The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 11, No. 99, May 28, 1920 |
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0. V- D. EDITION—TEMPERATURE AT LEAST HO
ifeSouth
3 11 Service, Campaign Subscriptions I)uc
California
Pay Promptly at Treasurer's Office
Los Angeles, California, Friday, May 28, 1920
No. 99
[Vat Year Will See Large Expansion in Many Departments
COURSES OFFERED
[Textiles, Costume Design, Hat and Garment Making Courses Contemplated
Intensive plans for expansion in By of the departments of the uni-Bity are now being made whereby |S. C. expects to add numerous new ses to the curriculem for the com-{fall semester.
[Expansion will perhaps be greatest I the new college of commerce and Biness administration, which had its *ption this year. This college, with
NEW ORGAN TO CONTAIN 5000 PIPES,80 STOPS
Specifications y for Instrument Drawn Up By Dean of College of Music
‘MONSTROSITIES’ LEFT OUT
MILLION DOLLAR STADIUM MAY BE SCENE OF FUTURE TROJAN GRIDIRON BATTLES
By A. V. Allcott
TROTS OUT GANG OF
To Be Largest Organ on Coast With Exception of San Francisco Municipal
dp
i possible thirteen major groups, is ended to hold the same relation to lern business as a profession that college of law, for example, holds the legal profession.
Physical Edcation The physical education department h is conceded by authorities to the best in the state, is adding a our course in human anatomy, work in athletic coaching for , and physical diagnosis. Next marks the beginning of a coming of Boy Scout executives for ial positions.
ime Economics will continue the een hours now given, and if pres-plans now under way now carry, t will be offered in textiles, cos-design and hat and garment mak->
frofessor L. M. Riddle, head of the ®ch department, and Professor K. ill, will not .teach in the univer-next year. Their places will be by Dr. H. D. Austin, now asso-te professor in the University of iigan, and Dr. H. S. Lowther. now College of the City of New York. Mvanced news writing and short fy writing will be given in journal-under Marc N. Goodnow. n expansion program will be car-! °ut in many other departments • for which plans are not yet ready Publication.
,Teral changes in the commence-Program, as announced in Tues-. Trojan, have been announced bjr, j- Montgomery, registrar.
* baccalaureate sermon and alum-Nm « ill both take place on Sun-June 13.
Coll ege of Music concert will be Tuesday, June 15, instead of ““^day, as was previously allied.
e annual sermon before the Colot Theology will be Sunday, 6,
lN|E CROWE CHOSEN
EDITOR STANFORD DAILY
^ANFord UNIVERSITY, Cal., y *8, 192(1 (Special to ihe Tro-’" K- E. Crowe, ’21, of Porter* third baseman on the varsity ba|l team during the past sea-*Nd news editor of the Daily Alto during the past year, was F** editor of the paper today.
*e is popular in all lines of y hi the school and is an ac-ftfalete as well as one of the ^own journalists iu the iusti-He iu a member of Delta fraternity.
By Dean W. F. Skeele
Some years c.yu, when a new auditorium for the University was first spoken of, the hope was timidly expressed that there might be a real pipe organ as a part of its equipment. The maximum appropriation for this was never expected at that time to exceed $10,000. About a year ago the writer received word from the trustees, asking him to prepare specifications and secure bids for an organ to cast about $25,000.
After a trip to the East and examination of instruments in New York, Boston, Springfield, Yale and Oberlin, and a visit to several of the leading factories, a specification was prepared which was thought to combine the best features of all the organs seen and submitted to several builders. The contract was finally awarded to the Robert-Morton Company, of Van Nuys, California, for approximately $35,000. This will give us an instrument much larger than was at first anticipated, and commensurate with the noteworthy scale on which the greater University is being developed.
