Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 40, November 10, 1952 |
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Religion Week Starts Tomorrow Talks Scheduled By Fraternities And Sororities The stage will be set tonight for Religious Emphasis week, which will officially begin with convocation services tomorrow at 10 a.m. in Bovard auditorium. Religious speakers will give addresses at several fraternities and sororities this evening. Principal speakers during the week will be a protestant, Dr. George Hedley: a Jew, Rabbi Edgar F. Magnin; and a Catholic, not yet selected. Classes Dismissed The theme of tomorrow’s convocation will be “Religion, What It Isn’t—And Is.” Ten o'clock classes will be dismissed. Tomorrow afternoon. Dr. Hedley will speak on "The Superstitions of the Irreligious" at 2:15 in 133 FH. In addition, Capt. R. M. MacKinnon, commanding officer of the NROTC, will speak to the Newman club at 2 p.m., and Dr. Peter Joshua, minister of the South Hollywood Presbyterian church, will speak in 133 j F<H at 3:15. Dr. Joshua's topic will be “Christian Equipment for 1952.” Meandering Meal Concluding the day’s events will j be a progressive dinner, beginning at the Newman house, transferring to the Hillel house and to the j University Methodist church, and nding at the YWCA. The dinner \kjll begin at 6 p.m. Dr. Hedley, Chaplain of Mills College for Women, and Prof. Peter Stoner, chairman of mathematics and astronomy at Pasadena city college, will speak at various class meetings Wednesday morning, after which Dr. Hedley will address a faculty club luncheon at noon in Commons on “Ethics in Politics.” View of Communism Following the luncheon. Dr. Hedley will speak on “A Christian View of Communism” in 133 FH at 2:15. At 3:15 Prof. David D. Eitzen will speak at the YWCA on “You and Your Religion.” Wednesday evening has been re-rved for special events at the ligious club houses and residence halls. On Thursday Religious Emphasis week activities will be concluded with a talk by Dr. Hedley to the Zoology club at 4:15 p.m. in 352 Science hall. Earlier in the day Dr. Hedley will speak in several classes, ss will Rabbi Jacob Cohn, and Dr. Hedley will also talk on “Religion and Government" in 133 FH at 2:15 p.m. Hedley Visiting; Dr. Hedley wil) be the only visiting lecturer on campus. The other speakers will be Los Angeles churchmen. Dr. Hedley was born in China and educated in England and the U.S. He received his M.A. degree at SC and has written several books on religion. Among them are “A Christian Year,” “Church Council for Social Education,” “The C*h r i s t i a n Heritage in America,” “The Symbol of Faith,” and “The Superstitions of the Irreligious.” I MO a ul Vol. XLIV Lot Angeles, Calif., Monday, Nov. 10, 1952 No. 40 TROJANS OVER FRISCO RABBI MAGiflN ... to speak World Institute Advisers Told Chancellor Rufus B. von Klein-Smid announced the names of presidents of three universities and a college as new members of the board of advisors of the Institute of World Affairs Thursday. Dr. von KleinSmid is chancellor of the institute which meets at the Riverside Mission Inn, Dec. 14 to 17. New board members are presidents Paul S. Smith, Whittier college; Henry K. Newburn, University of Oregon; Henry Schmitz, University of Washington; and Richard C. Havrill, University of Arizona. Discussion of United States foreign policy and its implementation will be discussed by nationally known business men and educators at the December meeting, said Dr. Charles E. Martin, from University of Washington. He is director of the 29th meeting of the institute. Other university and college presidents on the board are Fred D. Fagg Jr., SC president, J. E. Wallace Sterling, Stanford university: Robert G. Sproul, University of California: E. Wilson Lyon, Pomona college, Arthur G. Coons, Occidental college; Gregg M. Sinclair, University of Hawaii; and Norman A. M. Mackenzie, University of British Columbia. Monroe to Salute Troy With Music Vaughn Monroe, vocalist and motion picture star, will salute SC on his radio show Nov. 15. Monroe's orchestra will play ‘Carry On.” a fight song written for Troy by Ernest Sutton. Band Director Tommy Walker ?nt scores of the song to New fit for use on the show yester- Hot Sorority Water Heater Arouses Row Row bonfire builders sometimes make life miserable for the fire department, but firemen answered a call Wednesday afternoon in time to avert a possible disaster in one of the 28th Street sorority houses. Seven fire engines rushed to the Row at 5:20 when the Delta Delta Delta house mother reported thermostat' trouble. The thermostat in the Tri-Delt hot water heater had jammed and pressure mounted dangerously. After telephoning the alarm, the house mother ordered 40 Tri-Delts outside to wait for (a) the fire department to arrive or (b) a possible explosion. Ten minutes of tinkering and everything was under control. Merrymaking Starts Fast on Rooters Train By Nick Apple Jubilant Southern California rooters