Summer News, Vol. 8, No. 11, July 27, 1953 |
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xclusive interview Wi ounciigai wiener (See Story Page 2) THE NEW CITY council is shown a few weeks ago in their first picture. Rosalind Wiener, SC grad (PA ’52) is conspicuous by her presence. For exclusive inter- view with Los Angeles' first councilwoman in 37 years see page two. No. 11 Los Angeles, Calif. Monday, July 27, 1953 Growth of Education Similar to 3-D Films The growth of public education in the past 40 years is something like the newest movies—it’s in three dimensions —the final school administration-supervision conference at SC was told Friday. These dimensions said Dr. Rolland H. Upton, superintendent of schools at All- Scandinavia' To Be Topic for Faculty Club "A Glimpse of Scandinavia” will be seen by Faculty Club members at their weekly meeting Wednesday noon in the Commons dining room. Hr. :md Mrs. Lars Ohnebrlnk from the University of Uppsala in Sweden will take the faculty on this trip via words and possibly slides. Dr. Ohnebrink is studying hero under the Smith-Mundt Act and was also in the United States in 3946-17 as Rockefeller Foundation Fellow. He wrote his Ph.D. on “The Beginning of Naturalism in American Fiction” and is the only staff member at the University of Uppasal who lectures in English. Reservations may be made at Ext. 34. Deadline is Tuesday noon.. Post-Session Sets Piano Courses Fay Templeton Frisch of New Rochelle, N.Y., national chairman for piano of the Music Educators National conference, will return to SC next month. In the post-season August to 28, Mrs. Frisch «ill present a methods course in the teaching of class piano and a workshop in class piano, utilizing children of various ages. Information may be obtained by telephoning Richmond 2311, ftvts. 518 or 541, or by writing the SC School of Musi<^ burn, Wash., are (1) a 533 per cent increase in secondary school enrollment during the period (2) length of the school term up 35 per cent and (3) the number and variety of courses and services offered. “This growth has not ended,” Dr. Upton said. “Birth statistics show clearly that the first dimension will grow for at least six more years. There are constant pressures to enlarge services and add new courses—the third dimension. “As public education faces this growth it must also face a crisis in its financing. Because of mounting federal taxes, state and local revenue is taking a smaller and smaller percentage of the national income. In 1939, state and local governments operated on 12.8 per cent of the national income .In 1953 they will run on 8.4 per cent. “Public education providing activity for more than one-filth of the population and employing two per cent of our working force has used from two to three per cent of the national income to operate. It needs more .But it is teeling the squeeze as state and local taxation gives way to federal.’' Supt. Upton suggested three possible ways to meet the problem and said the final solution might require a bit of each. These are: 1. Either return some of the taxing power to the states or provide federal funds lor education. 2. Revise, improve and make more equitable the tax structure on the state and local level. 3. Make present revenue go farther by creating larger and more efficient units of school district administration, cooperative purchasing, and better budget control. Dr. Clarence A. Newell, pro-continued on Page 1) SC Car Pool Starts Shifting Into High Gear From Seattle to San Antonio, from New York City to Little Rock — wherever Trojans go — automobile share - the ^ expense rides are being offered and sought. Mrs. Bernice Tiegs, Student Lounge hostess and car pool director, said that she has 10 rides offered and 15 rides sought. All of the rides listed are from July 31 to August 3. Riders are wanted to New York, Washington, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, Arkansas, Montana, and Ohio. Drivers and riders may sign up with Mrs. Tiegs in the Student Lounge for botTi summer and post session rider arrangements. Official Notice SC Summer Session school has received an urgent appeal from the Los Angeles Red Cross Regional Blood center in connection with the desperate need for blood at this time. The school has responded to the need by scheduling a blood mo-bile visit to the campus on Friday, Aug. 14 th. Donors will be accommodated from 9 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. in the basement of the university commons. This summer session bloodmo-bile visit to the SC campus is a first among southern California universities and colleges. Summer Trojans are being called upon to help “take up the slack” during the current drop in Mood donations, which is seriously impairing the life-saving work of the American Hod Cross. Trojans, I’m sure, will answer the call. A. S. Kaubonheinier Educational Vice-President John D. Cooke Dean, Summer Session Free Public Concerts To Be Presented Tues. A joint concert by the summer session band, choir and orchestra of the SC School of Music will be presented on the campus Tuesday at 7 p.m. The public is invited to this free three-part program. The band, under the direction of William A. Schaefer, will play outdoors on the lawn near Founders Hall on University Avenue. The program will include “March on English Country