Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 31, October 30, 1951 |
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eligious Week Enters Second Day
ISM
M
ui
an
Vol. XUII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 30 1951
No. 31
orld News
UMT May Call 60,000
In Summer
From The United Press
The administration hopes to neh its proposed universal mili-ry training program next sum-*r by calling up 60,000 18-year-Ls Ior six months' training. This tomatically would lead to some auction in the present two-year rm of service for draftees whc e inducted between the ages of i and 19, according to officials, e six months’ training program submitted Sunday by the spe-4 commission on UMT. The oom-sions blueprint must be accept-by Congress before training can started, and commission mem-rs have predicted that approval uld be forthcoming early next r.
# • •
Egyptian lighthouse keepers ve halted all night traffic rough the vital Suez .canal by fusing to man their beacons renewed outbreaks of mob oienee and gunfire left one and two injured in the dis-area yesterday. Other Effyp-t are refusing to handle goods ching British supply points, the canal zone, while con-tors are refusing to supply and thousands of workers walking off British installs--ns In protest.
• • •
The revived Korean truce talks once again teetering on the -cshold of the < familiar deadlock spite word from the U. S. Army 'ef of Staff that an agreement certain in the long run. The ies are standing pat on their fus:il to trade a broad swath of tern and central Korea below e battle line for the swampy and rthless Ongjin and Yonan penin-las of western Korea. This was fered as a “fair exchange" by mmunist negotiators, but the N truce team will have no part this, and instead, continues to on a truce line roughly along present battlefront.
• * *
A blood test given Orville Rus-l, 26-year-old sailor whose car med a San Francisco Bay dge approach abutment, later using the seven-death crash of Greyhound bus, indicates he been drinking before the ac-nt. Doctors at Permanent* pita! in Oakland yesterday said usseil’s test showed a blood al-olic content of .210. They ted out a content of .150 is sidered intoxicated.
• • •
Tne Armed forces have spent or Rrded contracts for $62,900,000,-for weapons and military sup-les since the start of the Korean ax. the defense department has ported.
Iff
LARRY SPECTOR .. . chairman
ALLEN A ARTHUR . .. investigates Wampas
Wampus Renewal Seen by Creater-U
The possibility of reactivating Wampus. SC s humor magazine, is under investigation by the Greater University committee, Larry Spector, Greater-U chairman, announced yesterday.
Spector announced the formation of a new sub-committee to study problems involved in bringing back to campus an improved and enlarged Wampus.
The findings of this committee will determine the fate of the magazine, Spector said. Wampus was discontinued this semester for lack of funds.
To Investigate Production The committee, headed by Allen A. Arthur, will investigate and study problems of cost, production, distribution, and content of successful college humor magazines. They wish to contact students interested in the following phases of publication:
Artists and industrial design stu-
dents; .circulation representatives; advertising, planning, and sales students; short story and feature writers; cartoonists; and photographers.
Positions Open to All
All positions will be made available to students on campus, regardless of age, class, or previous experience. Newcomers will find plenty of opportunity to demonstrate their latent talents in all departments. All interested students are asked to contact Arthur in 215 Student Union between 1 and 3 p.m. today or tomorrow.
Spector emphasized that this action is strictly an investigation Into the possibilities of a new Wampus.
“The Greater-U wants to either be able to put out a vastly improved and enlarged Wampus or none at all,-’ he said. “Response from students interested in its publication will therefore be a big factor in determining whether or not the Wampus will be renovated.”
$4000 ASSC Budget
Approved by Senators
Candidates Vie For Offices in Frosh Election
Finals in the freshman class elections get underway tomorrow with the record presidential field cut down to two candidates.
Hopefuls for the frosh gavel as president are Dick Chapman, chairman All-Row pledge dance, former high school senator-at-large, basketball and tennis Ietterman, head yell king at Canoga Park high, and member of student body cabinet executive board; and Fred Mold-enhauer, AFROTC, member senior control board at LA high, swimming and football Ietterman.
Final candidates for frosh vice-president are Nancy Humason and Sydne Moore.
Big Turnout
“I want to see real freshman interest in these final elections,” Chapman said. “The only way to have a good class is to show interest from the start.”
“If elected, I d like to start off right away by working on homecoming.’ Chapman said. “A frosh homecoming queen and plane for a frosh homecoming float should be the first order of business. A better frosh-soph brawl, a frosh shipwreck dance, and frosh participation in freshman orientation would all be part of my plan to make the class one o fthe most active.”
Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday on the northwest walk in Alumni park in front of the Doheny Memorial Library building.
States Platform “I’d like to have as many freshmen as are qualified represented at the polls,” Moldenhauer said.
“If I am elected,’’ he said, “I ,intend to expand the frosh-soph brawl, organize a much-needed frosh campus patrol for the UCLA game, and begin a foreign student orientation program.”
Noted Speakers Lead Seminars, Meetings
The ASSC General Fund budget for 1951-52 was approved last wek by the ASSC Senate. Funds appropriated for classes and councils this year total $4000.