celebrated riotously before, during, and after the unceremonious scalping of the Stanford Indian. The mild earthquake which shocked San Francisco about noon Saturday could not be compared with the boisterous merrymaking which rocked the Trojan rooters train, Stanford Stadium, and downtown ’Frisco. Students aboard the Southern Pacific apparently sensed the impending victory and began making whoopee as the train left Los Angeles on schedule Friday morning for the 11-hour trip. Among the first songs to be sung aboard the train was a rousing “Happy Birthday” by faculty advisers for Band Leader Tommy Walker. Vacationing scholars filled the remainder of the ride with a multitude of spirited cheers and gay tunes. No one sat for long in his seat as the students rambled through the lounges, dining halls, dance car and observation platform looking for friends and checking stock. Dates Galore Friendships blossomed and former strangers lined up dates for pre- and post-game festivities. Good-natured antics kept the Trojans full ot fire. One happy student, who wished to share his condition, went as far as to pour his bottle of liquid refreshments into a water tank. Samplers, unfortunately, found the drink a little more watered down than the drinks they purchased later in the nightspots. Some 30 football fans joined in a brief game of “headrest-slip tossing” when two chaps in car No. 4 discovered they were missing each other. Although it was all in fun, two late starters dropped out of the battle with discolored eyes. The celebrating on the rear platform came near to derailing the speeding train. A celebrant pulled the forbidden emergency stop and brought the train to a rolling and sci;eaching halt. Had the locomotive been traveling at a higher rate of speed, according to a Southern Pacific official, the train might have jumped the tracks. Penalty An all-expenses-paid trip to the nearest federal penitentiary could have been meted out. Company and university officials, however, admonished all the students to avoid a recurrence. Passengers disembarked at San Jose, Palo Alto and San Francisco and shortly afterwards were motoring to various parties. There was not peace, either, for the natives at Stanford. From the initial organized outburst from the SC rooting section to the singing of the alma mater, the Indians felt the overwhelming weight of both the Trojan football team and cheering section. T hi Y'.; V! m ell m - ** Wm >■ ADDISON HAWTHORNE finally comes a cropper on Indian Saturday, ten after brilliant 20-yard run that set up first Trojan TD Coming up to help are Bozanic and Weeks. —Courtesy San Francisco Chronicle Fourteen High School Bands ^ense^omes To Play at SC-Wash. Game {'ve,as^°! ' Smashes Tribe 'amp-Puss Hiding From Censors' Indignation ★ ★★ ★★★★★ augh Sheet Hits Another Snag Wamp Editor Perry Snell sent a thundering herd of elephants on the trail of Willie the Wampus after the prophetic puss reluctantly meowed that Troy's unpredictable humor magazine would again be delayed. ‘1 advised Willie to stay in zfl until things cooled off,” said. “It's geeting so you trust even cats any more.” ampus. which has undergone censorships and is now try-g for five, has been delayed at he printers and won’t be out on the streets until Wednesday morning. Snell said he resorted to sitting on the roof of Bovard auditorium after the last Wamp “cat" astro-phe. but came down when he heard that his baby would be ready Nov. 10. “It’s too cold to perch up there now," Snell continued, "but then again I m not Allen A. Arthur.” Arthur, last year’s bespectacled chief, contemplated purchasing an eel to act as Wamp mascot and also p’anned to dress a sea lion in a tuxedo and take him to the opera. “Students are anticipating the publication of Wampus,” said Circulation Manager Jim Paul. “One thousand tickets have been sold for copies and only 1500 remain for non-ticket holders. Features of the satirical review will include “Room With a Redhead,” the story of a football player gone astray, “A Man of Letters." a touching saga of a student’s attempt to attend SC, and “A Day With Doodles,” which explains itself. Art work is the creation of Bill Seelig, who also draws for the DT. Pictures of partially-dressed calendar girls and several dozen cartoons also will add to the wit of the magazine. Snell said. “Even the advertisements are humorous,” said Ad Manager Arnold Luster. “You start laughing when you read page one and vou're still laughing after page 32.” Dinner and dancing at the Hotel Ambassador’s Cocanut Grove will be the prize given to the Wamp contest winner, according to Arnold Fazekas, publicity director. He said information about the contest can be obtained at the Wampus booth outside the Student Union. More than 1000 young musicians will participate in SC’s eighth annual high school band day Saturday. The musicians, from 14 Southland schools, will take part in the half-time activities of the SC-Washington football game. The visiting bands and the 104-man