Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 55, December 05, 1951 |
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JOYCE MARTIN
MARILYN MERKLEY
MARY MILLER
I i NANCY NYE
GERRY REICH
GRETCHEN RUBINS
KARI SKRAMSTAD
BARBARA SUGARMAN
dru&t'em
-PAGE THREE-
Al Lamont May Be Out For Season
Dai
Trojan
— RAGE FOUR —
Foreign Policy Topic Of LAS Meeting
Vol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1951
No. 55
igma Chi Problems —32,000 • ★ ^ ^ ^ ^ ntertains
9 Coeds
Sweetheart Hopefuls To Return Tonight
It's D-day. H-hour at 7 .onight for the 19 campus oeds who will be facing the irst in a series of eliminations in the 1951 contest for Sweetheart of Sigma Chi.
At that time, the candidates irom sororities and residence halls sill attend dinner at the Sigma Chi house, after which Sig actives Rill begin the first judging. Only
10 wtfl return tomorrow night.
Sig Secret Ballot Judging is done by secret ballot ising a point system emphasizing jeauty. poise, and personality. The ield will be cut to five at tomorrow night's dinner and further re-
Child Care in Israel
of THon Firemen Probe ★ ★ ★ fire Origin
Discussed At Sigma Nu
The problem of raising 32.000 j children in Israelian collective settlements was discussed by Dr. Ger-! aid Caplan in yesterday’s meeting of the Institute on Mental Health in 133 Founders hall.
According to Dr. Caplan. psy-i ehiatric director of the Lasker Mental Hvgiene center of Hadas-sah in Jerusalem, under the set-
Spurs Invited To Blue Key Meeting Today
A meeting of Blue Key, service and scholarship organization, will uced to three in the finals Fri- | be held today at 5:30 at the Sigma ay night. One of the three will phi Epsilon house. 630 West 28th _ chosen Sweetheart of Sigma ! street. It will be a dinner meeting hi and the other two wi if be her and all Spurs are invited to at-ttendants. tend as guests of Blue Key.
Identities of the Sweetheart and Accortilng M md Harper, presi-!er court «U be a closely guarded ^ , procedure tor
ecret until the crowning at the tivc membera will be
ormal Sweetheart ball Saturday . ... __.
right a. ihe Minunar hotel. The 'us3Kl- To a ”an T*
rchestra will plav The Sweet- have a «ride avera8' at*>'' th"‘. lean of Sigma Chi ’ as the win- ot thf *« mfn? averase- A1 . ™em; iers receive the plaudits of the ^ asked to brm* “!ts °f hapter. prospective tapees. ^
Scrolls ‘n’ Roses Bob Mitchell will discuss the
Last night, the Sweetheart can- AMS “big brother” program. Mcm-
idates attended dinner in formals bers of Blue Key will be asked to
nd were presented with certificates serve as big brothers for incoming
honoring their selection as entries foreign students.
tleir.ent system begun 30 years ago by the pioneer socialists, the children appear to do fine after they are six years old.
“Up to the age of six. children in the collective settlements are three times as insecure as those reared by their own parents,” Dr. Caplan said. “This is because they are subjected to emotional stress with the social workers who rear them and with other children in the group.
“After six. the children begin to lose their feelings of insecurity. Between 9 and 10 they show less -i unstable symptoms. They have a smoother time in adolescence, and in early adult life they are stable, tough individuals.”
The setup in Israel today was caused by founders of the collective settlements who believed children should be brought up by pro-fessionally-trained workers.
The children live in mixed groups of 30, and are co-educated. About 20.000 of the children have been born in the settlements and the other 12.000 are immigrants.
Dr. Caplan then discussed the immigrant situation.
“Immigrants have come in such numbers that you would think they would have overwhelmed the capacity of the country to handle them, yet Israel has taken care of them.” Dr. Caplan continued.
About 700,000 immigrants have come to Israel in the 3% years |ince it became a nation. They have left behind familiar social and cultural surroundings and have had to adapt to new customs and work situations.
“Psychiatrists are acting as expert advisers to immigration administrators,” he co'ncluded. “Where immigrants used to be sent to barracks and given no work, they are now placed in small work camps and given family housing immediately to make them feel more secare in their surroundings.”
Dr. Carlos Nassar, director of the University of Chile's child guidance clinic, will lecture today at 9:30 a.m. in 133 Founders hall on “Group Tensions in the Americas.”