Classes:
Graduate $25
Senior $100
Junior $50
Sophomore $50
Freshmen
Schools:
Architecture
Commerce
Education
Engineering
International Relations
$50
Arts, and Sciences $125 $50
AS Talks ill Follow EW Theme
In keeping with Religious Empha-s week, the LAS lecture series will ‘sent three religious leaders speak-on the subject “Conscience. So-ty. and the Individual” Wednes-y afternoon in the art and lec-re loom of the University library. George W. Haskell. Ph.D., lectur-in religion; Alexander Miller.' uD.. visiting lecturer ln religion, lar.ford university; and Leslie R.
ith. D.D.. minister. Central hristian Church. Lexington. Ky.. 11 conduct the discussion.
The Rev. Mr. Haskell is a grad-te of the SC School of Religion d received his B.D. degree at ale He is minister of the Western noil Congregational church.
The Rev. Mr. Miller received his A. degree from the University of w Zealand. He has traveled ex-nsively and has WTitten three
Dr. Smith is a graduate of the ▼inity School at Yale university, e Is the author of two books and umerous Sunday school lesson ma-sriais. He conducts classes or con-ences on personal religion, prep-tion for family life, and how to velop prayer.
Korean Talk To Be Given To COP Club
Psychological warfare and the problems of refugee evacuation in Korea will be presented this evening at the Theta Chi fraternity house by Mrs. Ann Jones, state department intelligence officer.
Mrs. Jones recently returned from two years’ service in Korea where she aided in the evacuation of 672 women and children.
Mrs. Jones' talk will begin at 7.30 at 2715 Portland avenue. Her topic will be “Korea—Before and After. ’
The meeting is sponsored by the Trojan Young Republican club and is open to all students, according to President Eteverly Carl.
Letters Music Pharmacy Councils: Independent Veterans Religion General Fund Contingency Fund Homecoming
$50
$170
$50
$50
$1855
$300
$725
Total $4000
One half of the appropriations to each account are frozen until Jan. 1, 19f2. according to Albert S. Raubenheimer, educational vi< president.
El Rodeo Writers Meet Tomorrow
El Rodeo copy staff and persons interested in writing for the year book will meet tomorrow at 2:15 p.m. in 323 Student Union.
ELMER HASKIN . . . proceeds
Trolios to Give To Troy Camp
The entire proceeds from the Trolios Varsity Show will go to Troy Camp, it was announced yesterday by Chairman Elmer Haskin.
Troy Camp was started three years ago by SC students as a move to help the underprivileged children of East Los Angeles’have a summer outing.
This will be the first time that Trolios has given the total receipts from the show. Last year, a part of the show's profit was given to the camp.
Haskin also announced that the fraternity themes for Trolios would be Beta Theta Pi, Take Care of My Little Boy; Delta Chi, Show Boat; Delta Tau Delta,, Guys and Dolls; Delta Sigma Phi, Ritual to a Volcano; Kappa Alpha, Paradise Island; Kappa Sigma, A Date With Julie; Lambda Chi Alpha, Tommy Get Your Indian; Phi Delta Theta, PDT-TV; Phi Kappa Psi, Man and Civ; Phi Kappa Tau, Registration Blues; Pi Kappa Alpha, Dina; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Old Black Magic in New Orleans; Sigma Chi, Apache in F; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sig Eps go to the Opera; Sigma Nu, Shakespearean; Tau Delta Phi, Minstrel Show; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Pure Nonsense; and Theta Chi, Flashbacks of 1931.
The show will be presented Nov. 8 at 8 p.m. in the Shrine auditorium.
Walker Advises Gospel Study
Dr. Alan Walker, minister of the Waverly Methodist mission in Sydney. Australia, said yesterday before an audience which filled two-thirds of Bovard’s main floor that the world and mankind stand at a crossroads in a haze of indecision and must either find world fellowship or perish.
The talk opened SC’s annual Religious Emphasis week.
In a broad, pleasing British accent, the minister from “down under” said that the “Christian gospel holds the answer to our economic and political problems” which hinge on ‘ giving man back his sense of dignity and worth.” He said that the United Nations has failed in this respect because it has not given protection to the individual citizen.
Local Churches Lodal churches, he said, which are down on the same level with the common man, “can provide part of the answer to a civilization robbing persons of the community.”
He feared that there was no mutual bond of Christian unity in the UN, and that this tie was needed for a successful world government. “God made the world to be one world,” he said, “and there must be one world or no world. Peace is not an option, it is a Stark necessity.” Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman
DR. ALEXANDER MILLER . . . seminar speaker
Sydney Minister Speaks To Faculty Tomorrow
Dr. Alan Walker, touring Australian minister, will discuss “Making Democracy Work” at tomorrow’s faculty luncheon meeting in the north dining room, second floor Commons. Doors will open at 11:45 a.m.
Helen of Troy Contestants. Narrow to 10 Tomorrow
Twenty coeds still remain in the Helen of Troy contest, with quarter-final eliminations to be held tomorrow from 6 to 7 p.m. in 133 Founders hall, according to Jim Brockman, queen contest chairman. Tom Graham will be in charge
men, and Dr. Alex Aloia, student activities coordinator.
