Summer News, Vol. 8, No. 7, July 13, 1953 |
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PAGE THREE Beach Rules Given SUMMER NEWS PAGE POUR Young Talks Philosophy Bowl College Night Thurs. Hollywood Symphony Series Opens 32nd Year Tomorrow Night HOLLYWOOD BOWL’S STARLIGHT GIRL of 1953 who will reign as hostess of College Night in the® Bowl on July 16 poses prettily with her two aides. Starlight Girl, center, is Peggy Constance of Hollywood, representing Los Angeles City College. Her tw'o aides are Mary Medlock of Downey, representing Los Angeles State College on left and Myrna Schiffman of Long Beach, representing Long Beach State College, on right. Girls were selected from 11 representatives of colleges and universities in the Southland and were judged on basis of interest in music and scholastic standing. Reservations Open for URA Fishing Trip Sat. By Norm Nager Baracuda, sea bass, and yellow tail will be on the defensive 2 o’clock Safurday morning when a team of fishermen from SC in- Free Public Art Exhibit Opens Tonight at 8 Proving that a person doesn’t have to be wealthy to be an art collector, an exhibit of material collected by students and teachers at SC will be on free public display in the Fisher “upstairs gallery” today through Aug. 7. There will be a public opening of the show tonight at 8 o’clock. Hours of the display will then be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ranging from pre-Colombian sculpture to contemporary painting, the collection of 35 students and teachers includes prints, fabrics, jewelry, ceramics, Oriental art, Africa native work, early Greek and 15th century Italian pieces. A wide range of periods and countries is represented to show what art the average person can collct, Wm. Paul Baker and Harvey Schaefer, graduate students in design, and Donald Goodall, head of the SC fine arts department, prepared the exhibit. Official Notice The French language exam for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy will he given oil July 22; the German exam will bit given on July 23; and the Spanish exam will be given on July 24. All exams will be held at 2:15 In Room 229, Founders Hall. Applications to take the test must be filed in the Graduate Office, Administration 201, during the week of July IS. vade the 3000 foot depths of the continental slope. There is room for 34 Trojans on the University Recreation Association deep sea fishing trip. Reservations can be made in the URA office, in 112 PE, for $8.50. The fishermen will leave SC at 1 a.m. Saturday and drive to the dock. The URA has hired a live-bait, deep sea boat. Trojans may rent fishing equipment at the dock for 50 cents and board the boat at 2. Trojans, bait, and equipment will go out to sea, pass the island of Catalina and drop anchor wherever the fish are running. On the last few fishing trips, said UR A . co-director Tillman Hall, the fishermen, most of them Inexperienced, caught on the average of 3 fish per person. Hall said that this week the flsli will be running in large numbers. Last year, Hall said, three Inexperienced fishermen got all>a-core on their lines at the same time. One of the other Trojans on board threw his baited line over the side of the boat as the three albacore were being pulled in. A pelican caught the bait and entangled all four lines. After forty minutes, lines were untangled and three albacore were pulled over the side of the boat. The group on the boat raises “kittles** of several dollars for the one who catches the biggest fish and the most fish, Hall said. Sometimes sharks go after the bait and scare other fish away. When this happens, the fishermen shoot the sharks and drive them away. Hall said the group will return to Los Angeles between 5 and 6 in the evening depending on fishing conditions. I.ast year there were so many fi<*h ca'iKht that fishermen did not return till 10 at night. Troy Car Pool To Aid Both. Drivers, Riders Do you want a breather from Los Angeles smog? Do you want to see San Francisco, New York, or Louisiana? Would you like a trip home? Several Trojans are giving and looking for rides at the end of the summer session, Aug. 1. They want to cut down the cost of transportation by sharing expenses. Mrs. Bernice Tiegs, Student Lounge hostess, directs the car pool at her desk in the lounge. Trojans may sign there for rides to almost every quarter of the United States. The lounge is located on the third floor of the Student LTnion and is open every morning and evening. Coffee Hour Wednesday Every Wednesday afternoon from 3:00 to 4:30, the Graduate School sponsors a coffee hour in the new Graduate Lounge located in the basement of Town and Gown. This week the English Department will act as host. All Graduate Students are invited for coffee, tea, and do-nuts. Hundreds of Trojans are expected to be among the students from 19 colleges and universities who are expected to take advantage of the first “College Night” in the 32-year history of the Hollywood Bowl Thursday night. The annual “Symphonies Under the Stars” series will start tomorrow night with ; Mayer Slates Lecture About U.S. Teachers The changing function of the teacher from Puritan times to the present will be discussed in a lecture tomorrow by Dr. Frederick Mayer, visiting professor of philosophy and religion from the University of Redlands. “The lecture, “The Teacher in