Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 15, October 03, 1952 |
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Army Team to Assault Troy Tomorrow
by Fred Neil, Daily Trojan Sports Editor The U.S. Army manual states that officers are to conduct themselves as gentlemen at all times, but there are at least 44 embryo shavetails who, for about two and one-half hours tomorrow afternoon, are apt to behave in an exceedingly ungentlemanly manner.
These would be the members of the 1952 Army team who will try to establish a beachhead on the Coliseum turf tomorrow with H hour scheduled for 2 p.m.
It is doubtful however, that thqy will be successful in their assault. They figure to fire and fall back before the big guns of the defending Trojans, commanded by Field Marshal Jess Hill.
Two previous challengers to Trojan supremacy have been routed. Washington State was forced to withdraw and attempt to regroup (35-7), and bhe Northwestern Wildcat is still licking wounds incurred last week (31-0).
To get down to plain facts, the Trojans look to be a mite too deep and erperienced for the Cadets, who are making their first appearance in the Southland.
When the two-game home and home series was first scheduled two years ago, West Point was represented by one of the top teams in the land.
Then the cribbing scandal broke, and Coach Red Blaik found himself minus a football team and with only a handful of substitutes and guys named Joe from which
to try and mold a football team.
It is a tribute to the coaching skill of Blaik that only two teams, Navy and SC, were able to overwheta his rag-tag bunch of gridders who were short on weight, experience, and ability, but long on Amy guts and spirit.
In the ’51 Trojan-Cadet game, played in Yankee Stadium in a snowstorm, SC held the soldiers to zero yardage, minus 10 running,.plus 10 passing, while running up 446 yards on their way to a 28-6 win. First downs were 23-0.
Such teams as Northwestern, Villanova, and Dartmouth had their hands full before edging the Cadets,
(Continued on Page 2)
Trolios Set to Be Axed From Homecoming Scene
—(Courtesy L.A. Times;
HUGE CHARLEY ANE will be back at his quarterback post when the Trojans meet the West Point Cadets tomorrow afternoon. Ane may be played strictly on offense
due to a t-> CV'o-rre Bozanic. his alternate.
Vol. XLIV
Los Angeles, Calif., Friday, Oct. 3, 1952
$506,000 Religious
Center to Be Erected
Tentative plans have been drawn up for a $506,000 religious center which will be constructed around the University Methodist church, 34th street at University avenue, according to Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman.
Seven buildings will be available for the use of the
--— church-related groups now asso-
| /|\* dated with the university.
KanH MinerS Construction of the center will
^ ■ start as soon as sufficient funds
W* 11 ft f are •btained, and it will be com-
p0rTOrm pleted about nine months later,
Neyman said.
AX A vmtf I IMA Religious Background
Al Arniy VJCJlTIv “Through the center's integration with many departments and Tomm\ Walkers Trojan Foot 0f tj,e university, students
hail hand will be joined b> ° , not majoring in divinity will be other bands, two color guar s provj(je<j w.jth a religious back-and two drill teams in the pre groun(j -p^e center also will serve game and halftimr ceremonies in people of the area by gradu-
the Coliseum tomorrow. , . .
1 „ . . atmg Well-educated ministers and
Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Swing is .
_ I other religious personnel.” Ney-sending from the Presidio of San *
Francisco, a 56-piece band led by j '
. 1 with its newT buildings and a Chief Warrant OfJicor . at an remodeled Methodist church, it Cammack Jr., apd an 18-piece wili supply classrooms, library, bagpipe band, with Douglas Hen- and administrative offices necessary for theological instruction. Ministerial candidates and their
Deadline Today For Candidate Battle Columns
Battle columns listing the aims and platforms of freshman presidential and vice-presi-dential and foreign student representative candidates are due at 3 p.m. today in the Daily Trojan office, 432 Student Union.
The statements will appear in Monday’s DT.
Columns are limited to 150 words, double-spaced, and sign-’ ed by the candidate.
The Daily Trojan will print pictures of candidates who turn in glossy photographs 5x7 inches or larger. Candidates will be charged $4.30 for the engraving. Picture deadline is 1 p.m. today.
