Summer News, Vol. 9, No. 14, August 09, 1954 |
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- PAGE THREE -
|8 Trackmen Named To A-A Squad
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Summer News
IO. 14
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
- PAGE FOUR -
Swimmer To Cross Tahoe in 18 Hours
Monday, August 9, 1954
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SUMMER PROGRAM—A new television show was added Thursday by Trojan Football Coach Jess Hill. The program, >ver channel 13 each Thursday at 6:45 p.m., is set up to acquaint fans with various aspects of the game. Title of the show is "Summer Football School."
less Hill Begins ummer TV Show
A new “must” television show for SC followers was Ided Thursday evening when Football Coach Jess Hill beta his “Summer Football School” program. The broadcast, [•ed over KCOP (channel 13) at 6:45 p.m., will continue for weeks before switching over to Hill’s regular fall program.
lamst Cancels SC ppearance
The School of Music has an-Imced the cancelation of the ap-^ ranee of pianist John Brown-
1954 Steinway Centennial lard winner, who was to have beared Wednesday, at 8:30 p.m. [Hancock Auditorium. Browning (unable to appear due to a sere throat infection. Substituting him will be Herma Rosenfeld |d Daniel Pollack who will be psented in joint recital.
Miss Rosenfeld and Pollack are campus during the month of Igust, along with a group of [ter young pianists from various Hions of the country, for study [h Mme. Rosina Lhevinne who (offering private instruction in [no and a master class in piano ^ertoire. Herma Rosenfeld, win-of the Joseph Lhevinne schol-Ihip, is a resident of Philadel-la and a former student of Vila Robinor of that city, for the past two years, Miss Wnfeld has been commuting kveon New York City and Phil-|lphia in order to study with ■ Lhevinne. At the age of 10 appeared with Philadelphia Ibeatra under Eugene Orman-lhas appeared before National tyention of the Federation of )ic Clubs in New York, and yeur has won the Sophomore |d Competition in Dallas. mir?l Pollack is a fomer stu-of Lillian Steuber and is the Pent of a Juilliard scholar-whore he is now a student, [ell as the 1954 Olga Samaroff rd.
The Trojan mentor has set up the show as a summer football clinic to acquaint fans with inside dope on the game.
Hill explains various intricacies of the game with diagrams and movies. Later on he plans to have guests on the show.
Last Thursday, the SC coach told about the buck lateral series as used by Troy, and what it means. He diagrammed various plays and showed movies of actual game situations.
Thursday he plans to discuss tl>3 punting game and punt returns.
Each snow contains a question and answer period which is designed chiefly for the fan to clear up any doubts or lack of knowledge he might have.
The program was designed to help the football fan to appreciate and watch football more.
This is the first year that such a summer show has been in existence. Hill usually doesn’t begin his broadcasts until fall. The program will last until January.
Literature And Law' Lecture Set Wednesday At 3
Ths regular weekly literature series talks will resume Wednesday afternoon in the Art and Lecture room of Doheny. Dr. William H. Davenport, professor of English, will speak on “Literature and the Law” beginning at 3:15 p.m-
Speaking at th3 first post session literature lecture, Dr. Davenport will discuss a new literature course that he taught in law school last year.
He will explain how literature and law connect, and why it is a good idea to offer literature courses to law students.
This literature course, the first of its kind, will be offered again next year.
Railroad Expert Schedules Talk
Taxation Institute Set Here
October Meet Will Deal With Income Tax Revisions
Recent revision of the income tax laws, the most sweeping in 100 years, will make the seventh annual Institute on Federal Taxation at the School of Law Oct. 20-22 the most important ever held, the planning committee of eight Los Angeles attorneys said Friday.
Attorneys, accountants, life insurance underwriters, trust officers and executives dealing with federal tax problems may register at once for the intensive three-day program which will be held in Bovard auditorium.
More than 25 speakers will review the new internal revenue code and its important changes Uiat affect every person and nearly every legal transaction in the nation.
