DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 13, October 09, 1956 |
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PAGE TWO
ABC Chart Explains Alphabet Soup
Southern
DAILY
California
TROJAN
PAGE THREE
Navarro Moves Up In DT Picks'
VOL. XLVItl
«072
LOS ANGELES, CALIF., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1956
NO. 13
Football Fans Plan Stylish Trip North
Trojan football fans going north Friday, Oct. 26 for the big Stanford game the next day will be "going modern" if they intend to take the rooters’ train.
The completely streamlined Morning Daylight will be leaving Union Station in Los Angeles at 8:15 and will ----------------- arrive in San Francisco, 480
SupremeCourt Loaded Down With Burdens
miles away, at 6:15 Friday evening. The Southern Pacific Railroad has set up an office on campus in the service building and will be selling tickets up to the last minute to SC students who want to make the trip.
Including tax.
d the anti-trus
L P » — The ?ed today to ?ases includ-of Commun-x>r questions tat us of pro-
Ho
first business ses-■ term, the court judicial history by appeals in a num-including a lone ie of its de-segre-
The court staked out a heavy work load tor its 1956-57 term in a series of brief orders without written opinions. Oral sv^u-menes and decisions of cases accepted for review will be scheduled later.
In major actions, the court:
—Agreed to decide whether congressional investigators may require an ex^Communist to name persons he knew in the past as Communists. The question was raised by John T. Watkins, Rock Island, III., union leader convicted of contempt in a 1954 appearance before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Watkins talked freely about former associates he thought had broken with
—Granted a hearing to Rudolph Schware of Albuquerque, N. M., who was barred from tak.ng the state bar examination because of past Communist Party membership, use of aliases and an arres record. The American Civil Liberties Union said this is the first appeal to reach the high court by an ex-Com-munist lacing loss of license in a profession.
—Denied a hearing to Maurice Braverman. Baltimore, Md., attorney disbarred after conviction of conspiracy to advocate violent overthrow of the government.
—Agreed to decide whether professional football is exempt from anti-trust laws. The court previously exempted professional baseball but held that professional boxing is subject to antitrust laws.
—Refused to hear Virginia's appeal from a low«' federal court decision barring racial segregation in state - operated Seashore Park near Cape Henry, Ya. This was the only segregation appeal action at today’s
round trip ticket to San Francisco costs $19.03. The Morning Daylight will leave from up north Sunday morning at 8:15 and arrive in Los Angeles at 6:15 a.m.
If students don’t want to leave the Friday morning before the game, tickets may be purchased on the Southern Pacific Starlight leaving Los Angeles at 7:45 and arriving up north at 6:45 the next morning. This train may be boarded either Thursday or Friday nights.
Following is the schedule of trains to San Francisco:
1.) Morning Daylight ($19.03) leaves L.A. at 8:15 and arrives at 3rd St. Station in San Francisco at 6:15 p.m.
2.) Starlight ($19.03) leaves L.A. at 7:45 on Thursday and Friday evenings and arrives in San Francisco at 6:45 a.m.
Here is the schedule of trains from San Francisco:
1.) Morning Daylight leaves San Francisco’s 3rd St. Station at 8:15 and arrives at Los Angeles' Union Station, 800 N. Alameda St., at 6:15.
2.) Starlight leaves San Francisco Saturday or Sunday night at 7:45 p.m. and arrives here at 6:45 a.m.
The Trojan band and the Spartan squad have already made arrangements to take the rooters’ train, and R. W. Hydin-ger, who is in charge of the temporary campus oflice for Southern Pacific, said that he is arranging the seating on the train so that the SC group will be in the forward cars.
Lyman E. Graham, city passenger agent for the company, has eight cars for the exclusive use of the university and can provide more space if needed.
Breakfasts will be available on the trip. According to Graham a full braakfast (eggs, bacon, etc.) will cost from $1.25 to $1.85 and a full lunch will cost between $1.15 and $2.30. All kinds of sandwiches will be sold.