One of Largest
The organ will be the largest on the coast except the municipal organ of San Francisco. It will have 80 speaking stops and nearly 5000 pipes. There will be five divisions or organs, played from four keyboards. It will be grouped in the stage wings and the triangles in front of them formed where they meet the main walls of the auditorium. An echo organ will be placed in the ceiling just in front of the balconies and the console or key desk will be on the main floor at the head of the center aisle. In addition to the 80 stops, there will be 34 couplers for connecting the different organs at unison and actave below and octave above; 44 thumb pistons between the keyboards for throwing different combinations of stops adjustable for any combinations desired; three expression pedals, and one crescendo pedal, which will bring on or off all the stops and couplers.
With miscellaneous couplers, pedals, indicators and pistons the total number of movements which must be in the constant thought of the organist, is about 175, besides four manuals of (il keys and a pedal keyboard of 32 keys. Its largest pipes, 32 feet long and largeenough for a good-sized man to crawl through, will give a pitch nearly one octave below the lowest note on the piano and its smallest ones, about the size of a slate pencil, will speak at a pitch one octave above the piano.
No “Trick" Attachments
The instrument wil! be a true organ with none of the moving-picture organ monstrosities of classified noises, such as tom-toms, drums, sllght-bells, battle thunder, and the like. Of course, it will have chimes and a harp stop, as modern church organs do. Nothing as yet constructed in the city will compare with it in variety of beautiful organ tone. It will afford c**e of the very few opportunities in the city for high
(Continued on Page 3)
Construction in Exposition Park of a million dollar war memorial stadium, plans for which have just been announced, will relieve the critical need for a larger athletic field at the University of Southern California. According to graduate athletic manager, Henry Bruce, the University plans, if arrangements are satisfactory, to use the stadium for all big football games in preference to building a large amphithea-: ter on the campus.
The Community Development Association plans the construction, as soon as rental contracts are signed, of a huge combination ampitheater and stadium which will seat 75,000, making it the largest of its kind in the world. The structure will occupy the space inside the race track at the park, will have a memorial entrance dedicated to the men and women who served in the Great War.
The field is to be operated on a nonprofit basis under the auspices of the city and county governments and may be rented by anyone for a percentage of the gate receipts to cover the cost
of construction. It will be equipped for all kinds of athletics and will serve U. S. C. for any game, such as the Oregon-U. S. C. football game next year, which promises a larger crowd than can be accommodated at Bovard field.
If, as is believed on the campus, Wm. M. Bowen, who is a trustee of the University, is one of the men largely interested in the Community Development Association, the University may lOok forward to satisfactory arrangements.
As the stadium wil not be completed time for the football season next fall, Manager Bruce has announced that if a satisfactory schedule is arranged several thousand dollars will be spent in enlarging Bovard field and erecting portable bleachers to be removed at the enu of me season.
Commenting on the Exposition Park proposals Mr. Bruce said, “This only demonstrates again the advantageous location of the University adjoining Exposition Park.”
FIELD WORK TO! BE FEATURE OF NEW S.C. SCHOOL
Commerce College Designed to Give Thorough Preparation for Business Career
In response to an ever-increasing demand for an institution of full collegiate rank, offering adequate and thorough preparation for work in the business world, U. S. C. will formally add the College of Commerce and Business Administration to its present nine colleges when the 1920-1921 semester opens next September.
The establishment of the new college was authorized at a meeting of the University trustees on January 27, 1920. The college was really installed last February, when several of the regular economic courses were organized into a business college. This, however, was only the nucleus of the organization which will go into effect next September, and which will develop into a full-fledged college within the next few years.
The purpose of the college, according to an announcement from Dr. Hunt, will be "to equip the student so that he will have at once a broad outlook upon life with Its demands for social service, a thorough knowledge ol the principles that underlie sound business activities, and a comprehensive grasp of actual business practices.”
Courses Include Field Work
“Realizing that no study, however complete, can take the place of actual business experience, courses in the college will incorporate a substantia! amount of field work, including inspection trips and investigatorial work, and in the fourth year of study, actual employment service in co-operating business houses in Los Angeles under the supervision of a faculty member will be required.
