DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 77, February 20, 1957 |
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PAGE THREE
Ernie Pinckert Makes Football Shrine
Southern
DAILY
California
TROJAN
PAGE TWO
Daytime Radio, TV Proves Delightful
VOL. XLVIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1957
NO. 77
Handicapped
xhibit Art. Craft
HELD ON SUSPICION
Students Lose Wits; Lost and Found Grows
The old saw about absent-minded professors seems to apply to SC students too.
Since September the lost and
____, , , , . found department has accumu-
star now attending SC on a football scholarship, was Jated such odd i(ems as. ,w0
arrested at 3:20 a.m. yesterday morning by Los Angeles weddinK rjnCrSt a tooth brush, a
Police officers on suspicion of participating in a series of bab> bottle, four slide rules, 15
San Fernando Valley armed robberies.______! coaXs a pipe and a Chinese
Booked on suspicion bv Yal-
uth.
Trojan Freshman Arrested by Police
By DAVID C. HENLEY
Gordon Hjelmstrom. 18, a former All-City
football
lev Di
sion de'eclives. w no pn investigating five •ommitted in the Yai-■en .July and December year. Hjelmstrom ad-irticipating in the roo at ing. “I don't kno»v illed the crimes ... 1 k I wanted to aci
rested by the Los An-;*ers Monday night a.iu ;terday morning wcie. Wood. 20: James S. I in. 27: and Staniev 26. Wood and Em-are employees of a I fender repair shof. ’rman is a swimming contractor-
Husky Ciuarcl
rum. a 205-pound guard ? described by his being “quiet . . . un . . . never a trouble-onfessed to the ValJc,, his participation in the aiter the detectives thev found two .45
The lour youths told officers and reporters they used the two weapons during the holdups. were usually masked and operated in “different pairs on
Formed Gang
They further stated they got together and formed their “gang” at a Panorama City pool hall and bowling alley.
The investigating officers said the robl>ery series began Iasi July 13 when the Hub Liquor store in Pacoima was robbed of $1600. From then until De cember. three other armed hold-
have b<
holdu ips
ley h et w 3 ^4
mine d p
why I P
just t hi
tough
Als o a
rpJfM,;
early
Chari Ies
Emm Sh^rr
mem
body
w hi le SI
pool sub
H.i<
who vv;
frienc
make
office rs 1
rob be i ies
told him
calibf1 r a
loom of
onsidered by many tc be an “outstanding” Trojaii football prospect, enrolled at SC only two weeks ago after being graduated from Van Nuys
High School. He plaved for the , , _
Van Nuys High football team Pa,rs of eyeglasses, assorted
in 1955 and 1956 and made both
back-scratcher.
Other unclaimed items currently on the shelves of the lost and found department include six watches. 10 sweaters, jive umbrellas, dozens of books, 11
All-City and All-Valley teams both years.
Hjelmstrom was not connected with any social fraternity at SC hut has been in the process of rushing several houses, the DT learned.
pens, five purses, several pairs 1 of gloves, many hats and a set of false teeth.
Cautions Students Carlcton H. Mann, director of the information center on campus and head of the lost and found, cautioned SC students to place their names and addresses on all their possessions.
“We have absolutely no way of returning these articles to their owners without this,” Mann said. “The only thing we can go on is the owner's description of what he has lost.” Held Si\ Months Mann holds all unclaimed articles for six months. If they are not claimed by that time, they are turned over to the YWCA for sale at its semester bazaar.
The YWCA also sells the unclaimed books at the first of each semester. The proceeds of these sales go into the YWCA treasury.
Lost items can be claimed at the information center at the
Sunday Showing
Planned to Give Varied Displays
The Handicapped Placement Center will present its third annual Sweetheart Hour Sunday evening at the YWCA from 4 to 7.
Sponsored by the Womens Auxiliary to the Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association of Southern California. the event will feature
Brass OK s Army Proposal
the arts and crafts of the physically disabled and cite the “Handicapped of the Year.”
It is open to any handicapped student, as well as those from the Placement Center.
Based on outstanding contri-
ARTS BY HANDICAPPED—Artist Adolph Chavoya (I.) found himself surrounded by a group of admirers when he showed one of his paintings which will become part of the arts and crafts display to be shown at
the annual Sweetheart Hour Sunday. Onlookers (l-r) are Mrs. Calvin Edwards, Clarence Cooke, Mrs. Curtis G. Carr, Mrs. Robert Woods and Mrs. Horace Mays.
