Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 13, October 03, 1951 |
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- PAGE THREE -
Footballers Prep For Huskies
Daily
Trojan
— PAGE FOUR
Heifetz Story Continues
kol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1951
Night Telephone - Richmond 5472
No. 13
tVorld News
Losing Face ln Oil Crisis British Say
From the United Press
Russia has indicated that it was reparing to move in on the trou-Jled Iranian scene as British evacu-lg the Abadan refinery, protest-d they would lose face in their degrading'’ departure by sea.
In a lengthy talk between Rus-ian Ambassador Ivan Sabchikov nd Iranian Premier Mohammed lossadegh, the Soviets renewed tussia's promise of economic as-istance to Iran under the recently egotiated barter trade agreement.
Two Hot Issues
Rousing, Rooting Rally to Resound **★★★★★** ★★ Varsity Gets Send-off Friday Morning
A wide tropieal storm has | slashed a S2 million path of destruction through Florida and ! shredded awnings on the tourist “gold coast.” The storm moved j inland from the Gulf of Mexico, | swept the coast, and then noved toward open sea. Three fishermen we presumed drowned off the roast.
* • •
Suspension of tariff concessions n Czech goods and an informal sit own strike by the U. S. Embassy nd Consulate in Prague were the lows struck at Czech trade with ie U. S. as the State Department lade good its promise of retallia- j on for the imprisonment of Amer-:an newsman William Oatis.
* • •
Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge iR.-Mass.) has revealed that the loint Chiefs of Staff have agreed ►n a multi-billion dollar Air rorce buildup that will expand he nation's air arm from 95 to 40 groups by 1954. The a greener t came after months of behind-the-scenes squabbling as Jefense Secretary Robert A. Lov- I "tt conferred secretly at the Ahite House with President Tru-nan.
# # #
Squabbling Communist leaders ho have been unable to decide in x days of conference whether to •sume truce talks or return to all-it war in Korea have been noU-?d that Allied forces are prepared i whip them in battle if they hoose to fight it out.
• * •
j A bill to force the Army to restore white crosses it removed from the graves of 13.000 Ameri-Ican war dead in Hawaii's Na- I Itional Memorial cemetery was be- j |fore the House of Representa- i tives today. The Army removed Ithe crosses and replaced them |with flat stone markers.
• • •
Russian-born aircraft designer Dr. I gor Ivan Sikorsky will receive the I 951 Daniel Guggenheim medal Fri-lay for his pioneering in aviation id his lifetime service to the world I flying, the society of automotive icineers announced. Dr. Sikorsky egan his aviation engineering ca->er in 1909.
Founders Day To Cut Short Friday Classes
Classes will be dismissed early Friday in view of Founders day celebrations, according to A. S. Raubenheimer, educational vice-president.
So that all students and faculty members may hear Gordon Dean, chairman of the Atomic Energy commission, no classes will be held from 10:30 until noon.
Dean, 1930 honor graduate of SC and professor in its Law school from 1946 to 1949. will speak on “The Responsibilities of Atomic World Leadership” at 11 a.m. in Bovard auditorium.
President Honored
The Founders day celebration commemorates the Oct. 5. 1880 in-! augjration of the late Marion Mc-] Kinley Bovard, first president of the university.
Appointed to the commission two years ago by President Truman, Dean took over the chairmanship j of the AEC last year.
Outstanding Alumnus
Selected as the most distinguished alumnus of the year on Alumni day last May 5, he received the Asa V.
! Call achievement trophy. He served ■ as chief of the appellate section of the criminal division of the Department of Justice and then as a special executive assistant to the Attorney General.
During World War II he was a Naval Reserve officer and served from 1945 on the staff of Prosecutor Robert H. Jackson at the war crimes trials in Nuernberg. Ger-i many.
JACK OWEN . Support Team
Official
Annual Debate Lunch Set
If you enjoy talking while indulging in food and drink or even if you just enjoy talking, you are cordially invited to attend the an-nunl debate barbecue tomorrow night.
The get-together is held to give all hopeful orators an opportunity to find out about many tournament trips and trophies scheduled for the forthcoming year.
Head Coach Allan Nichols, along with the rest of his coaching staff, will be on hand to answer questions. and men and wromen who i are interested in debate, oratory, ! extemporaneous and dramatic reading are invited.
The barbecue will be held at I the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity i house, 931 West Adams boulevard. I Chow-time is 7 p.m.
