Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 43, November 16, 1950 |
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enate Okays Operating Budget
ine Arts Lecture Psychology Professor to Test Knights Plan
o End LAS Series Air Force Aptitudes in Korea football Rally
For Tomorrow
Estvan to Discuss Pre-Education Needs; Open House Slated
tires on art, pre-education, philosophy will conclude thej
\ ,
Bombardiers, navigators, and pi-1 Air Force officers. They will sper.d classes will be oovered by other inlots now taking part in the Korean lone week at headquarters in Ja-j structors. Clark P. Wilson will subwar will be the guinea pigs of an pan and another week at Johnson stitute for Dr. Ruch in Psychology during the next field perfecting testing methods. 440;
I The group will then break
SC psychologist i two months.
Floyd L. Ruch, professor of psy- teams of two and spend two weeks | chology, will leave for Korea and
Japan by plane Friday to test the at individual ba5es throughout Re-
training j'
| ficiency of the entire air
combat conditions, day.
Dr. Ruch, of General Studies 200
textbook fame, is the only univer- ^ guinea pigs will be interviewed sity psychologist from the West and given ratings. The study was Coast who has been invited by the Panned by the Human Resources Air Force to participate in the Research institute attached to the
DR. NEIL WARREN . . . speaker
! study.
The group will Include five psy-| chologists, five sociologists, and two
tters. Arts, and Sciences advise-J nt and orientation scries this’ emoon in Founders hall at 3:15.!
Richard Snavely, instructor in e arts, will discuss careers in art 114 Founders. Most of the period il be given to questions and an-! ers. and no lecture has been; nned, he said. Value of fine arts!
ses in other major fields will so be told.
Tells Entrance Requirements r. Frank J. Estvan, assistant: lessor of education, will meet! h an orientation group and speak | pre-education in 204 Founders.! will outline entrance require-nts for the School of Education.! he Sohool of Philosophy will Id open house today in the Argo-ut room of Mudd hall from 3:15 4:15. Dr. Daniel S. RoWnson, di-tor of the school, will be ini arge. Coffee and donuts will be ved.
Traces History
Dr. Robiuson will trace the his-y of the School of Philosophy at and list the courses required a major. The session is open to dents interested in philosophy.
Dr. Neil Warren, head of the Psy-ology department, said in his LAS ientation lecture yesterday, •‘The mand for trained psychologists exceeds the supply." r. Warren said that psychology partments in colleges and um-rsities throughout the country crowded and that all available lities are taxed, especially at the uate level.
Graduate Work Needed ‘If you wish to make psychology ur vocation, it is highly desirable at you plan to take graduate
rk. There are few opportunities , . .. .. ---- ----------- -------- ----- -
those with only B.A. degrees,”! contnbutioi s the field of check reports from a San j0aquin
Robert Mackie in Psychology into 464; and Ward Jensser. in Psychology 300.
Dr. Ruch helped develop the safe driver selection system used “The selection, classification, and by the Los Angeles Transit lines
I accuracy of Air Forcfe based on aptitude tests.
“We’re going to study the pro- training of pilots and ground crews | d the company.
......and!will u.....“*
be evaluated at the actual j
, ground crews to see how valid the bases in the Far East,” Dr. Ruch tests now given to cadets are in said. “Any deficiencies that have degree of circulation, predicting ability to perform under developed in combat will be used and influence of
he said yester-1as a check on the effectiveness of our training.”
The Air Force personnel serving
Air university at Maxwell Air Force base, Alabama.
While Dr. Ruch is away his three! States.
He invented tests to measure the credibility, proposition themes and applied them in Democratic political campaigns f o r Warren and Proposition 2, the aid to aged and blind proposal voted on last year. Both campaigns won.
“Psychology and Life,” the textbook for General Studies 200, is used at 700 other universities and colleges throughout the United
Daily
Trojan
Friday’s noon rally will be boom ing with special entertainment, yells, and bandfare in Bovard audi-
Non-Voting Solons Face Loss of Seats
The Senate allotted $4900 for ASSC operating expenses last night and set a share of it aside for free coffee at the legislative sessions.
Acting on a Finance committee report, the lawmakers
torium, Bud Templeton, Knight okayed _ almost all recommendations for allotments with-
rally chairman, announced yester day.
jout question,
Expense accounts for the Schools
Harry the Hipster, piano player of Internati°na.l Relations and Edu-and songster and his combo. will! cation, however, drew strong objec
perform. Two of Harry’s novelty
Students were urged yesterday by Bud Templeton, Knight rally chairman, to show school spirit and back the footbalt team by participating in a send-off rally.
The teajm will board busses Friday for the Miramar hotel in S anta Monica where they will stay overnight.
The farewell rally will be held at 5 p.m. in front of the gym tomorrow afternoon.
tions from the school presidents and were referred back to the committee for further study.
