Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 36, November 06, 1950 |
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SC STANFORD GRID MACHINES STRUGGLE TO 7-7 DEADLOCK
Kennedy Ouster Sought Y Unknown Petitioners
aw Fund rive
nderway
9-10 a.m. Law Classes Cancelled; Faculty To Meet With Dean
SHELDEN D. ELLIOTT . . . more alumni
Law classes at 9 and 10 a.m. today will be canceled so at School of Law faculty members may meet with Shel-n D. Elliott, dean, who returns briefly from New York liversity to head an intensive alumni drive.
Dean Elliott says the purpose of the campaign is to get
-I more money for scholarships in the
I School of Law. He is at present on leave for a semester at NYU. and is profeessor of administrative ; law there.
endoff Rally rings Out 20 hole Rooters
The dean will confer with Pres ider.t Fred D. Fagg Jr. and School of Law faculty members before 1 returning to his position in the east Dr. Robert Kingsley is acting dean m Elliott’s absence.
SC Faculty To Star on TV Program
Dr. Baxter to Start-off ‘KFI-TV University’
Series Tonight at 6:05
Beginning tonight at 6:05, a; member of Troy's faculty will appear on a television program sponsored by the Encyclopedia Britan-nica Film Service over KFI-TV j Monday through Friday.
The series of 50 programs titled!
“KFI-TV University.” will have a! different member of the faculty i each night.
Dr. Frank Baxter, professor of!
English, will debut the program to- i night with a talk on “The Story of the Alphabet,” the theme of a course he gives in the School of include any exposes, the Vulture Library Science.
Tomorrow evening, Dr. John A.
Russell, head of the astronomy department. will lecture on “The
Planets Go Round and Round.” , ,,, , . ___ ... 4I_
, 11TT TT Wednesday morning, will cost the
A discussion of “How Hygiene ..
Vol. XLII 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Nov. 6, 1950 No. 36
Vulture Says 1950 Edition.
To Be New Low
“Only two more days,” screached the Vulture yesterday, rubbing his mothy wings together. “Only two more days.”
When one of the hardier DT reporters asked him if his paper, which is named after him, will
said that back where he comes from “they don’t call me Stack-well Pyles for nothing.”
He said that the Vulture, which hits the streets bright and early
.lie temperature and the SC
Can Be Fun,” on Wednesday night will place Dr. Lucien Bavetta of the School of Dentistry before the cameras.
Appearing Thursday night will be Dr. Thomas Clements, head of the; geology department, who will speak j on diamonds in mineralogy.
A demonstration of an opera re-1
He is studying the NYU plan to tball team's spirit were both! give instruction to lawyers who are >h last Friday, even though a practicing but r.*io want to keep eduled sendoff rally failed to; abreast of new legal procedures trriallT * ln February of this year Elliott
he yell' squad and the Trojan |was appointed to the Contract Ap-
lid were supposed to have gath- Advisory board of the Atomic Dr CarJ head
in front of the PE building to ****& conimission. He has served • department and Wolf
motors in sontr, and veils as dean of the School of Law since the dePartment- a™ w°u
asthTSiSjES* ««« — semester. “4“"r-
the two waiting busses, a sparse ^ graduate of the class of 31, Under the supervision of William R’d of about 20 well-wishers saw EiijCtt was secretary of the Legal H. Sener, head of the department of m Personnel commission under the radio and television, a different
A Carmicheal got in some last secretary of war before going into'student writer and producer will iute practice’ when lie almost actjve military service in 1943. I work on each show.
;sed the bus and had to makej__——-
he was headed for the Indian il line.
Let's get going.” shouted Jeff \vath a little apprehensively as two busses pulled out and ded for the International air-t.
usual 15 cents.
“Blackmail material comes high these days,” he cackled, “but my old customers will know how to make it pay.”
Because the Vulture has threatened reprisals if the DT city room isn’t turned over to him and his staff tomorrow afternoon so he can put the finishing touches to his loathsome rag, there will be no Daily Trojan Wednesday.
I - - best to n
Owls to Honor" Slain Founder
Disc Jockey
Austrian on KUSC
Doctor, Lawyer Debate Today Proposition C
A debate between a School of Medicine scientist favoring Proposition C and the leading attorney for anti-vivisectionists opposing the measure, will take place at 3 today in 335 Founders hall.
Proposition C. if passed, wculd release unwanted pound animals to institutions for medical research.
Dr. William H. Bachrach, research associate in the School of Medicine, will match arguments with Brooks Gifford, '26 School of Law graduate.
Gifford last week debated with Dr. Clinton H. Thienes, head of the department of i harmacology, on a television show.
Dr. Brachrach yesterday said, “Mr. Gifford unfortunately has spread a number of misstatements of fact regarding medical research and Proposition C.
“The anti-vivisectionist clique, which he represents, has done its best to misrepresent, misinform, and the Los Angeles voters on Important issue,” he said.