Knights Urge All Students To Back Squad
Trojan footballers will be given a noisy farewell in front of the Commons building, Friday at 7:45 a.m. as they prepare to leave for the crucial PCC tilt with Washington at Seattle this weekend.
“We need all-out student participation for the sendoff Friday morning to show our football team how strongly we are behind them,” emphasized Trojan Knight Jim Piper, rally committeeman.
“This is not an overstatement," Piper said, “because this year, as any sports enthusiast knows, SC's team is playing a superior brand of football which'in part is due to the higher morale of the team members.”
Keep ’em Smiling “To maintain this morale level must be the goal of every Trojan.” said Knight President Jack Owen. “We can begin to do this immediately by backing the rally Friday morning, he said.
“The fact that Washington has been picked as a 7 and one-half point favorite over SC and has been named as co-favorite with California to win the Pacific Coast conference title this year seems to give rooters something to shout about,’ Owen said.
Rally Heralds Arrangements have been made by the Rally committee for a band to march through the Row, and to “trumpet” house members to the rally.
Climax of the rally will come wrhen SC's team leaves bn the bus at 7:45 for the Los Angeles International airport.
“George Tirebiter II will be there to join in the yells and other send-off activities,” Rally Chairman Don DuBose said.
Notice
Acheson Proposal To Cut China Aid branded Untrue
WASHINGTON. Oct. 3— <UP^ — Tie State department tonight de-lied that Secretary of Str.te Dean ichcsnn or any other department fficial ever proposed cutting off j imencan aid to the Chinese Na-ior.al.st s.
The department said Harold E.
fs memory was “playing jim tricks” when he said yesterday at the late Sen. Arthur H. Van-nberg <R-Mich> told him Ache-n and Ambassador-at-Large Phil-C. Jessup made the proposal at White House conference. Testifying before the Senate In-rnal Security committee. Stassen id Vandenberg told him he >cked the move by telling Presi- ! nt Truman he had votes enough the Senate to kill it.
I But Str.te Department Press Of-cer Micnael J. McDermott said “exhaustive search" of department records failed to produce any ►'itience of such a White Hcuse inference. He said Acheson and essup “have no recollection of jich a meeting.”
| “Moreover, thve never has been
[w proposal tc abolish economic d to Nationalist China by Secre-ry Acheson. by Ambassador Jes-p or by any other authorized of-of the State department." IcDermott said.
The official also took note of pn's testimony regarding a lund-table conference ca.ied by }e department in October, 1949.
On Friday. Oct. 5. the University celebrates Founders Day.
Students and faculty are invited to attend the special convocation at 11 in Bovard Auditorium. Mr. Gordon Dean, chairman of the atomic energy commission, will speak on “The Responsibilities of Atomic World Leadership.”
All classes will be dismissed from 10:30 until 12:00 noon.
A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President
Quarterbackers To View Movies Of SC-Navy Tilt
Flickers of SCs romp over San Diego Navy in last Saturday’s football game will be show-n at noon : today in 133 Founders hall by the | Quarterbacks club.
A member of the Trojan coaching staff will be on hand to nar-1 rate the film and add interesting
TrumanLoyalty Board Clears Philip Jessup
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3—(UP)— President Truman's top loyalty review board today notified Senate investigators that “there is no reasonable doubt” of the loyalty of Ambassador-at-Large Philip C. Jessup.
The board’s clearance of Jessup was sent to chairman John J Sparkman, (D-Ala) of a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee considering Jessup's nomination as a n/ember of the U. S. delegation to the United Nations.
It came as Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis) accused Jessup of adopting “100 per cent” a policy program favorable to the ,Chinese Communists. McCarthy was imme- | diately challenged to prove his statement by Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark).
Review Clearance Sparkman inserted in the committee record a letter from Hiram Bingham, chairman of the loyalty review board. Bingham said a special panel had reviewed Jessup’s clearance by the State Department Loyalty board and approved it.
Sparkman also put into the record a letter from Warren R. Austin, chief U. S. delegate to the UN. Austin praised Jessup's “special brilliance in respect to international law and international relations.”
The Trojans will board a United j observed freedom of his
Airlines plane which is to arrive I thought from shadow or bias or
RICHARD VAN LAANEN . . . Senate Debater
Package Deal Offered For SC Music Series
Senat
Heated Debate Due On El Rod Grades
by Chuck Sweet
Two red-hot issues—stopping of El Rodeo funds and lowering the 1.5 grade-point requirement-'loE elective ASSC offices—will be hashed over at the Senate meeting tonight at 7:15.