Talkers
Some of the country’s most distinguished tax lawyers will address the SC institute. They include Norris Darrell, head of the tax department of Sullivan and Cromwell, New York City; and Harry Rudick, head of the tax department of Lord, Day & Lord, New York City, and professor of tax laws at New York University.
Also, Lloyd Kennedy of Kennedy and Kennedy, Chicago, author of “Federal Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates;” and Prof. Boris I. Bittker of the Yale University law school, author of a casebook on federal taxation.
More Talkers
Other speakers will be the members of the planning committee including Louis M. Brown, John W. Ervin, Richard Forster, Arthur Gorman, Sidney Krystal, Arthur Manella, Carl Stutsman Jr., and Arthur B. Willis.
All corporate, partnership, trust and other tax changes in the new law will be discussed by men who are recognized experts in their fields.
Tuition for the institute will be $35. A $10 registration fee will make a reservation. Checks payable to the University of Southern California may be sent to the Tax Institute, 3518 University Avenue, Los Angeles 7-Information may be obtained by telephoning Richmond 2311, Ext. 340, or Richmond 7-0854.
Professor Elected to Business Council
Dr. Albert C. Fries, 4983 Valley Ridge Ave., head of the department of office administration in the School of Commerce, has been elected western regional member of the National Council for Business Education for three years.
The national council is the executive board of the United Business Education Association, a department of the National Educa-
Professor To Tell Part Rails Played In Growth of America
The second post session noon assembly will take place tomorrow at 12:15 in Hancock Auditorium with Dr. William St. Clair Greever, associate professor of the University of Idaho delivering the principal address.
Dr. Greever will speak on “The Role of Railways in American Development.” The
Idaho pi’ofessor wrote his doctoral dissertation on how th? Santa Fe railway disposed of 13 million acres of land grants in Arizona and New Mexico. This dissertation has since been turned into a book entitled Arid Domain, published by Stanford University Press.
RR History
Dr. Greever, a post session history lecturer, will discuss the importance of railways in American history. Developing the his-torial angle, he will show how the railroads helped develop the west, and how their continuous business expansion made trade easier.
“In building these roads, there were lots of financial maneuvers on such a large scale, that they affected th2 United States economic system,” he said.
He said he would also discuss the part railroads played in becoming the first big business to become regulated.
Precedents
“This business expansion created certain problems and established precedents that eventually spread to other fields,” he said.
Summer Session Dean John D. Cooke said that the assembly will commence at 12:15 instead of noon so as to give students more time to get to the assembly from class.
Dr. Kurt von Schnuschnigg, professor of international relations at St. Louis University and former Chancellor of Austria, will speak at the following assembly a week from tomorrow.
Four SC Students Enter Art Show
Four SC students have entries for tho art show at the California State Fair at Sacramento Sept. 2 to 12.
They are: Don Nice, Jean E. Stevenson, Frances Rasmussen, and Barbara Werts.
The Troy quartet are among 100 students from 21 colleges, universities and private art schools who have submitted their work.
Calendar Of Events
TODAY—Education Series, “A British View of American Education,” Hancock auditorium, 10 a.m.
TOMORROW—General Assembly, “The Role of Railways in American Development,” William St. Clair Greever, Bovard auditorium, noon.
Religion in Life Series, “The Role of Mass Communications in Religion,” Robert O. Hall, Doheny Art and Lecture room, 3:15 p.m.
WEDNESDAY — Literature Series, “Literature and the Law,” William H. Davenport, Doheny Art and Lecture room, 3:15 p.m.
Scholarships Awarded To 31 SC Students
Thirty-one youhg men and women students will be able to attend SC this fall on $13,000 in scholarships from the George H. Mayr Educational Foundation, Dean of Students Bernard L. Hyink announo2d Friday.
t Sixteen new Mayr scholarship holders were chosen by the SC committee on student aid headed by Dr. Hyink and approved by the board of advisers of the foundation. Advisers are Milo W. Bekins, Leland P. Reeder and Ted M. Mayr.