Photo by Earl Thielen, Jr.
WASHINGTON — (UP) —
Two National Guard generals broke ranks yesterday and I butions to the community, the strongly endorsed the Army's Medical Auxiliary selects the .order requiring six months ac- j ‘Handicapped of the Year in tive duty for all guard recruits, j order to entourage those who Thev told a House Armed are physically impaired to think Services Subcommittee that the j of others aside from themselves, substitute guard proposal for 11- Art Work
weeks training for recruits 17 i Adolph Chavoya, originally to 18*2 years old was “absolute- from Mexico, will exhibit his art ly inadequate. work. Entered by the Handi-
Their testimony marked the capped Placement Center, Cha-first break in the guard's opposi- voya has studied at Art Instruc-I tion to the Army regulation, ef- i tion Inc. in Minneapolis and is I fective Apr. 1, that all guard I now attending Santa Monica recruits take six months active City College, training. j According to Chairman Rich-
Maj. Gen. Roy A. Green, of ard j# Peckron, the Placement Sacramento, Calif., commander | Center's most important per-
GORDON HJELMSTROM
. . . freshman arrested
Breakfast Club To Hear Trojans
Safety Film To Be Shown
A color film on SC’s a' iatior. corner of University and 15th I safety program, which has been PI- ! filmed entirely at the univer-
sity, will be premiered at the
Korea Hires Journalists
sity, wil Faculty Club luncheon today at | 11:50 am. in the main dining room of Commons.
THE TERZIAN ERA
Host Committee, First Nighter Plans Mired
of the 49th National Guard Division, said he actually would favor eight months to a year of
formance is placement. It is a welfare agency designed exclusively to aid the physically han-
active duty for guardsmen, if dicapped in seeking a suitable
job.
“Selective placement of a handicapped person requires individualized and coordinated professional service s.” Peckron said. “To be rehabilitated, a
be
“again go into combat pared.”
unpre-
Six prominent Trojans will js uete committed which not- take part todav in the prograiii
of the Los Angeles Breakfast Club.
Chancellor Rufus B. von KIeinSmid will speak, as win Coach Don Clark and Athletic Director Bill Hunter.
Hosts will be Newton E. Anderson, law alumnus; and Dr. Holland E. Shirley, a physician
They are Steven A. Nager, 28. and Edw^ard A. Neiian, 24.
Nager graduated in 1951 and Neiian in 1954.
Both were Daily Trojan staff
ted tlie thieves about S2000, otficers asserted.
Hjelmstrom, av*akened tms morning in his apartment at 963 W. 30th St., moved into tne flat only Monday, the Daily Trojan learned yesterday. AL%u sharing the rooms with Hjelm-strom were two other SC students They have not l>een in- from the School of Medicine, members and members of Sigma volved in the robberies, how- Michael Marsman, Trojan Pass-1 Delta Chi, national journalism ever. baritone, will giva solo selec- iionorarv fraternity, and both
The lS-vear-old, blond-haired tions. I have served in the Army.
Coach Clark to Address First Yell Leader Class
Mr. Louis Kaplan, director of the Aviation Safety Division at Two School of Journalism j SC, will present the film along graduates have been named as j with a speech which will “prob-
consultants to the Office of , , , .. . . . ______,
... , . T .. _ ... , ablv be the shortest speech on
Public Intormation, Republic of
Korea, it was announced yesterday by Chang Whan Kirn,
Korean Vice Consul in Los Angeles.
By LEE Be DEI.L them for their performances in ; as follows: March 6, 13, 20 and
Clark, newly appoint front of the selection board April 27: April 3 and 10.
h(
!4.
Th<
thf
Wr
I football coach, will be suest ker at the first meeting of cheer leading school cheerleading nesday. Feb. 27, in 335 FH from 3:45-to 5.
The school was formed to acquaint potential cheer leade r with the different phases of cheerleading and to nrepare
applicant
movements.
songs and veils and will be ori- * average. No applications are j <nted bv present Yell King Dann necessary but those students in- I Angeloff.