The El Rodeo controversy, stemming from a motion by Dick Van Laanan to withhold funds from the puolication until a new Board of Publications is set up, has simmered for the past week.
Work on the yearbook has gone ahead in spite of the Senate directive, however. Editor Fred Harper said yesterday that it will be “business as usual” in the El Rod offices as far as he is concerned.
Harper repeated his charge that the Senate’s action was illegal in spite of Parliamentarian Dean PicTs ruling to the
contrary.
A $5 concert-book pr.ckage deal i for 1951-52 campus music events,! goes on sale today in the School j of Music office for both students; and faculty.
Less than 200 bocks are available , for thc series, which begins with! thc Heifetz concert in Bovard auditorium Saturday and extends through the a cappella concert next spring.
The books may be purchased at the School of Music office, 35th i place and Hoover street, today and tomorrow. Tickets for the Heifetz concert will be received at once, while tickets for later events will be mailed to purchasers.
May Be Confused
“The new $5 package deal is not to be confused with the recent 26-concert course offered by the School of Music,” Dean Raymond Kendall said.
That series, which is now closed to student registration, included many musical events off-campus as well as those on-campus events w’hich come under the new package deal, he said. It also carried one unit of credit, while the new pack-
in Seattle at 1:30 p.m. Friday,
SC Red Cross To Visit Vets
prejudice or preoccupation with interests other than those of the United States and security and freedom in the world,” Austin wrote.
Case Re-Opened
Jessup’s case was re-opened by the State Department, along with a number of others, after Presi-
The SC chaptv of the Red Cross will give a party for patients j deiit Truman made drastic changes the Saw telle Veterans hospital Fri- , jn secur^y regulations. Previously,
day afternoon. j government employees could be dis-
Women interested in going to charged only if a board found
^ v ■ _a T-v... Horm._ „hoir |the hospital. may cal1 Jane Turner reasonable evidence of disloyalty.
5idelights, said Don Herman, chair-1 or Nancy Mispagel at PR 7-93731 Now they may be discharged if
by tomorrow noon. there is “reasonable doubt” as to
Students will entertain the pa- | thejr loyalty SC game, movies of the game will j tients by reading and playing games “There is no reasonable doubt be shown to all who are interested, with them. Professional entertain-Admission is free. I ers are also needed.
man.
Every Wednesday following an
Rules Set for Queens, Slogans By New Homecoming Chairmen
Pat Cunningham. Jim Bockman. and Lawrence W. Pritchard have been named to three top Homecoming posts. Homecoming Chair- ; man Jack Colton disclosed yester- ' d°.y. They will assume the jobs of 1 slogan chairman, queen chairman, | and alumni Homecoming general ! chairman.
The selection of Pritchard, vice- j president of Bank of America, as alumni homecoming general chairman, was announced by J. Knee-land Nunan. president of the General Alumni association.
Miss Cunningham. ZTA presi-' dent and a member of the Panhellenic council immediately disclosed plans lor the acceptance of Homecoming slogans.
No Verbosity Students interested in submitting slogans are instructed to keep the homecoming themes at a six-word maximum. Entries must include the \ student's name, address, and telephone number.
Deadline for slogans is Oct. 17. j They are to be placed in a special bo':, which will be located inside of the main door of Student Union.
Bockman, Trojan Knight and Delta Sigma Phi president, disclosed instructions for entries in |
PATTY CUNNINGHAM . . . top post
the Homecoming queen selection. Coeds entering the contest must submit an 8” by 10” glossy head and shoulder photograph which includes name, address, and telephone number.
Photographs due Photographs are to be placed in the Homecoming queen entry box
in the office of Dr. Alex Aloia, stu dent activities adviser, 228 Student Union. Entries are to be submitted no later than Oct. 19. Bockman stated.
Homecoming week activities for returning graduates will be highlighted by the annual alumni reunion at the Biltmore hotel Nov. 9. Also scheduled will be the School of Commerce luncheon Nov. 7 at the Biltmore hotel, a banquet and week of clinical demonstrations by the Schcol of Medicine, and a series of School of Religion events.
Students Parade •
Student activities will include the parade of decorated floats in the Miracle Mile section of Wilshire boulevard, fraternity and sorority house decorations featuring the SC-Stanford football game, a varsity show to be presided over by Helen of Troy and her court, and a homecoming dance.