Vol. XUI
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Thursday, Nov. 16, 1950
No. 43
songs will be “Sweet Marihuana Brown” and “I Stay Brown All Year ’Round.”
Plans have been made for Braver. Dyer, noted sportswriter, to interview alumni John Wayne and Ward Bond.
Yells will be led by John Chapman and the yell leaders, and the band will play fight songs.
The rally will last from 12 to 12:45. The Knights wall be in charges.
The budget as passed contains:
Homecoming _________________ _______$850
General fund _________________ -.........2500
Graduate students____ ___50
Senior class ............. _____100
Junior class ............ ________ 50
Sophomore class __________ __50
Freshman class ............ _ 50
Architecture___________ 50
Commerce _______________ 100
Engineering _______________ ___100
LAS ......................... . . ______125
Lukens Lauded Air Force By Fortnight JooJ*
i Glen Lukens, associate professor ° l^11 1 iaM^
of Fine Arts, was named one of the STOCKTON. Calif., Nov. 15—(U.E) top artisans of the year by Fort- _An Air porce helicopter swept night magazine, in its last issue, Qver lsolat€d Hog island today t0
Seaborne Units Aid Red Drive In North Korea
TOKYO, Nov. 16—(U.E)—North Korean Communists reinforced their East Coast positions with a seaborne landing today and drove the South Korean Capitol Division back 2H miles, front dispatches reported.
A Communist battalion described as a Marine Training unit landed
,h, w„ ,ht ffc,M or „ !mics remains untouched by Tl'isl'mw "wreck or"the rematai!25 miles south of the blg NOTtheast
1 th, ■ “mp*tl“rs- As a research anist- of two B-29 superfortresses which Coast port of Chongjin as frost-
lOC\ V. 35 limited most * \ to tne Via vPiH an tnHiictrv anH ... __rn-v.
y>. *y ,v
said.
:nly one tenth of the 'students! o apply for graduate study i. e psychology departments of U-S. ^ersities are accepted. Schools competing for good students, t competition among students is ks severe, he said.
New Fields Open
ceramics.
The selection was made on a basis of men who have made note- iand yesterday, worthy contributions in making a better, more interesting, and happier life for Californians.
Lukens’ picture in with examples of his work, bears | the caption “In the field of cera
river dredging crew that they had seen airplane wreckage on the is-
3
The pilot said results were inconclusive because he believed the high tide possibly had hidden the Fortnight. wreckage belowT the water.
He is scheduled to return at low ti^e tomorrow to determine whether
ology was limited mostly to the ching profession. Dr. Warren
he has revived an industry and given it Western identity and fla
collided a year ago over the same area, killing 18 crewmen.
Members of the dredging crew
psychology are the most im- complete without the Glen Lukens] th5y *’ere attractedto the area
touch in glazing and styling.”
id. Today, the fields of govern- vor Current modem designs in ;nt research psychology and clini- glassware and dishes, would be in-
:rtant.
r. Warren said that an A.B. de-! see is good preparation for suchj fessional fields as teaching, |
„dicme, and law. It is excellent!
homemaking. he said. iDr. Warren has taught psychol-y for 18 years and has been head the department at SC for seven rs. He was engaged in psycho- Washington jgical research in the armed forces iiring the war and was director of le VA Guidance center in 1946.
Liberal Arts Important Dr. Raymond Kendall, director of at SC,
;e School of Music, said music, marked Majors should have a liberal arts ckground.
“Most great artists have acquired mone thorough background in the field!dine, human affairs befbore attaining iccess as musicians," Dr. Kendall! continue id yesterday.
by buzzards circling and were able to get close enough to see pieces of an airplane on the island. They could not get on the island itself, however, because of dense underbrush and marshland.
Those that felt the dredging crew-had seen the year-old B-29 wreck-
The Federal Security agency in said the buzzards might have
been after a dead animal.
SC Awarded FSA Grant
WM
yesterday announced grants totaling $13,932 to SC to promote research on cancer.
To initiate a new the federal
$11,286 for research, directed by Dr Paul Starr, into
Authorities also checked the possibility that the wreckage might be the F6F fighter plane missing since line of work Monday on a flight from San Diego agency ear- to Monterey. They pointed out, however, that the Hog islands are a long way off the flight plan of !the missing pilot, Lt. Comdr. George
was allotted to directed by Dr. Daniel C. Pease, associate profes-Dr. Kendall told of opportunities sor of anatomy, in electron mic-k the professional music field. jroscopy of ultrathin tissue sections.
preparation of thyrotropic hor- Harrison Frates Jr.. 35, of Monterey’ labeled with radioactive io- Meamvhile. search was not abandoned for Frates, although prohibitive flying weather had hampered planes from naval air stations in covering mountainous areas where the Navy pilot may have crash-landed or bailed out.
