Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 17, October 13, 1953 |
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—PAGE THREE—
Trcjans Pul Through Heavy Workoul
1880
Daily
21
luil
L¡y#
Troian
—PAGE FOUR—
Natural Science Seríes Opens Tonighi
OL. XLV
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 13, 1953
No. 17
LECTION APPROVED
ASSC Run-offs Set for Thursday
meriean Life o be Studied y 8 Germans
Eight German police chiefs and anking officials will begin a ourse studying the workings of meriean industrial, civic, and ocial life today.
Their four-week course is giv-n by SC’s School of Public Administration.
SC was selected among univer-ities of the nation to give the raining, which is sponsored by he State Department's Govern-ent Affairs Institute.
The institlte is affiliated with he American Political Science ssociation.
Studies of American life for the isitors will include economic, in-ustrial, and civic affairs aß well school systems and home life. A similar program was given y SC in 1952 for 14 Germans. The program of law enforce-ent administration and manage-ent was planned by Dr. Henry ining Jr., dean of the SC ehool of Public Administration; ohn P. Kenney, law enforcement oordinator; Harry Marlow, di-ctor; and Stanley Johnson, field -presentative, Civic Center Division.
Attending the SC course are jisbert Scheller, 39, Chief of Police. Soutl\ Baden; Erich von _ck und Polach, 42, Bremen poce president; Christian Fries, 58, ead of criminal police, Frank-ort.
Also Klemens Graf von Mer-’edt, 57, director of the police hool, Rheinland-Pfalz; Erich ueska. 45, polioe inspector. Dis-irict of Cologne; Franz Poeschl, 5, in charge of all civic educa-ion. police forces of Bavaria; ?rnhard Scheer, 51, deputy nead, department of public safely, Lower Saxony; and Erich
Vortmann, 50, Chief of Police,
The ASSC Senate yesterday approved last week’s election and scheduled the runoff election for Thursday and Friday in a special noon meeting in the Senate chambers. Students will vote on four offices in the election.
Highlight of the balloting will be a three-way runoff for Freshman class president between Chuck Leimbach, Dick Grantham, and Kenn Niles. Niles, who placed third in the first election, is in the runoffs because the two top candidates did not poll a majority of the freshman vote.
Chuck McClure, elections commissioner, said that if nona of the three receive a majority vote this week, a second runoff will be held Monday.
John Garr and Hillard Torgen ! will oppose each other for LAS president, while Lenore Monosson ! and Bud Sealts will race for the junior class vice-presidency.
Runoff for freshman vice-president will be between Diane Holt j and Regina Gesell.
Following the election, the Elections Investigating Committee. headed bv AWS President Joan Vasseur, will recommend fines for candidates who violated campaign rules.
One committee member remarked that it should be “a pretty good haul” because most of the candidates violated the rules at
some point.
Battle Columns Due Today For ASSC Run-offs
Candidates for the ASSC run-off election are advised to have their “Battle Columns” in the Daily Trojan office, 432 SU, no later than 4 p.m. today for publication tomorrow.
Any political advertisements must be turned in a day before they are scheduled to run.
“Battle Columns” should not be longer than 200 words and may be altered at the editor’s discretion.
Last week when the deadline for handing in Battle Columns was announced, It was disregarded by several candidates who handed in columns a day late.
To avoid this problem, candidates are requested to turn in columns on time.
I Rodeo Portrait
El Rodeo portrait shooting chedule will tie as follows this
"eek :
Town and Gown. Alpha Phi, Al-ha Chi Omega. Delta Delta Del-a, and Chi Omega.
URA to Hold Faculty Golf Tournament
The deadline for entries in the Faculty Golf Tournament is next Monday.
Entry blanks may be obtained from the URA Office, Physical Education Building, room 112.
All entrants must furnish clubs,
balls, and pay green fee. Any male or female faculty member of the University this semester is eligible to compete.
Official U.S.G.A. rules will govern the tournament play, which will be 72 holes medal play, two divisions.
Handicaps will be determined after the first two rounds. However, the score will be counted for those first two rounds.
Tee-off time will be posted on the U.R.A. bulletin board and also printed in the Daily Trojan.
A fee of 25 cents must accompany each entry blank. This money will be used to purchase awards for the tournament.
Pearson to Keynote Press Conference
Drew Pearson, Washington newscaster and journalist, will be main speaker at the Associated Collegiate Press’s West Coast Short Course and Press Conference at the Ambassador Hotel, Nov. 5 to 7, it was announced yesterday.
Along with a list of prominent newspapermen and authors, Robert Kirsch, SC professor of journalism and head of the Sunday copy desk, Los Angeles Times, will also address the gathering.
Called a Liar
Pearson, one of the most controversial figures in American journalism, has chosen as his topic “How To Be Called a Liar in Washington.”
Also scheduled to speak at the Conference is Paul I. Wellman, novelist and newspaperman. Wellman authored “The Iron Mistress” and his latest novel “The Female” is currently a best seller.
Other Speakers
Paul Zimmerman, sports editor,
Los Angeles Times; Joseph A.
Brandt, UCLA Journalism Graduate Department Chairman; Paul Coates, feature writer, Los Angeles Mirror and many others round out the panel of speakers at the three-day conference.