Air Force Commander To Speak at Institute
Fire department officials are investigating the cause of three recent fires in the basement of the Sigma Nu fraternity house today.
Sigma Nu fraternity members put out a small fire in the charred basement Monday night with a “bucket brigade.” This was the third fire in a two week period.
The first fire occurred two weeks ago and seriously damaged the Sigma Na basement and the second fire last week added to the damage. The latest blaze Monday about midnight did only negligible damage.
Christmas Party for Faculty Set
Faculty members will ho!d their traditional Christmas party Saturday evening at 7 in Town and Gown.
Good Turnout Made By LWM Volunteers
Thirty-five Students Offer to Work In Drive to Send An Orphan to'SC
Thirty-five students turned out yesterday at the Trovets’ Living War Memorial meeting in Founders hall to offer their services as workers during the drive.
“This was far more than we had expected,” said Dick Van Laanen, publicity chairman.of the drive, “and exemplifies the tremendous student interest in our campaign.n Bernard L. Hyink, dean of students, person ally congratulated the Trovets yesterday on their drive.
“There is a possibility,” said Van Laanen, “that Dr. Frank C. Baxter’s Christmas ----readings, which are sponsored by
Trombones Slide Open Noon Concert Today
“Three Equali” played by four trombonists will be the opening section of a four-part Music-at-Noon presentation in Hancock auditorium at 12:15 today.
Following the trombonists will be
____... , selections sung by Glendon Me-
The party will get under way With Cutcheon baritone th£n a ^
a dinner and will be followed by a
program of Christmas music by
Warville Fiore, graduate student in
| the School of Music. The faculty
n the contest. Tonight they will receive white roses, the fraternity Slower.
This is the oldest of national fra-ernity “queen” contests, the first ne being held in 1912 shortly after the Sigtna Chi “Sweetheart Song” was v rilten. The song has made Sigma Chi Sweethearts known throughout the U. S. The first contest at SC was held in 1942.
International Girl Selection of the International Sweetheart of Sigma Chi is a biennial affair and this year's SC
Dr. Jose Morales To Speak at Fellowship Meet
Dr. Jose Morales, graduate of the Foreign Relations ministry in Mr.drid, Spain, will be the speaker for today s weekly Trojan Christian Fellowship meeting.
Presently teaching at the Los Sweetheart will be entered in the Angeles Bible college. Dr. Morales international contest. The winner will talk on ‘Christ in the Ameri-of the international crown in 1S49 cas."
was a Kappa Alpha Theta from The meeting, to be held at the
Syracuse university.
YWCA house, will begin at noon.
Major-General Emmett O'Donnell Jr., commanding general of the 15th Air Force, March Field, will be the armed forces representative for the 28th annual SC-sponsored Institute of World Affairs session to be held from Dec. 9 to 12 at the Mission Inn in Riverside.
Offered, primarily, lo discuss problems of political, economic, and social factors in the struggle for world cooperation, the session is held in conjunction with colleges and universities of the Pacific Coast. This year's session, which will offer as its general theme, “The Quest for Peace,” will present 81 representatives from 20 educational institutions in the West Coast area. Twelve faculty, members from SC will participate in the session.
General O'Donnell, who will
Curtain
Tonight
Rises in for The
Bovard
Consul'
The curtain will go up tonight at 8:30 on the West Coast Premiere of Gian-Carlo Menotti's Pulitzer prize- j winning opera “The Consul.”
Peggy Bonini and Duncan McLeod will sing the lead roles of Magda and John Sarel in the Bovard auditorium performance Jay the Opera Workshop, under the direction of Carl Ebert. Ingolf Dahl will conduct.
Kathtrine Hilgenberg will sing the .ole of the mother; William Vennard. a iaculty member, will be the ecret police aEent; Ava G.icrset. he secretary; Chris Lachona. the tgician; Kalem Kermoyan, Mr. Kofner: and Marni Nixon, the foreign woman.
Others in the cast are Delores isser, Phyllis Wilkins. John osches, Stanley Hughes, and Man-Leonardo.
The story of the opera is one of Intrigue, suspense, and waiting. At he beginning. John Sorel becomes involved with the secret police of a -.aropean country and is forced to fa- his life. His wife then tries I to rejo:n him. To do this she must
speak on the subject, “Peace, But Not at Any Price,' graduated from West Point in 1928.
Acting as chief of the advisory council to General Henry H. “Hap” Arnold in 1943, General O’Donnell gained command of the 73rd Bombardment Wing and led its early B-29 raid on Tokyo.