After the final judging Nov. 7, there will be a royal court of four princesses and the queen. Helen of Troy will reign over all homecoming festivities, states Bockman. and will be chauffeured to all the af-
of the judging and the contestants ^a*rs *n a sPec*al cardinal and gold
„ , . . : convertible. •
will wear date dresses. I _ . , . . . ..
Bockman also stated the queen
To Reign Over AU
The judges for tomorrow will be Edwarda White, counselor of women, Dr. Albert Zech, counselor of
Trick or Treat1
El Rodeo
Portraits
Juniors to Host Kids' Spook Party
Organisations to be photographed for the El Rodeo next week (Nov. 5 to 5) can make oppoint-ments now. They are:
Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Tau Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Lambda Phi Delta Sigma Delta Xi Psi Phi. Alpha Omega. Psi Omega, will have their picture taken on Saturday Nov. 3, or Saturday Nov. 10.
A Halloween party sponsored by the Junior Council will be given for underprivileged children at the YWCA today from 3 to 5:30, according to Bob Hitchcock. Junior class president. »
Thirty children from the Cle-lands Presbyterian Settlement home in East Los Angeles will be provided transportation to and from the party by council members. Transportation facilities will be handled by Joe Greenwood.
The hall will be decorated by Art Costa. Chuck Evans. Alice Min-ikel, and Alva Soper. Refreshments will be served by Cathy Wickstrom. George Koteles is in charge of the entertainment.
Junior Council members will be in costume, and surprises for. the children are being planned.
If the party is a success, another one will be planned for Christmas.
will ride on her own float, built by Alpha Pm Omega, service fraternity, in the homecoming parade. She will also preside over Trolios, which will be held at the Shrine auditorium this year.
Remaining Contestants
According to Bockman, Helen of Troy will also make a guest appearance on the Sammy Kaye radio show.
The 20 coeds still in the contest are Kathy Adams, Beverly Badham, Charlotte Bell, Barbara Boiler, Bev Bristol, Barbara Buddrow, Sally Drews, Sue Fenton, Joan Field, Pat Johnson, Ellagene Kennedy, Dorothy Mabry, Peggy Miller, Marilou Moehlin, Joyce Palmer, Esther Pearson, Carolyn Schiller, Mary Vidos, Maralee Walther, and Joan Winter.
opened the convocation by introducing guests and speakers who will take part in other Religious Emphasis week activities. Clarence W. Kerr, president of the Southern California Council of Protestant churches, offered the invocation. President Fred D. Fagg introduced Dr. Walker.
Choir Sings
SC's a cappella choir, under the direction of Dr. Charles A. Hirt, offered a choral story of “The Creation,” narrated by Marvin Hayes. Hayes’ narration caused almost as much comment by the audience as did the main speaker.
The entire program of Religious Emphasis week is sponsored by the University Christian mission and the Campus Committee of One Hundred, under the chairmanship of Stan Tomlinson.
Other speakers to take part in the week’s activities include Eugene E. Dawson, dean of students at Kansas State Teachers’ college; Lesli? R. Smith, minister of Central Christian church in Ijexing-ton, Ky.; Vere V. Lojer, national moderator of the Congregational Christian church; Alexander Miller, lecturer in religion at Stanford; and Edward H. Johnson, general secretary of the Student Volunteer movement.
Frank Requests Parade Entries
Non-float entries in the homecoming parade are due Friday, according to Ron Frank, homecoming float chairman.
First ideas, drawn on 8^4 x 11 inch paper, will receive preference in case of duplication. Sketches may be dropped in the parade#box 215 Student Union.
Any campus group may enter the nonfloat division of the parade even if they don't have a float. A trophy will be awarded to the best nonfloat entry.
Float Entries Competing organizations are asked to turn in brief histories for use in writing scripts for the public address system.
Approved float entries are Acacia, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Chi Phi. Delta Chi. Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Tau Delta. Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta.
Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi. Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Delta. Tau Delta Phi. Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi.
More Entries Theta Xi, Zeta Beta Tau, Beta Sigma Tau, Delta Sigma Delta, LAS council, Newman club, Education council, Sterix club. Pharmacy council. Engineering council, and Air ROTC.
Religion Books On Display
Community Chest Needs $3000
Only $2000, less than half the quota, has been collected to date in the SC Community Chest drive, with only a. few days left in the campaign, according to Dean Robert E. Vivian, chairman of the drive.
Vivian emphasized the need for vigorous support this year, especially with the re-establishment of USO units throughout the nation. More than 160 community agencies are aided by the Chest.
Contributions need not all be paid at once, Vivian pointed out. Donations may be pledged now and payment made at a more convenient time later in the year.
Carrying the 'DT headline “SC Begins Religious Empnasis Week' the University Bookstore yesterday opened a new 17-book religious emphasis display in the main entrance to Student Union.
“Addressed to Christians. Isolationism vs. World Community” by Floyd H. Doss, SC professor of reli' gion, is one of the featured books.