A special train will leave from 3rd St. Station in San Francisco to the Stanford campus the day of the game, the last one leaving at 12:15. It will leave Stanford 20 minutes after the gun. The round trip price will be $1.67.
Graham advises students looking for hotel reservations in San Francisco to consult the Yellow Pages of the Los Angeles telephone book under “hotels for travel agents who will help.
RUSSIANS, EGYPT MERGE ON SUEZ CANAL SOLUTION
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y — (UP) — The Soviet Union joined Egypt today in proposing that the United Nations Security Council set up a Negotiating Committee to seek a sc.’ution to the Suez Canal crisis.
Soviet Foreign Minister Dmitri T. Shepilov, making his most important public appearance since he relieved Vyacheslav M. Molotov last summer, said the council should appoint a committee of perhaps eight countries to work out a treaty guaranteeing freedcm of passage through the canal to replace the 1888 Constantinople convention. The new treaty eventually would be submitted to a meeting of all Users of the canal.
At the end of today's meeting, the council had heard the views of all its members except Yugoslavia and the United States, both of which were scheduled to speak tomorrow morning. Council President Christian Pineau of France announced that the council would hold Its first secret meeting on the Suez crisis at 4 p.m., EDT, tomorrow.
Both Shepilov and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi offered principles which should govern the discussions of the negotiating group
The proposal, submitted separately and informally by the two foreign ministers, appeared to approach the position held by the United States that “negotiot-ing machinery” should be set up and that he chief aim of the current Security Council debate should be to determine whether a basis for negotiation exists.
But Shepilov and Fawzi spe.Ued out preconditions for such negotiation that might wreck any chance of Western acceptance.
American sources said the U.S. position toward the Soviet-Egvptian proposal would be spelled out when Secretary of State John Foster Dulles addresses the council tomorrow.
A French delegation spokesman said there were some points in Fawzi’s speech indicating a basis for negotiation but that Shepilov’s address was “so adamant we wonder where it can lead.”
Both Fawzi and Shepilov struck a popular note with the packed public gallery. There was applause at the end of their speeches this morning. Council President Christian Pineau of France warned at the outset of the afternoon meeting that he would clear the ha.’l if there was any further demonstration.
Shepilov, conscious of the six foreign ministers— all hi^ senior—watching him, spoke slowly and deliberately in his rolling bass voice. He started pleasantly enough, then launched into a denunciation of Britain, France and the United States
Britain and France, he said, replying to worldwide public demand for a peaceful settlement of the Suez crisis, said in effect:
Senators, Faculty Prepared For idyllwild Discussions
Dickinson Poems Heard at Reading
In the period of the early 1860’s she fell in love with Rev. Charles Wadsworth of Philadel-
By K«‘n Mondshine
The poetry of Emily Dickinson. which is closely correlated
with her calm and quiet life in . . .
^ , , , • phia who influenced her to write
New England during the late | ‘
19th century, was discussed yes- ' many romantic poems, terday by Dr. Bruce R. McEl- , Spirited Writer
derry Jr. in the second weekly j Miss Dickinson had several English department Noon Read-
ing.
“Many consider Emily Dickinson as one of the principal narrative poets of present day and the 19th century,” he said.
Miss Dickinson had the ability to write about the souls and emotions of the country people
run-ins with her publishers. She once wrote to Publisher Colonel Higgins:
“A word is dead When it is said,
Some say
Begins to live that day” Another poem she dedicated
around her and every day occur- to Col. Higgins begins, “I’m no-rences that happened to her, Dr. j body, Who are you?”
McElderrv said.
Takes Notes She differed from many other poets since she noted everything ! small volumes she saw and felt. An example ! were published of this is an untitled poem she j wrote in 1856:
“To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee A clover and a bee and revery The revery alone will do if bees are few”
One of the many subjects she ■ wrote about was bees. Bees to j
More than 1000 brief lyrics were found in Emily Dickinson’s bureau after she died. Three and selections 10 years after she died in 1896. when people began to recognize her talent. Three more installments of poetry appeared in 1914, 1929 and 1938. Dr. MdElderry said.