Students asked to attend the homecoming meeting tomorrow night at 8 in the Senate chambers are Jim Bockman, Pat Cunningham, Beck Kissleberg. Frank Mead. Rich Ives. Ron Frank. Marv Vidos, Elmer Haskins. Bill Rosenweig, Louis Hanna. Whit Sponsler, Alder. , McKelvey, Ernie Schay, Pat O'Bryan, and Mimie Wagner.
of his (Jessup's) loyalty,” Bingham notified Sparkman.
Testifying against Jessup's appointment. McCarthy cited testimony by Harold E. Stassen before another Senate committee yesterday. He said Stassen showed how the State Department followed a 10-point pro-Chinese communist program put forward by Far Eastern expert Owen Lattimore.
Fulbright demanded that McCarthy “connect” Jessup with the program and said none of it ever actually was put into effect by the State Department.
age deal has nothing to do with any courses, Dean Kendall said.
Individual admission prices to the events covered by the new $5 concert-book, range in price from $1.20 to $3.60 Tickets at these prices for the Heifetz concert are now on sale in the Student Union ticket office.
Additional Concerts
In addition to the Heifetz concert, the $5 package deal includes admission to an opera in Bovard auditorium staged by the opera workshop, and directed by Carl Ebert. It will run Dec. 5, 7, and 8. Also included in the package deal will be a concert by the world-famed Italian ensemble Virtuosi Di Roma, Feb. 6.
Concert-book holders will get special admission tickets to the University Symphony orchestra con-I cert: the concerts of solo artists Irene Robertson, organist; Lillian Steuber, pianist; John Crown, pianist; a Baroque Festival concert, under Alice Ehlers and Charles Hirt; a concert by the SC concert band:
I and an a cappella choir concert.
Noon Music Programs Open Today
Five School of Music students will headline today's Music at Noon program to be held at 12:15 in Hancock auditorium.
Morton Subotnick, pianist, will open the piogram with two sonatas by Scarlatti. Joy Kim. soprano; James Low\ pianist; and Subotnick will combine their talents to present “Der Hirt auf dem Felsen” by Schubert for the second number.
Keith Brown, trombonist, will play Sonata, by Corelli, accompanied by Lowe.
Eve Sarafian, pianist, will play “La Soiree Dans Grenade,” “La Serenade Interrompue.” and “La Puerta del Vino” by Debussy.
M’ss Kim. a graduate student and winner of many music awards, will close the program with four Koraan songs, including “Nodul Kang Byun” and “Don Rah Chi,” arranged by Low-, and “Nina” and “Spring Rooting Digging Maiden ’ by Hyun.
Drop Seen In Cancer Death Rate
A mystifying decrease in the cancer death rate in California has been reported to a group of cancer workers by Dr. Ian MacDonald, associate professor of surgery.
The decrease in intestinal cancer death rates, which was discovered in an anlysis of statistics by the State Health department, is the first such decrease reported anywhere, and appears to be contrary to the general trend in other states, said Dr. MacDonald.
Since many other states have cancer control programs as good as that cf California, there is no reason to believe that better treatment is responsible for the results here. Dr. MacDonald said.
He offered the theory that there has been some change in the natural behavior of the basic character of intestinal malignancies in this state.
Sports Editor Job on El Rod Still Vacant
El Rodeo Editor Fred Harper yesterday reported that work on the 1952 SC yearbook is progressing satisfactorily.
“We have a job to do and deadlines to meet and we intend to meet them all,” said Harper.
Harper requested that applicants for the vacant job of sports editor report to him at the El Rod office tomorrow from 1:15 to 2:15. Copy staff members are asked to report to Jim Lasry for assignments today at 1:30.
Secretaries, proof readers, and layout staff are asked to come to the yearbook office on appointed hours during the week.
L.A. Vice Squadders Raid Sig Eps — but No Dice
Vice squaders of the Los Angeles Police department raided Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity Monday night r.fter a telephoned tip that gambling was being carried on in the house, but the case ' has been i dropped because of lack of conclusive evidence.
The Sig Eps are still subject to action of the Interfratemity council, which is investigating the in-cidfnt.
The case against the Sig Eps was thrown out of court yesterday morning after fraternity members explained the “Monte Carlo night,” an anntlal private affair conducted by the alumni of the local chapter, is operated on a strict non-profit basis.