Service Cross Award Before his appointment as commanding general of the 15th Air Force, the General led the Far East Bombardment Command in Japan. For his heroism in Korea, General O'Donnell received the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation's second highest award.
In addition to General O’Donnell, main speakers for the session include Paul G, Hoffman, director of the Ford Foundation and former ECA administrator; Edwin M. Wright, intelligence adviser to the State department on the middle East; and Virgil Pinkley, editor and publisher of the Ix»s Angeles Mirror.
Special arrangements for a car pool and lowered membership rates for students attending the sessions in groups of five were disclosed yesterday by Paul E. Hadley, assistant professor of International Relations and executive secretary of the institute.
Reduced Rates Although regular individual membership rates have been reduced from $10 to $5 for students, those attending in groups of five or ore may obtain membership for the entire session for only $2.50 per member. Regular single day memberships, which had been reduced from $3.50 to $2 for students, have also been lowered to $1 for persons in groups of five or more.
A car pool is being organized to provide transportation to Riverside. Students may get car pool information from Mrs. Bernice Tiegs in the student lounge or
will then sing Christmas carols.
Dancing to the music of Don Eschoff with cards to follow until midnight is scheduled.
The party will be semi-formal and reservations are $1.75 per person. Reservations may be made through Prof. Rodney Lewis, electrical engineering, Ext. 381.
Working on the party are Lewis, representing the Men's Faculty club; Dr. Florence R. Scott, Women's Faculty club; and Mrs. Robert Schruben, Faculty Wives.
Double Feature On Bill Tonight For YM-Nite
Tonight at 7:45 the YMCA will present a double feature at its second “YM-Nite.”
The first feature will star Charlie Chaplie in “Champion.” The second is “Trojan Review.”
Ken Shanks, interfraternity coordinator, will open the show in the Student Union lounge. Following the two movies will be a community sing.
I
Admission for members is free, but non-members will be charged 25 cents service charge. Doughnuts and cider will be served.
tion played by solo trombonist Jerry Winters, and in conclusion a piano solo by Delmer Rogers of a work of Royce Malm who composed work at SC.
The “Three Equali,” Beethoven, will feature William Smith, Jerry Jansen, Robert Cairns, and Keith Brown as the four trombonists.
Giendon McCutcheon, baritone,
Caldwell Talks
will be accompanied by Roger Bus-hell at the piano in singing “Pilgrim’s Song,” Tchaidowsky; “La Giromelta,” Sibella; and “Per me Giunto” from “Don Carlo,” Verdi.
In his trombone presentation of “Concert Piece,” Salzedo, Jerry Winter will be accompanied at the piano by James Low.
The finale of the Music-at-NOon program will be “Theme, Variations, Finale," Royce Malm which will be played by Delmar Rogers, piano soloist.
Royce Malm, an SC student composed “Theme, Variations, F’inale” this spring as a project in a second semester course of
Trovets, may be aired on a nationwide NBC radio hookup.”
Frank Ford, general chairman of the LWM drive, is endeavoring to arrange the national broadcast. He says he has lined up many celebrities for the readings, to be held Dec. 12 in Bovard auditorium as part of the drive.
Free tickets for Dr. Baxter's popular readings may be obtained at the Trovets office. 405 Student Union.
Student to SC
The purpose of the LWM drive is to send the orphan of a World War II or Korean conflict veteran to SC. The university scholarship committee chooses the scholarship recipient, who must be unable to attend college because of lack of funds. The money will send the orphan through an entire college course and will provide needed The theme of this year’s Living
composition. " War Memorial campaign is
All musicians appearing on the ^’or8et To Remember.” program tomorrow are SC students. I ~
‘Lest
Today On War ^n'9.^s
5emi-Formal
“World War III in the Making’ will be the title of a talk that Dr. Russell L. Caldwell, associate professor of history, will give to the YMCA World Relatedness committee today at 3:15 in 229 Founders hall.
Caldwell wiil cover three major questions in his lecture. F’irst, has the American nation closed its mind entirely to the possibility that we can establish a “modus vivendi” with Russia? Second, has our State Department accepted the thesis that war is coming? Third, is war inevitable?
Caldwell was the debate coach for Wooster High school, Ohio, where his class won the Lowell Thomas award for outstanding
Films of the SC-Notre Dame last Saturday will be shown today achievement in oratory in 1940. He at noon in Bovard auditorium and has also written for many histori- 1 will be narrated by Joe Muha. cal periodicals. | assistant football coach.