“I will be glad to correct his deficiency of information on this subject which affects our health,” he concluded
tate Extends ducation Aid
The memory of Lt. Tom John-
son. one of the founders of the
I Owls, SC's only fraternity without
| national ’ affiliation, will be hon-
jored tonight at 7 at the Owls’ ini-
j tiation banquet. Dinner will be
j served at the Old Dixie barbecue,
4287 South Western avenue, by Jack D. Miller j French, Spanish, Dutch, Portugese.: A spedal brochure prepared by
Austrian student. Gehard “Jerry Austrian, German languages, he j the fraternity containing the pic-
was well equipped for a job as in-|torial story of Johnson, who was
Comedy to End Run Tomorrow
Charges LAS President Ignored Council Policy
Petitions for the recall of Bill Kennedy, LAS president, are being quietly circulated around campus it was learned Friday.
The presumed reason for the movement was Kennedy’s abstention vote on the NSA question in Wednesday night's
senate meeting.
| Students circulating the petitions have been unidentified as yet. but were in the office of Richard Berg, fraternity coordinator, Thursday checking on the legality of such a movement.
Thus far. the move has complied with the LAS constitution, which states that recall petitions must have a written grievance, but they must also have valid signatures of 20 per cer.t of the student body of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences before action can be taken.
Grievance Told
The statement of grievance reads:
“We, the students of LAS of SC. do, by our affixed signatures, show our disapproval of actions taken by the president of LAS. ar.d hereby institute recall proceedings against the president of LAS, William Kennedy.”
Three weeks ago. Bill Gumpert,
LAS vice-president, put a motion on the floor that the LAS council go on record as opposing affiliation with NSA. Before the vote, Kennedy said:
“This council’s vote will be my vote on the senate.-’
The vote against NSA was 27-21.
Explains Action Kennedy’s actionsf Wednesday night went directly against the
previous statement, but he explain- date and its future potentialities, ed it, thusly: will be discussed by Dr. Willard
“I ran on the Unity party plat-; Geer, assistant professor of physics, form which favored NSA, and was at 3:15 Wednesday in the art and elected by Unity voters. However, lecture room. University library, four foreign students will speak when I was caught between two The talk is the second in the before an open meeting of the loyalties. I had no other choice but LAS-sponsored Wednesday Lecture YWCA World and Coed commit- to abstain.” series and is open to students, fac-
tee at the YW house at noon to- Thp ^ Trojan hag ^ ablf ulty members, and the public.
dayl _ . f. f to find only one person Vho has" D0tf0r. Gee‘ de5cribe the
Frida Kirszenberg a native ofibeen aTJproftched by petition-bear- four existlng «>or systems. includes. John Deitrich telephoned the the CBS sysera’ whlch is the DT that he had been confronted only system aPPr0Ved by the Fed-with a petition, and wanted tojeral Communications commission, know what it was all about. He! point out the advantages
said the students already had two
BILL KENNEDY
. . ’did my best'
OMAR KUREISHI ... on Pakistan
YWCA to Hear Talks on Reds
The international spread of communism as applied to their native countries is the topic on which
Dr. Geer Will Discuss Color TV Systems
Color television, its progress to
dent body at the International Student camp at Hamburg university in 1948. _
Omar Kureishi. who comes from The last two performances of Pakistan, formerly attended the Moss Hart s comedy. Light Up the ^ university of Bombay. He is a Sky. will be staged in Bovard to-l
10 quarter hour programs on Aus_|terr)rtler at the Austrian league 0f I killed in the First Marine division trian Words and Music" over «*!«ter at theAustrum lea,** ofj^^ at Korea in August, will
jKUSC, 6:45 p.m. Friday. , e i I be presented at the banquet,
he state of California has ex- Jerry will play recordings of Aus- He next passed a foreign service Johnson, an enlisted Marine in pose ih presenting it is to pro-ded financial assistance for edu- trian music and tell about the j exam to the U. S. on a scholarsip World War II. was a member of vide entertainment, not to educate
anyone.”
night and tomorrow night,
“It’s a rollicking comedy, William C. deMille, director, completely uninhibited and our pur
ro^em^eme^ wh?ncaavee their countr>'s folklore and humor. He provided by Chancellor Rufus B*. the campUS unit of NROTC from s in the Korean war. according a*so £'ve brief biographies of von KlemSmid. He has been at SC 1945 to 1948. In the latter year he D. J. Callaghan, state director some Austrian musicians and com- f0r six weeks. i received the annual Rufus B.
veteran affairs. • posers and tell about the places!
lided they have lived in Cali-1 they lived and the inspirations for e M em e
ia some of their music. j Since coming to America, Jerry
and children 16-20 ma\ recei\e hoc tripH in firiri out morp- about
a month subsistence at any ap-, Jerry has the background to talk ved college.
Widows may be assisted for up years
the co intry than can be found in books. Some things that have im-
rhiiHrpn until %as born in Graz. Austria, received, , , . , , ,
lour \eais and children until pressed him are male and female
v have "omnleted their studies his elementary and part of his sec- *' .
until they reach their 27th „„dary education in England. »ent relationsh.ps. the difference in the hday. . to France for another year of universities
von
KleinSmid award given the NROTC platoon leader whose platoon wins the drill competition .