Another $2646 work
LAS Open House Schedule
Department
Biochemistry and Nutrition
Geography
History
Philosophy
Physics
Radio
Host
John W. Mehl John W. Reith Donald W. Rowland Daniel S. Robinson Richard E. Vollrath William Sener
Time
2-3 p.m.
3:15-4 p.m. 2:30-4 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m.
Today s Headlines
by United Press
ourt to Hear Traitor s Appeal
philosophy here in 1927 and 1928, died Tuesday in his room at the A three-judge panel of the U. S. Ninth Circuit Court of Biltmore hotel after suffering a ppeals heard arguments today on a legal battle to save stroke. He was 81. moya (the meatball) Kawakita from death for treason.
bitten 7th Division American in fantrymen 55 miles to the northwest drove four miles to within 25 miles of the Chinese border in 20-below-zero temperatures.
As the Americans shoved steadily ahead through stinging winds from Siberia, Marine fighter-bombers burned a path ahead of them with a fire bomb attack that wiped out one-third of the town of Kapsan. North Korean and Chinese Communists have concentrated there to block the United Nations drive.
The Communists lashed back with the amphibious landing that raised the total of Red forces blocking the Sout hKorean drive toward Siberia to an estimated seven or eight battalions—upwards of 8000 men.
The North Koreans, seeking to smash the right flank of the ROK Capitol Division, counterattacked for the fourth straight day and pushed the Republicans back 2’A miles before they were checked six to eight miles northeast of Myong-chon.
The U. S. Air Force mounted another smashing air offensive amid reports that the flow of Chinese troops and supplies across the Yalu river into Korea has de creased sharply and that the Reds were withdrawing from 2 to 10 miles in many sectors.
U. S. B-29s “completely wiped out” the North Korean border city of Hoeryong, a supply and communications center, in a 30-plane strike Wednesday. The big planes roared out again today despite the weather forecast of snow and scattered clouds.
The B-29s dropped 40.000 incendiary bombs on Hoeryong only 40 miles from the Soviet border and less than a mile across the nar-Dr. John E. Boodin. who taught row Tumen river from Red China.
High winds whipped the fires into a deadly holocaust.
Place
Science 108 FH 409C FH 409F
Mudd, Argonaut hall Science 160 Hancock 231
CLARENCE SAWHILL ... to direct
1000 Musicians To Play at Tilt
One thousand musicians from 15 Southland high school bands and the Trojan football band will play during half-time activities at the SC-Washington game Saturday.
Director Clarence Sawhill of the SC band and Tommy Walker, assistant director, have worked out a special series of marching formations for the bandsmen to celebrate Dad’s day.
High sohool bands filling the Coliseum with colorful uniforms, drum majorettes and music are as follows :
Corcoran, Monrovia, Glendale, Avenal, Alhambra, Chino, Corona, San Bernardino, Covina, Orange, Wilson and Polytechnic, both of Long Beach; Citrus, Azusa; John Burroughs, Burbank* and Roose velt Junior high, Compton.
Navy Recalls Earl Bolton
Recalled to extended active duty in the Navy, Earl C. Bolton, director of high school and junior college relations, will report to San Diego, Dec. 19.
Bolton, a lieutenant in the naval reserve, was ordered to duty in the 11th Naval district, which includes Los Angeles and San Diego.
He served four years in World War II in the Aleutians and the South Pacific as commanding of ficer of mine sweepers and assault hydrographic ships.
1 Bolton is an assistant professor in political science and a member of the California Bar association.
His successor has not been chosen. The person who replaces Bolton will follow through with his schedule of visits to various high schools and junior colleges throughout the country.
Bolton will be on campus until Dec. 15.
Former Troy Teacher Dies
Grades to Go To Inductees
Men called into active service will get a *>reak on grades and credits from the registrar’s office, according to John Salmond, assistant registrar.
“A student wiio withdraws after Nov. 27, and before the end of the semester, will receive full credit for all courses passed with a grade of C or higher at the date of reporting for active duty,” he said.
Courses reported with a grade of D or IW will be recorded as W;
, those reported with a failing grade U. S. Infantrymen were fighting recorded as F.
on the coldest battlefield in Ameri
Advisers Aid Is Unutilized
Tito Okays U. S. Loan
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Nov. 15 —(U.E)—Marshal Tito has approved the American plan to give Yugoslavia an estimated $20,000,000 immediately in emergency food relief under the U. S. Mutual Assistance act, thereby linking his country to the nations pledged to combat Soviet aggression, reliable informants said today.
Tito has informed the U. S. embassy of his agreement to the four stipulations which the American Congress insisted that every nation benefiting from the plan must accept in advance. These provisions, contained in section 402 of the act, include;
Firstly, Yugoslavia “shall use the assistance for the furtherance of policies of the act.”
Secondly, Yugoslavia will not transfer title of any materials received under the act.
Thirdly, Yugoslavia guarantees the “security” of any materials received.