The annual Knight dance will be held Saturday at the Beverly Hills hotel, social co-chairmen Don Tuffle and Don Reinholdt announced today.
Tommy Jones and his orchestra will play.
Trojan Knights and their friends are invited to the semi-formal party, which will be held from 9 I college ** University
. - _. . Saturday, both games will be
Noon Showing Set played in Pan-Pacific auditorium.
Tickets will go on sale to the general public Wednesday at $2.40 for box seats, and $1.50 and $1 for reserved seats.
Tickets are available in the University Ticket Office, second floor, Student Union.
Basketball Ducats Ready
In a reversal of last week's procedure, holders of activity books numbered above 2000 will be presented tickets to Friday night’s basketball game, while those holding books numbered below that will be eligible for tickets in the game on Saturday.
Playing against Los Angeles State Friday and against the of San F’rancisco on
For SC-ND Films
World News Roundup
U.S. Demands Release of Yank Airmen
From United Press
The United States has demanded that Communist Hungary free four American airmen immediately and indicated it will reject any Hungarian attempt to use them as hostages for new concessions in the Vogeler case. The four men were crew members of a C-47 transport plane forced down in Hungary by Russian fighters Nov. 19.,
Diplomatic circles in the Hun-
from BUI McGinn, PRospect 6-9588,! gari£m capita, expressed belief that
DUNCAN McLEOD .. . shares spotlight
sal's office experience the same difficulties.
Other performances of “The Consul’ will be given Saturday night.
secure a visa from the consul, whose and Friday Dec. 14. A few tickets retail keeps .putting her off for for the first two performances are tape reasons. Others in the con- on sale at the Student Union ticket
PEGGY BONINI . . . co-stars
office. Tickets for all performances run from $.60 through $2.40.
Menotti wrote both the music and libretto of “The Consul.” In addition to the Pulitzer prize, it won the award of the New York Drama Critics Circle.
or Jerry Johnston, PRospect 7-9605 Reduced Student Rates
Special arrangements have also been made by the Mission Inn to offer reduced rates for students desiring a room, Hadley said. ' Students desiring any further membership or general institute information may contact Hadley or Norman R. Fertig, lecturer in international relations, at 420 Founders hall, ext. 336.
the airmen will be released relatively soon.
Red Cross officials yesterday had recovered the bodies of 141 victims of the first of two violent eruptions of Hibok Hibok volcano in Manila. They said they feared a soaring death toll on tiny Cmi-guin island, 450 miles off Manila.
Thirty critically injured persons had been removed from the area before the second deafening,
shuddering explosion in the mountain which has become known as "the killer” of the Philippines.
* • *
Sen. Estes Kefauver, who said he may be a candidate for the 1952 Democratic presidential nomination, defended his party's policies last night and labeled Gen. Douglas MacArthur a “Monday morning quarterback.”
Kefauver told a Jefferson-Jack-son day gathering it is of* “overriding importance to look at the facts” about Korea “instead of being misled by the loose attacks of defeatists and Monday morning quarterbacks, even though they may wear five stars upon their shoulders.”
• * •
The Big Four secret disarmament conference in Paris yesterday appeared ready for a “buck-
passing” maneuver which would drop all the thorny issues involved into the lap of a 12-nation disarmament commission.
Informed sources said East and West remained as far apart as ever on the crucialjiuestion of the relative timing of a ban on the atom bomb and international control and inspection of atomic plants.
* * •
All shipping was halted yesterday at the mouth of the Columbia river in Oregon as damage-wreaking hurricane winds up to 115 miles an hour whipped the Northwest and a steady downpour of rain soaked the Pacific Coast as far south as Central California.
Near blizzard conditions were reported at Klamath Falls in southern reservations are $2.75 per person. Oregon where three inches of snow as violence flared in widely-scat-fell during a one hour period and | tered areas of strife-torn Egypt.
were whiplashed by a 60-mile gale • • *
In Chatham. England, a bus ploughed through a marching platoon of teen-aged Royal Marine cadets last night, killing at least 23 and injuring 24. The bus struck the platooh of 50 cadets from the rear and one passenger said he “just felt a series of bumps” as the heavy vehicle rolled through the ranks of marchers.