Upon graduation Johnson was given the choice of receiving a commission of ensign in the Navy or second lieutenant in the Marine
and the friendly as-1
r::m "" “* -hool, ar.d finally finished hls vocations of people with difftrtr.t _ , «
nformation and application secondary education In Austria. political \.ews. ^OeOS r OS©
nks may be erans office.
obtained at any
Father’s Footsteps
Jerry then decided to follow in his father's footsteps and become a lawyer. He studied law in Switz-
Getting acquainted with a Sir*
m Europe is like climbing a moun- D C
tain, but in America it’s like riding ■ ^ I ■ ^ ■ ■ ■ Cl I I J
an elevator, he said. People also _ ^ .. , , r
, j „ * i t* The portrait class of the cm
erland. France. Spain and finally marry at a younger age here. It
got his LL.D. in Vienna. takes Europeans longer, because ..P. _____... .
Writh his knowledge of English, they can't afford it. he said.
Dancer, Folklorist Booked For Latin-American Show
rojan Donors et for Record lood Donation
f 535 Trojans who registered for campus blood bank follow rough with 100 per cent dona-ns. SC wiil more than double
260-pint donation record set Chet Milar. American exponent bers. and a dance of the Chiapas year by the University of Ore- of Hindu dance, and Amalia Mil-jor Mexican Indians.
Ian. Mexican folklorist, will present! Milar wears authentic costumes
Additional rccistrations will be . for all his danccs.
Additional rr»fni' “ a free program of Latin American
cepted today and Tuesday from
tn T nm at the booth in':and Spanish songs and dances Fn-
nt of the Student Onion. day at 8:30 p.m, Bovard.
Donations will be taken by the Miss Millan. a graduate-of the
d Cross on the following sched- j University of Mexico where she
majored in folklore, will sing 16th j
Wednesday—All donors who century Spanish religious songs.
ned up for that day, go to the ceremonial songs of the Mexican
ial hall of Town and Gown, 666 Indians, contemporary Mexican folk
>st 36th street. 10 a.m. to 3 pm. | songs, Aztec songs from the pre-
Thursday—NROTC men and of- Cortez period, and songs of Peru
ers only. and Cuba.
Friday All donors who signed ijvetj with Indian tribes
for that day. throughout Mexico, learning their
The Thursda\ and jsongs and legends. She has pub-
be taken to the lished a book of Mexican folksongs,
center. 925 South Western nue to donate. Red Cross station Milar has danced in concerts' gons will begin picking up donors and night clubs in Europe. Africa,; ^ the main entrance of the Phy- and South America. He also has ' al Education building at noon appeared on stage and television.! shuttle back and forth in 20- He studied in India and the United1 ute relavs States with native Indian teachers.:
nors may eat regular meals on He will present a Caribbean voo-; dav of donation, but should doo dance, a Spanish bullfight d eating fatty foods during the dance, an East Indian temple dance t lour hours before giving blood, j two Spanish-South American num-
11 ood
sittings of SC coeds to publicize the homecoming* parade.
Each sorority and women’s residence is being asked to select cne coed to pose for portraits. Eacn coed will receive complimentary portraits.
The homecoming publicity committee will display the portraits on posters in 50 store windows along Wilshire boulevard to publicize the homecoming parade.
Arrangements for coed portraits are under the direction of ^nema majors George von Kemper and Sam Gandrud.
City Clerk To Give Talk
In what reall yis a play within a play,'Miriam Cassidy, Stan Johnson, and Morton Miller play the leads.
Poland, will represent Israel. She worked for the Israelian government in Israel where she lived for eight years before coming to SC.
Eric Koivisto, a native of'Fin-|said the Students”already'had two'and disadvantages of CBS converted, studied at Helsinki univer-1. three sheets m]ed with name$ ers. as well as enumerate possible sity before coming to SC last year.| methods of approaching the ideal
He represented the Helsinki stu- Calls It Illogical all-electronic color converter.
Kennedy called the move, “a verv( , _
..... .. . , J Answer Questions
illogical move, in that no one has
made any complaints to me directly. After the lecture he will answer and it seems to be that it is only i Que;>hons from the audience, fair that they would see me before! Doctor Geer is one of the na-thev started to remove me from hons best qualified men to speak office.” |on *his subject. He is the inventor
„ , . . , . .. of the first color television tube
said,relations and has been active in; Referring again to his voting. capable of receiving color and
It is SC politics and activities since his Kennedy said. . black ^ whiU
arrival here. “I did what I thought best, and
Henry Oh, a native Korean. isjhope the students are still behind an ordained minister of the Korean |me- and continue to support me. I
Methodist church. He has attended only hope that such action in no SDend more than siOO-
universities and theological senv- wav discredits the LAS, council ^5? P! more than SoOO.
universities ana tneoio0icai sem. _ ^ 000 on research to develop the tube.
naries in Japan and Korea and and the College of Letters, Arts ^ fnr thp tubp pamp ^ currently is studying for a doc-j and sciences.
[graduate student in international
Last March the SC inventor sold the patent rights to his invention to Technicolor incorporated on their
tor’s degree in religion.