Fourthly, Yugoslavia agrees to “furnish equipment and materials, services or other assistance, consistent with the charter of the United Nations, to the United States, or to and among other eligible nations, to further the policies and purposes of this act.”
By agreeing to these conditions Tito is accepting the policies and purposes of an act aimed at combatting Soviet aggression, and whose beneficiaries include the North Atlantic treaty members, Turkey, Greece, and Iran.
Diplomatic observers regard the American-Yugoslav agreement as close to a “treaty” as possible, without formally being one.
LAS department advisers threw open their doors yesterday, but apparently nobody wanted advice.
Troy students were practically unanimous in their neglect of the open house' program sponsored by the college. Of 11 departments participating, seven reported no response. while the others received visits from only a few students.
The open house series, designed to familiarize students with their major departments, will close to morrow.
Reasons given for this lack of student interest were varied, but several instructors said advisement offices are open from the beginning of the semester and most students are already familiar with the department which they jplan to enter. Also, some departments, such as nursing and physical thereapy, hold classes off campus, which may account for yesterday’s microscopic response.
Other departments reported a slight show of interest, but pessimistically opined that their visitors would thave arrived, open house or not.
ormer Gambling Overlord Shot
phy and was president of many philosophical organizations. He i wrote exter sively
CHICAGO. Nov. 15—A former policy gambling overlord Bom in Sweden, Dr Boodin ms wounded by gang-styie guns today and authorities be- came to the United states when he n a search for a new suspect in the September slaying was 18. f ace Detective William Drury.
Dr. Boodin was a member of the:can military history and the win-International Congress of Philoso- j begun.
Official
Notice
. S. Losing Inflation Fight
He earned his bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees at: Brown university and received his Ph.D. at Harvard.
a, Stal?iliZati0n Admi^lis- H^aS^d^hf^i^^cf
tor Alan Valentine said tonight that Americans are los-
Kansas. After leaving SC,
ng the fight against chronic inflation, and urged stiffer j taught at UCLA where he __
axes, stijjeter credit curbs and higher production to turn!ed until his retirement in 1939.
The offices of the university will be closed for the Thanksgiving recess from Nov. 23 to Nov. 25 (Thursday, Friday, and Saturday).
A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President
Salmond suggested that any men who might be called into active service before the end of the semester get their grades in shape now so as to be in good shape when called.
Adjustment of credits for withdrawing students in dentistry, law, and medicine, will be left to the faculties of the respective schools.
Students who are effected by the draft or reserve unit calls may secure petitions in the office of the registrar.
Decision or. the grades of men called into the service was made by the oommittee on student scholarship standards.
Admiral Says U.S. Now Fighting World War III
MONTEREY, Calif., Nov. 15—<l'.E> —“We are fighting World War III right now, and it is going to be a hard war and a long one,” a Navy captain said today upon his return from the headquarters staff of the U. S. Eighth Army in Korea.
He is Capt. John Tracy, new executive officer of the Navy General Line school at Monterey. He was liaison officer on Lt. Gen. Walton Walker’s staff.
Debunking talk that the war in Korea is all but over, Tracy said, "There is nothing at all to be complacent about. The first battle of the third World War has been going on4 since June.”
New Trouble Sweeps P. R.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Nov. 15 —(U.E)—Police today announced the arrest of Domingo Saltari Crespo, a fanatical Nationalist, and there were reports of a daring new Nationalist plot to assassinate Governor Luis Munoz Marin.
Saltari Crespo in 1936 attempted to kill Puerto Rico’s then resident commissioner to Washington, Santiago Iglesias Pantin, but police did not link him up officially with the reported new assassination plot.
Saltari Crespo was arrested at his home by detectives and taken to police headquarters where he was interrogated by Assistant Attorney General Jose Aponte. Later Attorney General Vicente Geigel Polanco was reported to have conferred with Aponte at headquarters.
Although there was no official confirmation, usually reliable police sources said Saltari Crespo’s arrest was connected with investigation of a reported plot against Munoz Marin in which the assassin would be chosen by lot.
These reports said the plotters planned to select the assassin by mixing one black ball with white bails in a box and the Nationalist who drew the black ball would attempt the murder.
Music_____________________ 50
Pharmacy_____________ 50
Independent council____75
Veterans council ........50
Council on Religion____50
Contingency fund_________490
A personal expense account of $300 was allotted to ASSC President Al Wiggins, and will be drawn from the general fund.
ASSC Vice-President Marilyn Wolf was allocated a personal expense account of $100 to be drawn from a separate source, the ASSC social fund.
Although no definite sum was allotted for the Senatorial coffee, the legislators took care of the matter by voting “sufficient funds to cover cost of all coffee served at Senate meetings.”
In addition to action on finances the Senate finally got around to considering dropping some of its members.
Junior Class President Jack Colton offered a constitutional amendment that would cut off all nonvoting members except the parliamentarian. Senator-at-Large Art Wexler’s attempt to substitute the Blue Key reorganization plan was ruled out of order.