Participating in student panels will be editors and personnel of many of the southwest’s campus newspapers. Hank Al-couloumre, Daily Trojan editor, and Ed Neilan, Daily Trojan managing editor, will lead a discussion on “Problems of (Sim-pus News Coverage.”
Miss Universe Adds OompH To SC Social
Things at the “La Soiree Française” meeting Saturday night in Student Union were in pretty good shape.
Christine Martel, Miss Universe of 1953, a title supposedly for being the most beautiful girl in the world, attended the party with her sister Georgette, on an invitation from Milt Forrest, French department professor.
Forrest said, “Miss Martel is truly a most charming and gracious woman. She made herself quite at home with the students and is an excellent ' dancer.”
A crusade sponsored by the In-ter-Cutural club is on to persuade Miss Martel io become a member of our student body, in hopes of promoting better international relations between the United States and France.
However, most of Miss Martel’s time is taken up with motion picture making at Universal-International Studios where she has just competed feature roles in “Yankee Pasha” and “Fort Laramie.”
The Inter-Cultural Club, le Cercle Français, and Parlezvous Rendezvous are presenting Miss Martel with a souvenir gift from SC in commemoration of her visit.
Eddie Etezad, president of the Inter-Cultural Club announced, “The boys on campus that didn’t attend our party certainly don’t know what they missed. Perhaps this will act as an incentive for them to try to attend some of our group’s activities in the future.”
WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP
IMC and IWC
Will Sponsor Wesley Fete
Independent Men’s Council yesterday voted to co-sponsor with Independent Women’s Council, the Wesley Square Dance to. be held at 8:30 p.m. Friday at the University Methodist Church.
Also decided at the meeting according to Murray Bring, president:
1. A new project committee was named with the purpose of organizing all independent groups on campus, and sponsoring joint social activities.
2. A special independent rooter’s train car for the Cal game is out. Student relations make it unnecessary.
3. A bulletin board will be hung in Founders Hall for the use of independents.
4. Officers elected were Carlos Martinez, vice-president; Alvis Price, secretary; and Sid Osowitz, treasurer.
Meetings are open to all indedependent men. The council meets
every other Tuesday.
Taft s Seat Goes to Democrat
COLUMBUS—Gov. Frank J. Lausrhe yesterday appointed Mayor Thomas A. Burke of Cleveland, a Democrat, to the I'. S. Senate vacancy created by the death of Sen. Robert A. Taft, a Republican.
Burke. 55-year-old lawyer who was mayor of Cleveland longer than any other of the city’s chief executives, gives the Democrats 48 members in the Senate and control of that body ©f Congress.
The Republicans have 47 members. One senator, Wayne Morse of Oregon, lists himself •s an independent.
The governor, who had kept the nation’s political experts guessing; since Taft died late in July, said he felt Burke would “have in mind the interest and welfare of all the people.
* * +
Belgrade—Yugoslavia yesterday emanded a four-power conference on the Trieste crisis and appealed to the United Nations to jtep in if the meeting fails to ■tamp out the “danger to peeace ” Marshal Tito moved with dra-uc abruptness an hour after Yugoslav mob broke into the •S. Information Service offices nd beat an American diplomat, rilliam B. King. The U.S. em-assy promptly lodged a stern rotest,
‘ + + *
NEW YORK—Two tnickloads of AIL longshoremen drove through a barrage of bricks yesterday and “captured” a pier from Anthony (Tough Tony)
Anastasia’s “Loyalists” in the first violence of the bitter waterfront war between new and old longshoremen unions.
Three of Anastasia’s men w ere injured and another was arrested for disorderly conduct.
Meanwhile, a 13-state police alarm was issued for a missing AFL longshoreman who last was seen working on the Moore-McCormack Line Freighter Mormacreed Sept. 29. Fellow workers said Michael Bgogan, 50, assistant hiring boss at the
pier, was outspoken in his opposition to the discredited International Longshoremen's Association.
* * *
WASHINGTON—Medical authorities yesterday told congressmen that paralytic polio is increasing.
They said the latest proposed vaccine, although encouraging, still is not the final answ7er to control the disease.
Dr. Albert Sabln of the Children’s Hospital Research Foun-dation. Cincinnati, Ohio, told the House Commerce Committee that “diagnosable polio is increasing.”
He said he referred particularly to paralytic polio and did not include many mild cases which are not diagnosable.
Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, medical director of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, said, “None of us believes
[ that Salk’s vaccine, if it is a vaccine, is the final answer to
control polio.”
Wellington — Vice- President Richard M. Nixon arrived in New
Zealand by air yesterday on his round-the-world “Goodwill Tour” and conferred with Prime Minis-j ter Sidney G. Holand and his 1 Cabinet on the Korean situation and trade problems.
The youthful vice-president conferred privately with Premier Holland on a two-hour drive from the airport to Wellington and then met for one and one-half hours wdth Holland and his entire cabinet.
“To all intents and purposes we had a cabinet meeting of the United States and New’ Zealand cabinets,” Holland said afterward.