New Edition Last year Thomas Johnson compiled all her poems in a three volume book. AlLthe selections read at yesterday's
hpr- were symbolic of happiness and contentment. This feeling is shown in a poem written in 1873:
“The pedigree of Hay Does not concern the Bee A clover to him Is Aristocracy”
readings were taken from thig edition.
Next Monday the English department’s Noon Reading will be presented by Dr. William D. Templeman of the English department on Great Literary Letters.
ANSWER EXPECTED
Adlais
Target
Manners
Of TYR
By Joe Nevens There is a first time for everything.
This theory is being practiced by the Trojan Young
LOU SCARBOROUGH
... to attend
McKeon Starts Death March' Brig Sentence
PARRIS ISLAND. S. C. <UP)
; —Pvt. Matthew C. McKeon, stripped of his sergeant's stripes, walked without escort to the brig today to finish a three-! months sentence for the April 8 “Death March.”
I With time off for good beha-! vior, rtcKeon will actually have I to serve only 13 days, becoming 1 eligible for release Oct. 21. The Bv Pat Moffat : sentence runs from Aug. 4, the
“Sea-Scroll Madness” by Dr. Ralph Tyler Flewelling day he was comicted by gen is the first of several articles on Philosophy, Religion and Literature that will be found in the autumn issue of “The Personalist.”
The quarterly publication, published by the School
\ of Philosophy and edited by Dr. j III
j Ralph Flewelling, founder of the. [jyp F* I OO K i School of Philosophy, is consid-
Philosophy Professor Writes on Sea Scrolls
Republicans by contributing to the opposition’s campaign, ered by many to be one of the
The actions of the TYR are not expected to create best in its field. L^OI wD It IO I
Schedule
Mutiny On Campus As Rehearsals Start
expected
dissension in Republican ranks, but stout fellows that
they are, they have given their < all for the cause.
Saturday morn, TYR mailed a parcel to Democratic Nation- 1 al Headquarters in Washington, j D. C. This contribution contain-ed a copy of Betty Betz's 150 page book on teen-age manners,
“Your Manners Are Showing.”
The rascally and devilish TYR men have intended it as a gift for the Democratic candidate for president, Adlai Stevenson.
Inspiration for this generous gift by local politicos of Republican shadings was due to a mass mob reaction expressed at another institution of higher learning.
Dr. Flewelling has been on the SC faculty since 1917 when he was a professor in the
Philosophy School. Largely The shooting schedule of El
through his efforts, the School pt0deo portraits is continuing at j its
of Philosophy was founded in a id paC6i Chuck Swan, El 1929, and Dr. Flewelling was RodeQ ^ member reported
Hodge Doesn t Know Why He Took a Million
CHICAGO —(UP)— Ex-State Auditor Orville E. Hodge, a shabby figure in prison clothes I and prison haircut, told a Senate Committee today he can’t ! founded in 1920, and although appear in the yearoook, said
appointed its director, a post which he held until his retirement in 1945. At that time he was awarded the honorary degree of director emeritus.
Prolific Author Since his retirement Dr. Flewelling has devoted most of his time to the editorship of ‘The Personalist” which he
today, and a few students are forgetting their appointments.
“Broken appointments mean no pictures in El Rodeo,” Swan added. Pictures of professional organization and club members must be taken at the scheduled time or their portraits will not
Session to Combine Fun
With Work for Weekend
By Joe Jares
On the premise that the smog-free and serene atmosphere of the San Bernardino Mountains is a better
place to solve problems than the SC Senate chambers, the fourth annual Idyllwild Conference will be held there
Saturday and Sunday.
SC's voting and non-voting Senators and a group of faculty members and administrators will try to unravel some of the university's serious problems at the conference, which is financed by the university.