Two books each by Will Durant and Edgar J. Goodspeed are among those displayed. “The Age of Faith and “Caesar and Christ” are Dur ant’s two, while “The New Testament—An American Translation and “Life of Jesus” were written by Goodspeed. *
The other books on display are “The Reality of the Religious Life by Henry Bett, “Letters to Young Churches” by J. B. Phillips, “J Treasury of Great Sermons” select ed by Daniel A. Poling, “A Testament of Devotion” by Thomas R Kelly, “Bible for the Liberal’ edited by Dagobert D. Runes. “The Religion of a Vagabond” by Thomas Dreier, “Great Saints” by Walter Nigg.
“Making a Go of Life” by Roy L Smith, “The New Testament in the Language of the People ’ by Charles B. Williams, and “Here I Stand—A Life of Martin Luther” by Roland Bainton are among those displayed.
Finegan Talks Today on Faith
“The Nonchalance of Faith” will be the topic of the second convocation of Religious Emphasis week to be held at noon today in Bovard auditorium.
Dr. Jack Finegan, professor at Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, will discuss nonchalance attitudes, obtained through faith, held by Jesus, his apostles, and great men of of our time.
The second day of religioua events will also feature seminars in addition to the noon convocation. Dr. Alexander Miller, general secretary of the New Zealand Student Christian Movement, will be among the seminar leaders. His topic, “Religion in Business and Government,” will be conducted at 4:15 in 229 Founders.
During the convocation program Marilyn Home will sing “Hallelujah” by Mozart. She will be accompanied by Ronald Huntington, organist.
Previous to this, Dr. Finegan was minister of the First Christian church in Ames. Iowa, from 1934 until 1939. Dr. Finegan was appointed to the department of Religious Education at the Iowa State university, in 1939.
Dr. Finegan received his Ph.D. from the University of Berlin, following several years study at Drake university. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he graduated from the University of Berlin maga cum laude..
Among seminars to be continued this afternoon will be one conducted by Dr. Edward Johnson, general secretary of the Student Volunteer Movement, who will speak on the finding of meaning in the Christian faith. In yesterday’s seminar Dr. Johnson discussed our situation in the world today, stressing a need for an awareness on the part of the public.
Dr. Eugene Dawson, dean of students at Kansas State .Teachers college, talking on religion on the campus, said yesterday that in recent years there has been a slight decline in religious interest among students. His topic today will be •'Institutional Sympathy."
War as the concern of every single person was discussed by Dr. Alan Walker, religious editor of the Sydney, Australia, Morning Herald. The Rev. Dr. Walker said that faith in peace must be rediscovered.
“Peace.” he said, “cannot be obtained through treaties, but only by patient and persistent work with the causes of war.”
The seminars will be held by Dr. Johnson at 2:15 p.m., FH 335; by Dr. Dawson in FH 129, 3:15; and by Dr. Walker in FH 133, 3:15.
Dr. Vere Loper, minister of the first Congregationalist Church at Berkeley, will conduct a seminar on “Preparatioh for Family Life” at 2:15 in FH 129.
Jacob Kohn To Address Forum Today
“The Problem of Evil” will be discussed by Dr. Jacob Kohn, one of the outstanding thinkers in the American Rabbinate, at today’s Philosophy Forum meeting in Bowne Hall at 4:15.
His lecture will deal with the question of how a rational mind can believe that God, all mighty and infinitely good, could have created a world in which man experiences evil as a hard and grim reality.
Dr. Kohn's treatment, showing the influience of Joad, offers a solution to the great paradox via modern rational thought.
Dr. Kohn, associate progressor of philosophy, has had an impressive background as a scholar, teacher, and religious leader, and has always taken an active part in Zionist activities.
••
BOB HITCHCOCK • • • for charity
Education
Notice
Students who expect to complete the requiremenes for teaching or administration credentials with the university recommendation in January, should make application at once.
Application forms are available in 353 Administration building, 9-11:30 a.m. today through Sat -urdav and 2-4:30 p.m. today through Friday.
Osman R. Hull
Dean, School of Education
Rittenberg Receives $7000 Grant For Bacteriological Investigation
Dr. Sydney C. Rittenberg, associate professor in bacteriology, will receive a $7000 research grant from the National Institute of Health to continue his investigation of fatty acids, it was learned yesterday.
Dr. . Rittenberg applied for the grant last August. The reviewing board of the United States Health service recognized his ability to conduct the research in “studies on the mechanism of the aerobic oxidation of fatty acids by bacteria” and awarded him a one-year grant.
The investigation, which was j the Government at Tulane univer-started two years ago at SC by sity and made experiments on in-Dr. Rittenberg and Dr. John H fected casualty wounds.
Silliker, who is now teaching at the University of Rochester in New York, deals with determining the steps that fatty acids take when consumed by the body.
After obtaining his bacheloi of •science and master’s degree at UCLA. Dr. Rittenberg received his Ph.D. at the University of California.
During the war he worked for
David Ivler ana Jack Waltiran, graduate st’jdents working for their doctorates will be working with Dr. Rittenberg in the investigation.