The present business college faculty will be materially enlarged with the beginning of the new semester. Among the instructors will be Harry Baaker-ville, who is at present conducting accounting classes; J. 8. Robinson, Ph.D.,
(Continued on Page 2)
Abbreviated Costumes Make Ramblin’ Rook Wonder Where the Surf Is
EIGHT VARSIiaf, MEN BACK
—
Henderson Teaches Tricks to Bunch of New Men; Evans Handles Old-Timers
GV
TRAIt HYSICA
GFO
Department Will Specialize in Teachers’ Training—Expect Large Enrollment
NORMA GOULD TO TEACH
Week-End Parties, Tournaments, Among Recreation’s Planned for Members, of Course
U. S. C.’s department of physical education is to offer for Its summer session an unusually complete set of courses under a strong corps of teachers, according to Professor Ralph La-Porte, head of the department, and the bulletin issued by the department regarding its summer courses.
The session will begin June 28, 11 days after commencement, and will continue until August 6. The tuition fee of $20 for enrollment must be paid during the preceding week, and this will enable the student to enroll in all courses for which he is qualified.
In the past the department lias always specialized in teachers’ training, and this work will be continued at the summer session. “The university has the strongest course of this kind in California,” said Professor LaPorte, “and the summer session will be attended largely by teachers.”
Large Demand for Teachers
Due to its strength in this specialty the university has been unable to sup ply the demand for teachers of physical education which has come from California and the neighboring states. Last year the total enrollment in this department was 500 and prepartions are being made for a larger number this year.
Various recreations are planned for the course to include week end parties at beach and ocean, swimming parlies, tennis tournaments and a pageant at the end of the course. The University athletic field will be at the disposal of the students of the summer school, and Exposition Park will offer opportunities in this line arid in the playground courses.
The teaching staff will be ample, and will contain instructors of state-
(Continued on Page 2)
By Geo. Don Ashbaugh
Coach Elmer Henderson swears it is a football team. Graduate Manager Henry Bruce le willing to take an oath that it is a football team—but—to the untrained eye of the common proletariat. it looked like a gang of B. V. D. advertising models gamboling gavly o’er the green.
Attired, merely in an abbreviated pair of white panties—and abbreviated is the most expressive word ln the dictionary—with a shirt that barely covered their manly bosoms, 50 Trojans galloped gallantly hither, thither and yon, every evening this week, under the direction of Coach Henderson and Captain Swede Evans, under the guise of being a football team. The only semblance of a football team that could be seen was the cleated shoes and the various pigskins sailing, rolling, bouncing and bumping o’er the sod.
Football Players Galore
There were little football players and there were big football players. There were football players that seemed to know what they were doing and then there were football players that had never before been football players. The latter were getting the benefit of all of Coach Henderson’s time, ho once upon a time being a real football player.
The rest of the football players, those who had been football players before, were under the careful direction of Captain Swede Evans and Jimmy Woodward. The latter were engaged in the mathematical labor of signal practice. Time and time and time and again they called signals and smashed around imaginary ends and through imaginary tackles and over Imaginary centers until, even with their abbreviated unies, they sweated great gobs of perspiratioa. Eight of laBt year’s famous grid team will trot terrifically forth when the whistle calls them for the first game this fall. Tho eight who already wear the mono-grammed jersey are Captain Swede Evans, Jimmy Woodward, Jimmy Smith, Toolen, Lindley, Lockett, Cox, Axe, and Slippery Leadingham.
Several of last year’s freshman stars are expected to loom up like lighthouses this fall. Hardly any of the peagreeners have appeared for the bathing BUit practice of the spring.
New Faces Appear Many new faces are appearing on the gridiron each evening and Coach Henderson is enthused over the interest that is being taken by men who never felt the delicious smack of a pigskin In the paws before. "I am spending,” he said, “all of my time with the novices. I want ’em. The more the better. Who knows but what some great football players may be lurking ln the halls, unsuspected. If they don’t know anything about the game, we’ll teach ’em. Thornton, the baseball man, didn’t know a football from a phonograph, and he is looming up well. Hope I can get a hundred like him. Let ’em come.”