• • •
Egyptian police and civilian* fought with British troops yesterday in the second pitthed battle m 34 hours in the Suez Canal zone, and Egyptians officials said 15 Egyptians were killed and 20 others wounded Riotous demonstrations in Cairo caused serious injury to 28 persons
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 55, December 05, 1951 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 43, No. 55, December 05, 1951. |
| Full text | JOYCE MARTIN MARILYN MERKLEY MARY MILLER I i NANCY NYE GERRY REICH GRETCHEN RUBINS KARI SKRAMSTAD BARBARA SUGARMAN dru&t'em -PAGE THREE- Al Lamont May Be Out For Season Dai Trojan — RAGE FOUR — Foreign Policy Topic Of LAS Meeting Vol. XLIII 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1951 No. 55 igma Chi Problems —32,000 • ★ ^ ^ ^ ^ ntertains 9 Coeds Sweetheart Hopefuls To Return Tonight It's D-day. H-hour at 7 .onight for the 19 campus oeds who will be facing the irst in a series of eliminations in the 1951 contest for Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. At that time, the candidates irom sororities and residence halls sill attend dinner at the Sigma Chi house, after which Sig actives Rill begin the first judging. Only 10 wtfl return tomorrow night. Sig Secret Ballot Judging is done by secret ballot ising a point system emphasizing jeauty. poise, and personality. The ield will be cut to five at tomorrow night's dinner and further re- Child Care in Israel of THon Firemen Probe ★ ★ ★ fire Origin Discussed At Sigma Nu The problem of raising 32.000 j children in Israelian collective settlements was discussed by Dr. Ger-! aid Caplan in yesterday’s meeting of the Institute on Mental Health in 133 Founders hall. According to Dr. Caplan. psy-i ehiatric director of the Lasker Mental Hvgiene center of Hadas-sah in Jerusalem, under the set- Spurs Invited To Blue Key Meeting Today A meeting of Blue Key, service and scholarship organization, will uced to three in the finals Fri- be held today at 5:30 at the Sigma ay night. One of the three will phi Epsilon house. 630 West 28th _ chosen Sweetheart of Sigma ! street. It will be a dinner meeting hi and the other two wi if be her and all Spurs are invited to at-ttendants. tend as guests of Blue Key. Identities of the Sweetheart and Accortilng M md Harper, presi-!er court «U be a closely guarded ^ , procedure tor ecret until the crowning at the tivc membera will be ormal Sweetheart ball Saturday . ... __. right a. ihe Minunar hotel. The 'us3Kl- To a ”an T* rchestra will plav The Sweet- have a «ride avera8' at*>'' th"‘. lean of Sigma Chi ’ as the win- ot thf *« mfn? averase- A1 . ™em; iers receive the plaudits of the ^ asked to brm* “!ts °f hapter. prospective tapees. ^ Scrolls ‘n’ Roses Bob Mitchell will discuss the Last night, the Sweetheart can- AMS “big brother” program. Mcm- idates attended dinner in formals bers of Blue Key will be asked to nd were presented with certificates serve as big brothers for incoming honoring their selection as entries foreign students. tleir.ent system begun 30 years ago by the pioneer socialists, the children appear to do fine after they are six years old. “Up to the age of six. children in the collective settlements are three times as insecure as those reared by their own parents,” Dr. Caplan said. “This is because they are subjected to emotional stress with the social workers who rear them and with other children in the group. “After six. the children begin to lose their feelings of insecurity. Between 9 and 10 they show less -i unstable symptoms. They have a smoother time in adolescence, and in early adult life they are stable, tough individuals.” The setup in Israel today was caused by founders of the collective settlements who believed children should be brought up by pro-fessionally-trained workers. The children live in mixed groups of 30, and are co-educated. About 20.000 of the children have been born in the settlements and the other 12.000 are immigrants. Dr. Caplan then discussed the immigrant situation. “Immigrants have come in such numbers that you would think they would have overwhelmed the capacity of the country to handle them, yet Israel has taken care of them.” Dr. Caplan continued. About 700,000 immigrants have come to Israel in the 3% years ince it became a nation. They have left behind familiar social and cultural surroundings and have had to adapt to new customs and work situations. “Psychiatrists are acting as expert advisers to immigration administrators,” he co'ncluded. “Where immigrants used to be sent to barracks and given no work, they are now placed in small work camps and given family housing immediately to make them feel more secare in their surroundings.” Dr. Carlos Nassar, director of the University of Chile's child guidance clinic, will lecture today at 9:30 a.m. in 133 Founders hall on “Group Tensions in