“Actually, there is a dual purpose at this conference.” said Lou Scarbrough, chairman of the project. “One is to verbalize SC's problems and do our best to find the solutions. Secondly, we want to get acquainted with each other so we may be a more unified, coordinated body.” Starts Saturday The conference officially starts at 2:30 Saturday afternoon, giving the students and teachers plenty of time to make the trip. Transportation will be provided by the faculty members and administrators.
As in the past three Idyllwild conferences, the first meeting Saturday afternoon will be for the purpose of deciding what problems should be discussed.
The group purposely avoids planning an agenda before getting to the conference in order to make the thinking more spontaneous and applicable to the important problems of th? university.
Broken Sessions The Saturday evening ana Sunday afternoon sessions wiil be broken up into four panels to facilitate easier exchange of ideas.
Panel members will include Dr. Paul Hadley, director of the LAS advisement office: Dr.
John Gerletti. public administration; Dr. Totton J. Anderson, political science; Dr. Robert Gordon, counselor of men; Clinton A. Neyman, acting dean of students and chaplain: Carl
Terzian, Mary Laird, Vi Jameson. Jack Casey and Greg Taylor.
Some Play
“Idyllwild is anything but all work and no play,” said Miss Scarbrough. Recreational facilities at the conference will include horseback riding, table tennis, volley ball, bowling, and billiards. In addition, the Senators, faculty members and administrators will spend time ‘•just getting to know each
eral court martial, to Nov. 4. but the former drill instructor is entitled to five days off per monthor 15 days total—for good behavior.
All toi;. including seven weeks before his trial, McKeon will have spent nine weeks behind bars when released.
For seven weeks after the fateful night when he led his 74-man recruit platoon on a march to Ribbon Creek to teach the men discipline. McKecv was locked up. The platoon, most of members teen-agers, panicked in the dark water and six of the rookies drowned.
Navy Secretary Charles Thomas, who ordered McKeon freed from the brig several weeks before his trial, which began July 16, last week sharply reduced other.”
explain why he embezzled $1 million of tne slate's money.
He denied that racketeers,
Preparations for the Drama Dept.’s presentation of “The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial” shifted into high gear today with the beginning of daily afternoon rehearsals. The two act tragedy will take place in Bovard Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 30. 31 and Nov. 1, 2. 3.
Dr. Herbert M. Stahl will direct Herman Wouk's adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize winning novel, ‘The Caine Mutiny.” The drama centers about the court martial proceedings against a young, upright lieutenant who relieved his captain of command in the midst of a harrowing typhoon on the grounds that the captain was psychopathic in the crisis, and was directing the ship and its crew to its destruction.
The odds and naval tradition are against the lieutenant. But as the witnesses and experts, some serious, some unwittingh comic, cross the scene of the trial, the weakness in the character of the captain is slowly revealed in a devastating picture of disintegration.
The New York Herald Tribune hailed "The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial” tragedy as presenting “one of the most naked revelations of character to have stunned Broadway in years.”
Members of the SC cast are: P.-iiil Cumi. Lt. Stephen Maryk; Max Huher. Lt. Barnev Green-
Stevenson made an appear- , ...
ance at Yale University last Fri- | Pther _Pol^1Cia^_^r “y°n* day. When he stepped outside, he was greeted by the crowd
wald; Janipj John Challe
'ondon, Lt. Com. Tony Ellsworth,
DR. HERBERT STAHL
. . . director
Captain Blakely: Vie Heyden, Lt. Com. Philip Francis Queeg; Bill Kenn, Lt. Thomas Keefer.
More players are: Eric Erickson. Signalman 3rd Class; Julius Urban; Ken Smith, Lt. J.G. Willis Seward Keith: Ed Mastin, Capt. Randolph Southard; Chris Lofting, Dr. Forrest Lundeen; Harry Blackstone, Doctor Bird.