The eight meetings which constitute the program beginning one with Feb. 27 meeting, wiil run
Editor’s note: In today’s article, the third of a series hy the Daily Trojan evaluating the Terzian administration and the work of the 1956-57 ASSC Senate, the DT reviews the third portion of a list of accomplishments released recently by the president.
Shortly after ASSC President Carl Terzian assumed record" according to Mr. Kap- j office last year, he announced that his administration lan, because the film lasts 26 would witness a series of innovations and experiments minutes and his allotted time never before attempted by student government at SC. is a half hour; thereby leaving I Trojan Host Committee
four minutes for his talk. I .. . , .
One of tnese programs called for the formation of a
The film, entitled “No Mar- Trojan Host Committee to greet visiting athletic teams gin for Error, ’ uses onlv cam- an(j celebrities. The group is composed of seniors, with pus actors with the exception ASSC Vice President Vi jameSon at the helm, of Clete Roberts, who narrates j
throughout. Basically, the idea is a sound one. Other universities
The relationship of the avia- j have similar programs, and they lend an air of hospitality tion safety program at SC to and congeniality to the students of a campus.
the accident prevention efiort I Trojan Host Committee however, got off to a very of aviation services w’lll be ja^e sj-arj. shown in the movie. 1 * ' .
By the time the committee was formed and operating,
SC was ready to tackle Notre Dame for the last football game of the season.
Consequently, the Fighting Irish became the first team scheduled to receive a taste of Trojan hospitality.
After elaborate plans, Miss Jameson reported at a Senate meeting that the visitors were to be met, as they stepped off the airplane, with, literally, a red carpet donated by a local entrepreneur, a couple of cases of California oranges, and, among others, Homecoming Queen Cynthia Dixon.
Unfortunately, the Notie Dame squad arrived an hour
terested must attend the first I With a program scheduled as early, foiling the committee’s plans, and causing the
ti V i 4 hicr mmp thp Annual SrouP to detour from the airport to the hotel where the
meeting end miss no more tnai> big as its name, the Annual ° ^
of the remaining seven Meeting of the Western Polit- team was to stay.
such a program could be worked out.
His views were endorsed by Maj. Gen. John W. Guerard, of Fresno, Calif., who recently retired as commander of the 49th’s artillery. He said he did not i
want to see American soldiers ; h3rKiic ipp person mu>t
able to work at a job successfully and be able to renew his mental courage,” Peckron continued.
Member of Board
Edward Brown, member of the Center's Board of Directors and himself a handicapped person. will be in charge of the art exhibit. Any handicapped person interested in entering his handicrafts in the exhibit should contact the Placement Center at AXminister 5-3121 any time this week.
“Everyone is cordially invited to attend the exhibit and view the work of the handicapped,” Peckron said.
Official
Notice
Because of the large number of seniors who have not yet been photographed for the senior section of El Rodeo, the date for having these pictures taken has been extended through Friday, March 8. it was announced by Photo Editor Chuck Swan.
The previous deadline was March 1.
SCs aviation training course is the only one in the world of its kind and reliable sources have reported that the program is saving our government n.ii-lions of dollars.
AMS Head Miffed by Article; Denounces Neglect Charges
Those interested must have will learn completed 28 units and main-£C tained not less than a 2.0 grade
UCLA Scene Of Meeting
meetings.
ical Science Association and the
A new method has been devised in the election of the Yell King. In the past, those running for Yell King in the general election were not required to attend the cheer leading school and could run for the position with no previous experience or training.
Will Be Picked
Under the new system, five cheerleaders will be picked from
faculty members will be in on the activities.
When the committeee members arrived at the hotel, American Society for Public however, they were informed bv the manager that the Adm,lustration will converge on practice.
UCLA tomorrow and two SC i ^ J ^
Nothing more was possible, so the group left the oranges as a token of welcome and departed. Since then, Dr. Carl Q. Christol and Dr. no more has been done.
Lowell G. Noonan of the 1 o- committee has been on the verge of disbanding
ntte.1 Science department wij ,atel One of the major reasons for this is that its mem-
be commentators m two of (he ,____. .. , ,J.. . .. . .
many discussion groups that bers were 111 the hablt of representing themselves at its will'take place during the tinee meetings by proxies, and this has tended to drag the day meet. ^ group’s constructive work.