Town and Gown to View Two Dramas at Meeting
Hopes for Support
“I hope that the LAS council will continue to support me as they have in the past, so that we on the council can continue our contributions to university life.”
The idea for the tube came to Doctor Geer while he was lecturing to a class. It took him five years to develop the tube.
Color Conference Last year the FCC called Doctor Geer to Washington to testify at its conference on color transmission.
The movement came as a com- At the time, the FCC was trying
„ m jplete surprise to everyone cor.nec- to decide which of three svstems
Members ot Town and Gown will see two one-act play* wd with,Jthe LAS ^uncU^
tomorrow afternoon in Hancock auditorium.
Gum- to standardize. t pert said, “It's news to me. ’ Other CBS's sequential frame system was Nine O Clock Players of the Assistance League of Los members of the council were equal- finally approved over the dot-at-a-i^ngeles will open the program with a comedy. Assisting j iy surprised when they heard of the time system of RCA and Color Tele-them will be students of the experimental theater of the proposed move. j vision's line-at-a-time system.
SC drama department. Trojans par-1-—-----
ticipating will include Pat Nichols.
Jan Saunders, and Peter Sterne.
Howard Banks, head of the de-1 partment of drama, wiil direct the! comedy.
The second play, a farce, will star Mrs. Philip S. Dorner, Banks,!
Portrait of Famous Philosopher To Be Unveiled Tonight in Bowne
Philosopher Heinrich Gomperez
and Mrs. A. S. Raubenheimer, who!wiu be posthumously honored to-
will direct it. ! night at 8 by the School of Phil-
_ . , .__!osophy and the Argonaut society.
Courtesy committee cochairmen j M A „
will be Mmes. John W. Harris. Town
library by the university made it.The remaining books are being dis-American property and not subject I tributed among other university li-to seizure. Entrance of the United brary collections.
States into the war brought an Daniel S. Robinson, director of
A portrait of Dr. Gomperez. | end to this protection and only painted by Mary Ann Adler, for- heroic efforts by Maria Zohrer, Dr. and Gown president, Coy Burnett merly of the Kunsthistorisches mu- Gomperz' secretary, to conceal the
seum in Vienna, will be unveiled [library prevented its confiscation, in Bowne hall. Mrs. Gomperez is j With the cessation of hostilities, presenting the portrait to the Miss Zohrer revealed the location School of Philosophy. of the books, American occupation
and Kenneth Reynolds.
Serving as cochairmen of the hospitality group will be Mmes. Clyde Phelps and G. Roland Siegel. Assisting them will be Mmes. Walter Albach, Thomas Clements, Ralph H. Albach, Thomas Clements. Ralph Emerson Richer. Garland Greev-er, J. C. Roberts, ar.d Robert L.
After being “prematurely retired” from the faculty of the University of Vienna in 1934 for refusing to join the “irresistible popular movement” of Austrian Chancellor Dollfuss, Dr. Gomperez came Ljto SC in 1935 as a visiting pro
forces recovered them, and they were shipped here. Cataloguing is now nearly complete.
That part of the library which
the School of Philosophy, will preside at the program.
Dr. Ralph T. Flewelling, director emeritus of the school: Fredrick Mayer, associate professor of philosophy at Redlands; Herbert L. Searles, professor of philosophy; and Miss Adler, painter of the portrait, will speak on their impressions of Professor Gomperz.
The Argonaut society will serve
is appropriate is being added to refreshments following the speak-the Hoose Library of Philosophy, i ers.
Rutherford.
“Opportunities in County Gov- AlsQ wm ^ ________________ _
eLnnT.LWl11 Tbe dAlscu“ed ,^y R. Shruben, Albert R. Wiegel. and fessor of philosophy and was a fac- i r 1 I A C C f\ r A I nr /~\ n T K I C
* waiter J. Yeaton. 'ulty member until his death in L) L A L /xtUrL N J
old J. Ostley, Los Angeles city clerk, in a talk to members of the American Society for Public Administrators tomorrow.
Baton Waver, Walker,
CHET MILAR . . . top dancer
Undergraduates are invited to A fs jn Current MOVje join graduate students and faculty members of the School of Public Administration for the address, which will be at 6:30. 318 Student Union.
Ostley has been in public administration work since 1936. A ques-tion-and-answer period will follow the talk.
— 11942.
i
When Dr. Gomperez came to this The sale of package-deal tickets
'country he left behind, in Vienna, to senior class members is on
the library of philosophy which he again today after an interrup-
had been a lifetime in building, tion Friday because of the Stan-
Tommy Walker, director of t h e In 1937, the university purchased ford game.....
football band, has a part in “Two part of the collection. Seniors may obtain this S7.50
Arrangements were completed to combination today and tomorrow
purchase the rest of the library at the booth in front of the Stu-
just before Germany confiscated j dent Union or in front of the
Flags West,” movie now showing at five local Fox theaters He plays the part of a bugler in the Union army. In one scene. Austrian property of Jewish exiles.! Engineering building. Tickets will Confederate troops help him beat The German government was in- be on sale indefinitely at the off an Indian attack. 'formed that the purchase of thei ticket office on the second floor
of the Student Union.