Also in the cast are Gordon Campbell. Stenographer; George Shoemate, Ordeily; John Har-bo, Dick Johnson. Jim Jacobs, Clide Fornam, Rich Ericson and Paul Lyons as the six members of the court.
enchanting, “We Want Ike.” “Your manners are terrible,” said Gov. Stevenson.
The reaction of Trojan YR to the Yale incident has been summed up by Art Snyder, executive director of the club.
He stated, “We have been watching Stevenson throughout his campaign, and have concluded that if anyone needs a lesson in manners, it is the Democratic candidate. His continual policy of playing with the facts of the economic situation and the record of the Eisenhower administration shows that he. more than any teen-ager, would benefit from this book.”
“We’re looking forward to the Democrat candidate’s reply,” added the TYR director.
inspired the scheme to loot the state treasury through a flood of phony checks.
He gave the same explanation he had offered before for the massive embezzlement that sent him to jail—“I suppose it was temporory insanity."
“I had no pressing need for that money, no political obligations and I didn’t owe anyone,” the one-time “wonder boy’ of Republican state politics said plaintively.
Hodge was a tired, protesting shadow of the glad-handing politician of a few months ago as he testified before the opening session of Senate Banking and Currency Committee hearings on his embezzlement.
He complained "my stomach is turning round and round” under the pressure 01 questions from Committee Chairman J.
he is now eighty-five years old, gwan.
Dr. Flewelling has just com- v.lieck pull.over sweaters with 1 pleted his 12th book, Winds of 1 „
I Hiroshima.” ; white shirts °Pen at the Collar
Other articles in the autumn are t^ie ProPer "ear for men,
! edition of the "Personalist” in- ' while women are asked to wear ! elude “The Pivotal Point of pull-over sweaters with round ! Idealism” by Prof. D. Luther neckiines_
| Evans of the Philosophy School, ' 0 . * , 'fn.
. c.. . TT „ .. , „ A charge of $<J is made for
Ohio State University, and a _
I verse, “Evergreens,” by Mrs. each portrait. Students are le-Dora M. Pettinella of New quested to pay the $2 at the York. j time the portrait is taken.
Apology for Agnosticism Slated to face the camera this
“Apologia pro vita sua is week are Alpha Gamma Delta, the autobiography of the late , DU• A1
B. A. G. Fuller. Prior to his AIPha Del,a Pl- Alpha Phl- AN death in Taxco, Mexico, in j pha Kappa Alpha. Mu Phi Epsi-March, 1956, Dr. Fuller was a Ion and Alpha Lambda Delta. Professor in the SC School of Appointments for portraits Philosophy. must be made at the Photo
This article is .more or less Shop adjacent to the Post Of-an apology for hifc agnosticism, fice.
somewhat modified by his sense Professional organizations and of humor. Dr. Fuller also wrote , ciUbs which did not appear in
the punishment handed the 31-year-old Korean combat veteran by the court.
He was found guilty of negligent homicide and drinking in a barracks housing single enlisted men: but was acquitted of manslaughter. oppression of troops and drinking in the presence of a recruit.
He was sentenced to nine months at hard labor, and a bad conduct discharge, reduction to private and $270 fine.
Thomas, acting as convening authority, threw out the bad conduct discharge and fine, and , cut the prison term to three 1
In the past such questions as “How can we improve the academic environment at SC?” and “What can associated students do to create a group feeling at SC?” have been batted back and forth.
Other Items
Other items discussed have been academic integrity and the problem of how to get SC, largely a school of commuters, molded into a more unified group.
•Miss Scarbrough believes this year's Idyllwild Conference will be the most productive yet. “The freer atmosphere and the
months. He left standing the. more relaxed surroundings make
order reducing McKeon to private.
From the time of his release until the trial, and since his conviction while awaiting review of the sentence, McKeon has been in a status of “restriction in lieu of confinement.”
for a wonderful group feeling,” she said. “The group doesn't separate into factions.”