the Americas.” Air Force Commander To Speak at Institute Fire department officials are investigating the cause of three recent fires in the basement of the Sigma Nu fraternity house today. Sigma Nu fraternity members put out a small fire in the charred basement Monday night with a “bucket brigade.” This was the third fire in a two week period. The first fire occurred two weeks ago and seriously damaged the Sigma Na basement and the second fire last week added to the damage. The latest blaze Monday about midnight did only negligible damage. Christmas Party for Faculty Set Faculty members will ho!d their traditional Christmas party Saturday evening at 7 in Town and Gown. Good Turnout Made By LWM Volunteers Thirty-five Students Offer to Work In Drive to Send An Orphan to'SC Thirty-five students turned out yesterday at the Trovets’ Living War Memorial meeting in Founders hall to offer their services as workers during the drive. “This was far more than we had expected,” said Dick Van Laanen, publicity chairman.of the drive, “and exemplifies the tremendous student interest in our campaign.n Bernard L. Hyink, dean of students, person ally congratulated the Trovets yesterday on their drive. “There is a possibility,” said Van Laanen, “that Dr. Frank C. Baxter’s Christmas ----readings, which are sponsored by Trombones Slide Open Noon Concert Today “Three Equali” played by four trombonists will be the opening section of a four-part Music-at-Noon presentation in Hancock auditorium at 12:15 today. Following the trombonists will be ____... , selections sung by Glendon Me- The party will get under way With Cutcheon baritone th£n a ^ a dinner and will be followed by a program of Christmas music by Warville Fiore, graduate student in the School of Music. The faculty n the contest. Tonight they will receive white roses, the fraternity Slower. This is the oldest of national fra-ernity “queen” contests, the first ne being held in 1912 shortly after the Sigtna Chi “Sweetheart Song” was v rilten. The song has made Sigma Chi Sweethearts known throughout the U. S. The first contest at SC was held in 1942. International Girl Selection of the International Sweetheart of Sigma Chi is a biennial affair and this year's SC Dr. Jose Morales To Speak at Fellowship Meet Dr. Jose Morales, graduate of the Foreign Relations ministry in Mr.drid, Spain, will be the speaker for today s weekly Trojan Christian Fellowship meeting. Presently teaching at the Los Sweetheart will be entered in the Angeles Bible college. Dr. Morales international contest. The winner will talk on ‘Christ in the Ameri-of the international crown in 1S49 cas." was a Kappa Alpha Theta from The meeting, to be held at the Syracuse university. YWCA house, will begin at noon. Major-General Emmett O'Donnell Jr., commanding general of the 15th Air Force, March Field, will be the armed forces representative for the 28th annual SC-sponsored Institute of World Affairs session to be held from Dec. 9 to 12 at the Mission Inn in Riverside. Offered, primarily, lo discuss problems of political, economic, and social factors in the struggle for world cooperation, the session is held in conjunction with colleges and universities of the Pacific Coast. This year's session, which will offer as its general theme, “The Quest for Peace,” will present 81 representatives from 20 educational institutions in the West Coast area. Twelve faculty, members from SC will participate in the session. General O'Donnell, who will Curtain Tonight Rises in for The Bovard Consul' The curtain will go up tonight at 8:30 on the West Coast Premiere of Gian-Carlo Menotti's Pulitzer prize- j winning opera “The Consul.” Peggy Bonini and Duncan McLeod will sing the lead roles of Magda and John Sarel in the Bovard auditorium performance Jay the Opera Workshop, under the direction of Carl Ebert. Ingolf Dahl will conduct. Kathtrine Hilgenberg will sing the .ole of the mother; William Vennard. a iaculty member, will be the ecret police aEent; Ava G.icrset. he secretary; Chris Lachona. the tgician; Kalem Kermoyan, Mr. Kofner: and Marni Nixon, the foreign woman. Others in the cast are Delores isser, Phyllis Wilkins. John osches, Stanley Hughes, and Man-Leonardo. The story of the opera is one of Intrigue, suspense, and waiting. At he beginning. John Sorel becomes involved with the secret police of a -.aropean country and is forced to fa- his life. His wife then tries I to rejo:n him. To do this she must speak on the subject, “Peace, But Not at Any Price,' graduated from West Point in 1928. Acting as chief of the advisory council to General Henry H. “Hap” Arnold in 1943, General O’Donnell gained command of the 73rd Bombardment Wing and led its early B-29 raid on Tokyo. Service Cross Award Before his appointment as commanding general of the 15th Air Force, the General led the Far East Bombardment Command