The package-deal will give seniors admission to the prom and senior week activities, a year’s subscription to the Alumni Review, and a membership in the General Alumni association.
The activities would cost S13.50 if paid for individually.
Seniors unable to attend the prom may purchase the ticket for S5.50.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 36, November 06, 1950 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 42, No. 36, November 06, 1950. |
| Full text | SC STANFORD GRID MACHINES STRUGGLE TO 7-7 DEADLOCK Kennedy Ouster Sought Y Unknown Petitioners aw Fund rive nderway 9-10 a.m. Law Classes Cancelled; Faculty To Meet With Dean SHELDEN D. ELLIOTT . . . more alumni Law classes at 9 and 10 a.m. today will be canceled so at School of Law faculty members may meet with Shel-n D. Elliott, dean, who returns briefly from New York liversity to head an intensive alumni drive. Dean Elliott says the purpose of the campaign is to get -I more money for scholarships in the I School of Law. He is at present on leave for a semester at NYU. and is profeessor of administrative ; law there. endoff Rally rings Out 20 hole Rooters The dean will confer with Pres ider.t Fred D. Fagg Jr. and School of Law faculty members before 1 returning to his position in the east Dr. Robert Kingsley is acting dean m Elliott’s absence. SC Faculty To Star on TV Program Dr. Baxter to Start-off ‘KFI-TV University’ Series Tonight at 6:05 Beginning tonight at 6:05, a; member of Troy's faculty will appear on a television program sponsored by the Encyclopedia Britan-nica Film Service over KFI-TV j Monday through Friday. The series of 50 programs titled! “KFI-TV University.” will have a! different member of the faculty i each night. Dr. Frank Baxter, professor of! English, will debut the program to- i night with a talk on “The Story of the Alphabet,” the theme of a course he gives in the School of include any exposes, the Vulture Library Science. Tomorrow evening, Dr. John A. Russell, head of the astronomy department. will lecture on “The Planets Go Round and Round.” , ,,, , . ___ ... 4I_ , 11TT TT Wednesday morning, will cost the A discussion of “How Hygiene .. Vol. XLII 72 Los Angeles, Calif., Monday, Nov. 6, 1950 No. 36 Vulture Says 1950 Edition. To Be New Low “Only two more days,” screached the Vulture yesterday, rubbing his mothy wings together. “Only two more days.” When one of the hardier DT reporters asked him if his paper, which is named after him, will said that back where he comes from “they don’t call me Stack-well Pyles for nothing.” He said that the Vulture, which hits the streets bright and early .lie temperature and the SC Can Be Fun,” on Wednesday night will place Dr. Lucien Bavetta of the School of Dentistry before the cameras. Appearing Thursday night will be Dr. Thomas Clements, head of the; geology department, who will speak j on diamonds in mineralogy. A demonstration of an opera re-1 He is studying the NYU plan to tball team's spirit were both! give instruction to lawyers who are >h last Friday, even though a practicing but r.*io want to keep eduled sendoff rally failed to; abreast of new legal procedures trriallT * ln February of this year Elliott he yell' squad and the Trojan was appointed to the Contract Ap- lid were supposed to have gath- Advisory board of the Atomic Dr CarJ head in front of the PE building to ****& conimission. He has served • department and Wolf motors in sontr, and veils as dean of the School of Law since the dePartment- a™ w°u asthTSiSjES* ««« — semester. “4“"r- the two waiting busses, a sparse ^ graduate of the class of 31, Under the supervision of William R’d of about 20 well-wishers saw EiijCtt was secretary of the Legal H. Sener, head of the department of m Personnel commission under the radio and television, a different A Carmicheal got in some last secretary of war before going into'student writer and producer will iute practice’ when lie almost actjve military service in 1943. I work on each show. ;sed the bus and had to makej__——- he was headed for the Indian il line. Let's get going.” shouted Jeff \vath a little apprehensively as two busses pulled out and ded for the International air-t. usual 15 cents. “Blackmail material comes high these days,” he cackled, “but my old customers will know how to make it pay.” Because the Vulture has threatened reprisals if the DT city room isn’t turned over to him and his staff tomorrow afternoon so he can put the finishing touches to his loathsome rag, there will be no Daily Trojan Wednesday. I - - best to n Owls to Honor" Slain Founder Disc Jockey Austrian on KUSC Doctor, Lawyer Debate Today Proposition C A debate between a School of Medicine scientist favoring Proposition C and the leading attorney for anti-vivisectionists opposing the measure, will take place at 3 today in 335 Founders hall. Proposition C. if passed, wculd release unwanted pound animals to institutions for medical research. Dr. William H. Bachrach, research associate in the School of Medicine, will match arguments with Brooks Gifford, '26 School of Law graduate. Gifford last week debated with Dr. Clinton H. Thienes, head of the department of i harmacology, on a television show. Dr. Brachrach yesterday said, “Mr. Gifford unfortunately has spread a number of misstatements of fact regarding medical research and Proposition C. “The anti-vivisectionist clique, which he represents, has done its best to misrepresent, misinform, and the Los Angeles voters on Important issue,” he said. “I will be glad to correct his deficiency of information on this