+ -* *
Albuquerque — A robbery suspect yesterday identified the man wiio, he said, murdered two truckers on the Pennsylvania turnpike. But officers kept the suspect’s name secret pending his arrest.
Undersheriff Walter Geis announced that John Wable, 24, who wras arrested last night after a wild, 30-mile automobile chase after he had robbed a service station, named a Pennsylvania man as the murderer.
Wable earlier told police he owTied the gun used in the killing of the two truckers, and 'said he believed the man to whom he lent the weapon committed the murders.
Official
Notice
In recognition of the fact that several thousand students will attend the SC-Cal game Oct. 24, University administrative officials and student body leaders have made arrangements for a special rooters’ train to Berkeley.
Because of the risk involved due to the unusua"” heavy traffic on highways to the San Francisco area, and in the interest of safety it is hoped that many students will take the train rather than drive their own car.
The University, through the offices of the Educational Vice-President and the academic deans, is requesting that instructors of classes where students are predominantly undergraduate not penalize students who are absent Friday, Oct. 23. Students will assume responsibility for making up the work which they miss in such classes.
The student rooters’ special will leave Los Angeles at 8:16 a.m. and arrive in San Fran-cisco at 7:15 p.m. Oct. 23. The return train leaves San Francisco 8:16 a.m. Sunday and arrives at Los Angeles 7:35 p.m. The Trojan Band will ride on this train, and plans are being made by the railroad to make this train a typical “football special.”
Bernard L. Hyink Dean of Students A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President
CHRISTINE MARTEL OF France, "Miss Universe," winner in the world-wide beauty pageant at Long Beach, took time out »from movie chores to drop in at the SC Student Union Saturday night and quicken pulses at the "La Soiree Française" confab.
600 Boys From Troy Camp To See SC-Oregon Play
Six hundred boys from the Variety Boys’ Club of East Los Angeles will attend the SC-Oregon State game this Saturday. They are the same boys who attended Troy Camp at Jinks Lake this summer.
The camp, which is located near the San Bernardino Mountains, was run by SC student body members wrho volunteered as counselors. Don Weston and Mary Barrett, camp directors, and counselors, will welcome the kids.
A Troy Camp card stunt will
be featured at the game. Tommy Walker will introduce the boys to the crowd.
Color movies taken at the camp this summer are being processed. They will be used during the forthcoming Troy Camp fund campaign.
“The boys are for SC all the way. They even know the yells so they should help out a lot Saturday afternoon,” said Miss Barrett.
Italian Club Reorganized
SC’s Italian club has reorganized, elected new officers, and announced the slate of this semester’s activities.
Joseph Bono is president, Fer-ando Mercado, vice-president; Frances Bono, secretary; Antonio De Frenza, treasurer; and Yolanda D’Amico, program and publicity chairman.
Mrs. Elena Sanz will be Faculty adviser for this semester.
Club’s activities this week wdll
be a luncheon meeting today at
noon, and a speech by Mrs. Made-
lame Blackmore, general studies
instructor, who will talk about
her European travels Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the International
lounge.
The talk will be given in English. The club is planning a dinner and Italian show.
Interested students may attend.
Knights Plan Special Day For Fathers
Dads’ Day, an annual project sponsored by Trojan Knights, will be highlighted by inviting Pop into the rooting section for the SC-Oregon State game Saturday.
Tickets are $2 each, and are available' at the ticket office in Student Union. There will be a reserved student section at the Coliseum where students can watch the game with their dads.
“Dads and students should enter gate 25 to insure finding their seats quickly,” said Jack Cashin, Knights Projects chairman.
Last year 200 fathers atended the game and other activities.
Winning Slogan Honors Alumni
“The Alumni Story Is SC’s Glory.”
SC’s entire 1953 Homecoming program will be planned around this theme. It is the winning Homecoming slogan out of- a field of 125 entries.
The catch phrase was authored by Tom Eilken, senior and real estate major.
“I’ve always felt that past slogans did not give credit to the alumni for whom
Homecoming means the most,’* said Eilken.
“I have always thought that SCs high reputation is based for a great part upon the doings of the alumni.
Planned For Alumni “The football boys play tneir hearts out in the Homecoming game so that the alumni will not be disappointed and the Home-coming spirit of the school deflated.
“If everything else about Homecoming is arranged for the welcoming back of the alumni, then, I thought, the slogan should be written that way too,” said Eilken.
Asked what gave him the inspiration for the slogan, Eilken said, “Well, it was one of those hot days last week and I was down in the grill with some budr dies drinking iced tea.
Too Long “First, I came up wdth ‘In our Alumni Lies the Story—Trojan Standards, Trojan Glory.’ 1 fo»n.d out that there was a seven word limit so I revamped it to what it is now.
“I had in mind, too, that the slogan would make for some good float ideas.” Eilken said.
“Something in regard to cut-standing achievements by alumni presented in a book form mounted on the float was what I had in mind for a float decoration idea, said Eilken.
Eilken’s slogan was judged best out of a group of 125. Final judging was made late yesterday afternoon.
Wins Album
As a prize for winning. Eilken will be presented with a “Songs of Troy” record album it the rally Friday noon. Johanna Prk, chairman of the slogan committee, and Tommy Walker, director of the Varsity Band and recorder of the “Songs of Troy” albwr, will present Eilkin with the award.