Twenty-one persons were arrested in the raid. Four were Sig Ep members and the others were alumni and men from other Row houses.
Each man had put up $50 bail, which was refunded after the judge in the case commented that “the whole thing was a very unfortunate mistake.”
“Our chapter hasn't got anything to do with the presentation of this yearly ‘Monte Carlo,’ ” said Don DuBose, president of the Sig Ep chapter. “It's an all-alumni af- j fair.”
Conducting the raid were officers R. O. Bryant, Grafton Reed, and K. L. Foster, who acted on a complaint telephoned to the police department.
“All three vice squad officers were wearing civilian clothes,” DuBose said. “They came in the house, ate up all the popcorn, and then proceeded to make their pinch.” According to the officers, another 30 persons escaped through the windows just as the arrests were being made.
No Control
“The ASSC Senate has no control over how money is expended in faculty budgets. The El Rod budget is not controlled by students; it is administered by the university,” he said.
Expenditure of funds for the El Rodeo is made with the signature of a faculty member, and the ASSC Senate, despite any rulings anyone may make, has no control over what this faculty member may or may not do, he said.
Contracts Let
Contracts for certain items in the yearbook budget have already been let, it was disclosed. Failure to fulfill these contracts because of stoppage of funds will be a liability to the university, it was said.
The Senate will discuss the revamping of the Board of PubLc.'-tions and vote on it as a by-law to be added to the ASSC Constitution. Reorganization of the publications board as suggested last week wouid put control of student publications more directly in the hands of the Senate.
Lower Grades
Debate on the proposed amendment to lower requirements for elective student offices to a 1-point may prove bitter. Present grade-point requirement is 1.5, but AMS President Bob Mitchell proposed the cut in order that more students seek office.
Discussion tonight is expected to center around the question of whether campus “wheels" also can be leaders in scholarship. Tony Ward and Al Katz said they believed the present 1.5 requirement is jjst. If the amendment passes the Senate tonight, the student J body would be required to approve the measure in an election.
Further comment on the grade-point issue is found on page 2 of today s DT.
President John Bradley will announce two more appointments to chairmanships of standing committees.
Idylwild
Plans for the Idylwild student leadership conference will be discussed. Stan Tomlinson and Marillyn Judd have formulated the program for the meeting. The conference will be held from Friday afternoon to Saturday evening and will include round-table discussions of issues which will face the ASSC Senate this year.
A report from newly appointed Elections Commissioner Jim Schuck on procedure for coming freshman elections will be heard.
Budgets for student activities are expected to be presented by the Senate Finance committee. The group includes President Bradley. Sen. John F. Bradley, and Wendell Casey. Allocations will be based largely on last year’s expenditures, President Bradley said.
El Rodeo
Portraits
Portrait shooting for the El Rodeo will begin today at the SC photographic department, 3522 University avenue. Organizations listed for the first week can make appointments for this now. The groups for Oct. 1-5 are: Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Phi
Alpha Lambda Delta
Chimes
EVK hall
Alpha Kappa Alpha Troeds
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 13, October 03, 1951 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 13, October 03, 1951. |
| Full text |
- PAGE THREE - Footballers Prep For Huskies Daily Trojan — PAGE FOUR Heifetz Story Continues kol. XLIII 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1951 Night Telephone - Richmond 5472 No. 13 tVorld News Losing Face ln Oil Crisis British Say From the United Press Russia has indicated that it was reparing to move in on the trou-Jled Iranian scene as British evacu-lg the Abadan refinery, protest-d they would lose face in their degrading'’ departure by sea. In a lengthy talk between Rus-ian Ambassador Ivan Sabchikov nd Iranian Premier Mohammed lossadegh, the Soviets renewed tussia's promise of economic as-istance to Iran under the recently egotiated barter trade agreement. Two Hot Issues Rousing, Rooting Rally to Resound **★★★★★** ★★ Varsity Gets Send-off Friday Morning A wide tropieal storm has slashed a S2 million path of destruction through Florida and ! shredded awnings on the tourist “gold coast.” The storm moved j inland from the Gulf of Mexico, swept the coast, and then noved toward open sea. Three fishermen we presumed drowned off the roast. * • • Suspension of tariff concessions n Czech goods and an informal sit own strike by the U. S. Embassy nd Consulate in Prague were the lows struck at Czech trade with ie U. S. as the State Department lade good its promise of retallia- j on for the imprisonment of Amer-:an newsman William Oatis. * • • Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge iR.