subject which affects our health,” he concluded tate Extends ducation Aid The memory of Lt. Tom John- son. one of the founders of the I Owls, SC's only fraternity without national ’ affiliation, will be hon- jored tonight at 7 at the Owls’ ini- j tiation banquet. Dinner will be j served at the Old Dixie barbecue, 4287 South Western avenue, by Jack D. Miller j French, Spanish, Dutch, Portugese.: A spedal brochure prepared by Austrian student. Gehard “Jerry Austrian, German languages, he j the fraternity containing the pic- was well equipped for a job as in- torial story of Johnson, who was Comedy to End Run Tomorrow Charges LAS President Ignored Council Policy Petitions for the recall of Bill Kennedy, LAS president, are being quietly circulated around campus it was learned Friday. The presumed reason for the movement was Kennedy’s abstention vote on the NSA question in Wednesday night's senate meeting. Students circulating the petitions have been unidentified as yet. but were in the office of Richard Berg, fraternity coordinator, Thursday checking on the legality of such a movement. Thus far. the move has complied with the LAS constitution, which states that recall petitions must have a written grievance, but they must also have valid signatures of 20 per cer.t of the student body of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences before action can be taken. Grievance Told The statement of grievance reads: “We, the students of LAS of SC. do, by our affixed signatures, show our disapproval of actions taken by the president of LAS. ar.d hereby institute recall proceedings against the president of LAS, William Kennedy.” Three weeks ago. Bill Gumpert, LAS vice-president, put a motion on the floor that the LAS council go on record as opposing affiliation with NSA. Before the vote, Kennedy said: “This council’s vote will be my vote on the senate.-’ The vote against NSA was 27-21. Explains Action Kennedy’s actionsf Wednesday night went directly against the previous statement, but he explain- date and its future potentialities, ed it, thusly: will be discussed by Dr. Willard “I ran on the Unity party plat-; Geer, assistant professor of physics, form which favored NSA, and was at 3:15 Wednesday in the art and elected by Unity voters. However, lecture room. University library, four foreign students will speak when I was caught between two The talk is the second in the before an open meeting of the loyalties. I had no other choice but LAS-sponsored Wednesday Lecture YWCA World and Coed commit- to abstain.” series and is open to students, fac- tee at the YW house at noon to- Thp ^ Trojan hag ^ ablf ulty members, and the public. dayl _ . f. f to find only one person Vho has" D0tf0r. Gee‘ de5cribe the Frida Kirszenberg a native ofibeen aTJproftched by petition-bear- four existlng «>or systems. includes. John Deitrich telephoned the the CBS sysera’ whlch is the DT that he had been confronted only system aPPr0Ved by the Fed-with a petition, and wanted tojeral Communications commission, know what it was all about. He! point out the advantages said the students already had two BILL KENNEDY . . ’did my best' OMAR KUREISHI ... on Pakistan YWCA to Hear Talks on Reds The international spread of communism as applied to their native countries is the topic on which Dr. Geer Will Discuss Color TV Systems Color television, its progress to dent body at the International Student camp at Hamburg university in 1948. _ Omar Kureishi. who comes from The last two performances of Pakistan, formerly attended the Moss Hart s comedy. Light Up the ^ university of Bombay. He is a Sky. will be staged in Bovard to-l 10 quarter hour programs on Aus_ terr)rtler at the Austrian league 0f I killed in the First Marine division trian Words and Music" over «*!«ter at theAustrum lea,** ofj^^ at Korea in August, will jKUSC, 6:45 p.m. Friday. , e i I be presented at the banquet, he state of California has ex- Jerry will play recordings of Aus- He next passed a foreign service Johnson, an enlisted Marine in pose ih presenting it is to pro-ded financial assistance for edu- trian music and tell about the j exam to the U. S. on a scholarsip World War II. was a member of vide entertainment, not to educate anyone.” night and tomorrow night, “It’s a rollicking comedy, William C. deMille, director, completely uninhibited and our pur ro^em^eme^ wh?ncaavee their countr>'s folklore and humor. He provided by Chancellor Rufus B*. the campUS unit of NROTC from s in the Korean war. according a*so £'ve brief biographies of von KlemSmid. He has been at SC 1945 to 1948. In the latter year he D. J. Callaghan, state director some Austrian musicians and com- f0r six weeks. i received the annual Rufus B. veteran affairs. • posers and tell about the places! lided they have lived in Cali-1 they lived and the inspirations for e M em e ia some of their music. j Since coming to America, Jerry and children 16-20 ma\ recei\e hoc tripH in firiri out morp- about a month subsistence at any ap-, Jerry has the background to talk ved college. Widows may be assisted for up years the co intry than can be found in books. Some things that have im- rhiiHrpn until %as born in Graz. Austria, received, , , . , , , lour \eais and children until pressed him are male and female v have "omnleted their studies his elementary and part of his sec- *' . until they reach their 27th „„dary education in England. »ent relationsh.ps. the difference in the hday. . to France for another year of universities von KleinSmid award given the NROTC platoon leader whose platoon wins the