From Law to Gridiron Law College is looming on the football map like a red country amidst a
(Continued on Page 4)
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| Title | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 11, No. 99, May 28, 1920 |
| Description | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 11, No. 99, May 28, 1920. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | 0. V- D. EDITION—TEMPERATURE AT LEAST HO ifeSouth 3 11 Service, Campaign Subscriptions I)uc California Pay Promptly at Treasurer's Office Los Angeles, California, Friday, May 28, 1920 No. 99 [Vat Year Will See Large Expansion in Many Departments COURSES OFFERED [Textiles, Costume Design, Hat and Garment Making Courses Contemplated Intensive plans for expansion in By of the departments of the uni-Bity are now being made whereby S. C. expects to add numerous new ses to the curriculem for the com-{fall semester. [Expansion will perhaps be greatest I the new college of commerce and Biness administration, which had its *ption this year. This college, with NEW ORGAN TO CONTAIN 5000 PIPES,80 STOPS Specifications y for Instrument Drawn Up By Dean of College of Music ‘MONSTROSITIES’ LEFT OUT MILLION DOLLAR STADIUM MAY BE SCENE OF FUTURE TROJAN GRIDIRON BATTLES By A. V. Allcott TROTS OUT GANG OF To Be Largest Organ on Coast With Exception of San Francisco Municipal dp i possible thirteen major groups, is ended to hold the same relation to lern business as a profession that college of law, for example, holds the legal profession. Physical Edcation The physical education department h is conceded by authorities to the best in the state, is adding a our course in human anatomy, work in athletic coaching for , and physical diagnosis. Next marks the beginning of a coming of Boy Scout executives for ial positions. ime Economics will continue the een hours now given, and if pres-plans now under way now carry, t will be offered in textiles, cos-design and hat and garment mak-> frofessor L. M. Riddle, head of the ®ch department, and Professor K. ill, will not .teach in the univer-next year. Their places will be by Dr. H. D. Austin, now asso-te professor in the University of iigan, and Dr. H. S. Lowther. now College of the City of New York. Mvanced news writing and short fy writing will be given in journal-under Marc N. Goodnow. n expansion program will be car-! °ut in many other departments • for which plans are not yet ready Publication. ,Teral changes in the commence-Program, as announced in Tues-. Trojan, have been announced bjr, j- Montgomery, registrar. * baccalaureate sermon and alum-Nm « ill both take place on Sun-June 13. Coll ege of Music concert will be Tuesday, June 15, instead of ““^day, as was previously allied. e annual sermon before the Colot Theology will be Sunday, 6, lN E CROWE CHOSEN EDITOR STANFORD DAILY ^ANFord UNIVERSITY, Cal., y *8, 192(1 (Special to ihe Tro-’" K- E. Crowe, ’21, of Porter* third baseman on the varsity ba l team during the past sea-*Nd news editor of the Daily Alto during the past year, was F** editor of the paper today. *e is popular in all lines of y hi the school and is an ac-ftfalete as well as one of the ^own journalists iu the iusti-He iu a member of Delta fraternity. By Dean W. F. Skeele Some years c.yu, when a new auditorium for the University was first spoken of, the hope was timidly expressed that there might be a real pipe organ as a part of its equipment. The maximum appropriation for this was never expected at that time to exceed $10,000. About a year ago the writer received word from the trustees, asking him to prepare specifications and secure bids for an organ to cast about $25,000. After a trip to the East and examination of instruments in New York, Boston, Springfield, Yale and Oberlin, and a visit to several of the leading factories, a specification was prepared which was thought to combine the best features of all the organs seen and submitted to several builders. The contract was finally awarded to the Robert-Morton Company, of Van Nuys, California, for approximately $35,000. This will give us an instrument much larger than was at first anticipated, and commensurate with the noteworthy scale on which the greater University is being developed. One of Largest The organ will be the largest on the coast except the municipal organ of San Francisco. It will have 80 speaking stops and nearly 5000 pipes. There will be five divisions or organs, played from four keyboards. It will be grouped in the stage wings and the triangles in front of them formed where they meet the main walls of the auditorium. An echo organ will be placed in the ceiling just in front of the balconies and the console or key desk will be on the main floor at the head of the center aisle. In addition to the 80 stops, there will be 34 couplers for connecting the different organs at unison and actave below and octave above; 44 thumb