“Great.” said Eilken when informed of the presentation, “but, you know, I think I have a class Friday noon.
Eilken is a vet having served during World War II in the tank corps .He started school at SC in 1950. He said he had never entered a slogan in the Homeeim-ing contest before this year. Good Spirit Judges for the contest were Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English; Dr. Edward McDonaugh. associate professor of sociology: Ken Shanks, lecturer in speech: and Edwarda White, counselor ot women.
Miss Pick said she wanted to thank all those who had turned in slogans. “It shows that there is good spirit at SC when so many take so much interest in Homecoming.”
SC Professor s Art Displayed Up North
Edgar Ewing, Associate Professor of Fine Arts, whose w'orks are on display with the faculty exhibition of the Department of Fine Arts, is currently having a one-man exihibition of painting at the College of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington.
Professor Ewing’s exhibition has been invited to the Seattle Museum and will open there on Nov. 11, The same exhibition will also be shown in Portland, Oregon.
The M. H. DeYoung museum in San Francisco has also scheduled a one-man exhibition of Ewing’s paintings to be made up of his work completed writhin the past year.
Since coming to the university Ewing has received many aw?ards for his wrork in local and national exhibitions. Among these were the Louis Comfort Tiffany Grant, first prize all city exhibition, first prize Chaffey College exhibition of American Painting, first prize, Newport Beach Union High School and the Ada Kilpatrick Purchase Award for the DeYoung Museum, San Francisco.
mm
Religion School Holds Reception
The annual fall reception of the School of Religion will take place Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Common room, School of Religion.
• “The reception is open to all students and friends of SC,” Dean Earl Cranston said.
Guests of honor will be new faculty members of the school, Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs. Elton Shell. Dr. Johnson, professor of psychology and religion, is visiting from Boston- University. Shell is the new religion school librarian.
Refreshments will be served by the Coterie Society, wives of students and faculty.
• MARY BARRETT
. . . chairman
SC Blood Drive Chairmen Named
Shirley Blalock and Bill Houser were named co-chairmen of SC’s ¡Red Cross Blood Drive yesterday | by Mary Barrett, chairman of the ! Red Cross.
Houser is also chairman of the Blood program tor the Los Angeles College Council and Miss Blalock holds the office of Senator-at-Large.
The Red Cross College Council held an all-day workday session Sunday at the John Ford ranch in Encino. Plans for the Blood drive, fund drive, and International Students Week, December 7-11, were made.
Recital Features Cellist, Pianist
Stephen De’ak, cellist and John Crown, pianist, will be presented by the School of Music and Phi Beta fraternity in a recital Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in Hancock Auditorium.
The performers, faculty members of the School of Music, will play three sonatas for cello and
piano.
Opening the concert will be Prokofiev’s Op. 119, written in 1949; followed by Beethoven’s Op. 5, No. 1, in F Major. The program will close with a sonata by Debussy published in 1915.
Film Classic to Show Prize Winner Torment'
“Torment,” winner of the Grand Prix du Cinema at the Cannes Film Festival, will be shown tonight as the second film featured in this year’s Film Classics series.
This prize winning film has won international acclaim as * one of the greatest films to come from Sweden in a number of years.
The story is one of great youthful passion and is suspenseful throughout.
Sadistic Teacher
It starts out with Caligula,(Stig Jarrel) a sadistic and psychopathic Latin teacher at a boy’s school is terrorizing his pupils, particularly sensitive Jan-Erik (Alf Kjel-lin). .
On returning home one night Jan-Erik meets Bertha (Mai Zet-
terling) who is extremely drunk. He helps her back to her flat and she begs him to stay. She explains to him that she is frightened of a man who is tormenting her.
Jan-Erik falls in love with Bertha. They have an idyllic affair but constantly are in the shadow of the mysterious, threatening figure who has Bertha in his grip.
Serious Student
The adolescent Jan-Erik, previously a serious student, is confused and enraptured by the shattering impact of his relationship. Consequently his studies are neglected.
Coming to her apartment one day after school, Jan-Erik again finds Bertha drunk. She begs forgiveness, but it is apparent that
her tormentor has visited her
again.
Disillusioned
Jan-Erik becomes disillusioned and in disgust he vows never to see her again. The outcome of this film packs such a suspenseful wallop that it’s best for the viewer not to know of it beforehand.
A new feature has been instigated whereas those not having the available purchase price of S3 for a season ticket, may pay one dollar a week for three weeks.
Tickets may be purchased at the Cinema Department, the Ticket Office in SU, and at the time of showing, each Tuesday evening, at 7:30 in FH 133, and at 8:30 in FH 229.
Official
Notice
Applications for student teaching assignments for the spring semester 1953 may be filed any time during the two weeks following Monday, Oct.
■ 12. Students who plan to do directed teaching this spring should contact the office of Directed Teaching in Administration building, room 353, to make an appointment for the application and interview.
Those who have papers on file and have not yet taken Directed Teaching should reactivate their applications at this time.