It is the responsibility of candidates and campaign managers to see that pictures and battle columns meet the qualifications listed.
People Wander as Sirens Howl ★ ★ ★ ★ ' ★ Disaster Drill Opinions
Wide differences of opinion marked campus relations to the city-wide disaster* drill yesterday.
Dean Robert E. Vivian, chairman of the University Committee on Civilian DefAse, called it "fairly successful” on the campus.
“There were a lot of people wandering around,” Dean Vivian said, “who didn’t know what the sirens meant. But, from what I saw, students and faculty cooperated well.”
Dr. John Gerletti, professor of public administration, thought the drill was “highly successful” all over the city. Dr. Gerletti recently returned from an assignment with the Civil Defense administration in Washington, D. C.
“The alert proved,” he said, “that the putflic isn’t ready, and that is wh^t the civil defense planners wanted to know.”
He said the government has distributed millions of leaflets;
derson as pipe major.
Camp Roberts is sending a 60-man drill team and a WAC drill unit of 24 women. The Army will have a color guard and SC
families will be able to make use of the various dormitories, dining halls, and social accommodations. * A new main chapel, seating ap-
will have its Naval ROTC unit proximtaelv 2000 persohs, will be color boaners oo tho field. I bui" ,0 Prov'P306 for ,he
The Army bands and drill teams will take the field first at half-
larger religious events on the campus.
Equipment Donated time. The Army drill team will be ; Furniture and equipment for uniformed in blue helmets, blue offices and other facilities will be scarfs, khaki uniforms, white donated by individual groups, and
, . .. .__•____their assigned allocations will re-
gloves, white leggings, and will .... T j *
main their property. In order to
cany rifles. get a unif0rmity of appearance,
The bagpipe band, sometimes the furniture shall conform to a
known as the “Dancing Pipers, general style determined by the
will do several novelty stunts. university, said Neyman.
The SC band will march onto j The estimated cost includes fur-
the field to the tune of “This Is nishings. land, and razing the
the Army. Mr. Jones.” buildings now surrounding the
Walker expressed his apprecia- j church. Upkeep and maintenance
tion to all the campus organiza- of the center will be the respon-
tions which have helped him re- sibility of the university, Neyman
emit band members. added.
Political Rally Slated For Noon at Bovard
After Came March Dance Scheduled
A victory march and street ( dance will follow the SC-Army football game Saturday afternoon. ASSC Vice-President Joan Field announced.
Spearheaded by Tommy Walker and the Trojan band, students in the rooting section will assemble below the chec-iing section in- j side the Coliseum and parade to I the player’s dressing room. There, led by cheerleaders and the band, •tudents will fete the team.
The parade will continue down University avenue, halting i n front of Tommv Trojan.
Pud Brown and his Dixieland combo. ‘ currently appearing at Sardi’s restaurant, will play until 6:30 p.m. in front erf the Administration building.
Brown formerly played with I Pete Dailey and is widely known for his solo work on Dailey’s Capital recording of “Johnson Rag.” I
Candidates for freshman president and vice-president and foreign students representative will make their pitches for voters’ support at a'noon political » rally in Bovard auditorium.
Only five men and women had applied for the freshman offices as of last night. Only one man, Satinder Kum&r Verma,, had applied for the foreign students representative post, which was created by the ASSC senate last spring.
The number of candidates is small compared to last year. Sixteen • men and nine wromen ran for freshman offices in 1951. However, this year’s list may still grow. Nominations from the floor of the rally today will be accepted.
Candidates
Those applying for the president’s position were Don Davis, Barry Everet. Jack Forney, Tom Robertson, and Ron Shields. Linda Ruddy, Gretchen Dockweiler,
Teacher Assn. Has Membership Drive
Joy Furtado, president of the SC chapter of the California Student Teachers association, has announced a membership drive for educational majors.
Advantages of the organization include a year’s subscription to the CTA journal, special prices on merchandise, and free literature and pictures, she said.
Requirements for membership are payment of a $2.50 fee and enrollment in the School of Education.
Jane Heacock, Ann Moore, and Audrey Stone were the candidates for vice-president.
Presidential aspirants will each be allowed to give two-minute campaign speeches, while the vice-president and foreign student hopefuls will be permitted to speak for one-minute at the rally.