The problem solving and fellowship will end Sunday at 2:30 p.m. when the group will leave the mountains and return to Los Angeles.
Touche! Now, all wait with William Fulbright and he baited breath for a counter- ! begged that television cameras move from the opposite end of in the hearing room be turned the gallery. Trojans, man your j away from him.
Fulbright shielded Hodge from the TV cameras. But he hammered hard at Hodge’s recipe on how to steal $1 million, his alleged underworld friends, and his dabbling in bank reorganizations during his three-and-a-half year regime as auditor.
Hodge gave a sketchv account of how his chief aide, Edward A. Epping, helped prepare at least worth of fraudulent
the most popular contemporary texts on “The History of Philosophy.”
the 1956 edition of El Rodeo and desire to reserve space in the 1957 copy must contact the Or-
Brown Calls Good Habits Key to Study Problems
poison-pens and start slugging.
Sponsor Lauds Conservation Bill
SANTA BARBARA. Calif.—
(UP(—Charles S. Jones, cosponsor of a controversial oil conservation act on the November ballot, today said if the $600,000
The article “Typee and ganization Editor at 326 SU be-
Blithedale” is the contribution fore Saturday any day between
of Miss Lillian Beatty, assistant :--------------------------------------------
professor of English at La Sierra College, Arlington, California. In her article Miss Beatty discusses the efforts of Hawthorne and Melville to meet the j challenge of modern civilization j in the Utopian life of the “noble savage.”
Editor Names Grill SCellar'
The second in a series of October Study Lectures was given last night by Dr. Charles Brown on “How to Read and Stay Awake.” This series of lectures will continue all through Octo-! ber Monday nights at 7 in Bovard and is open to everyone.
“Good students don’t study Trojan anymore than poor students.
It was unanimous.
SCellar” is the name of the new They just use their time more grill in the basement of Aenas efficiently,’ Dr. Brown said. He dition can either hinder or im
of the subject being studied and ability to analyze words.
The mental and psychological aspects of study are also important. Dr. Brown said. He noted that freedom from worry is an absolute must if a person is going to put forth his best. “But if you have to worry, worry effectively,” he said.
"The student's physical con-
proposition fails there will never be a sound conservation law in California.
vouchers (state checks) and they were cashed at the South-
I liioor Bank and Trust Co. here, j and new knowledge of the past.
“The Personalist” concludes Hall. The name was accepted a|so pointed out how to “worry
unanimously by the judges from effectively.”
114 entries. j According to Dr. Brown there
The winner is Sig Ep Jerry i are many aspects to a good
Madera, who put his originality | study environment. A student’s
to work last year as editor of ; skills and background aid him
SCampus. Madera is now serv- to read and study effectively, ing as rally chairman of the Included among these are his Knights. 1 experience, vocabulary, jargon
its feature articles with "The History of Historiography” by Dr. T. Foster Lindley of the University of Connecticut, a description of the advances made in the writing of history through improvement in writing tools
prove his ability to assimilate knowledge, according to Dr. Brown.