W. C. Cannon
Director of Student Teaching * * +
Effective Monday, October IS, parking lot attendants will honor only the new 1933-54 sticker for faculty parking.
If any faculty member has not received his sticker ha should contact his dean or department head who submitted Elton D. Phillips Business Manager the list of eligible faculty.
à
I
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 17, October 13, 1953 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 17, October 13, 1953. |
| Full text | —PAGE THREE— Trcjans Pul Through Heavy Workoul 1880 Daily 21 luil L¡y# Troian —PAGE FOUR— Natural Science Seríes Opens Tonighi OL. XLV Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 13, 1953 No. 17 LECTION APPROVED ASSC Run-offs Set for Thursday meriean Life o be Studied y 8 Germans Eight German police chiefs and anking officials will begin a ourse studying the workings of meriean industrial, civic, and ocial life today. Their four-week course is giv-n by SC’s School of Public Administration. SC was selected among univer-ities of the nation to give the raining, which is sponsored by he State Department's Govern-ent Affairs Institute. The institlte is affiliated with he American Political Science ssociation. Studies of American life for the isitors will include economic, in-ustrial, and civic affairs aß well school systems and home life. A similar program was given y SC in 1952 for 14 Germans. The program of law enforce-ent administration and manage-ent was planned by Dr. Henry ining Jr., dean of the SC ehool of Public Administration; ohn P. Kenney, law enforcement oordinator; Harry Marlow, di-ctor; and Stanley Johnson, field -presentative, Civic Center Division. Attending the SC course are jisbert Scheller, 39, Chief of Police. Soutl\ Baden; Erich von _ck und Polach, 42, Bremen poce president; Christian Fries, 58, ead of criminal police, Frank-ort. Also Klemens Graf von Mer-’edt, 57, director of the police hool, Rheinland-Pfalz; Erich ueska. 45, polioe inspector. Dis-irict of Cologne; Franz Poeschl, 5, in charge of all civic educa-ion. police forces of Bavaria; ?rnhard Scheer, 51, deputy nead, department of public safely, Lower Saxony; and Erich Vortmann, 50, Chief of Police, The ASSC Senate yesterday approved last week’s election and scheduled the runoff election for Thursday and Friday in a special noon meeting in the Senate chambers. Students will vote on four offices in the election. Highlight of the balloting will be a three-way runoff for Freshman class president between Chuck Leimbach, Dick Grantham, and Kenn Niles. Niles, who placed third in the first election, is in the runoffs because the two top candidates did not poll a majority of the freshman vote. Chuck McClure, elections commissioner, said that if nona of the three receive a majority vote this week, a second runoff will be held Monday. John Garr and Hillard Torgen ! will oppose each other for LAS president, while Lenore Monosson ! and Bud Sealts will race for the junior class vice-presidency. Runoff for freshman vice-president will be between Diane Holt j and Regina Gesell. Following the election, the Elections Investigating Committee. headed bv AWS President Joan Vasseur, will recommend fines for candidates who violated campaign rules. One committee member remarked that it should be “a pretty good haul” because most of the candidates violated the rules at some point. Battle Columns Due Today For ASSC Run-offs Candidates for the ASSC run-off election are advised to have their “Battle Columns” in the Daily Trojan office, 432 SU, no later than 4 p.m. today for publication tomorrow. Any political advertisements must be turned in a day before they are scheduled to run. “Battle Columns” should not be longer than 200 words and may be altered at the editor’s discretion. Last week when the deadline for handing in Battle Columns was announced, It was disregarded by several candidates who handed in columns a day late. To avoid this problem, candidates are requested to turn in columns on time. I Rodeo Portrait El Rodeo portrait shooting chedule will tie as follows this "eek : Town and Gown. Alpha Phi, Al-ha Chi Omega. Delta Delta Del-a, and Chi Omega. URA to Hold Faculty Golf Tournament The deadline for entries in the Faculty Golf Tournament is next Monday. Entry blanks may be obtained from the URA Office, Physical Education Building, room 112. All entrants must furnish clubs, balls, and pay green fee. Any male or female faculty member of the University this semester is eligible to compete. Official U.S.G.A. rules will govern the tournament play, which will be 72 holes medal play, two divisions. Handicaps will be determined after the first two rounds. However, the score will be counted for those first two rounds. Tee-off time will be posted on the U.R.A. bulletin board and also printed in the Daily Trojan. A fee of 25 cents must accompany each entry blank. This money will be used to purchase awards for the tournament. Pearson to Keynote Press Conference Drew Pearson, Washington newscaster and journalist, will be main speaker at the Associated Collegiate Press’s West Coast Short Course and Press Conference at the Ambassador Hotel, Nov. 5 to 7, it was announced yesterday. Along with a list of prominent newspapermen and authors, Robert Kirsch, SC professor of journalism and head of the Sunday copy desk, Los Angeles Times, will also address the gathering. Called a Liar Pearson, one of the most controversial figures in American journalism, has chosen as his topic “How To Be Called a Liar in Washington.” Also scheduled to speak at the Conference is Paul I. Wellman, novelist and newspaperman. Wellman authored “The Iron Mistress” and his latest novel “The Female” is currently a best seller. Other Speakers Paul Zimmerman, sports editor, Los Angeles Times; Joseph A. Brandt, UCLA Journalism Graduate Department Chairman; Paul Coates, feature writer, Los