Deadline for petitions for the offices is 1 p.m. today. Students nominated during the rally will be able to yet petitions there and fill them out at that time, Election Commissioner Jim Lucostic said.
Must Know Rules
He also said that all candidates must receive a copy of the official campaign rules and that all campaign literature must be stamped by .the Senate Investigating committee.
Students may have their campaign literature approved in George Gonzales' .AMS office, 212 Student Union, from 9-10 and 11:30-12 a.m. and 2-3:30 p.m.
The preliminary elections will be held next Monday and Tuesday:
The run-offs will be held on Thursday and Friday.
Official
Notice
PUD BROWN . . . band leader
Garwood Wiil Explain Clinical Procedure
Victor Garwood, assistant professor of speech and clinical training supervisor in the SC speech and hearing clinic, will be on the university’s “Halls of Science” television program on Channel 4, KNBH, at 9 p.m. tomorrow.
Dr. Garwood will discuss how problems of speech and hearing are treated in the SC clinic.
On Wednesday, Oct. 8 at 10 a.m. in Bovard auditorium the university will celebrate Founders Day. Dr. Leonard Scheeie, surgeon general of the United States Public Health Service, will speak on “Public Health in the World Today.”
Although this year we are not planning a formal faculty procession, we hopa very much that all faculty members will plan to attend the convocation and will encourage their students to attend.
Ten o’clock classes will be dismissed.
Fred D. Fagg ,r.
President
newspapers and magazines have published reams of copy on “What to do in an A-bomb attack.”
“But their message hasn’t reached the people,” Gerletti said. “Defense authorities thought it had. Now they know it hasn’t, and civil defense planning can start all over again with the idea that nobody knows anything about air attacks.”
Bernard L. Hyink, dean of students, said he thought the drill, as carried out here, was “better than it was elsewhere.”
“Downtown,” he said, “people largely ignored the alert, but on the campus cooperation was good.”
Several students and university employees had - different ideas about the ^success of the alert.
Most of them said they didn’t know what the whistles meant.
Most of them said that, at the time of the alert, they went right on as if nothing had happened.
They all said they noticed very little response to the alert by people around them. One World II veteran said he wras in class, and that the lecturer went right on talking, oblivious to the warning.
An administration secretary laughed and said, “I was trying to figure out how I was going to get under the desk, and then gave up. I went to the window tp see what everybody was doing. Looked like nothing had happened.” Another student said he was walking down Vermont at the time and looked around to see a streetcar stop. “I thought I had better look for cover,” he said, “until I saw the streetcar unload a couple of passengers and move along.”
Insufficient Acts Entered for Show
by Kent Wood
Trolios, a traditional event in SC’s annual Homecoming week, will be canceled this year unless more entries are submitted before the deadline, 2:30 this afternoon, it was announced last night by Trolios Chairman Chuck Meerschaert.
Only one entry has been received thus far.
According to Meerschaert, each
SDX Pledges Six Journalists From DT Staff
Six new pledges, Bill Rogers, Ed Dudzik, Wimpy Hiroto, Sandy Bothman, Lou Mass. and Stan Kiefer, have entered the ranks of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity. All are seniors.
Bill Rogers won the SDX best reporter award last year, is a DT news editor, and lives in Glendale. Ed Dudzik is a news editor. He comes from Canton, Ohio. Wimpy Hiroto, news editor, from Riverside, was editor of the Summer News.
Sandy Bothman is DT feature editor, was an all-Bay league basketball player from Beverly Hills high school. He lettered in frosh basketball at California, and transfered to SC from UCLA.
Lou Mass, a news editor, is from Altadena. Stan Kiefer is city editor of the DT, and a transfer from the University of W;
They will attend an SDX dinner Wednesday, President Stan Wood said. The dinner will honor local Olympic heroes. Los Angeles sportswTiters who covered the games will be guest speakers.
George Gottesman . . . prexy
IFC to Present Greek Trophies
IFC athletic scholarship trophies for the Spring semester will be presented at Greek Roundup at 7:30 p. m. in the Town and Gown foyer.
