. 6 72 Tuesday, July 18, 1950 Siobs to strafe with meal stubs Lower Slobovia will pay its war debt to the U.S. by buying free meals for 40 Trojans today, according to the publicity agent for the SC Coop. Red and green capsules will rain down on campus at 11, but Lower Slobovia isn’t mixed up in it. Pure publicity stunt. •--* 6000 capsules containing promotional leaflets will be dumped out Dusk concert wifi be held on Bovard steps A twilight band concert sponsored by the Trovets Living War Memorial will be played on the steps of Bovard auditorium Thursday evening at 5. Tlie Summer Session band will be following a growing tradition Which began last year. The ‘Prayer and Dream’’ sequence from “Hansel and Gretel" by Humperdinck will be the best-known selection on the program, according to Clarence Sawhill. band director. Henry Cowell, important contemporary composer, will lead tne band during his own number, "Schoon-three." “Bolero,” by Walter Smith, will be rendered by a trumpet trio; “Moods Interlude,” Herbert. Fred, will be among the other works. of a low-flying plane. Five thousand riine hundred sixty of them will be red, and will have no intrinsic value. The othe'r 40 green ones, though, will be good for a free meal in the non-profit cafeteria located in the basement of the University Methodist church. A Rochdale-type cooperative student organization dedicated primarily to serving meals at low prices, the coop also sponsors dances and social meetings. Lai-t year, by using a rotating student-labor system to ■'Cut costs, it nanaged to serve 1000 diners a week. Wanna know how to drive a tank? Channel trip to slip hip Barring the unexpected appearance of Russian submarines in the Santa Catalina channel, students, faculty members and thfcir families will weigh anchor from Long Beach at noon Saturday, July 29, for the University Recreation association’s Catalina trip. Free dancing at the Casino ballroom is only one of the many attract ions of the trip according to Alex D. Aloia, URA chairman, whose sole purpose in life is to eep summer students and faculty entertained. Boats will leave Catalina at 11:30 >.m. for the return journey by star-ight. Tickets for the trip can be ^cured in 104 Physical Education uilding. “Do-si-do and around you go” ill echo from the Student lounge night as the first all-university 'uare dance ball gets under way. ‘art Myles will be calling the do-i-do’s and his band will be back-*g him up with rustic rhythms. This calico cotillion is open to students, faculty, staff, and •iends of the university, Aloia said. Comments on the Korean war, straight from the mouth of one who knows, will be heard today and tomorrow at 3:15, 133 Founders hall. Dr. No-Yong Park, who was born in Manchuria and went to school in Korea, China, and Japan, before coming to college in the U.S., has entitled his lectures “America’s Role in Eastern Asia.” * An authority on Asiatic affairs, Dr No-Yong Park is a graduate of Harvard and the University of Minnesota. Novelist Pearl Buck has said ‘ required reading for the white race” of one of his books prophesizing the fate of Western powers in Asia, “Retreat of the West.” Far Eastern problems are the life study of Dr. No-Yong Park who has been a special lecturer at the Institute of International Understanding; for the past ten years. n / .... the 13th Armored division off§rs to teach you all about tanks, and to pay you while learning as America readies her armored reserve. Local armor reserves comb SC for officers College men may qualify for reserve commissions in the 13th Armored division of the organized Reserve corps by attending the division’s Officer Candidate school one weekend each month for 10 months, Capt. Floyd McCann announced yesterday. ^ The reserve unit is also seeking Trojans for vacancies in .special services, intelligence, operations What's Going On PROBLEMS A PRESENT - DAY novelist has to face will be discussed by Frederic Morton, lecturer in English at New York university and himself a novelist, Thursday afternoon at 3:15, 133 Founders hall. Morton’s lecture is one of a series presented every Thursday by the department of English. * * * A THREE-WAY CORRECTIVE reading aid show will be on exhibit in Speech D Friday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sponsored by the test panel committee of the class in corrective reading, the exhibit will be contributed to by the American Childhood Education association, the California Test Bureau, and the California Teachers association. Mrs. Zettie W. Cole, chairman of the panel committee, said that the show will immediately follow a panel on the use of tests in corrective reading. * * * POETRY BY NEGRO writers will highlight the weekly meeting of the Tlialian Reading club tonight in 401 Student union at 7:30 p.m. The group will also attempt 1o present Pulitzer prizewinner