drill competition . Upon graduation Johnson was given the choice of receiving a commission of ensign in the Navy or second lieutenant in the Marine and the friendly as-1 r::m "" “* -hool, ar.d finally finished hls vocations of people with difftrtr.t _ , « nformation and application secondary education In Austria. political \.ews. ^OeOS r OS© nks may be erans office. obtained at any Father’s Footsteps Jerry then decided to follow in his father's footsteps and become a lawyer. He studied law in Switz- Getting acquainted with a Sir* m Europe is like climbing a moun- D C tain, but in America it’s like riding ■ ^ I ■ ^ ■ ■ ■ Cl I I J an elevator, he said. People also _ ^ .. , , r , j „ * i t* The portrait class of the cm erland. France. Spain and finally marry at a younger age here. It got his LL.D. in Vienna. takes Europeans longer, because ..P. _____... . Writh his knowledge of English, they can't afford it. he said. Dancer, Folklorist Booked For Latin-American Show rojan Donors et for Record lood Donation f 535 Trojans who registered for campus blood bank follow rough with 100 per cent dona-ns. SC wiil more than double 260-pint donation record set Chet Milar. American exponent bers. and a dance of the Chiapas year by the University of Ore- of Hindu dance, and Amalia Mil-jor Mexican Indians. Ian. Mexican folklorist, will present! Milar wears authentic costumes Additional rccistrations will be . for all his danccs. Additional rr»fni' “ a free program of Latin American cepted today and Tuesday from tn T nm at the booth in':and Spanish songs and dances Fn- nt of the Student Onion. day at 8:30 p.m, Bovard. Donations will be taken by the Miss Millan. a graduate-of the d Cross on the following sched- j University of Mexico where she majored in folklore, will sing 16th j Wednesday—All donors who century Spanish religious songs. ned up for that day, go to the ceremonial songs of the Mexican ial hall of Town and Gown, 666 Indians, contemporary Mexican folk >st 36th street. 10 a.m. to 3 pm. songs, Aztec songs from the pre- Thursday—NROTC men and of- Cortez period, and songs of Peru ers only. and Cuba. Friday All donors who signed ijvetj with Indian tribes for that day. throughout Mexico, learning their The Thursda\ and jsongs and legends. She has pub- be taken to the lished a book of Mexican folksongs, center. 925 South Western nue to donate. Red Cross station Milar has danced in concerts' gons will begin picking up donors and night clubs in Europe. Africa,; ^ the main entrance of the Phy- and South America. He also has ' al Education building at noon appeared on stage and television.! shuttle back and forth in 20- He studied in India and the United1 ute relavs States with native Indian teachers.: nors may eat regular meals on He will present a Caribbean voo-; dav of donation, but should doo dance, a Spanish bullfight d eating fatty foods during the dance, an East Indian temple dance t lour hours before giving blood, j two Spanish-South American num- 11 ood sittings of SC coeds to publicize the homecoming* parade. Each sorority and women’s residence is being asked to select cne coed to pose for portraits. Eacn coed will receive complimentary portraits. The homecoming publicity committee will display the portraits on posters in 50 store windows along Wilshire boulevard to publicize the homecoming parade. Arrangements for coed portraits are under the direction of ^nema majors George von Kemper and Sam Gandrud. City Clerk To Give Talk In what reall yis a play within a play,'Miriam Cassidy, Stan Johnson, and Morton Miller play the leads. Poland, will represent Israel. She worked for the Israelian government in Israel where she lived for eight years before coming to SC. Eric Koivisto, a native of'Fin- said the Students”already'had two'and disadvantages of CBS converted, studied at Helsinki univer-1. three sheets m]ed with name$ ers. as well as enumerate possible sity before coming to SC last year. methods of approaching the ideal He represented the Helsinki stu- Calls It Illogical all-electronic color converter. Kennedy called the move, “a verv( , _ ..... .. . , J Answer Questions illogical move, in that no one has made any complaints to me directly. After the lecture he will answer and it seems to be that it is only i Que;>hons from the audience, fair that they would see me before! Doctor Geer is one of the na-thev started to remove me from hons best qualified men to speak office.” on *his subject. He is the inventor „ , . . , . .. of the first color television tube said,relations and has been active in; Referring again to his voting. capable of receiving color and It is SC politics and activities since his Kennedy said. . black ^ whiU arrival here. “I did what I thought best, and Henry Oh, a native Korean. isjhope the students are still behind an ordained minister of the Korean me- and continue to support me. I Methodist church. He has attended only hope that such action in no SDend more than siOO- universities and theological senv- wav discredits the LAS, council ^5? P! more than SoOO. universities ana tneoio0icai sem. _ ^ 000 on research to develop the tube. naries in Japan and Korea and and the College of Letters, Arts ^ fnr thp tubp pamp ^ currently is studying for a doc-j and sciences. [graduate student in international Last March the SC inventor sold the patent rights to his invention to Technicolor incorporated on their tor’s degree in religion. Town and Gown to View Two Dramas at Meeting Hopes for Support “I hope that the LAS council will continue to support me as they have in the past, so