Trojan outfit will work together as a unit. Each has been rehearsing the intricate marching formation. A Thanksgiving hymn, “We Gather Together,” will express greetings to our servicemen around the world. A spellout of ! “Our U.S. Air Force” and a huge battleship formation will also honor them. To Honor Navy The “Marine Hymn” and “Anchors Aweigh” will further honor the Navy, while an antimated stunt of a big tank will move downfield as the bands play the new Army song. More than $200,000 worth of musical instruments will be used by the bands. The uniforms alone are valued at approximately $60,000. Tommy Walker, Trojan band director, has planned all the half-time activities, William A. Schaefer, new director of instrumental organizations as SC, will conduct some of the numbers. Nearly all of the high school band directors have attended he SC School of Music, and many of them played in the Trojan band while at the university. Schools Named Schools sending bands are Alhambra, Anaheim, Avenal, Bar-stow, Compton, Corcoran, Covina, Fullerton, McFarland, Oxnard, Porterville. San Bernardino, San Dieguito. and Torrance. The opening stunt will salute Washington, the combined bands forming a “Welcome Huskies.” and “Bow Down Washington.” ★ ★ S.F. Police Arrest Two SC Students at St. Francis Rally SAN FRANCISCO—Two SC students were arrested here early yesterday during an Impromptu victory celebration in front of the St. Francis hotel. The students were released on bail and will appear in court today. Daily Trojan staff members at the scene said that, contrary to press reports, the students were not leaders in an attempt to overturn a cable car as police said. Eight police cars responded to the call, causing more traffic tie-ups than the rooters themselves. Scores of students lined the entrance to the St. Francis hotel, but the crowd was orderly. Policemen used what appeared to be strong-arm tactics in pulling James Bole and Ivan Rose from the crowd and taking them to the station, DT reporters said. Bole was jailed after poliue charged him with battery, disturbing the peace, and resisting arrest. Rose was charged with disturbing the peace and battery. In nearby Union Square, a Trojan cheerleader began songs and yells in the underground parking lot that echoed and reechoed at street level until they were repeated by the crowd which had gathered in front of St. Francis at about 1 a.m. By Fred Neil PALO ALTO. Nov. 8 (DTNS) —For a team without an offense, the Trojans came up with a fairly reasonable facsimile this bright and sunny afternoon as they rolled up 508 yards by land and air in the process of dismantling Stanford. 54-7. Some 45,000 startled fans sat in on the carnage and saw, among other things, the Cards take their worst beating since Michiean walloped them 49-0 in the Rose Bowl way back in ’02. It was also the most lopsided contest in a Trojan-Indian series dating back to 1905. the previous highs' being 41-12 and 33-0 wins posted by SC in 1933 and 1939 respectively. It was the unbeaten Trojans’ seventh consecutive win and left them tied with UCLA atop the PCC standing with resurgent Washington and the Bruins still on the conference docket and Notre Dame to follow. Seven of the eight Trojan touchdowns were made through the air with Jim Sears, Rudy Bukich, Des Koch, and Al Kirkland pitching; Tom Nickoloff. Ron Miller, (Continued on Page 3) Rambunctious Rallies Mark Celebration By Tom Pflimlin SAN FRANCISCO—Strands of cardinal and gold crepe paper scattered over tthe city are all that remain of the thundering herd of students that arrived here Friday morning and concluded their victorious reign yesterday. But San Franciscans will long remember the Troy representatives who were prominent in every nook and cranny of the metropolis because of a burst of rampant vitality comparable to last year's panty raids. Students and alumni were engaged in merrymaking from the Top o’ the Mark to Fisherman’s Wharf with numerous hotel parties and ram bunctious rallies whenever the time seemed ripe. To the visiting SC student, it was like transporting the campus to San Francisco because the faces of nearly 10,000 Trojans loomed from every point of interest. See Sights Daytime found the visitors studying road maps in search of such landmarks as Treasure Island, Muir Woods and Sutro Bay but evening turned their attentions to the cosmopolitan dining and dancing spots. Residents of the foggy city seemed slightly annoyed at the goings-on of the imposing crowd. Many stood aghast upon seeing some of the amusing but rather spicy victory signs pasted on students’ cars. Others only read of the visitors’ activities. The San Francisco News i-arried a story about Trojan Student Jim Sink of Sigma Chi who had written a letter to a city official requesting a bunk in the city jail. Hard Bunk “I enjoyed my cell last year,” Sink wrote, "but the mattress on my bunk was rather hard. If you’ll obtain a better one,” he concluded, “I’ll be glad to sleep there again this