In addition to his other accomplishments, Dr. Rittenberg was elected president of the Southern California branch of the Society of American Bacteriologists at a meeting held at Cedars of Lebanon hospital Wednesday night.
i
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 31, October 30, 1951 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 31, October 30, 1951. |
| Full text | eligious Week Enters Second Day ISM M ui an Vol. XUII 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 30 1951 No. 31 orld News UMT May Call 60,000 In Summer From The United Press The administration hopes to neh its proposed universal mili-ry training program next sum-*r by calling up 60,000 18-year-Ls Ior six months' training. This tomatically would lead to some auction in the present two-year rm of service for draftees whc e inducted between the ages of i and 19, according to officials, e six months’ training program submitted Sunday by the spe-4 commission on UMT. The oom-sions blueprint must be accept-by Congress before training can started, and commission mem-rs have predicted that approval uld be forthcoming early next r. # • • Egyptian lighthouse keepers ve halted all night traffic rough the vital Suez .canal by fusing to man their beacons renewed outbreaks of mob oienee and gunfire left one and two injured in the dis-area yesterday. Other Effyp-t are refusing to handle goods ching British supply points, the canal zone, while con-tors are refusing to supply and thousands of workers walking off British installs--ns In protest. • • • The revived Korean truce talks once again teetering on the -cshold of the < familiar deadlock spite word from the U. S. Army 'ef of Staff that an agreement certain in the long run. The ies are standing pat on their fus:il to trade a broad swath of tern and central Korea below e battle line for the swampy and rthless Ongjin and Yonan penin-las of western Korea. This was fered as a “fair exchange" by mmunist negotiators, but the N truce team will have no part this, and instead, continues to on a truce line roughly along present battlefront. • * * A blood test given Orville Rus-l, 26-year-old sailor whose car med a San Francisco Bay dge approach abutment, later using the seven-death crash of Greyhound bus, indicates he been drinking before the ac-nt. Doctors at Permanent* pita! in Oakland yesterday said usseil’s test showed a blood al-olic content of .210. They ted out a content of .150 is sidered intoxicated. • • • Tne Armed forces have spent or Rrded contracts for $62,900,000,-for weapons and military sup-les since the start of the Korean ax. the defense department has ported. Iff LARRY SPECTOR .. . chairman ALLEN A ARTHUR . .. investigates Wampas Wampus Renewal Seen by Creater-U The possibility of reactivating Wampus. SC s humor magazine, is under investigation by the Greater University committee, Larry Spector, Greater-U chairman, announced yesterday. Spector announced the formation of a new sub-committee to study problems involved in bringing back to campus an improved and enlarged Wampus. The findings of this committee will determine the fate of the magazine, Spector said. Wampus was discontinued this semester for lack of funds. To Investigate Production The committee, headed by Allen A. Arthur, will investigate and study problems of cost, production, distribution, and content of successful college humor magazines. They wish to contact students interested in the following phases of publication: Artists and industrial design stu- dents; .circulation representatives; advertising, planning, and sales students; short story and feature writers; cartoonists; and photographers. Positions Open to All All positions will be made available to students on campus, regardless of age, class, or previous experience. Newcomers will find plenty of opportunity to demonstrate their latent talents in all departments. All interested students are asked to contact Arthur in 215 Student Union between 1 and 3 p.m. today or tomorrow. Spector emphasized that this action is strictly an investigation Into the possibilities of a new Wampus. “The Greater-U wants to either be able to put out a vastly improved and enlarged Wampus or none at all,-’ he said. “Response from students interested in its publication will therefore be a big factor in determining whether or not the Wampus will be renovated.” $4000 ASSC Budget Approved by Senators Candidates Vie For Offices in Frosh Election Finals in the freshman class elections get underway tomorrow with the record presidential field cut down to two candidates. Hopefuls for the frosh gavel as president are Dick Chapman, chairman All-Row pledge dance, former high school senator-at-large, basketball and tennis Ietterman, head yell king at Canoga Park high, and member of student body cabinet executive board; and Fred Mold-enhauer, AFROTC, member senior control board at LA high, swimming and football Ietterman. Final candidates for frosh vice-president are Nancy Humason and Sydne Moore. Big Turnout “I want to see real freshman interest in these final elections,” Chapman said. “The only way to have a good class is to show interest from the start.” “If elected, I d like to start off right away by working on homecoming.’ Chapman said. “A frosh homecoming queen and plane for a frosh homecoming float should be the first order of business. A better frosh-soph brawl, a frosh shipwreck dance, and frosh participation in freshman orientation would all be part of my plan to make the class one o fthe most active.” Polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday on the northwest walk in Alumni park in front of the Doheny Memorial Library building. States Platform “I’d like to have as many freshmen as are qualified represented at the polls,” Moldenhauer said. “If I am elected,’’ he said, “I ,intend to expand the frosh-soph brawl, organize a much-needed frosh campus patrol for the UCLA game, and begin a foreign student orientation program.” Noted Speakers Lead Seminars, Meetings The ASSC General Fund budget for 1951-52 was approved last wek by the ASSC Senate. Funds appropriated for classes and councils this year total $4000. Classes: Graduate $25 Senior $100 Junior $50 Sophomore $50 Freshmen Schools: Architecture Commerce Education Engineering International Relations $50 Arts, and Sciences $125 $50 AS Talks ill Follow EW Theme In keeping with Religious Empha-s week, the LAS lecture series will ‘sent three religious leaders speak-on the subject “Conscience. So-ty. and the Individual” Wednes-y afternoon in the art and lec-re loom of the University library. George W. Haskell. Ph.D., lectur-in religion; Alexander Miller.' uD.. visiting lecturer ln religion, lar.ford university; and Leslie R. ith. D.D.. minister. Central hristian Church. Lexington. Ky.. 11 conduct the discussion. The Rev. Mr. Haskell is a grad-te of the SC School of Religion d received his B.D. degree at ale He is minister of the Western noil Congregational church. The Rev. Mr. Miller received his A. degree from the University of w Zealand. He has traveled ex-nsively and has WTitten three Dr. Smith is a graduate of the ▼inity School at Yale university, e Is the author of two books and umerous Sunday school lesson ma-sriais. He conducts classes or con-ences on personal religion, prep-tion for family life, and how to velop prayer. Korean Talk To Be Given To COP Club Psychological warfare and the problems of refugee evacuation in Korea will be presented this evening at the Theta Chi fraternity house by Mrs. Ann Jones, state department intelligence officer. Mrs. Jones recently returned from two years’ service in Korea where she aided in the evacuation of 672 women and children. Mrs. Jones' talk will begin at 7.30 at 2715 Portland avenue. Her topic will be “Korea—Before and After. ’ The meeting is sponsored by the Trojan Young Republican club and is open to all students, according to President Eteverly Carl. Letters Music Pharmacy Councils: Independent Veterans Religion General Fund Contingency Fund Homecoming $50 $170 $50 $50 $1855 $300 $725 Total $4000 One half of the appropriations to each account are frozen until Jan. 1, 19f2. according to Albert S. Raubenheimer, educational vi< president. El Rodeo Writers Meet Tomorrow El Rodeo copy staff and persons interested in writing for the year book will meet tomorrow at 2:15 p.m. in 323 Student Union. ELMER HASKIN . . . proceeds Trolios to Give To Troy Camp The entire proceeds from the Trolios Varsity Show will go to Troy Camp, it was announced yesterday by Chairman Elmer Haskin. Troy Camp was started three years ago by SC students as a move to help the underprivileged children of East Los Angeles’have a summer outing. This will be the first time that Trolios has given the total receipts from the show. Last year, a part of the show's profit was given to the camp. Haskin also announced that the fraternity themes for Trolios would be Beta Theta Pi, Take Care of My Little Boy; Delta Chi, Show Boat; Delta Tau Delta,, Guys and Dolls; Delta Sigma Phi, Ritual to a Volcano; Kappa Alpha, Paradise Island; Kappa Sigma, A Date With Julie; Lambda Chi Alpha, Tommy Get Your Indian; Phi Delta Theta, PDT-TV; Phi Kappa Psi, Man and Civ; Phi Kappa Tau, Registration Blues; Pi Kappa Alpha, Dina; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Old Black Magic in New Orleans; Sigma Chi, Apache in F; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sig Eps go to the Opera; Sigma Nu, Shakespearean; Tau Delta Phi, Minstrel Show; Tau Kappa Epsilon, Pure Nonsense; and Theta Chi, Flashbacks of 1931. The show will be presented Nov. 8 at 8 p.m. in the Shrine auditorium. Walker Advises Gospel Study Dr. Alan Walker, minister of the Waverly Methodist mission in Sydney. Australia, said yesterday before an audience which filled two-thirds of Bovard’s main floor that the world and mankind stand at a crossroads in a haze of indecision and must either find world fellowship or perish. The talk opened SC’s annual Religious Emphasis week. In a broad, pleasing British accent, the minister from “down under” said that the “Christian gospel holds the answer to our economic and political problems” which hinge on ‘ giving man back his sense of dignity and worth.” He said that the United Nations has failed in this respect because it has not given protection to the individual citizen. Local Churches Lodal churches, he said, which are down on the same level with the common man, “can provide part of the answer to a civilization robbing persons of the community.” He feared that there was no mutual bond of Christian unity in the UN, and that this tie was needed for a successful world government. “God made the world to be one world,” he said, “and there must be one world or no world. Peace is not an option, it is a Stark necessity.” Chaplain Clinton A. Neyman DR. ALEXANDER MILLER . . . seminar speaker Sydney Minister Speaks To Faculty Tomorrow Dr. Alan Walker, touring Australian minister, will discuss “Making Democracy Work” at tomorrow’s faculty luncheon meeting in the north dining room, second floor Commons. Doors will open at 11:45 a.m. Helen of Troy Contestants. Narrow to 10 Tomorrow Twenty coeds still remain in the Helen of Troy contest, with quarter-final eliminations to be held tomorrow from 6 to 7 p.m. in 133 Founders hall, according to Jim Brockman, queen contest chairman. Tom Graham will be in charge men, and