Angeles Mirror and many others round out the panel of speakers at the three-day conference. Participating in student panels will be editors and personnel of many of the southwest’s campus newspapers. Hank Al-couloumre, Daily Trojan editor, and Ed Neilan, Daily Trojan managing editor, will lead a discussion on “Problems of (Sim-pus News Coverage.” Miss Universe Adds OompH To SC Social Things at the “La Soiree Française” meeting Saturday night in Student Union were in pretty good shape. Christine Martel, Miss Universe of 1953, a title supposedly for being the most beautiful girl in the world, attended the party with her sister Georgette, on an invitation from Milt Forrest, French department professor. Forrest said, “Miss Martel is truly a most charming and gracious woman. She made herself quite at home with the students and is an excellent ' dancer.” A crusade sponsored by the In-ter-Cutural club is on to persuade Miss Martel io become a member of our student body, in hopes of promoting better international relations between the United States and France. However, most of Miss Martel’s time is taken up with motion picture making at Universal-International Studios where she has just competed feature roles in “Yankee Pasha” and “Fort Laramie.” The Inter-Cultural Club, le Cercle Français, and Parlezvous Rendezvous are presenting Miss Martel with a souvenir gift from SC in commemoration of her visit. Eddie Etezad, president of the Inter-Cultural Club announced, “The boys on campus that didn’t attend our party certainly don’t know what they missed. Perhaps this will act as an incentive for them to try to attend some of our group’s activities in the future.” WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP IMC and IWC Will Sponsor Wesley Fete Independent Men’s Council yesterday voted to co-sponsor with Independent Women’s Council, the Wesley Square Dance to. be held at 8:30 p.m. Friday at the University Methodist Church. Also decided at the meeting according to Murray Bring, president: 1. A new project committee was named with the purpose of organizing all independent groups on campus, and sponsoring joint social activities. 2. A special independent rooter’s train car for the Cal game is out. Student relations make it unnecessary. 3. A bulletin board will be hung in Founders Hall for the use of independents. 4. Officers elected were Carlos Martinez, vice-president; Alvis Price, secretary; and Sid Osowitz, treasurer. Meetings are open to all indedependent men. The council meets every other Tuesday. Taft s Seat Goes to Democrat COLUMBUS—Gov. Frank J. Lausrhe yesterday appointed Mayor Thomas A. Burke of Cleveland, a Democrat, to the I'. S. Senate vacancy created by the death of Sen. Robert A. Taft, a Republican. Burke. 55-year-old lawyer who was mayor of Cleveland longer than any other of the city’s chief executives, gives the Democrats 48 members in the Senate and control of that body ©f Congress. The Republicans have 47 members. One senator, Wayne Morse of Oregon, lists himself •s an independent. The governor, who had kept the nation’s political experts guessing; since Taft died late in July, said he felt Burke would “have in mind the interest and welfare of all the people. * * + Belgrade—Yugoslavia yesterday emanded a four-power conference on the Trieste crisis and appealed to the United Nations to jtep in if the meeting fails to ■tamp out the “danger to peeace ” Marshal Tito moved with dra-uc abruptness an hour after Yugoslav mob broke into the •S. Information Service offices nd beat an American diplomat, rilliam B. King. The U.S. em-assy promptly lodged a stern rotest, ‘ + + * NEW YORK—Two tnickloads of AIL longshoremen drove through a barrage of bricks yesterday and “captured” a pier from Anthony (Tough Tony) Anastasia’s “Loyalists” in the first violence of the bitter waterfront war between new and old longshoremen unions. Three of Anastasia’s men w ere injured and another was arrested for disorderly conduct. Meanwhile, a 13-state police alarm was issued for a missing AFL longshoreman who last was seen working on the Moore-McCormack Line Freighter Mormacreed Sept. 29. Fellow workers said Michael Bgogan, 50, assistant hiring boss at the pier, was outspoken in his opposition to the discredited International Longshoremen's Association. * * * WASHINGTON—Medical authorities yesterday told congressmen that paralytic polio is increasing. They said the latest proposed vaccine, although encouraging, still is not the final answ7er to control the disease. Dr. Albert Sabln of the Children’s Hospital Research Foun-dation. Cincinnati, Ohio, told the House Commerce Committee that “diagnosable polio is increasing.” He said he referred particularly to paralytic polio and did not include many mild cases which are not diagnosable. Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, medical director of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, said, “None of us believes [ that Salk’s vaccine, if it is a vaccine, is the final answer to control polio.” Wellington — Vice- President Richard M. Nixon arrived in New Zealand by air yesterday on his round-the-world “Goodwill Tour” and conferred with Prime Minis-j ter Sidney G. Holand and his 1 Cabinet on the Korean situation and trade problems. The youthful vice-president conferred privately with Premier Holland on a two-hour drive from the airport to Wellington and then met for one and one-half hours wdth Holland and his entire cabinet. “To all intents and purposes we had a cabinet meeting of the United States and New’ Zealand cabinets,” Holland said afterward. + -* * Albuquerque — A robbery suspect yesterday identified the man wiio, he said, murdered two truckers on the Pennsylvania turnpike. But officers kept the suspect’s name secret pending his arrest. Undersheriff Walter Geis announced that John Wable, 24, who wras arrested last night after a wild, 