-Mass.) has revealed that the loint Chiefs of Staff have agreed ►n a multi-billion dollar Air rorce buildup that will expand he nation's air arm from 95 to 40 groups by 1954. The a greener t came after months of behind-the-scenes squabbling as Jefense Secretary Robert A. Lov- I "tt conferred secretly at the Ahite House with President Tru-nan. # # # Squabbling Communist leaders ho have been unable to decide in x days of conference whether to •sume truce talks or return to all-it war in Korea have been noU-?d that Allied forces are prepared i whip them in battle if they hoose to fight it out. • * • j A bill to force the Army to restore white crosses it removed from the graves of 13.000 Ameri-Ican war dead in Hawaii's Na- I Itional Memorial cemetery was be- j fore the House of Representa- i tives today. The Army removed Ithe crosses and replaced them with flat stone markers. • • • Russian-born aircraft designer Dr. I gor Ivan Sikorsky will receive the I 951 Daniel Guggenheim medal Fri-lay for his pioneering in aviation id his lifetime service to the world I flying, the society of automotive icineers announced. Dr. Sikorsky egan his aviation engineering ca->er in 1909. Founders Day To Cut Short Friday Classes Classes will be dismissed early Friday in view of Founders day celebrations, according to A. S. Raubenheimer, educational vice-president. So that all students and faculty members may hear Gordon Dean, chairman of the Atomic Energy commission, no classes will be held from 10:30 until noon. Dean, 1930 honor graduate of SC and professor in its Law school from 1946 to 1949. will speak on “The Responsibilities of Atomic World Leadership” at 11 a.m. in Bovard auditorium. President Honored The Founders day celebration commemorates the Oct. 5. 1880 in-! augjration of the late Marion Mc-] Kinley Bovard, first president of the university. Appointed to the commission two years ago by President Truman, Dean took over the chairmanship j of the AEC last year. Outstanding Alumnus Selected as the most distinguished alumnus of the year on Alumni day last May 5, he received the Asa V. ! Call achievement trophy. He served ■ as chief of the appellate section of the criminal division of the Department of Justice and then as a special executive assistant to the Attorney General. During World War II he was a Naval Reserve officer and served from 1945 on the staff of Prosecutor Robert H. Jackson at the war crimes trials in Nuernberg. Ger-i many. JACK OWEN . Support Team Official Annual Debate Lunch Set If you enjoy talking while indulging in food and drink or even if you just enjoy talking, you are cordially invited to attend the an-nunl debate barbecue tomorrow night. The get-together is held to give all hopeful orators an opportunity to find out about many tournament trips and trophies scheduled for the forthcoming year. Head Coach Allan Nichols, along with the rest of his coaching staff, will be on hand to answer questions. and men and wromen who i are interested in debate, oratory, ! extemporaneous and dramatic reading are invited. The barbecue will be held at I the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity i house, 931 West Adams boulevard. I Chow-time is 7 p.m. Knights Urge All Students To Back Squad Trojan footballers will be given a noisy farewell in front of the Commons building, Friday at 7:45 a.m. as they prepare to leave for the crucial PCC tilt with Washington at Seattle this weekend. “We need all-out student participation for the sendoff Friday morning to show our football team how strongly we are behind them,” emphasized Trojan Knight Jim Piper, rally committeeman. “This is not an overstatement" Piper said, “because this year, as any sports enthusiast knows, SC's team is playing a superior brand of football which'in part is due to the higher morale of the team members.” Keep ’em Smiling “To maintain this morale level must be the goal of every Trojan.” said Knight President Jack Owen. “We can begin to do this immediately by backing the rally Friday morning, he said. “The fact that Washington has been picked as a 7 and one-half point favorite over SC and has been named as co-favorite with California to win the Pacific Coast conference title this year seems to give rooters something to shout about,’ Owen said. Rally Heralds Arrangements have been made by the Rally committee for a band to march through the Row, and to “trumpet” house members to the rally. Climax of the rally will come wrhen SC's team leaves bn the bus at 7:45 for the Los Angeles International airport. “George Tirebiter II will be there to join in the yells and other send-off activities,” Rally Chairman Don DuBose said. Notice Acheson Proposal To Cut China Aid branded Untrue WASHINGTON. Oct. 3— |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1377/uschist-dt-1951-10-03~001.tif |
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