pistons between the keyboards for throwing different combinations of stops adjustable for any combinations desired; three expression pedals, and one crescendo pedal, which will bring on or off all the stops and couplers. With miscellaneous couplers, pedals, indicators and pistons the total number of movements which must be in the constant thought of the organist, is about 175, besides four manuals of (il keys and a pedal keyboard of 32 keys. Its largest pipes, 32 feet long and largeenough for a good-sized man to crawl through, will give a pitch nearly one octave below the lowest note on the piano and its smallest ones, about the size of a slate pencil, will speak at a pitch one octave above the piano. No “Trick" Attachments The instrument wil! be a true organ with none of the moving-picture organ monstrosities of classified noises, such as tom-toms, drums, sllght-bells, battle thunder, and the like. Of course, it will have chimes and a harp stop, as modern church organs do. Nothing as yet constructed in the city will compare with it in variety of beautiful organ tone. It will afford c**e of the very few opportunities in the city for high (Continued on Page 3) Construction in Exposition Park of a million dollar war memorial stadium, plans for which have just been announced, will relieve the critical need for a larger athletic field at the University of Southern California. According to graduate athletic manager, Henry Bruce, the University plans, if arrangements are satisfactory, to use the stadium for all big football games in preference to building a large amphithea-: ter on the campus. The Community Development Association plans the construction, as soon as rental contracts are signed, of a huge combination ampitheater and stadium which will seat 75,000, making it the largest of its kind in the world. The structure will occupy the space inside the race track at the park, will have a memorial entrance dedicated to the men and women who served in the Great War. The field is to be operated on a nonprofit basis under the auspices of the city and county governments and may be rented by anyone for a percentage of the gate receipts to cover the cost of construction. It will be equipped for all kinds of athletics and will serve U. S. C. for any game, such as the Oregon-U. S. C. football game next year, which promises a larger crowd than can be accommodated at Bovard field. If, as is believed on the campus, Wm. M. Bowen, who is a trustee of the University, is one of the men largely interested in the Community Development Association, the University may lOok forward to satisfactory arrangements. As the stadium wil not be completed time for the football season next fall, Manager Bruce has announced that if a satisfactory schedule is arranged several thousand dollars will be spent in enlarging Bovard field and erecting portable bleachers to be removed at the enu of me season. Commenting on the Exposition Park proposals Mr. Bruce said, “This only demonstrates again the advantageous location of the University adjoining Exposition Park.” FIELD WORK TO! BE FEATURE OF NEW S.C. SCHOOL Commerce College Designed to Give Thorough Preparation for Business Career In response to an ever-increasing demand for an institution of full collegiate rank, offering adequate and thorough preparation for work in the business world, U. S. C. will formally add the College of Commerce and Business Administration to its present nine colleges when the 1920-1921 semester opens next September. The establishment of the new college was authorized at a meeting of the University trustees on January 27, 1920. The college was really installed last February, when several of the regular economic courses were organized into a business college. This, however, was only the nucleus of the organization which will go into effect next September, and which will develop into a full-fledged college within the next few years. The purpose of the college, according to an announcement from Dr. Hunt, will be "to equip the student so that he will have at once a broad outlook upon life with Its demands for social service, a thorough knowledge ol the principles that underlie sound business activities, and a comprehensive grasp of actual business practices.” Courses Include Field Work “Realizing that no study, however complete, can take the place of actual business experience, courses in the college will incorporate a substantia! amount of field work, including inspection trips and investigatorial work, and in the fourth year of study, actual employment service in co-operating business houses in Los Angeles under the supervision of a faculty member will be required. The present business college faculty will be materially enlarged with the beginning of the new semester. Among the instructors will be Harry Baaker-ville, who is at present conducting accounting classes; J. 8. Robinson, Ph.D., (Continued