year.” A rally at Union Square, similar to Los Angeles’ Pershing Square, gave Trojans a chance to use their lungs in pre-victory yells and gave policemen a chance to use their clubs after the celebration got out of hand. One student inquired of another, “How do you manage to get in to all these parties you’ve been talking about?” Just Tag Along The ofher answered. “Just stand in the lobby of any hotel ’till you see some SC students. It doesn’t matter whether you know them or not. If they’re going to a party, tag along.” For pure amusement, many of Troy’s bolder members rode the famous cable cars up and down the staggering hills of The City while the meek in spirit were content to tour via automobiles. No one knows exactly when El Troje Fiesta began or ended. Walker s Patriotic Pageant Praised The Freedoms Foundation has nominated the Trojan band’s pageant, “This is My Country,” for an award for promoting the American way of life. The Foundation’s headquarters in Valley Forge, Pa., asked band director Tommy Walker for photographs of the band stunts, a copy of the commentary read over the public address system, and newspaper stories about the event, which was presented during half-time of the SC-California game. John Missing; Dog Sought A black poodle, taken from a Hollywood bar by an SC medical student named John on Saturday night, is the subject of a scarch by its owner Mrs. Bess Pollock and Dr. Albert Zech, counselor of men. The dog, P-Bee, was wearing a gold collar with a Long Beach license number when it was accidentally taken by John. “Both Mrs. Pollock and I would appreciate it if John or anyone else who knows the whereabouts of the poodle would return it,” said Dr. Zech. Mrs. Pollock may be contacted at 1630 Broadway, Long Beach, or by telephone at LB 77063. Critic Views Dad Play by Dorotha Fox The experienced cast of “Life With Father” tried but failed to arouse the enthusiasm of a cold and unresponsive first night audience Thursday evening. Leading lady Sue Brown was expected to be good. She wasn’t —she was outstanding. Her performance was by far the finest given. Genuine and sincere was her portrayal of the mother of the Day family. Stan Johnson did a good job as “Father,” but appeared to lack the vitality he has displayed in past productions. Wright AU Right Despite the fact that Willard Booth as Clarenc eDay Jr. looked younger than Ralph Ocampo, who played his younger brother John, Booth gave one of the top performances. Freshman Carl Wright as Whitney, the third brother, appeared relaxed and natural. Homecoming queen Jan Anderson, as Mary Skinner, sweetheart of Clarence Dry Jr., one of the weaker parts in the play, did not have a fair chance to prove her ability. Other Roles Commendable supporting performances were given by Patricia Madgwick, Annie, first maid; Zola Steele, Margaret, the cook; Pat Hougham, Cora, the visiting relative; W. Leigh O’Malley, the Rev. Dr. Lloyd; and Nat C. Gourman, as Dr. Humphreys. The cast appeared to be handicapped by the dreary atmosphere of Bovard auditorium and an unresponsive audience. The play began gayly, lagged a little until scene 2, act 2, and ended with a lively third act. William C. deMille, executive director said he was well pleased with the play, and particularly with the work of (Erector Benita Booth. “This is Miss Booth's first play at SC,” said deMille, “and I think she handled it very well.” Bows Oat Tonight Marcus Fuller, set designer, justified the praise accorded him by Los Angeles critics. The set, typical of the ’80s is filled with many vases, lamps, a shocking pink plaster-of-paris bust, and large gold-framed pcitures. Closing performance of “Life with Father” will be tomorrow at 8:30 in Bovard auditorium. Tickets may be purchased at the box office at 50c and $1. Activity bookholders will be admitted free.
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Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 40, November 10, 1952 |
Full text |
Religion Week Starts Tomorrow
Talks Scheduled By Fraternities And Sororities
The stage will be set tonight for Religious Emphasis week, which will officially begin with convocation services tomorrow at 10 a.m. in Bovard auditorium. Religious speakers will give addresses at several fraternities and sororities this evening.
Principal speakers during the week will be a protestant, Dr.
George Hedley: a Jew, Rabbi Edgar F. Magnin; and a Catholic, not yet selected.
Classes Dismissed
The theme of tomorrow’s convocation will be “Religion, What It Isn’t—And Is.” Ten o'clock classes will be dismissed.
Tomorrow afternoon. Dr. Hedley will speak on "The Superstitions of the Irreligious" at 2:15 in 133 FH. In addition, Capt. R. M. MacKinnon, commanding officer of the NROTC, will speak to the Newman club at 2 p.m., and Dr. Peter Joshua, minister of the South Hollywood Presbyterian church, will speak in 133 j F |
Filename | uschist-dt-1952-11-10~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1343/uschist-dt-1952-11-10~001.tif |