One thought developed during the lecture was that once the student has obtained the perfect study environment, he must have a desire to learn and* he must know how to study.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 13, October 09, 1956 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 13, October 09, 1956. |
| Full text |
PAGE TWO ABC Chart Explains Alphabet Soup Southern DAILY California TROJAN PAGE THREE Navarro Moves Up In DT Picks' VOL. XLVItl «072 LOS ANGELES, CALIF., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1956 NO. 13 Football Fans Plan Stylish Trip North Trojan football fans going north Friday, Oct. 26 for the big Stanford game the next day will be "going modern" if they intend to take the rooters’ train. The completely streamlined Morning Daylight will be leaving Union Station in Los Angeles at 8:15 and will ----------------- arrive in San Francisco, 480 SupremeCourt Loaded Down With Burdens miles away, at 6:15 Friday evening. The Southern Pacific Railroad has set up an office on campus in the service building and will be selling tickets up to the last minute to SC students who want to make the trip. Including tax. d the anti-trus L P » — The ?ed today to ?ases includ-of Commun-x>r questions tat us of pro- Ho first business ses-■ term, the court judicial history by appeals in a num-including a lone ie of its de-segre- The court staked out a heavy work load tor its 1956-57 term in a series of brief orders without written opinions. Oral sv^u-menes and decisions of cases accepted for review will be scheduled later. In major actions, the court: —Agreed to decide whether congressional investigators may require an ex^Communist to name persons he knew in the past as Communists. The question was raised by John T. Watkins, Rock Island, III., union leader convicted of contempt in a 1954 appearance before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Watkins talked freely about former associates he thought had broken with —Granted a hearing to Rudolph Schware of Albuquerque, N. M., who was barred from tak.ng the state bar examination because of past Communist Party membership, use of aliases and an arres record. The American Civil Liberties Union said this is the first appeal to reach the high court by an ex-Com-munist lacing loss of license in a profession. —Denied a hearing to Maurice Braverman. Baltimore, Md., attorney disbarred after conviction of conspiracy to advocate violent overthrow of the government. —Agreed to decide whether professional football is exempt from anti-trust laws. The court previously exempted professional baseball but held that professional boxing is subject to antitrust laws. —Refused to hear Virginia's appeal from a low«' federal court decision barring racial segregation in state - operated Seashore Park near Cape Henry, Ya. This was the only segregation appeal action at today’s round trip ticket to San Francisco costs $19.03. The Morning Daylight will leave from up north Sunday morning at 8:15 and arrive in Los Angeles at 6:15 a.m. If students don’t want to leave the Friday morning before the game, tickets may be purchased on the Southern Pacific Starlight leaving Los Angeles at 7:45 and arriving up north at 6:45 the next morning. This train may be boarded either Thursday or Friday nights. Following is the schedule of trains to San Francisco: 1.) Morning Daylight ($19.03) leaves L.A. at 8:15 and arrives at 3rd St. Station in San Francisco at 6:15 p.m. 2.) Starlight ($19.03) leaves L.A. at 7:45 on Thursday and Friday evenings and arrives in San Francisco at 6:45 a.m. Here is the schedule of trains from San Francisco: 1.) Morning Daylight leaves San Francisco’s 3rd St. Station at 8:15 and arrives at Los Angeles' Union Station, 800 N. Alameda St., at 6:15. 2.) Starlight leaves San Francisco Saturday or Sunday night at 7:45 p.m. and arrives here at 6:45 a.m. The Trojan band and the Spartan squad have already made arrangements to take the rooters’ train, and R. W. Hydin-ger, who is in charge of the temporary campus oflice for Southern Pacific, said that he is arranging the seating on the train so that the SC group will be in the forward cars. Lyman E. Graham, city passenger agent for the company, has eight cars for the exclusive use of the university and can provide more space if needed. Breakfasts will be available on the trip. According to Graham a full braakfast (eggs, bacon, etc.) will cost from $1.25 to $1.85 and a full lunch will cost between $1.15 and $2.30. All kinds of sandwiches will be sold. A special train will leave from 3rd St. Station in San Francisco to the Stanford campus the day of the game, the last one leaving at 12:15. It will leave Stanford 20 minutes after the gun. The round trip price will be $1.67. Graham advises students looking for hotel reservations in San Francisco to consult the Yellow Pages of the Los Angeles telephone book under “hotels for travel agents who will help. RUSSIANS, EGYPT MERGE ON SUEZ CANAL SOLUTION UNITED NATIONS, N. Y — (UP) — The