In accordance with the ASSC constitution there was one speech for and one speech against the proposed amendment, which will come up for % debate at the next ASSC senate meeting.
Colton spoke for the amendment, saying that it would cut the already over-large Senate membership.
Ed Stegman, perennial proxy, spoke against, saying that the amendment was a piece-meal proposition and that the Blue Key plan should be considered.
The Senate passed a resolution that the University Bookstore make provisions for the purchase and sale of used textbooks before the beginning of the spring semester .
The resolution further recommended complete and unrestrictec use of off-campus bookstores for veterans.
Milt Yusim, chairman of the organizations committee, asked the Senate to recognize three campus organizations: Nisei Trojan club. Anthropology club, and Fine Arts student body.
The Nisei Trojan club was later withdrawn by Yusim for further investigation following objections concerning the club’s constitutional limitations on voting membership.
Anthropology club and Fine Arts student body were recognized as ASSC organizations.
Part-time student employee wages figured next in a preliminary report by Allen A. Arthur, chairman of the committee to investigate student employment.
Arthur revealed that the committee is conducting a survey among student employees and is also investigating part-time employment wages at other universities.
VA Explains Check Delay
William E. Hall, director of veterans affairs, today listed three possible reasons why veterans have not received subsistence checks yet.
They were failure to transfer records from other schools; lost records in the VA office; or incorrect addresses on the mailing forms.
Hall said that his office has traced down the checks of 79 veterans this year and that most of the trouble resulted from wrong mailing addresses.
Mild Earthquake Rocks L. A. Area
by United Press
An earthquake of mild intensity shook the Los Angeles area at 5:59 p.m., PST yesterday.
The shock was so light that few residents of Los Angeles felt it. Police reported a half dozen calls from persons who were not sure they had felt a quake.
The temblor was felt in nearby Inglewood, Hollywood and the southwest portion of Los Angeles. Long Beaoh, 25 miles away, did not record the shock.
French Approve German Troops
PARIS, Nov. 15—(U.E)—France proposed tonight that complete German fighting units of about 6,000 men each be included in divisions of a Western European army to fight off any attack by Russia.
The proposal, intended to Dreax. a deadlock over the extent to which Germany is to be permitted to rearm, was submitted to & meeting of representative* of the Atlantic Defense Pact Council.
Germany would be permitted to form its units—corresponding to an American army combat team—with artillery and tanks.
The Geran units would be combined with similar units from other Western European countries to form complete divisions of the European army which, France insists, must be the framework in which any German fighting force is included.
SDX
. . . meets at noon today in Student Union. ,
iOl
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 43, November 16, 1950 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 43, November 16, 1950. |
| Full text |
enate Okays Operating Budget ine Arts Lecture Psychology Professor to Test Knights Plan o End LAS Series Air Force Aptitudes in Korea football Rally For Tomorrow Estvan to Discuss Pre-Education Needs; Open House Slated tires on art, pre-education, philosophy will conclude thej \ , Bombardiers, navigators, and pi-1 Air Force officers. They will sper.d classes will be oovered by other inlots now taking part in the Korean lone week at headquarters in Ja-j structors. Clark P. Wilson will subwar will be the guinea pigs of an pan and another week at Johnson stitute for Dr. Ruch in Psychology during the next field perfecting testing methods. 440; I The group will then break SC psychologist i two months. Floyd L. Ruch, professor of psy- teams of two and spend two weeks chology, will leave for Korea and Japan by plane Friday to test the at individual ba5es throughout Re- training j' ficiency of the entire air combat conditions, day. Dr. Ruch, of General Studies 200 textbook fame, is the only univer- ^ guinea pigs will be interviewed sity psychologist from the West and given ratings. The study was Coast who has been invited by the Panned by the Human Resources Air Force to participate in the Research institute attached to the DR. NEIL WARREN . . . speaker ! study. The group will Include five psy- chologists, five sociologists, and two tters. Arts, and Sciences advise-J nt and orientation scries this’ emoon in Founders hall at 3:15.! Richard Snavely, instructor in e arts, will discuss careers in art 114 Founders. Most of the period il be given to questions and an-! ers. and no lecture has been; nned, he said. Value of fine arts! ses in other major fields will so be told. Tells Entrance Requirements r. Frank J. Estvan, assistant: lessor of education, will meet! h an orientation group and speak pre-education in 204 Founders.! will outline entrance require-nts for the School of Education.! he Sohool of Philosophy will Id open house today in the Argo-ut room of Mudd hall from 3:15 4:15. Dr. Daniel S. RoWnson, di-tor of the school, will be ini arge. Coffee and donuts will be ved. Traces History Dr. Robiuson will trace the his-y of the School of Philosophy at and list the courses required a major. The session is open to dents interested in