Gwendolyn Brooks’ poem "Annie Allen.” Nearly 50 students participate in the reading and discussion of literature at each meeting. • * * THE LITTLfl CHAPEL of Silence is tlie meeting place of the Christian Science organization every Tuesday afternoon at 3 15. • • + NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL honorary, and Phi Deita Kappa, will (Continued on Page 4) DEE COOPER Immoral 3-act play due soon Sub-titled an “Immoral Comedy in Three Acts,” the drama department’s summer opus “Laburnam Grove” will be presented by Dr. Herber M. Stahl, visiting leiturer in drama, July 27, 28, and 29 in Bovard auditorium. The play depicts the anguish experienced by a well-to-do English family who live on Shooter's Green, Laburnam Grove. Quiet, home-loving George Radfern is plagued by sponging relatives and his daughter's foppish young suitor. This melee of trouble becomes a maelstorm when criminals and representatives of Scotland Yard enter the plot. The cast will include Robert Wallace, Abigail Dunn, Dee Cooper, Elaine Peterson, Sherman Martin, Edward Earle, Jeff Whitten, Robert Browning, and Rory Guy. Tickets may be purchased in ad-vance a the SC ticket office in the Student Union for 50 cents. No seats will be reserved. supply, personnel, communications, and in tank, armored infantry, and artillery battalions, McCann, a member of Brig. Gen. J. T. Robert’s special staff, said. McCann is also an SC student and president of Trovets. He said that students interested in knowing more about reserve opportunities may meet with him at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Trovet office, 405 Student Union. The 13th Armored wil! hold summer training maneuvers from Aug. 6 to Aug. 20. Personnel attending camp will get full pay for their rank and will receive travel pay. SC students in the division include Charles Daley, Marty Grey, Henry Challenge'-, Louis Burton, and Robert Houston. Players group digs up songs for new show Vaudeville that goes back beyond the '20s will be back with a flavor of the new tossed in Thursday evening, July 27, when the Crescent theater puts on an all -student variety show in the student lounge. “We dug back into the 18th century for then-popular, now- forgotten songs to use in the show along with new unpublished ballads and novelty tunes written by campus composers. Some of these new songs are exceptionally good,” said Stan Palmer, producer and director of the show. The dramatic group which wroks under Alexander Aloia, instructor in physical education, is known for its unusual presentation of productions in the half-moon or crescent staging which has the audience seated on three sides of the stage. No curtain is used with black-out employed between scenes. Composed of students interested in drama as a recreational activity, the Crescent theater group has presented several successful plays ih the past year including Lillian Hel-man's “The Little Foxes” and the first Los Angeles showing of Noel Cowards “’Present Laughter.” Palmer obtained much of his experience working with Army extravaganzas in Munich. Bill Rowlson, who rolls his eyes with the best of them according to Palmer, will be featured in the first part of the show, cutting up with song-and-dance in the old Jolson-Jessel fashion. Son.e of these new songs will be acted out in skit style. No admission will be charged. Registration continues Cellar signups satisfy Fall pre-registration continued virtually hitcniess today despite lines at the doors to the Student Union cellar, the new registration area, and increased parking problems. Registration materials are available at Door B, Owens annex. The veterans’ station and fee readers are in the west end of Commons. Payment of fees is still made in the bursar's office, liowever. The following is the schedule of registration. Absolutely no exceptions will be made, according to Assistant Registrar John Salmond. Juniors, seniors, and graduate students may register on the following days from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. according to their initials: Today, July 18 a.m. E—J July 18 p.m. K—M Tomorrow July 19 a.m. N—R Freshman and sophomores will register as follows. Tomorrow July 19 p.m. S—Z Thursday, July 20 a.m. A—H July 20 p.m. I—R All students and any initial: Friday, July 21 a.m. July 21 p.m. Saturday, July 2*2 a.m. until noon. ARCH ITEM 'Tl'llE: Delete 372al. (0256K) :in«l 372 (0259It* 1:15-5:03 W & 8-12 S. A Rt 'II ITK* TUItK—Industrial De«inn : Change time and room o£ 456aL> (03 314 to 1:15-0:03 TTli in H 110. Chans* time of 355al4 (0321) to 8-11 S4 TTli: 3551.1. (0322) to 8-11:50 TTli. CHEMISTR?: Course number for class members 090411 through 09129 should rend: lylal.. Course number an |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1337/uschist-dt-1950-07-18~001.tif |
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