Fred D. Fagg, president of the ^university, and Roland Maxwell, former national president of Phi Kappa Tau, will speak briefly.
The meeting is designed to foster closer relationship between faculty, alumni, and fraternity men.
Ken Shanks, interfratemity Counselor, urged all fraternity men to attend, and stressed that each house personally invite its alumni now serving on the SC faculty.
IFC President George Gottesman, suggested all houses conclude their active chapter meetings early so that they will be able to attend the function.
The meeting, sponsored jointly by the Southern California Alumni association and the university will give fraternity men an opportunity to get acquainted and to discuss mutual problems.
fraternity and men’s service organization received a letter two weeks ago containing the rules for the themes to be submitted and the deadline. The only organization to respond was Delta Chi fraternity.
Meerschaert, who formerly produced shows at the .Hollywood Canteen, said the reason for lack of interest shown by men’s organizations was possibly the strictness of the rules concerning the themes. The use of alcoholic beverages and obscene language and actions have been prohibited in the acts.
“However,” said Meerschaert, “something merely risque can be humorous and acceptable.”
Need 10 Acts
Entries may be submitted at 215 SU up to the time of the deadline, after which they will be processed at 418 SU. If at least 10 themes are not submitted by 2:15, Trolios definitely will be canceled, he said.
“The student organizations possibly have the misconception that Trolios have to be offending to be successful, but I feel we can produce a good show without obscene acts,” said Meerschaert. “It has been done that way previously and can be done again, but last year’s version of Trolios offended too many people.”
Trolios are scheduled for Oct. 15 and 16 in Bovard auditorium.
The rules for entries remain the same, said Meerschaert. The cost of the act is .not to exceed $25, and the acts, using only male personnel, are not to exceed 12 minutes.
Must Conform
All acts must be presented exactly as approved by the committee, and any changes will result in disqualification. The curtain will be closed immediately on any act that is changed while on the stage.
The selection of the acts will be based on originality, good showmanship, method of presentation, and the maximum amount of participation.
“I hope the Trolios will go on as scheduled,” said Meerschaert, “but if we can’t put on a good show, it will be better to have none at all.”
Tricky Stunts Scheduled for Card Section
Card stunts at the football game tomorrow will begin with a “Hi-Navy,” but will immediately insert a “whoops,” and correct the situation with “Hello Army,” according to Ken Wormhoudt, stunt designer, and Jim Cooke, director of the card section.
The Army mule is next,, followed by a sign for all draft evaders, “The Army Needs You.”
A plug fcr the community chest saying, “Pledge Now,” will be followed by two political demonstrations.
A huge Trojan sword in gold on a green background, then a Trojan horse prancing on a green turf, followed by the cardinal SC spell-out will climax the stunts.
Jim Cooke, president of Knights, asks all rooters in the card section to wear white shirts and pay close attention to his directions so that everyone will come up with the right card on the count of three.
He also asks that persons lower their cards immediately on the three count and flicker their cards only when instructed.
On the signature stunt look for the number after the color- “By doing all these things, the stunts will look sharp and crisp,” says Cooke.
Sendoff for Team Slated
A sendoff rally for the Trojan football team will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in front of the physical education building. The team will depart for the Miramar hotel in Santa Monica at 5 p.m. for fts usual pro-game seclusion period.
Tommy Walker’s Trojan band will play, and cheerleaders will lead songs and yells.
Chi Phi Feed Will Feature TV Star
Marilyn Mills, vocalist with Jack McElroy’s television show, will be guest star at the ninth annual Chi Phi watermelon dig tonight at 8. The free, all-U event will be held at 720 West 28th street.
According to Chairman Bob Stricklin, activities begin at 7:30 when Tommy Walker and the Trojan football band will lead a rooters parade from Hoover and 28th to the Chi Phi house. Immediately after the parade, Al Gallion will lead some Trojan yells.
Miss Mills and John Ferraro, former SC all-American, will then share the spotlight. Ferraro, who was an all-American in 1944 and 1947, will give a short talk. He is one of the few Trojans who has received the national recognition for two years.