Soviet Union joined Egypt today in proposing that the United Nations Security Council set up a Negotiating Committee to seek a sc.’ution to the Suez Canal crisis. Soviet Foreign Minister Dmitri T. Shepilov, making his most important public appearance since he relieved Vyacheslav M. Molotov last summer, said the council should appoint a committee of perhaps eight countries to work out a treaty guaranteeing freedcm of passage through the canal to replace the 1888 Constantinople convention. The new treaty eventually would be submitted to a meeting of all Users of the canal. At the end of today's meeting, the council had heard the views of all its members except Yugoslavia and the United States, both of which were scheduled to speak tomorrow morning. Council President Christian Pineau of France announced that the council would hold Its first secret meeting on the Suez crisis at 4 p.m., EDT, tomorrow. Both Shepilov and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi offered principles which should govern the discussions of the negotiating group The proposal, submitted separately and informally by the two foreign ministers, appeared to approach the position held by the United States that “negotiot-ing machinery” should be set up and that he chief aim of the current Security Council debate should be to determine whether a basis for negotiation exists. But Shepilov and Fawzi spe.Ued out preconditions for such negotiation that might wreck any chance of Western acceptance. American sources said the U.S. position toward the Soviet-Egvptian proposal would be spelled out when Secretary of State John Foster Dulles addresses the council tomorrow. A French delegation spokesman said there were some points in Fawzi’s speech indicating a basis for negotiation but that Shepilov’s address was “so adamant we wonder where it can lead.” Both Fawzi and Shepilov struck a popular note with the packed public gallery. There was applause at the end of their speeches this morning. Council President Christian Pineau of France warned at the outset of the afternoon meeting that he would clear the ha.’l if there was any further demonstration. Shepilov, conscious of the six foreign ministers— all hi^ senior—watching him, spoke slowly and deliberately in his rolling bass voice. He started pleasantly enough, then launched into a denunciation of Britain, France and the United States Britain and France, he said, replying to worldwide public demand for a peaceful settlement of the Suez crisis, said in effect: Senators, Faculty Prepared For idyllwild Discussions Dickinson Poems Heard at Reading In the period of the early 1860’s she fell in love with Rev. Charles Wadsworth of Philadel- By K«‘n Mondshine The poetry of Emily Dickinson. which is closely correlated with her calm and quiet life in . . . ^ , , , • phia who influenced her to write New England during the late ‘ 19th century, was discussed yes- ' many romantic poems, terday by Dr. Bruce R. McEl- , Spirited Writer derry Jr. in the second weekly j Miss Dickinson had several English department Noon Read- ing. “Many consider Emily Dickinson as one of the principal narrative poets of present day and the 19th century,” he said. Miss Dickinson had the ability to write about the souls and emotions of the country people run-ins with her publishers. She once wrote to Publisher Colonel Higgins: “A word is dead When it is said, Some say Begins to live that day” Another poem she dedicated around her and every day occur- to Col. Higgins begins, “I’m no-rences that happened to her, Dr. j body, Who are you?” McElderrv said. Takes Notes She differed from many other poets since she noted everything ! small volumes she saw and felt. An example ! were published of this is an untitled poem she j wrote in 1856: “To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee A clover and a bee and revery The revery alone will do if bees are few” One of the many subjects she ■ wrote about was bees. Bees to j More than 1000 brief lyrics were found in Emily Dickinson’s bureau after she died. Three and selections 10 years after she died in 1896. when people began to recognize her talent. Three more installments of poetry appeared in 1914, 1929 and 1938. Dr. MdElderry said. New Edition Last year Thomas Johnson compiled all her poems in a three volume book. AlLthe selections read at yesterday's hpr- were symbolic of happiness and contentment. This feeling is shown in a poem written in 1873: “The pedigree of Hay Does not concern the Bee A clover to him Is Aristocracy” readings were taken from thig edition. Next Monday the English department’s Noon Reading will be presented by Dr. William D. Templeman of the English department on Great Literary Letters. ANSWER EXPECTED Adlais Target Manners Of TYR By Joe Nevens There is a first time for everything. This theory is being practiced by the Trojan Young LOU SCARBOROUGH ... to attend McKeon Starts Death March' Brig Sentence PARRIS ISLAND. S. C. |
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