Airs” by Gustav Holst; “Danse Russe” from “Petrouchka” by Stravinsky; “The Irish Washerwoman” from “Irish Suite” by Leroy Anderson; “Pavane pour nue Infante Definite’’ by Ravel, and Schaefer’s arrangement of Tchaikovsky’s Finale from Symphony No. 3 in D Major. In Bovard auditorium at 8:15 p.m., Charles C. Hirt will conduct the choir in Haydn’s Mass in C Major (“Missa in tempore belli’’). .Soloists will lie Marilyn Horne, soprano; Camilla Crane, contralto; Allen Clinkscales, tenor, and William Vennard. baritone. The choir will repeat the Mass on Wednesday, July 29, at noon in the same auditorium. Ralph Rush will direct the orchestra in the Stradela overture by von Flotow; the French Baroque Suite from “I.e Bourgeois Gentilhomme” by Lully; “Gardens of Granada” by Tor-roba; “China Doll” by Leroy Anderson; “Scenes from the Southwest” by George F. McKay, and the first movement of Symphony in A Major by Men-deJssohn. Final Concert Wed. Night Lillian Steuber, professor of piano at SC School of Music, will play the seventh and last of a series of concerts of Beethoven piano sonatas Wednesday in Bovard auditorium at 8:30 p.m. The public is invited to this free program. Miss Steuber will play Opus 10 No. 3; Opus 2 No. 1; Opus Mia (“lias Lebewohl”) and Opus 111. Job Experience Combined In SC Workshop Combining actual job experience with seminars on current business trends are 19 graduate students enrolled in a cooperative business experience workshop at SC. Daytime finds class members engaged in full time positions ranging from bank tellers to an assistant to a corporation vice * president. Jobs were lined up to meet previous business experience of the students. Two evenings a week class members attend a three-hour seminar to discuss with the instructor problems encountered on the job, patterns of employees, kinds of employee tests, types of organizations and salary schedules, business methods, and office machines and equipment. Offered for the first time on the SC campus, the course was modeled on a similar program at Northwestern University. The curriculum was outlined by Kenneth N. Knight, administrative dean at Metropolitan Junior College and class instructor, and by Dr. Albert C. Fries, SC professor of office administration. The class was prompted by the realization that teachers of business subjects must have actual field exjierlence if they are to successfully meet the needs of their profession and students. Of the 19 enrolled, 17 are high school or two-year college business teachers and the remaining two are studying for teaching credentials. southern California PAGE THREE PAGE FOUR “ SUMNER NEWS “
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Title | Summer News, Vol. 8, No. 11, July 27, 1953 |
Full text | xclusive interview Wi ounciigai wiener (See Story Page 2) THE NEW CITY council is shown a few weeks ago in their first picture. Rosalind Wiener, SC grad (PA ’52) is conspicuous by her presence. For exclusive inter- view with Los Angeles' first councilwoman in 37 years see page two. No. 11 Los Angeles, Calif. Monday, July 27, 1953 Growth of Education Similar to 3-D Films The growth of public education in the past 40 years is something like the newest movies—it’s in three dimensions —the final school administration-supervision conference at SC was told Friday. These dimensions said Dr. Rolland H. Upton, superintendent of schools at All- Scandinavia' To Be Topic for Faculty Club "A Glimpse of Scandinavia” will be seen by Faculty Club members at their weekly meeting Wednesday noon in the Commons dining room. Hr. :md Mrs. Lars Ohnebrlnk from the University of Uppsala in Sweden will take the faculty on this trip via words and possibly slides. Dr. Ohnebrink is studying hero under the Smith-Mundt Act and was also in the United States in 3946-17 as Rockefeller Foundation Fellow. He wrote his Ph.D. on “The Beginning of Naturalism in American Fiction” and is the only staff member at the University of Uppasal who lectures in English. Reservations may be made at Ext. 34. Deadline is Tuesday noon.. Post-Session Sets Piano Courses Fay Templeton Frisch of New Rochelle, N.Y., national chairman for piano of the Music Educators National conference, will return to SC next month. In the post-season August to 28, Mrs. Frisch «ill present a methods course in the teaching of class piano and a workshop in class piano, utilizing children of various ages. Information may be obtained by telephoning Richmond 2311, ftvts. 518 or 541, or by writing the SC School of Musi<^ burn, Wash., are (1) a 533 per cent increase in secondary school enrollment during the period (2) length of the school term up 35 per cent and (3) the number and variety of courses and services offered. “This growth has not ended,” Dr. Upton said. “Birth statistics show clearly that the first dimension will grow for at least six more years. There are constant pressures to enlarge services and add new courses—the third dimension. “As public education faces this growth it must also face a crisis in its financing. Because of mounting federal taxes, state and local revenue is taking a smaller and smaller percentage of the national income. In 1939, state and local governments operated on 12.8 per cent of the national income .In 1953 they will run on 8.4 per cent. “Public education providing activity for more than one-filth of the population and employing two per cent of our working force has used from two to three per cent of the national income to operate. It needs more .But it is teeling the squeeze as state and local taxation gives way to federal.’' Supt. Upton suggested three possible ways to meet the problem and said the final solution might require a bit of each. These are: 1. Either return some of the taxing power to the states or provide federal funds lor education. 