America,” «ill be given at 1:15 in 129 FH. Wednesday, Dr. Mayer will hold a panel discussion" with Dr. William W. Robson, visiting professor of English from Lincoln college, Oxford university, on the “Foundation of Criticism.” The discussion will be held at 4:15 in 121 FH and will deal with the influence of the literary critic on Western civilization and the importance of a philosophy of criticism for educators. The panel will also diseuss the fallacies of the critic In his approach to literature. Both talks are sponsored by the School of Religion. Bruno Walter conducting the L. A. Philharmonic o^jhestra. J The second in the series, Tuesday, has been set aside for college students and will feature Izler Solomon as guest conductor and Isaac Stern as violin soloist. Students may purchase tickets for 50 cents by phoning the Hollywood Bowl office at HO 93151 or at the Student Union ticket office on campus. The Bowl association has announced that more parking facilities are available this .season at the Bowl. Special buses direct to the Bowl are also available. A special area has been set asi tie for busses to pick up passengers after the symphony. The Traffic department has urged Bowl patrons to park south of Hollywood Blvd. and uses busses or taxicabs to the Bowl. A special feature of “College Night” will be the presentation of “The Starlight Girl” and her two attendents. Chosen from over 19 entries from southland universities and colleges, Peggy Constance of LACC will welcome the students. Her two attendants are Mary Medlock of L.A. State and Myrna Shiff. man of Long Beach State. UCLA Students to Discuss India Tomorrow in Doheny “Project India” is to be discussed tomorrow at 3:15 p.m. in the Doheney Library art and lecture room. The discussion is part of the “Religion in Life” series sponsored by the School of Religion, University Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman, and the SC Protestant Adviser’s association. Eleven UCLA students and two adults who spent nine weeks in India, last summer will report tomorrow on their findings. They went to India for the purpose of putting on a personal campaign to help clear up the misunderstanding between the U.S. and that country. They spoke to 85,000 students at 135 colleges in India during the nine weeks. Since their return, they have been raising money for student libraries and oilier projects. PART OF THE 11 UCLA students who will be on campus tomorrow afternoon in the Religion in Life" talk on India are left to right Victor Hoche, Joan Meyensicli, and Ernest Ligbtmen. Standing is Rev. Cecil Hoffman. 1 N-o. 7 Los 'Angeles, Calif. 71 Monday, July 13, 1953
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Title | Summer News, Vol. 8, No. 7, July 13, 1953 |
Full text | PAGE THREE Beach Rules Given SUMMER NEWS PAGE POUR Young Talks Philosophy Bowl College Night Thurs. Hollywood Symphony Series Opens 32nd Year Tomorrow Night HOLLYWOOD BOWL’S STARLIGHT GIRL of 1953 who will reign as hostess of College Night in the® Bowl on July 16 poses prettily with her two aides. Starlight Girl, center, is Peggy Constance of Hollywood, representing Los Angeles City College. Her tw'o aides are Mary Medlock of Downey, representing Los Angeles State College on left and Myrna Schiffman of Long Beach, representing Long Beach State College, on right. Girls were selected from 11 representatives of colleges and universities in the Southland and were judged on basis of interest in music and scholastic standing. Reservations Open for URA Fishing Trip Sat. By Norm Nager Baracuda, sea bass, and yellow tail will be on the defensive 2 o’clock Safurday morning when a team of fishermen from SC in- Free Public Art Exhibit Opens Tonight at 8 Proving that a person doesn’t have to be wealthy to be an art collector, an exhibit of material collected by students and teachers at SC will be on free public display in the Fisher “upstairs gallery” today through Aug. 7. There will be a public opening of the show tonight at 8 o’clock. Hours of the display will then be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ranging from pre-Colombian sculpture to contemporary painting, the collection of 35 students and teachers includes prints, fabrics, jewelry, ceramics, Oriental art, Africa native work, early Greek and 15th century Italian pieces. A wide range of periods and countries is represented to show what art the average person can collct, Wm. Paul Baker and Harvey Schaefer, graduate students in design, and Donald Goodall, head of the SC fine arts department, prepared the exhibit. Official Notice The French language exam for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy will he given oil July 22; the German exam will bit given on July 23; and the Spanish exam will be given on July 24. All exams will be held at 2:15 In Room 229, Founders Hall. Applications to take the test must be filed in the Graduate Office, Administration 201, during the week of July IS. vade the 3000 foot depths of the continental slope. There is room for 34 Trojans on the University Recreation Association deep sea fishing trip. Reservations can be made in the URA office, in 112 PE, for $8.50. The fishermen will leave SC at 1 a.m. Saturday and drive to the dock. The URA has hired a live-bait, deep sea boat. Trojans may rent fishing equipment at the dock for 50 cents and board the boat at 