in Japan. For his heroism in Korea, General O'Donnell received the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation's second highest award. In addition to General O’Donnell, main speakers for the session include Paul G, Hoffman, director of the Ford Foundation and former ECA administrator; Edwin M. Wright, intelligence adviser to the State department on the middle East; and Virgil Pinkley, editor and publisher of the Ix»s Angeles Mirror. Special arrangements for a car pool and lowered membership rates for students attending the sessions in groups of five were disclosed yesterday by Paul E. Hadley, assistant professor of International Relations and executive secretary of the institute. Reduced Rates Although regular individual membership rates have been reduced from $10 to $5 for students, those attending in groups of five or ore may obtain membership for the entire session for only $2.50 per member. Regular single day memberships, which had been reduced from $3.50 to $2 for students, have also been lowered to $1 for persons in groups of five or more. A car pool is being organized to provide transportation to Riverside. Students may get car pool information from Mrs. Bernice Tiegs in the student lounge or will then sing Christmas carols. Dancing to the music of Don Eschoff with cards to follow until midnight is scheduled. The party will be semi-formal and reservations are $1.75 per person. Reservations may be made through Prof. Rodney Lewis, electrical engineering, Ext. 381. Working on the party are Lewis, representing the Men's Faculty club; Dr. Florence R. Scott, Women's Faculty club; and Mrs. Robert Schruben, Faculty Wives. Double Feature On Bill Tonight For YM-Nite Tonight at 7:45 the YMCA will present a double feature at its second “YM-Nite.” The first feature will star Charlie Chaplie in “Champion.” The second is “Trojan Review.” Ken Shanks, interfraternity coordinator, will open the show in the Student Union lounge. Following the two movies will be a community sing. I Admission for members is free, but non-members will be charged 25 cents service charge. Doughnuts and cider will be served. tion played by solo trombonist Jerry Winters, and in conclusion a piano solo by Delmer Rogers of a work of Royce Malm who composed work at SC. The “Three Equali,” Beethoven, will feature William Smith, Jerry Jansen, Robert Cairns, and Keith Brown as the four trombonists. Giendon McCutcheon, baritone, Caldwell Talks will be accompanied by Roger Bus-hell at the piano in singing “Pilgrim’s Song,” Tchaidowsky; “La Giromelta,” Sibella; and “Per me Giunto” from “Don Carlo,” Verdi. In his trombone presentation of “Concert Piece,” Salzedo, Jerry Winter will be accompanied at the piano by James Low. The finale of the Music-at-NOon program will be “Theme, Variations, Finale" Royce Malm which will be played by Delmar Rogers, piano soloist. Royce Malm, an SC student composed “Theme, Variations, F’inale” this spring as a project in a second semester course of Trovets, may be aired on a nationwide NBC radio hookup.” Frank Ford, general chairman of the LWM drive, is endeavoring to arrange the national broadcast. He says he has lined up many celebrities for the readings, to be held Dec. 12 in Bovard auditorium as part of the drive. Free tickets for Dr. Baxter's popular readings may be obtained at the Trovets office. 405 Student Union. Student to SC The purpose of the LWM drive is to send the orphan of a World War II or Korean conflict veteran to SC. The university scholarship committee chooses the scholarship recipient, who must be unable to attend college because of lack of funds. The money will send the orphan through an entire college course and will provide needed The theme of this year’s Living composition. " War Memorial campaign is All musicians appearing on the ^’or8et To Remember.” program tomorrow are SC students. I ~ ‘Lest Today On War ^n'9.^s 5emi-Formal “World War III in the Making’ will be the title of a talk that Dr. Russell L. Caldwell, associate professor of history, will give to the YMCA World Relatedness committee today at 3:15 in 229 Founders hall. Caldwell wiil cover three major questions in his lecture. F’irst, has the American nation closed its mind entirely to the possibility that we can establish a “modus vivendi” with Russia? Second, has our State Department accepted the thesis that war is coming? Third, is war inevitable? Caldwell was the debate coach for Wooster High school, Ohio, where his class won the Lowell Thomas award for outstanding Films of the SC-Notre Dame last Saturday will be shown today achievement in oratory in 1940. He at noon in Bovard auditorium and has also written for many histori- 1 will be narrated by Joe Muha. cal periodicals. assistant football coach. The annual Knight dance will be held Saturday at the Beverly Hills hotel, social co-chairmen Don