Dr. Alex Aloia, student activities coordinator. After the final judging Nov. 7, there will be a royal court of four princesses and the queen. Helen of Troy will reign over all homecoming festivities, states Bockman. and will be chauffeured to all the af- of the judging and the contestants ^a*rs *n a sPec*al cardinal and gold „ , . . : convertible. • will wear date dresses. I _ . , . . . .. Bockman also stated the queen To Reign Over AU The judges for tomorrow will be Edwarda White, counselor of women, Dr. Albert Zech, counselor of Trick or Treat1 El Rodeo Portraits Juniors to Host Kids' Spook Party Organisations to be photographed for the El Rodeo next week (Nov. 5 to 5) can make oppoint-ments now. They are: Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Tau Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Lambda Phi Delta Sigma Delta Xi Psi Phi. Alpha Omega. Psi Omega, will have their picture taken on Saturday Nov. 3, or Saturday Nov. 10. A Halloween party sponsored by the Junior Council will be given for underprivileged children at the YWCA today from 3 to 5:30, according to Bob Hitchcock. Junior class president. » Thirty children from the Cle-lands Presbyterian Settlement home in East Los Angeles will be provided transportation to and from the party by council members. Transportation facilities will be handled by Joe Greenwood. The hall will be decorated by Art Costa. Chuck Evans. Alice Min-ikel, and Alva Soper. Refreshments will be served by Cathy Wickstrom. George Koteles is in charge of the entertainment. Junior Council members will be in costume, and surprises for. the children are being planned. If the party is a success, another one will be planned for Christmas. will ride on her own float, built by Alpha Pm Omega, service fraternity, in the homecoming parade. She will also preside over Trolios, which will be held at the Shrine auditorium this year. Remaining Contestants According to Bockman, Helen of Troy will also make a guest appearance on the Sammy Kaye radio show. The 20 coeds still in the contest are Kathy Adams, Beverly Badham, Charlotte Bell, Barbara Boiler, Bev Bristol, Barbara Buddrow, Sally Drews, Sue Fenton, Joan Field, Pat Johnson, Ellagene Kennedy, Dorothy Mabry, Peggy Miller, Marilou Moehlin, Joyce Palmer, Esther Pearson, Carolyn Schiller, Mary Vidos, Maralee Walther, and Joan Winter. opened the convocation by introducing guests and speakers who will take part in other Religious Emphasis week activities. Clarence W. Kerr, president of the Southern California Council of Protestant churches, offered the invocation. President Fred D. Fagg introduced Dr. Walker. Choir Sings SC's a cappella choir, under the direction of Dr. Charles A. Hirt, offered a choral story of “The Creation,” narrated by Marvin Hayes. Hayes’ narration caused almost as much comment by the audience as did the main speaker. The entire program of Religious Emphasis week is sponsored by the University Christian mission and the Campus Committee of One Hundred, under the chairmanship of Stan Tomlinson. Other speakers to take part in the week’s activities include Eugene E. Dawson, dean of students at Kansas State Teachers’ college; Lesli? R. Smith, minister of Central Christian church in Ijexing-ton, Ky.; Vere V. Lojer, national moderator of the Congregational Christian church; Alexander Miller, lecturer in religion at Stanford; and Edward H. Johnson, general secretary of the Student Volunteer movement. Frank Requests Parade Entries Non-float entries in the homecoming parade are due Friday, according to Ron Frank, homecoming float chairman. First ideas, drawn on 8^4 x 11 inch paper, will receive preference in case of duplication. Sketches may be dropped in the parade#box 215 Student Union. Any campus group may enter the nonfloat division of the parade even if they don't have a float. A trophy will be awarded to the best nonfloat entry. Float Entries Competing organizations are asked to turn in brief histories for use in writing scripts for the public address system. Approved float entries are Acacia, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Chi Phi. Delta Chi. Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Tau Delta. Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta. Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi. Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Delta. Tau Delta Phi. Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi. More Entries Theta Xi, Zeta Beta Tau, Beta Sigma Tau, Delta Sigma Delta, LAS council, Newman club, Education council, Sterix club. Pharmacy council. Engineering council, and Air ROTC. Religion Books On Display Community Chest Needs $3000 Only $2000, less than half the quota, has been collected to date in the SC Community Chest drive, with only a. few days left in the campaign, according to Dean Robert E. Vivian, chairman of the drive. Vivian emphasized the need for vigorous support this year, especially with the re-establishment of USO units throughout the nation. More than 160 community agencies are aided by the Chest. Contributions need not all be paid at once, Vivian pointed out. Donations may be pledged now and payment made at a more convenient time later in the year. Carrying the 'DT headline “SC Begins Religious Empnasis Week' the University Bookstore yesterday opened a new 17-book religious emphasis display in the main entrance to Student Union. “Addressed to Christians. Isolationism vs. World Community” by Floyd H. Doss, SC professor of reli' gion, is one of the featured books. Two books each by Will Durant and Edgar J. Goodspeed are among those displayed. “The Age of Faith and “Caesar and Christ” are Dur ant’s two, while “The New Testament—An