2. Revise, improve and make more equitable the tax structure on the state and local level. 3. Make present revenue go farther by creating larger and more efficient units of school district administration, cooperative purchasing, and better budget control. Dr. Clarence A. Newell, pro-continued on Page 1) SC Car Pool Starts Shifting Into High Gear From Seattle to San Antonio, from New York City to Little Rock — wherever Trojans go — automobile share - the ^ expense rides are being offered and sought. Mrs. Bernice Tiegs, Student Lounge hostess and car pool director, said that she has 10 rides offered and 15 rides sought. All of the rides listed are from July 31 to August 3. Riders are wanted to New York, Washington, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, Arkansas, Montana, and Ohio. Drivers and riders may sign up with Mrs. Tiegs in the Student Lounge for botTi summer and post session rider arrangements. Official Notice SC Summer Session school has received an urgent appeal from the Los Angeles Red Cross Regional Blood center in connection with the desperate need for blood at this time. The school has responded to the need by scheduling a blood mo-bile visit to the campus on Friday, Aug. 14 th. Donors will be accommodated from 9 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. in the basement of the university commons. This summer session bloodmo-bile visit to the SC campus is a first among southern California universities and colleges. Summer Trojans are being called upon to help “take up the slack” during the current drop in Mood donations, which is seriously impairing the life-saving work of the American Hod Cross. Trojans, I’m sure, will answer the call. A. S. Kaubonheinier Educational Vice-President John D. Cooke Dean, Summer Session Free Public Concerts To Be Presented Tues. A joint concert by the summer session band, choir and orchestra of the SC School of Music will be presented on the campus Tuesday at 7 p.m. The public is invited to this free three-part program. The band, under the direction of William A. Schaefer, will play outdoors on the lawn near Founders Hall on University Avenue. The program will include “March on English Country Airs” by Gustav Holst; “Danse Russe” from “Petrouchka” by Stravinsky; “The Irish Washerwoman” from “Irish Suite” by Leroy Anderson; “Pavane pour nue Infante Definite’’ by Ravel, and Schaefer’s arrangement of Tchaikovsky’s Finale from Symphony No. 3 in D Major. In Bovard auditorium at 8:15 p.m., Charles C. Hirt will conduct the choir in Haydn’s Mass in C Major (“Missa in tempore belli’’). .Soloists will lie Marilyn Horne, soprano; Camilla Crane, contralto; Allen Clinkscales, tenor, and William Vennard. baritone. The choir will repeat the Mass on Wednesday, July 29, at noon in the same auditorium. Ralph Rush will direct the orchestra in the Stradela overture by von Flotow; the French Baroque Suite from “I.e Bourgeois Gentilhomme” by Lully; “Gardens of Granada” by Tor-roba; “China Doll” by Leroy Anderson; “Scenes from the Southwest” by George F. McKay, and the first movement of Symphony in A Major by Men-deJssohn. Final Concert Wed. Night Lillian Steuber, professor of piano at SC School of Music, will play the seventh and last of a series of concerts of Beethoven piano sonatas Wednesday in Bovard auditorium at 8:30 p.m. The public is invited to this free program. Miss Steuber will play Opus 10 No. 3; Opus 2 No. 1; Opus Mia (“lias Lebewohl”) and Opus 111. Job Experience Combined In SC Workshop Combining actual job experience with seminars on current business trends are 19 graduate students enrolled in a cooperative business experience workshop at SC. Daytime finds class members engaged in full time positions ranging from bank tellers to an assistant to a corporation vice * president. Jobs were lined up to meet previous business experience of the students. Two evenings a week class members attend a three-hour seminar to discuss with the instructor problems encountered on the job, patterns of employees, kinds of employee tests, types of organizations and salary schedules, business methods, and office machines and equipment. Offered for the first time on the SC campus, the course was modeled on a similar program at Northwestern University. The curriculum was outlined by Kenneth N. Knight, administrative dean at Metropolitan Junior College and class instructor, and by Dr. Albert C. Fries, SC professor of office administration. The class was prompted by the realization that teachers of business subjects must have actual field exjierlence if they are to successfully meet the needs of their profession and students. Of the 19 enrolled, 17 are high school or two-year college business teachers and the remaining two are studying for teaching credentials. southern California PAGE THREE PAGE FOUR “ SUMNER NEWS “ |
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