Tuffle and Don Reinholdt announced today. Tommy Jones and his orchestra will play. Trojan Knights and their friends are invited to the semi-formal party, which will be held from 9 I college ** University . - _. . Saturday, both games will be Noon Showing Set played in Pan-Pacific auditorium. Tickets will go on sale to the general public Wednesday at $2.40 for box seats, and $1.50 and $1 for reserved seats. Tickets are available in the University Ticket Office, second floor, Student Union. Basketball Ducats Ready In a reversal of last week's procedure, holders of activity books numbered above 2000 will be presented tickets to Friday night’s basketball game, while those holding books numbered below that will be eligible for tickets in the game on Saturday. Playing against Los Angeles State Friday and against the of San F’rancisco on For SC-ND Films World News Roundup U.S. Demands Release of Yank Airmen From United Press The United States has demanded that Communist Hungary free four American airmen immediately and indicated it will reject any Hungarian attempt to use them as hostages for new concessions in the Vogeler case. The four men were crew members of a C-47 transport plane forced down in Hungary by Russian fighters Nov. 19., Diplomatic circles in the Hun- from BUI McGinn, PRospect 6-9588,! gari£m capita, expressed belief that DUNCAN McLEOD .. . shares spotlight sal's office experience the same difficulties. Other performances of “The Consul’ will be given Saturday night. secure a visa from the consul, whose and Friday Dec. 14. A few tickets retail keeps .putting her off for for the first two performances are tape reasons. Others in the con- on sale at the Student Union ticket PEGGY BONINI . . . co-stars office. Tickets for all performances run from $.60 through $2.40. Menotti wrote both the music and libretto of “The Consul.” In addition to the Pulitzer prize, it won the award of the New York Drama Critics Circle. or Jerry Johnston, PRospect 7-9605 Reduced Student Rates Special arrangements have also been made by the Mission Inn to offer reduced rates for students desiring a room, Hadley said. ' Students desiring any further membership or general institute information may contact Hadley or Norman R. Fertig, lecturer in international relations, at 420 Founders hall, ext. 336. the airmen will be released relatively soon. Red Cross officials yesterday had recovered the bodies of 141 victims of the first of two violent eruptions of Hibok Hibok volcano in Manila. They said they feared a soaring death toll on tiny Cmi-guin island, 450 miles off Manila. Thirty critically injured persons had been removed from the area before the second deafening, shuddering explosion in the mountain which has become known as "the killer” of the Philippines. * • * Sen. Estes Kefauver, who said he may be a candidate for the 1952 Democratic presidential nomination, defended his party's policies last night and labeled Gen. Douglas MacArthur a “Monday morning quarterback.” Kefauver told a Jefferson-Jack-son day gathering it is of* “overriding importance to look at the facts” about Korea “instead of being misled by the loose attacks of defeatists and Monday morning quarterbacks, even though they may wear five stars upon their shoulders.” • * • The Big Four secret disarmament conference in Paris yesterday appeared ready for a “buck- passing” maneuver which would drop all the thorny issues involved into the lap of a 12-nation disarmament commission. Informed sources said East and West remained as far apart as ever on the crucialjiuestion of the relative timing of a ban on the atom bomb and international control and inspection of atomic plants. * * • All shipping was halted yesterday at the mouth of the Columbia river in Oregon as damage-wreaking hurricane winds up to 115 miles an hour whipped the Northwest and a steady downpour of rain soaked the Pacific Coast as far south as Central California. Near blizzard conditions were reported at Klamath Falls in southern reservations are $2.75 per person. Oregon where three inches of snow as violence flared in widely-scat-fell during a one hour period and tered areas of strife-torn Egypt. were whiplashed by a 60-mile gale • • * In Chatham. England, a bus ploughed through a marching platoon of teen-aged Royal Marine cadets last night, killing at least 23 and injuring 24. The bus struck the platooh of 50 cadets from the rear and one passenger said he “just felt a series of bumps” as the heavy vehicle rolled through the ranks of marchers. • • • Egyptian police and civilian* fought with British troops yesterday in the second pitthed battle m 34 hours in the Suez Canal zone, and Egyptians officials said 15 Egyptians were killed and 20 others wounded Riotous demonstrations in Cairo caused serious injury to 28 persons |
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