philosophy. Dr. Neil Warren, head of the Psy-ology department, said in his LAS ientation lecture yesterday, •‘The mand for trained psychologists exceeds the supply." r. Warren said that psychology partments in colleges and um-rsities throughout the country crowded and that all available lities are taxed, especially at the uate level. Graduate Work Needed ‘If you wish to make psychology ur vocation, it is highly desirable at you plan to take graduate rk. There are few opportunities , . .. .. ---- ----------- -------- ----- - those with only B.A. degrees,”! contnbutioi s the field of check reports from a San j0aquin Robert Mackie in Psychology into 464; and Ward Jensser. in Psychology 300. Dr. Ruch helped develop the safe driver selection system used “The selection, classification, and by the Los Angeles Transit lines I accuracy of Air Forcfe based on aptitude tests. “We’re going to study the pro- training of pilots and ground crews d the company. ......and!will u.....“* be evaluated at the actual j , ground crews to see how valid the bases in the Far East,” Dr. Ruch tests now given to cadets are in said. “Any deficiencies that have degree of circulation, predicting ability to perform under developed in combat will be used and influence of he said yester-1as a check on the effectiveness of our training.” The Air Force personnel serving Air university at Maxwell Air Force base, Alabama. While Dr. Ruch is away his three! States. He invented tests to measure the credibility, proposition themes and applied them in Democratic political campaigns f o r Warren and Proposition 2, the aid to aged and blind proposal voted on last year. Both campaigns won. “Psychology and Life,” the textbook for General Studies 200, is used at 700 other universities and colleges throughout the United Daily Trojan Friday’s noon rally will be boom ing with special entertainment, yells, and bandfare in Bovard audi- Non-Voting Solons Face Loss of Seats The Senate allotted $4900 for ASSC operating expenses last night and set a share of it aside for free coffee at the legislative sessions. Acting on a Finance committee report, the lawmakers torium, Bud Templeton, Knight okayed _ almost all recommendations for allotments with- rally chairman, announced yester day. jout question, Expense accounts for the Schools Harry the Hipster, piano player of Internati°na.l Relations and Edu-and songster and his combo. will! cation, however, drew strong objec perform. Two of Harry’s novelty Students were urged yesterday by Bud Templeton, Knight rally chairman, to show school spirit and back the footbalt team by participating in a send-off rally. The teajm will board busses Friday for the Miramar hotel in S anta Monica where they will stay overnight. The farewell rally will be held at 5 p.m. in front of the gym tomorrow afternoon. tions from the school presidents and were referred back to the committee for further study. Vol. XUI 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Thursday, Nov. 16, 1950 No. 43 songs will be “Sweet Marihuana Brown” and “I Stay Brown All Year ’Round.” Plans have been made for Braver. Dyer, noted sportswriter, to interview alumni John Wayne and Ward Bond. Yells will be led by John Chapman and the yell leaders, and the band will play fight songs. The rally will last from 12 to 12:45. The Knights wall be in charges. The budget as passed contains: Homecoming _________________ _______$850 General fund _________________ -.........2500 Graduate students____ ___50 Senior class ............. _____100 Junior class ............ ________ 50 Sophomore class __________ __50 Freshman class ............ _ 50 Architecture___________ 50 Commerce _______________ 100 Engineering _______________ ___100 LAS ......................... . . ______125 Lukens Lauded Air Force By Fortnight JooJ* i Glen Lukens, associate professor ° l^11 1 iaM^ of Fine Arts, was named one of the STOCKTON. Calif., Nov. 15—(U.E) top artisans of the year by Fort- _An Air porce helicopter swept night magazine, in its last issue, Qver lsolat€d Hog island today t0 Seaborne Units Aid Red Drive In North Korea TOKYO, Nov. 16—(U.E)—North Korean Communists reinforced their East Coast positions with a seaborne landing today and drove the South Korean Capitol Division back 2H miles, front dispatches reported. A Communist battalion described as a Marine Training unit landed ,h, w„ ,ht ffc,M or „ !mics remains untouched by Tl'isl'mw "wreck or"the rematai!25 miles south of the blg NOTtheast 1 th, ■ “mp*tl“rs- As a research anist- of two B-29 superfortresses which Coast port of Chongjin as frost- lOC\ V. 35 limited most * \ to tne Via vPiH an tnHiictrv anH ... __rn-v. y>. *y ,v said. :nly one tenth of the 'students! o apply for graduate study i. e psychology departments of U-S. ^ersities are accepted. Schools competing for good students, t competition among students is ks severe, he said. New Fields Open ceramics. The selection was made on a basis of men who have made note- iand yesterday, worthy contributions in making a better, more interesting, and happier life for Californians. Lukens’ picture in with examples of his work, bears the caption “In the field of cera river dredging crew that they had seen airplane wreckage on the is- 3 The pilot said results were inconclusive because he believed the high tide possibly had hidden the Fortnight. wreckage belowT the water. He is scheduled to return at low ti^e tomorrow to determine whether ology was limited mostly to the ching profession. Dr. Warren he has revived an industry and given it Western identity and