Dr. Noonan will be in the A meeting, however, is pending between Terzian and the cheerleading school by the group that will discuss political committee members to reach a final decision on whether selection board. All five, and j theory, Friday morning at 9:45 or not the program will survive.
only these five, will run for the while Dr. Christol will discuss j Not an innovation by Terzian, but one of his cam-position of Yell King in the gen- Politics and Natural Resources, paign planks is the creation of a Reception Committee
eral election. Policy Saturday morning at
Next year's Yell King will be 9:45.
elected and the other tour will Other roundtable talks will
serve as cheerleaders. he on Politics: the 1956 ca»n-
Lynn Bothvvell, SC \ell King paign in the West, Comparative
from 1922-25, will speak at the Government, Public Law. State
second meeting. Bothvvell was Government and Communism,
voted All-American Cheer Lead- Also there will he various pan-
er while at SC and he was also els on subjects related to poli
the originator of the famous SC tics in the U.S.
caid stunts. , Those attending the conven-
1-eading Group tion will represent colleges and
“We need a good cheer lead- universities from the w'estern
ing group. Next year we face a Half of the nation. Some of the
schools that will send represen tatives are: Oregon, California,
YELL-KING DANN ANGELOFF
. . . leading the way
tough football schedule with an inexperienced team and a new coach who needs our support.
“We have to give 100 per cent of our spirit lo Don Clark. He will have his best representatives in the field and we must , held at Corvallis. Oregon, anii
for cultural events. This is a continuation of the McMahon-initiated “First Nighter” program.
Heading the Reception Committee is Connie-Lu Berg, Music School president.
The “First Nighter” program was to lay plans for receptions following drama department and Music School functions, such as plays, operas and musical presentations. At these affairs, invited guests would have an opportunity to meet performers, directors and others who made these events possible.
The affairs were to serve as one form of compensation for all those whose energy and talents went into making SC performances possible.
be equally good representatives in the stands,” stated Angeloff.
To date, no part of Terzian’s “First Nighter” program i olorado, Nevada, New Mexico. cap honestly be said to have gone into effect. One of the Aiizuna.^ Montana, I tab and chjef bottlenecks is a lack of finances. No money was
appropriated for the functions by the Board of Financial Last year, the meeting wa* Control though Terzian was a member of the board.
Consequently, the only action regarding this program
four years ago it was held at SC.
(Continued on Page 4) ^
By CHUCK PHILLIPS
A disturbed Bob Meads. Associated Mens Students president. yesterday requested he be permitted to answer an article that appeared in yesterday's Daily Trojan stating that he and the AMS Council have lagged in interest and “sadly neglecteu" their positions.
In yesterday's article the DT stated that ASSC President Carl Terzian's interest and effectiveness in AMS activities “has lagged.”
Meade retaliated by saying, "As far as I know, AMS has been more active now than ever in its history. We have records to prove it.”
Wide Representation The article stated the AMS has failed in its purpose “to represent the interests of all male students on campus.”
“This is not true,” Meads declared. “At every meeting there is a representative group present from every men's organization on campus and they are given ample opportunity to express their views.
“They are also required to submit periodically written and oral reports concerning their past, present and future activities. These reports are then discussed.”
Attacks Attendance Concerning Meads’ participation in Senate meetings, the article read: “Bob Meads, AMS president, has appeared seldom, and spoken even less, in the Senate chamber. Many people interested in student government have no idea who Meads is. And Meads has apparently lost interest in his office and in the students it is his duty to represent.”
The AMS president again came to his own defense in explaining that this past semester he has held a part-time job
which did not permit him to arrive on time.
Attended All
“At every meeting a campus elected representative has been : present until I arrive,” he said. I Meads insisted he has attended ! every meeting of the AMS with the exception of the last one.
“I was unable to attend that one because I was married on Feb. 1, and was painting my apartment until the early hours of the morning so we could move in.”
Successful Program
Answering the statement that the AMS has been very lax on its activities and “can boast few accomplishments” the fired-up Meads cited the successful activities the AMS has sponsored.
“The fall semester Big Brother Program which we initiated took three months of planning, j It was the first time that this j program was tried at SC. As | far as the Associated Men's cabinet and administration is con-j cerned it turned out more successful than anticipated.”
Noting further accomplishments of his cabinet. Meads told of the success of the orientation I round-up.
“It had a larger attendance than any of the other round-ups ! recorded in AMS records,” he said.