30-mile automobile chase after he had robbed a service station, named a Pennsylvania man as the murderer. Wable earlier told police he owTied the gun used in the killing of the two truckers, and 'said he believed the man to whom he lent the weapon committed the murders. Official Notice In recognition of the fact that several thousand students will attend the SC-Cal game Oct. 24, University administrative officials and student body leaders have made arrangements for a special rooters’ train to Berkeley. Because of the risk involved due to the unusua"” heavy traffic on highways to the San Francisco area, and in the interest of safety it is hoped that many students will take the train rather than drive their own car. The University, through the offices of the Educational Vice-President and the academic deans, is requesting that instructors of classes where students are predominantly undergraduate not penalize students who are absent Friday, Oct. 23. Students will assume responsibility for making up the work which they miss in such classes. The student rooters’ special will leave Los Angeles at 8:16 a.m. and arrive in San Fran-cisco at 7:15 p.m. Oct. 23. The return train leaves San Francisco 8:16 a.m. Sunday and arrives at Los Angeles 7:35 p.m. The Trojan Band will ride on this train, and plans are being made by the railroad to make this train a typical “football special.” Bernard L. Hyink Dean of Students A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice-President CHRISTINE MARTEL OF France, "Miss Universe" winner in the world-wide beauty pageant at Long Beach, took time out »from movie chores to drop in at the SC Student Union Saturday night and quicken pulses at the "La Soiree Française" confab. 600 Boys From Troy Camp To See SC-Oregon Play Six hundred boys from the Variety Boys’ Club of East Los Angeles will attend the SC-Oregon State game this Saturday. They are the same boys who attended Troy Camp at Jinks Lake this summer. The camp, which is located near the San Bernardino Mountains, was run by SC student body members wrho volunteered as counselors. Don Weston and Mary Barrett, camp directors, and counselors, will welcome the kids. A Troy Camp card stunt will be featured at the game. Tommy Walker will introduce the boys to the crowd. Color movies taken at the camp this summer are being processed. They will be used during the forthcoming Troy Camp fund campaign. “The boys are for SC all the way. They even know the yells so they should help out a lot Saturday afternoon,” said Miss Barrett. Italian Club Reorganized SC’s Italian club has reorganized, elected new officers, and announced the slate of this semester’s activities. Joseph Bono is president, Fer-ando Mercado, vice-president; Frances Bono, secretary; Antonio De Frenza, treasurer; and Yolanda D’Amico, program and publicity chairman. Mrs. Elena Sanz will be Faculty adviser for this semester. Club’s activities this week wdll be a luncheon meeting today at noon, and a speech by Mrs. Made- lame Blackmore, general studies instructor, who will talk about her European travels Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the International lounge. The talk will be given in English. The club is planning a dinner and Italian show. Interested students may attend. Knights Plan Special Day For Fathers Dads’ Day, an annual project sponsored by Trojan Knights, will be highlighted by inviting Pop into the rooting section for the SC-Oregon State game Saturday. Tickets are $2 each, and are available' at the ticket office in Student Union. There will be a reserved student section at the Coliseum where students can watch the game with their dads. “Dads and students should enter gate 25 to insure finding their seats quickly,” said Jack Cashin, Knights Projects chairman. Last year 200 fathers atended the game and other activities. Winning Slogan Honors Alumni “The Alumni Story Is SC’s Glory.” SC’s entire 1953 Homecoming program will be planned around this theme. It is the winning Homecoming slogan out of- a field of 125 entries. The catch phrase was authored by Tom Eilken, senior and real estate major. “I’ve always felt that past slogans did not give credit to the alumni for whom Homecoming means the most,’* said Eilken. “I have always thought that SCs high reputation is based for a great part upon the doings of the alumni. Planned For Alumni “The football boys play tneir hearts out in the Homecoming game so that the alumni will not be disappointed and the Home-coming spirit of the school deflated. “If everything else about Homecoming is arranged for the welcoming back of the alumni, then, I thought, the slogan should be written that way too,” said Eilken. Asked what gave him the inspiration for the slogan, Eilken said, “Well, it was one of those hot days last week and I was down in the grill with some budr dies drinking iced tea. Too Long “First, I came up wdth ‘In our Alumni Lies the Story—Trojan Standards, Trojan Glory.’ 1 fo»n.d out that there was a seven word limit so I revamped it to what it is now. “I had in mind, too, that the slogan would make for some good float ideas.” Eilken said. “Something in regard to cut-standing achievements by alumni presented in a book form mounted on the float was what I had in mind for a float decoration idea, said Eilken. Eilken’s slogan was judged best out of a group of 125. Final judging was made late yesterday afternoon. Wins Album As a prize for winning. Eilken will be presented with a “Songs of Troy” record album it the rally Friday noon. Johanna Prk, chairman of the slogan committee, and Tommy Walker, director of the Varsity Band and recorder of the “Songs of Troy” albwr, will present Eilkin with the award. “Great.” said Eilken when informed of the presentation, “but, you know, I think I have a class Friday noon. Eilken is a vet having served during World War II in the tank corps .He started school at SC in 