that we on the council can continue our contributions to university life.” The idea for the tube came to Doctor Geer while he was lecturing to a class. It took him five years to develop the tube. Color Conference Last year the FCC called Doctor Geer to Washington to testify at its conference on color transmission. The movement came as a com- At the time, the FCC was trying „ m jplete surprise to everyone cor.nec- to decide which of three svstems Members ot Town and Gown will see two one-act play* wd with,Jthe LAS ^uncU^ tomorrow afternoon in Hancock auditorium. Gum- to standardize. t pert said, “It's news to me. ’ Other CBS's sequential frame system was Nine O Clock Players of the Assistance League of Los members of the council were equal- finally approved over the dot-at-a-i^ngeles will open the program with a comedy. Assisting j iy surprised when they heard of the time system of RCA and Color Tele-them will be students of the experimental theater of the proposed move. j vision's line-at-a-time system. SC drama department. Trojans par-1-—----- ticipating will include Pat Nichols. Jan Saunders, and Peter Sterne. Howard Banks, head of the de-1 partment of drama, wiil direct the! comedy. The second play, a farce, will star Mrs. Philip S. Dorner, Banks,! Portrait of Famous Philosopher To Be Unveiled Tonight in Bowne Philosopher Heinrich Gomperez and Mrs. A. S. Raubenheimer, who!wiu be posthumously honored to- will direct it. ! night at 8 by the School of Phil- _ . , .__!osophy and the Argonaut society. Courtesy committee cochairmen j M A „ will be Mmes. John W. Harris. Town library by the university made it.The remaining books are being dis-American property and not subject I tributed among other university li-to seizure. Entrance of the United brary collections. States into the war brought an Daniel S. Robinson, director of A portrait of Dr. Gomperez. end to this protection and only painted by Mary Ann Adler, for- heroic efforts by Maria Zohrer, Dr. and Gown president, Coy Burnett merly of the Kunsthistorisches mu- Gomperz' secretary, to conceal the seum in Vienna, will be unveiled [library prevented its confiscation, in Bowne hall. Mrs. Gomperez is j With the cessation of hostilities, presenting the portrait to the Miss Zohrer revealed the location School of Philosophy. of the books, American occupation and Kenneth Reynolds. Serving as cochairmen of the hospitality group will be Mmes. Clyde Phelps and G. Roland Siegel. Assisting them will be Mmes. Walter Albach, Thomas Clements, Ralph H. Albach, Thomas Clements. Ralph Emerson Richer. Garland Greev-er, J. C. Roberts, ar.d Robert L. After being “prematurely retired” from the faculty of the University of Vienna in 1934 for refusing to join the “irresistible popular movement” of Austrian Chancellor Dollfuss, Dr. Gomperez came Ljto SC in 1935 as a visiting pro forces recovered them, and they were shipped here. Cataloguing is now nearly complete. That part of the library which the School of Philosophy, will preside at the program. Dr. Ralph T. Flewelling, director emeritus of the school: Fredrick Mayer, associate professor of philosophy at Redlands; Herbert L. Searles, professor of philosophy; and Miss Adler, painter of the portrait, will speak on their impressions of Professor Gomperz. The Argonaut society will serve is appropriate is being added to refreshments following the speak-the Hoose Library of Philosophy, i ers. Rutherford. “Opportunities in County Gov- AlsQ wm ^ ________________ _ eLnnT.LWl11 Tbe dAlscu“ed ,^y R. Shruben, Albert R. Wiegel. and fessor of philosophy and was a fac- i r 1 I A C C f\ r A I nr /~\ n T K I C * waiter J. Yeaton. 'ulty member until his death in L) L A L /xtUrL N J old J. Ostley, Los Angeles city clerk, in a talk to members of the American Society for Public Administrators tomorrow. Baton Waver, Walker, CHET MILAR . . . top dancer Undergraduates are invited to A fs jn Current MOVje join graduate students and faculty members of the School of Public Administration for the address, which will be at 6:30. 318 Student Union. Ostley has been in public administration work since 1936. A ques-tion-and-answer period will follow the talk. — 11942. i When Dr. Gomperez came to this The sale of package-deal tickets 'country he left behind, in Vienna, to senior class members is on the library of philosophy which he again today after an interrup- had been a lifetime in building, tion Friday because of the Stan- Tommy Walker, director of t h e In 1937, the university purchased ford game..... football band, has a part in “Two part of the collection. Seniors may obtain this S7.50 Arrangements were completed to combination today and tomorrow purchase the rest of the library at the booth in front of the Stu- just before Germany confiscated j dent Union or in front of the Flags West,” movie now showing at five local Fox theaters He plays the part of a bugler in the Union army. In one scene. Austrian property of Jewish exiles.! Engineering building. Tickets will Confederate troops help him beat The German government was in- be on sale indefinitely at the off an Indian attack. 'formed that the purchase of thei ticket office on the second floor of the Student Union. The package-deal will give seniors admission to the prom and senior week activities, a year’s subscription to the Alumni Review, and a membership in the General Alumni association. The activities would cost S13.50 if paid for individually. Seniors unable to attend the prom may purchase the ticket for S5.50. |
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