fla collided a year ago over the same area, killing 18 crewmen. Members of the dredging crew psychology are the most im- complete without the Glen Lukens] th5y *’ere attractedto the area touch in glazing and styling.” id. Today, the fields of govern- vor Current modem designs in ;nt research psychology and clini- glassware and dishes, would be in- :rtant. r. Warren said that an A.B. de-! see is good preparation for suchj fessional fields as teaching, „dicme, and law. It is excellent! homemaking. he said. iDr. Warren has taught psychol-y for 18 years and has been head the department at SC for seven rs. He was engaged in psycho- Washington jgical research in the armed forces iiring the war and was director of le VA Guidance center in 1946. Liberal Arts Important Dr. Raymond Kendall, director of at SC, ;e School of Music, said music, marked Majors should have a liberal arts ckground. “Most great artists have acquired mone thorough background in the field!dine, human affairs befbore attaining iccess as musicians" Dr. Kendall! continue id yesterday. by buzzards circling and were able to get close enough to see pieces of an airplane on the island. They could not get on the island itself, however, because of dense underbrush and marshland. Those that felt the dredging crew-had seen the year-old B-29 wreck- The Federal Security agency in said the buzzards might have been after a dead animal. SC Awarded FSA Grant WM yesterday announced grants totaling $13,932 to SC to promote research on cancer. To initiate a new the federal $11,286 for research, directed by Dr Paul Starr, into Authorities also checked the possibility that the wreckage might be the F6F fighter plane missing since line of work Monday on a flight from San Diego agency ear- to Monterey. They pointed out, however, that the Hog islands are a long way off the flight plan of !the missing pilot, Lt. Comdr. George was allotted to directed by Dr. Daniel C. Pease, associate profes-Dr. Kendall told of opportunities sor of anatomy, in electron mic-k the professional music field. jroscopy of ultrathin tissue sections. preparation of thyrotropic hor- Harrison Frates Jr.. 35, of Monterey’ labeled with radioactive io- Meamvhile. search was not abandoned for Frates, although prohibitive flying weather had hampered planes from naval air stations in covering mountainous areas where the Navy pilot may have crash-landed or bailed out. Another $2646 work LAS Open House Schedule Department Biochemistry and Nutrition Geography History Philosophy Physics Radio Host John W. Mehl John W. Reith Donald W. Rowland Daniel S. Robinson Richard E. Vollrath William Sener Time 2-3 p.m. 3:15-4 p.m. 2:30-4 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m. 3:15-4:15 p.m. Today s Headlines by United Press ourt to Hear Traitor s Appeal philosophy here in 1927 and 1928, died Tuesday in his room at the A three-judge panel of the U. S. Ninth Circuit Court of Biltmore hotel after suffering a ppeals heard arguments today on a legal battle to save stroke. He was 81. moya (the meatball) Kawakita from death for treason. bitten 7th Division American in fantrymen 55 miles to the northwest drove four miles to within 25 miles of the Chinese border in 20-below-zero temperatures. As the Americans shoved steadily ahead through stinging winds from Siberia, Marine fighter-bombers burned a path ahead of them with a fire bomb attack that wiped out one-third of the town of Kapsan. North Korean and Chinese Communists have concentrated there to block the United Nations drive. The Communists lashed back with the amphibious landing that raised the total of Red forces blocking the Sout hKorean drive toward Siberia to an estimated seven or eight battalions—upwards of 8000 men. The North Koreans, seeking to smash the right flank of the ROK Capitol Division, counterattacked for the fourth straight day and pushed the Republicans back 2’A miles before they were checked six to eight miles northeast of Myong-chon. The U. S. Air Force mounted another smashing air offensive amid reports that the flow of Chinese troops and supplies across the Yalu river into Korea has de creased sharply and that the Reds were withdrawing from 2 to 10 miles in many sectors. U. S. B-29s “completely wiped out” the North Korean border city of Hoeryong, a supply and communications center, in a 30-plane strike Wednesday. The big planes roared out again today despite the weather forecast of snow and scattered clouds. The B-29s dropped 40.000 incendiary bombs on Hoeryong only 40 miles from the Soviet border and less than a mile across the nar-Dr. John E. Boodin. who taught row Tumen river from Red China. High winds whipped the fires into a deadly holocaust. Place Science 108 FH 409C FH 409F Mudd, Argonaut hall Science 160 Hancock 231 CLARENCE SAWHILL ... to direct 1000 Musicians To Play at Tilt One thousand musicians from 15 Southland high school bands and the Trojan football band will play during half-time activities at the SC-Washington game Saturday. Director Clarence Sawhill of the SC band and Tommy Walker, assistant director, have worked out a special series of marching formations for the bandsmen to celebrate Dad’s day. High sohool bands filling the Coliseum with colorful uniforms, drum majorettes and music are as follows : Corcoran, Monrovia, Glendale, Avenal, Alhambra, Chino, Corona, San Bernardino, Covina, Orange, Wilson and Polytechnic, both of Long Beach; Citrus, Azusa; John Burroughs, Burbank* and Roose velt Junior high, Compton. Navy Recalls Earl Bolton Recalled to extended active duty in the Navy, Earl C. Bolton, director of high school and junior college relations, will report to San Diego, Dec. 19. Bolton, a lieutenant in the naval reserve, was ordered to duty in the 11th Naval district, which includes Los Angeles and San Diego. He served four years in World War II in the Aleutians and the South Pacific as commanding of ficer of mine sweepers and assault hydrographic ships. 