1950. He said he had never entered a slogan in the Homeeim-ing contest before this year. Good Spirit Judges for the contest were Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English; Dr. Edward McDonaugh. associate professor of sociology: Ken Shanks, lecturer in speech: and Edwarda White, counselor ot women. Miss Pick said she wanted to thank all those who had turned in slogans. “It shows that there is good spirit at SC when so many take so much interest in Homecoming.” SC Professor s Art Displayed Up North Edgar Ewing, Associate Professor of Fine Arts, whose w'orks are on display with the faculty exhibition of the Department of Fine Arts, is currently having a one-man exihibition of painting at the College of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington. Professor Ewing’s exhibition has been invited to the Seattle Museum and will open there on Nov. 11, The same exhibition will also be shown in Portland, Oregon. The M. H. DeYoung museum in San Francisco has also scheduled a one-man exhibition of Ewing’s paintings to be made up of his work completed writhin the past year. Since coming to the university Ewing has received many aw?ards for his wrork in local and national exhibitions. Among these were the Louis Comfort Tiffany Grant, first prize all city exhibition, first prize Chaffey College exhibition of American Painting, first prize, Newport Beach Union High School and the Ada Kilpatrick Purchase Award for the DeYoung Museum, San Francisco. mm Religion School Holds Reception The annual fall reception of the School of Religion will take place Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Common room, School of Religion. • “The reception is open to all students and friends of SC,” Dean Earl Cranston said. Guests of honor will be new faculty members of the school, Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs. Elton Shell. Dr. Johnson, professor of psychology and religion, is visiting from Boston- University. Shell is the new religion school librarian. Refreshments will be served by the Coterie Society, wives of students and faculty. • MARY BARRETT . . . chairman SC Blood Drive Chairmen Named Shirley Blalock and Bill Houser were named co-chairmen of SC’s ¡Red Cross Blood Drive yesterday by Mary Barrett, chairman of the ! Red Cross. Houser is also chairman of the Blood program tor the Los Angeles College Council and Miss Blalock holds the office of Senator-at-Large. The Red Cross College Council held an all-day workday session Sunday at the John Ford ranch in Encino. Plans for the Blood drive, fund drive, and International Students Week, December 7-11, were made. Recital Features Cellist, Pianist Stephen De’ak, cellist and John Crown, pianist, will be presented by the School of Music and Phi Beta fraternity in a recital Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in Hancock Auditorium. The performers, faculty members of the School of Music, will play three sonatas for cello and piano. Opening the concert will be Prokofiev’s Op. 119, written in 1949; followed by Beethoven’s Op. 5, No. 1, in F Major. The program will close with a sonata by Debussy published in 1915. Film Classic to Show Prize Winner Torment' “Torment,” winner of the Grand Prix du Cinema at the Cannes Film Festival, will be shown tonight as the second film featured in this year’s Film Classics series. This prize winning film has won international acclaim as * one of the greatest films to come from Sweden in a number of years. The story is one of great youthful passion and is suspenseful throughout. Sadistic Teacher It starts out with Caligula,(Stig Jarrel) a sadistic and psychopathic Latin teacher at a boy’s school is terrorizing his pupils, particularly sensitive Jan-Erik (Alf Kjel-lin). . On returning home one night Jan-Erik meets Bertha (Mai Zet- terling) who is extremely drunk. He helps her back to her flat and she begs him to stay. She explains to him that she is frightened of a man who is tormenting her. Jan-Erik falls in love with Bertha. They have an idyllic affair but constantly are in the shadow of the mysterious, threatening figure who has Bertha in his grip. Serious Student The adolescent Jan-Erik, previously a serious student, is confused and enraptured by the shattering impact of his relationship. Consequently his studies are neglected. Coming to her apartment one day after school, Jan-Erik again finds Bertha drunk. She begs forgiveness, but it is apparent that her tormentor has visited her again. Disillusioned Jan-Erik becomes disillusioned and in disgust he vows never to see her again. The outcome of this film packs such a suspenseful wallop that it’s best for the viewer not to know of it beforehand. A new feature has been instigated whereas those not having the available purchase price of S3 for a season ticket, may pay one dollar a week for three weeks. Tickets may be purchased at the Cinema Department, the Ticket Office in SU, and at the time of showing, each Tuesday evening, at 7:30 in FH 133, and at 8:30 in FH 229. Official Notice Applications for student teaching assignments for the spring semester 1953 may be filed any time during the two weeks following Monday, Oct. ■ 12. Students who plan to do directed teaching this spring should contact the office of Directed Teaching in Administration building, room 353, to make an appointment for the application and interview. Those who have papers on file and have not yet taken Directed Teaching should reactivate their applications at this time. W. C. Cannon Director of Student Teaching * * + Effective Monday, October IS, parking lot attendants will honor only the new 1933-54 sticker for faculty parking. If any faculty member has not received his sticker ha should contact his dean or department head who submitted Elton D. Phillips Business Manager the list of eligible faculty. à I |
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