on Page 2) Abbreviated Costumes Make Ramblin’ Rook Wonder Where the Surf Is EIGHT VARSIiaf, MEN BACK — Henderson Teaches Tricks to Bunch of New Men; Evans Handles Old-Timers GV TRAIt HYSICA GFO Department Will Specialize in Teachers’ Training—Expect Large Enrollment NORMA GOULD TO TEACH Week-End Parties, Tournaments, Among Recreation’s Planned for Members, of Course U. S. C.’s department of physical education is to offer for Its summer session an unusually complete set of courses under a strong corps of teachers, according to Professor Ralph La-Porte, head of the department, and the bulletin issued by the department regarding its summer courses. The session will begin June 28, 11 days after commencement, and will continue until August 6. The tuition fee of $20 for enrollment must be paid during the preceding week, and this will enable the student to enroll in all courses for which he is qualified. In the past the department lias always specialized in teachers’ training, and this work will be continued at the summer session. “The university has the strongest course of this kind in California,” said Professor LaPorte, “and the summer session will be attended largely by teachers.” Large Demand for Teachers Due to its strength in this specialty the university has been unable to sup ply the demand for teachers of physical education which has come from California and the neighboring states. Last year the total enrollment in this department was 500 and prepartions are being made for a larger number this year. Various recreations are planned for the course to include week end parties at beach and ocean, swimming parlies, tennis tournaments and a pageant at the end of the course. The University athletic field will be at the disposal of the students of the summer school, and Exposition Park will offer opportunities in this line arid in the playground courses. The teaching staff will be ample, and will contain instructors of state- (Continued on Page 2) By Geo. Don Ashbaugh Coach Elmer Henderson swears it is a football team. Graduate Manager Henry Bruce le willing to take an oath that it is a football team—but—to the untrained eye of the common proletariat. it looked like a gang of B. V. D. advertising models gamboling gavly o’er the green. Attired, merely in an abbreviated pair of white panties—and abbreviated is the most expressive word ln the dictionary—with a shirt that barely covered their manly bosoms, 50 Trojans galloped gallantly hither, thither and yon, every evening this week, under the direction of Coach Henderson and Captain Swede Evans, under the guise of being a football team. The only semblance of a football team that could be seen was the cleated shoes and the various pigskins sailing, rolling, bouncing and bumping o’er the sod. Football Players Galore There were little football players and there were big football players. There were football players that seemed to know what they were doing and then there were football players that had never before been football players. The latter were getting the benefit of all of Coach Henderson’s time, ho once upon a time being a real football player. The rest of the football players, those who had been football players before, were under the careful direction of Captain Swede Evans and Jimmy Woodward. The latter were engaged in the mathematical labor of signal practice. Time and time and time and again they called signals and smashed around imaginary ends and through imaginary tackles and over Imaginary centers until, even with their abbreviated unies, they sweated great gobs of perspiratioa. Eight of laBt year’s famous grid team will trot terrifically forth when the whistle calls them for the first game this fall. Tho eight who already wear the mono-grammed jersey are Captain Swede Evans, Jimmy Woodward, Jimmy Smith, Toolen, Lindley, Lockett, Cox, Axe, and Slippery Leadingham. Several of last year’s freshman stars are expected to loom up like lighthouses this fall. Hardly any of the peagreeners have appeared for the bathing BUit practice of the spring. New Faces Appear Many new faces are appearing on the gridiron each evening and Coach Henderson is enthused over the interest that is being taken by men who never felt the delicious smack of a pigskin In the paws before. "I am spending,” he said, “all of my time with the novices. I want ’em. The more the better. Who knows but what some great football players may be lurking ln the halls, unsuspected. If they don’t know anything about the game, we’ll teach ’em. Thornton, the baseball man, didn’t know a football from a phonograph, and he is looming up well. Hope I can get a hundred like him. Let ’em come.” From Law to Gridiron Law College is looming on the football map like a red country amidst a (Continued on Page 4) |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1920-05-28~001.tif |
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