.Many Achievements
“Our cabinet also formed the Freshman Men's Club. At the present time its membership is | up to 77 men. They actively sup-| ported AMS Help Week and the AMS Christmas Program for j needy families and revised their ' constitutions, to name a few of ! their achievements. They have ' been unanimously approved b> the AMS Council.”
The Quarterback Club is another successful achievement of (Continued on Page 4)
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 77, February 20, 1957 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 48, No. 77, February 20, 1957. |
| Full text |
PAGE THREE Ernie Pinckert Makes Football Shrine Southern DAILY California TROJAN PAGE TWO Daytime Radio, TV Proves Delightful VOL. XLVIII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1957 NO. 77 Handicapped xhibit Art. Craft HELD ON SUSPICION Students Lose Wits; Lost and Found Grows The old saw about absent-minded professors seems to apply to SC students too. Since September the lost and ____, , , , . found department has accumu- star now attending SC on a football scholarship, was Jated such odd i(ems as. ,w0 arrested at 3:20 a.m. yesterday morning by Los Angeles weddinK rjnCrSt a tooth brush, a Police officers on suspicion of participating in a series of bab> bottle, four slide rules, 15 San Fernando Valley armed robberies.______! coaXs a pipe and a Chinese Booked on suspicion bv Yal- uth. Trojan Freshman Arrested by Police By DAVID C. HENLEY Gordon Hjelmstrom. 18, a former All-City football lev Di sion de'eclives. w no pn investigating five •ommitted in the Yai-■en .July and December year. Hjelmstrom ad-irticipating in the roo at ing. “I don't kno»v illed the crimes ... 1 k I wanted to aci rested by the Los An-;*ers Monday night a.iu ;terday morning wcie. Wood. 20: James S. I in. 27: and Staniev 26. Wood and Em-are employees of a I fender repair shof. ’rman is a swimming contractor- Husky Ciuarcl rum. a 205-pound guard ? described by his being “quiet . . . un . . . never a trouble-onfessed to the ValJc,, his participation in the aiter the detectives thev found two .45 The lour youths told officers and reporters they used the two weapons during the holdups. were usually masked and operated in “different pairs on Formed Gang They further stated they got together and formed their “gang” at a Panorama City pool hall and bowling alley. The investigating officers said the robl>ery series began Iasi July 13 when the Hub Liquor store in Pacoima was robbed of $1600. From then until De cember. three other armed hold- have b< holdu ips ley h et w 3 ^4 mine d p why I P just t hi tough Als o a rpJfM,; early Chari Ies Emm Sh^rr mem body w hi le SI pool sub H.i< who vv; frienc make office rs 1 rob be i ies told him calibf1 r a loom of onsidered by many tc be an “outstanding” Trojaii football prospect, enrolled at SC only two weeks ago after being graduated from Van Nuys High School. He plaved for the , , _ Van Nuys High football team Pa,rs of eyeglasses, assorted in 1955 and 1956 and made both back-scratcher. Other unclaimed items currently on the shelves of the lost and found department include six watches. 10 sweaters, jive umbrellas, dozens of books, 11 All-City and All-Valley teams both years. Hjelmstrom was not connected with any social fraternity at SC hut has been in the process of rushing several houses, the DT learned. pens, five purses, several pairs 1 of gloves, many hats and a set of false teeth. Cautions Students Carlcton H. Mann, director of the information center on campus and head of the lost and found, cautioned SC students to place their names and addresses on all their possessions. “We have absolutely no way of returning these articles to their owners without this,” Mann said. “The only thing we can go on is the owner's description of what he has lost.” Held Si\ Months Mann holds all unclaimed articles for six months. If they are not claimed by that time, they are turned over to the YWCA for sale at its semester bazaar. The YWCA also sells the unclaimed books at the first of each semester. The proceeds of these sales go into the YWCA treasury. Lost items can be claimed at the information center at the Sunday Showing Planned to Give Varied Displays The Handicapped Placement Center will present its third annual Sweetheart Hour Sunday evening at the YWCA from 4 to 7. Sponsored by the Womens Auxiliary to the Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association of Southern California. the event will feature Brass OK s Army Proposal the arts and crafts of the physically disabled and cite the “Handicapped of the Year.” It is open to any handicapped student, as well as those from the Placement Center. Based on outstanding contri- ARTS BY HANDICAPPED—Artist Adolph Chavoya (I.) found himself surrounded by a group of admirers when he showed one of his paintings which will become part of the arts and crafts display to be shown at the annual Sweetheart Hour Sunday. Onlookers (l-r) are Mrs. Calvin Edwards, Clarence Cooke, Mrs. Curtis G. Carr, Mrs. Robert Woods and Mrs. Horace Mays. Photo by Earl Thielen, Jr. WASHINGTON — (UP) — Two National Guard generals broke ranks yesterday and I butions to the community, the strongly endorsed the Army's Medical Auxiliary selects the .order requiring six months ac- j ‘Handicapped of the Year in tive duty for all guard recruits, j order to entourage those who Thev told a House Armed are physically impaired to think Services Subcommittee that the j of others aside from themselves, substitute guard proposal for 11- Art Work weeks training for recruits 17 i Adolph Chavoya, originally to 18*2 years old was “absolute- from Mexico, will exhibit his art ly inadequate. work. Entered by the Handi- Their testimony marked the capped Placement Center, Cha-first break in the guard's opposi- voya has studied at Art Instruc-I tion to the Army regulation, ef- i tion Inc. in Minneapolis and is I fective Apr. 1, that all guard I now attending Santa Monica recruits take six months active City College, training. j According to Chairman Rich- Maj. Gen. Roy A. Green, of ard j# Peckron, the Placement Sacramento, Calif., commander Center's most important per- GORDON HJELMSTROM . . . freshman arrested Breakfast Club To Hear Trojans Safety Film To Be Shown A color film on SC’s a' iatior. corner of University and 15th I safety program, which has been PI- ! filmed entirely at the univer- sity, will be premiered at the Korea Hires Journalists sity, wil Faculty Club luncheon today at 11:50 am. in the main dining room of Commons. THE TERZIAN ERA Host Committee, First Nighter Plans Mired of the 49th National Guard Division, said he actually would favor eight months to a year of formance is placement. It is a welfare agency designed exclusively to aid the physically han- active duty for guardsmen, if dicapped in seeking a suitable job. “Selective placement of a handicapped person requires individualized and coordinated professional service s.” Peckron said. “To be rehabilitated, a be “again go into combat pared.” unpre- Six prominent Trojans will js uete committed which not- take part todav in the prograiii of the Los Angeles Breakfast Club. Chancellor Rufus B. von KIeinSmid will speak, as win Coach Don Clark and Athletic Director Bill Hunter. Hosts will be Newton E. Anderson, law alumnus; and Dr. Holland E. Shirley, a physician They are Steven A. Nager, 28. and Edw^ard A. Neiian, 24. Nager graduated in 1951 and Neiian in 1954. Both were Daily Trojan staff ted tlie thieves about S2000, otficers asserted. Hjelmstrom, av*akened tms morning in his apartment at 963 W. 30th St., moved into tne flat only Monday, the Daily Trojan learned yesterday. AL%u sharing the rooms with Hjelm-strom were two other SC students They have not l>een in- from the School of Medicine, members and members of Sigma volved in the robberies, how- Michael Marsman, Trojan Pass-1 Delta Chi, national journalism ever. baritone, will giva solo selec- iionorarv fraternity, and both The lS-vear-old, blond-haired tions. I have served in the Army. Coach Clark to Address First Yell Leader Class Mr. Louis Kaplan, director of the Aviation Safety Division at Two School of Journalism j SC, will present the film along graduates have been named as j with a speech which will “prob- consultants to the Office of , , , .. . . . ______, ... , . T .. _ ... , ablv be the shortest speech on Public Intormation, Republic of Korea, it was announced yesterday by Chang Whan Kirn, Korean Vice Consul in Los Angeles. By LEE Be DEI.L them for their performances in ; as follows: March 6, 13, 20 and Clark, newly appoint front of the selection board April 27: April 3 and 10. h( !4. Th< thf Wr I football coach, will be suest ker at the first meeting of cheer leading school cheerleading nesday. Feb. 27, in 335 FH from 3:45-to 5. The school was formed to acquaint potential cheer leade r with the different phases of cheerleading and to nrepare applicant movements. songs and veils and will be ori- * average. No applications are j |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1397/uschist-dt-1957-02-20~001.tif |
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