Miss Mills hails from the Cherokee country of Oklahoma where she won the Tulsa Horace Heidt t both in 1949 and 1950. She was runner-up to Miss Okla-home in 1950 and was named Beauty Queen at Tulsa university in 1951. She also appeared in several opera productions before
landing a spot on Arthur Godfrey’s “Talent Scouts” in 1951.
Concluding the program will be a campus heavyweight wrestling match between Jack “Giant Killer” Muff, a Chi Phi 'weighing 185, and Pulverizing Paul Peratis, the “giant” at 205. The bout will take place on a special mat on the Chi Phi front lawn.
After the rooters get their fill of beauty and beasts, 10 Chi Phis will start slicing and handing out 4000 pounds of watermelon. Fraternity members began packing the melons in ice and straw yesterday. The Dowm beats, a 20-piece orchestra, has signed to play for the street dance after the watermelon is gone. Although a city ordinance forbids blocking off streets, several patrolmen from the University Police precinct will be out to direct traffic.
Chi Phi committeemen are Phil Battaglia, watermelons: Art Costa, posters; Bill Tilden and Storm Case, decorations; Bill Silliman, lights and sound equipment; Ron Bradford, guest stars; and Andy Gall, publicity.
Marilyn Miills . .. tennis anyone?
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 15, October 03, 1952 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 15, October 03, 1952. |
| Full text |
Army Team to Assault Troy Tomorrow by Fred Neil, Daily Trojan Sports Editor The U.S. Army manual states that officers are to conduct themselves as gentlemen at all times, but there are at least 44 embryo shavetails who, for about two and one-half hours tomorrow afternoon, are apt to behave in an exceedingly ungentlemanly manner. These would be the members of the 1952 Army team who will try to establish a beachhead on the Coliseum turf tomorrow with H hour scheduled for 2 p.m. It is doubtful however, that thqy will be successful in their assault. They figure to fire and fall back before the big guns of the defending Trojans, commanded by Field Marshal Jess Hill. Two previous challengers to Trojan supremacy have been routed. Washington State was forced to withdraw and attempt to regroup (35-7), and bhe Northwestern Wildcat is still licking wounds incurred last week (31-0). To get down to plain facts, the Trojans look to be a mite too deep and erperienced for the Cadets, who are making their first appearance in the Southland. When the two-game home and home series was first scheduled two years ago, West Point was represented by one of the top teams in the land. Then the cribbing scandal broke, and Coach Red Blaik found himself minus a football team and with only a handful of substitutes and guys named Joe from which to try and mold a football team. It is a tribute to the coaching skill of Blaik that only two teams, Navy and SC, were able to overwheta his rag-tag bunch of gridders who were short on weight, experience, and ability, but long on Amy guts and spirit. In the ’51 Trojan-Cadet game, played in Yankee Stadium in a snowstorm, SC held the soldiers to zero yardage, minus 10 running,.plus 10 passing, while running up 446 yards on their way to a 28-6 win. First downs were 23-0. Such teams as Northwestern, Villanova, and Dartmouth had their hands full before edging the Cadets, (Continued on Page 2) Trolios Set to Be Axed From Homecoming Scene —(Courtesy L.A. Times; HUGE CHARLEY ANE will be back at his quarterback post when the Trojans meet the West Point Cadets tomorrow afternoon. Ane may be played strictly on offense due to a t-> CV'o-rre Bozanic. his alternate. Vol. XLIV Los Angeles, Calif., Friday, Oct. 3, 1952 $506,000 Religious Center to Be Erected Tentative plans have been drawn up for a $506,000 religious center which will be constructed around the University Methodist church, 34th street at University avenue, according to Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman. Seven buildings will be available for the use of the --— church-related groups now asso- / \* dated with the university. KanH MinerS Construction of the center will ^ ■ start as soon as sufficient funds W* 11 ft f are •btained, and it will be com- p0rTOrm pleted about nine months later, Neyman said. AX A vmtf I IMA Religious Background Al Arniy VJCJlTIv “Through the center's integration with many departments and Tomm\ Walkers Trojan Foot 0f tj,e university, students hail hand will be joined b> ° , not majoring in divinity will be other bands, two color guar s provj(je |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1344/uschist-dt-1952-10-03~001.tif |
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