1 Bolton is an assistant professor in political science and a member of the California Bar association. His successor has not been chosen. The person who replaces Bolton will follow through with his schedule of visits to various high schools and junior colleges throughout the country. Bolton will be on campus until Dec. 15. Former Troy Teacher Dies Grades to Go To Inductees Men called into active service will get a *>reak on grades and credits from the registrar’s office, according to John Salmond, assistant registrar. “A student wiio withdraws after Nov. 27, and before the end of the semester, will receive full credit for all courses passed with a grade of C or higher at the date of reporting for active duty,” he said. Courses reported with a grade of D or IW will be recorded as W; , those reported with a failing grade U. S. Infantrymen were fighting recorded as F. on the coldest battlefield in Ameri Advisers Aid Is Unutilized Tito Okays U. S. Loan BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Nov. 15 —(U.E)—Marshal Tito has approved the American plan to give Yugoslavia an estimated $20,000,000 immediately in emergency food relief under the U. S. Mutual Assistance act, thereby linking his country to the nations pledged to combat Soviet aggression, reliable informants said today. Tito has informed the U. S. embassy of his agreement to the four stipulations which the American Congress insisted that every nation benefiting from the plan must accept in advance. These provisions, contained in section 402 of the act, include; Firstly, Yugoslavia “shall use the assistance for the furtherance of policies of the act.” Secondly, Yugoslavia will not transfer title of any materials received under the act. Thirdly, Yugoslavia guarantees the “security” of any materials received. Fourthly, Yugoslavia agrees to “furnish equipment and materials, services or other assistance, consistent with the charter of the United Nations, to the United States, or to and among other eligible nations, to further the policies and purposes of this act.” By agreeing to these conditions Tito is accepting the policies and purposes of an act aimed at combatting Soviet aggression, and whose beneficiaries include the North Atlantic treaty members, Turkey, Greece, and Iran. Diplomatic observers regard the American-Yugoslav agreement as close to a “treaty” as possible, without formally being one. LAS department advisers threw open their doors yesterday, but apparently nobody wanted advice. Troy students were practically unanimous in their neglect of the open house' program sponsored by the college. Of 11 departments participating, seven reported no response. while the others received visits from only a few students. The open house series, designed to familiarize students with their major departments, will close to morrow. Reasons given for this lack of student interest were varied, but several instructors said advisement offices are open from the beginning of the semester and most students are already familiar with the department which they jplan to enter. Also, some departments, such as nursing and physical thereapy, hold classes off campus, which may account for yesterday’s microscopic response. Other departments reported a slight show of interest, but pessimistically opined that their visitors would thave arrived, open house or not. ormer Gambling Overlord Shot phy and was president of many philosophical organizations. He i wrote exter sively CHICAGO. Nov. 15—A former policy gambling overlord Bom in Sweden, Dr Boodin ms wounded by gang-styie guns today and authorities be- came to the United states when he n a search for a new suspect in the September slaying was 18. f ace Detective William Drury. Dr. Boodin was a member of the:can military history and the win-International Congress of Philoso- j begun. Official Notice . S. Losing Inflation Fight He earned his bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees at: Brown university and received his Ph.D. at Harvard. a, Stal?iliZati0n Admi^lis- H^aS^d^hf^i^^cf tor Alan Valentine said tonight that Americans are los- Kansas. After leaving SC, ng the fight against chronic inflation, and urged stiffer j taught at UCLA where he __ axes, stijjeter credit curbs and higher production to turn!ed until his retirement in 1939. The offices of the university will be closed for the Thanksgiving recess from Nov. 23 to Nov. 25 (Thursday, Friday, and Saturday). A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President Salmond suggested that any men who might be called into active service before the end of the semester get their grades in shape now so as to be in good shape when called. Adjustment of credits for withdrawing students in dentistry, law, and medicine, will be left to the faculties of the respective schools. Students who are effected by the draft or reserve unit calls may secure petitions in the office of the registrar. Decision or. the grades of men called into the service was made by the oommittee on student scholarship standards. Admiral Says U.S. Now Fighting World War III MONTEREY, Calif., Nov. 15— |
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