2. Trojans, bait, and equipment will go out to sea, pass the island of Catalina and drop anchor wherever the fish are running. On the last few fishing trips, said UR A . co-director Tillman Hall, the fishermen, most of them Inexperienced, caught on the average of 3 fish per person. Hall said that this week the flsli will be running in large numbers. Last year, Hall said, three Inexperienced fishermen got all>a-core on their lines at the same time. One of the other Trojans on board threw his baited line over the side of the boat as the three albacore were being pulled in. A pelican caught the bait and entangled all four lines. After forty minutes, lines were untangled and three albacore were pulled over the side of the boat. The group on the boat raises “kittles** of several dollars for the one who catches the biggest fish and the most fish, Hall said. Sometimes sharks go after the bait and scare other fish away. When this happens, the fishermen shoot the sharks and drive them away. Hall said the group will return to Los Angeles between 5 and 6 in the evening depending on fishing conditions. I.ast year there were so many fi<*h ca'iKht that fishermen did not return till 10 at night. Troy Car Pool To Aid Both. Drivers, Riders Do you want a breather from Los Angeles smog? Do you want to see San Francisco, New York, or Louisiana? Would you like a trip home? Several Trojans are giving and looking for rides at the end of the summer session, Aug. 1. They want to cut down the cost of transportation by sharing expenses. Mrs. Bernice Tiegs, Student Lounge hostess, directs the car pool at her desk in the lounge. Trojans may sign there for rides to almost every quarter of the United States. The lounge is located on the third floor of the Student LTnion and is open every morning and evening. Coffee Hour Wednesday Every Wednesday afternoon from 3:00 to 4:30, the Graduate School sponsors a coffee hour in the new Graduate Lounge located in the basement of Town and Gown. This week the English Department will act as host. All Graduate Students are invited for coffee, tea, and do-nuts. Hundreds of Trojans are expected to be among the students from 19 colleges and universities who are expected to take advantage of the first “College Night” in the 32-year history of the Hollywood Bowl Thursday night. The annual “Symphonies Under the Stars” series will start tomorrow night with ; Mayer Slates Lecture About U.S. Teachers The changing function of the teacher from Puritan times to the present will be discussed in a lecture tomorrow by Dr. Frederick Mayer, visiting professor of philosophy and religion from the University of Redlands. “The lecture, “The Teacher in America,” «ill be given at 1:15 in 129 FH. Wednesday, Dr. Mayer will hold a panel discussion" with Dr. William W. Robson, visiting professor of English from Lincoln college, Oxford university, on the “Foundation of Criticism.” The discussion will be held at 4:15 in 121 FH and will deal with the influence of the literary critic on Western civilization and the importance of a philosophy of criticism for educators. The panel will also diseuss the fallacies of the critic In his approach to literature. Both talks are sponsored by the School of Religion. Bruno Walter conducting the L. A. Philharmonic o^jhestra. J The second in the series, Tuesday, has been set aside for college students and will feature Izler Solomon as guest conductor and Isaac Stern as violin soloist. Students may purchase tickets for 50 cents by phoning the Hollywood Bowl office at HO 93151 or at the Student Union ticket office on campus. The Bowl association has announced that more parking facilities are available this .season at the Bowl. Special buses direct to the Bowl are also available. A special area has been set asi tie for busses to pick up passengers after the symphony. The Traffic department has urged Bowl patrons to park south of Hollywood Blvd. and uses busses or taxicabs to the Bowl. A special feature of “College Night” will be the presentation of “The Starlight Girl” and her two attendents. Chosen from over 19 entries from southland universities and colleges, Peggy Constance of LACC will welcome the students. Her two attendants are Mary Medlock of L.A. State and Myrna Shiff. man of Long Beach State. UCLA Students to Discuss India Tomorrow in Doheny “Project India” is to be discussed tomorrow at 3:15 p.m. in the Doheney Library art and lecture room. The discussion is part of the “Religion in Life” series sponsored by the School of Religion, University Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman, and the SC Protestant Adviser’s association. Eleven UCLA students and two adults who spent nine weeks in India, last summer will report tomorrow on their findings. They went to India for the purpose of putting on a personal campaign to help clear up the misunderstanding between the U.S. and that country. They spoke to 85,000 students at 135 colleges in India during the nine weeks. Since their return, they have been raising money for student libraries and oilier projects. PART OF THE 11 UCLA students who will be on campus tomorrow afternoon in the Religion in Life" talk on India are left to right Victor Hoche, Joan Meyensicli, and Ernest Ligbtmen. Standing is Rev. Cecil Hoffman. 1 N-o. 7 Los 'Angeles, Calif. 71 Monday, July 13, 1953 |
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