American Translation and “Life of Jesus” were written by Goodspeed. * The other books on display are “The Reality of the Religious Life by Henry Bett, “Letters to Young Churches” by J. B. Phillips, “J Treasury of Great Sermons” select ed by Daniel A. Poling, “A Testament of Devotion” by Thomas R Kelly, “Bible for the Liberal’ edited by Dagobert D. Runes. “The Religion of a Vagabond” by Thomas Dreier, “Great Saints” by Walter Nigg. “Making a Go of Life” by Roy L Smith, “The New Testament in the Language of the People ’ by Charles B. Williams, and “Here I Stand—A Life of Martin Luther” by Roland Bainton are among those displayed. Finegan Talks Today on Faith “The Nonchalance of Faith” will be the topic of the second convocation of Religious Emphasis week to be held at noon today in Bovard auditorium. Dr. Jack Finegan, professor at Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley, will discuss nonchalance attitudes, obtained through faith, held by Jesus, his apostles, and great men of of our time. The second day of religioua events will also feature seminars in addition to the noon convocation. Dr. Alexander Miller, general secretary of the New Zealand Student Christian Movement, will be among the seminar leaders. His topic, “Religion in Business and Government,” will be conducted at 4:15 in 229 Founders. During the convocation program Marilyn Home will sing “Hallelujah” by Mozart. She will be accompanied by Ronald Huntington, organist. Previous to this, Dr. Finegan was minister of the First Christian church in Ames. Iowa, from 1934 until 1939. Dr. Finegan was appointed to the department of Religious Education at the Iowa State university, in 1939. Dr. Finegan received his Ph.D. from the University of Berlin, following several years study at Drake university. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he graduated from the University of Berlin maga cum laude.. Among seminars to be continued this afternoon will be one conducted by Dr. Edward Johnson, general secretary of the Student Volunteer Movement, who will speak on the finding of meaning in the Christian faith. In yesterday’s seminar Dr. Johnson discussed our situation in the world today, stressing a need for an awareness on the part of the public. Dr. Eugene Dawson, dean of students at Kansas State .Teachers college, talking on religion on the campus, said yesterday that in recent years there has been a slight decline in religious interest among students. His topic today will be •'Institutional Sympathy." War as the concern of every single person was discussed by Dr. Alan Walker, religious editor of the Sydney, Australia, Morning Herald. The Rev. Dr. Walker said that faith in peace must be rediscovered. “Peace.” he said, “cannot be obtained through treaties, but only by patient and persistent work with the causes of war.” The seminars will be held by Dr. Johnson at 2:15 p.m., FH 335; by Dr. Dawson in FH 129, 3:15; and by Dr. Walker in FH 133, 3:15. Dr. Vere Loper, minister of the first Congregationalist Church at Berkeley, will conduct a seminar on “Preparatioh for Family Life” at 2:15 in FH 129. Jacob Kohn To Address Forum Today “The Problem of Evil” will be discussed by Dr. Jacob Kohn, one of the outstanding thinkers in the American Rabbinate, at today’s Philosophy Forum meeting in Bowne Hall at 4:15. His lecture will deal with the question of how a rational mind can believe that God, all mighty and infinitely good, could have created a world in which man experiences evil as a hard and grim reality. Dr. Kohn's treatment, showing the influience of Joad, offers a solution to the great paradox via modern rational thought. Dr. Kohn, associate progressor of philosophy, has had an impressive background as a scholar, teacher, and religious leader, and has always taken an active part in Zionist activities. •• BOB HITCHCOCK • • • for charity Education Notice Students who expect to complete the requiremenes for teaching or administration credentials with the university recommendation in January, should make application at once. Application forms are available in 353 Administration building, 9-11:30 a.m. today through Sat -urdav and 2-4:30 p.m. today through Friday. Osman R. Hull Dean, School of Education Rittenberg Receives $7000 Grant For Bacteriological Investigation Dr. Sydney C. Rittenberg, associate professor in bacteriology, will receive a $7000 research grant from the National Institute of Health to continue his investigation of fatty acids, it was learned yesterday. Dr. . Rittenberg applied for the grant last August. The reviewing board of the United States Health service recognized his ability to conduct the research in “studies on the mechanism of the aerobic oxidation of fatty acids by bacteria” and awarded him a one-year grant. The investigation, which was j the Government at Tulane univer-started two years ago at SC by sity and made experiments on in-Dr. Rittenberg and Dr. John H fected casualty wounds. Silliker, who is now teaching at the University of Rochester in New York, deals with determining the steps that fatty acids take when consumed by the body. After obtaining his bacheloi of •science and master’s degree at UCLA. Dr. Rittenberg received his Ph.D. at the University of California. During the war he worked for David Ivler ana Jack Waltiran, graduate st’jdents working for their doctorates will be working with Dr. Rittenberg in the investigation. In addition to his other accomplishments, Dr. Rittenberg was elected president of the Southern California branch of the Society of American Bacteriologists at a meeting held at Cedars of Lebanon hospital Wednesday night. i |
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