Mayr, a retired Beverly Hills druggist, established the foundation in 1949 to help worthy students get the college education he wa6 unable to afford. Much of the foundation’s assets ans in Los Angeles metropolitan real estate, especially downtown parking lots.
New Grants
New grants were made to Arlene Abrams, 4524 Vesper Ave., Sherman Oaks; Marcia Lee Bateman, 14715 S. Frailey Ave., Compton; Michael Blewett, 4517 Circle View Blvd.; Sara Jean Christensen, 847 Exposition Blvd.; Ann Christine Clark, 5179 High Crest Ave.; John Edwin Cochrane, 212 W. 64th St., Inglewood; William L. Donnelly, 8688 Madison Ave., South Gate; Jack Forbes, 1245 Cedaredge Ave.; Iris Ann Higbie, 328 Amethyst, Balboa Island; Gordon Mol, 1022 W. 40th PI.; Fleet E. Nuttall, 2636 Portland St.; Sharon L. Reeb, 832 S. 7th St., Alhambra; Frank J. Skrivanic, 1609 Bently Ave.; Karen Sue Stamp, 1733 W. 57th St.; Elizabeth Wittmann, 29581,-} Francis Ave., and William L. Zaun, 1340 Winchester Ave.,
Glendale.
Afore Grants
Renewals were given Jerry Lee Baker, 9713 Denker Ave.; Martha Belknap, 906 Country Club Dr., Burbank; Seyom Brown, 1277V* W. 38th St.; Cameron H. Burley, 612 Fremont Ave., South Pasadena: Marguerite Cooper, 2432 S. St. Andrews PI.; Patricia L. Dahlman, 847 Exposition Blvd.; Dora De Larios, 3501 Murifield Road; Marilyn G. Hayes, 13734 Oxnard St., Van Nuys; Merle Marlow, 9734 San Miguel Ave., South Gate; Barbara Jane Page, 15524 Clark, Bellflower; Julius Smith, 6601 W. Olympic Blvd.;, John P. Touton-ghi, 10615 Moorpark, North Hollywood; William Van Alstyne, 3657 Buckingham Road; William R. Wilcox, 2824 Carson St., Torrance; and Charlotte Wood, 440 26th St., Santa Monica.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Summer News, Vol. 9, No. 14, August 09, 1954 |
| Full text | - PAGE THREE - 8 Trackmen Named To A-A Squad UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Summer News IO. 14 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - PAGE FOUR - Swimmer To Cross Tahoe in 18 Hours Monday, August 9, 1954 M :W» i iff' -.j ■ ' W:: J fJ r SUMMER PROGRAM—A new television show was added Thursday by Trojan Football Coach Jess Hill. The program, >ver channel 13 each Thursday at 6:45 p.m., is set up to acquaint fans with various aspects of the game. Title of the show is "Summer Football School." less Hill Begins ummer TV Show A new “must” television show for SC followers was Ided Thursday evening when Football Coach Jess Hill beta his “Summer Football School” program. The broadcast, [•ed over KCOP (channel 13) at 6:45 p.m., will continue for weeks before switching over to Hill’s regular fall program. lamst Cancels SC ppearance The School of Music has an-Imced the cancelation of the ap-^ ranee of pianist John Brown- 1954 Steinway Centennial lard winner, who was to have beared Wednesday, at 8:30 p.m. [Hancock Auditorium. Browning (unable to appear due to a sere throat infection. Substituting him will be Herma Rosenfeld d Daniel Pollack who will be psented in joint recital. Miss Rosenfeld and Pollack are campus during the month of Igust, along with a group of [ter young pianists from various Hions of the country, for study [h Mme. Rosina Lhevinne who (offering private instruction in [no and a master class in piano ^ertoire. Herma Rosenfeld, win-of the Joseph Lhevinne schol-Ihip, is a resident of Philadel-la and a former student of Vila Robinor of that city, for the past two years, Miss Wnfeld has been commuting kveon New York City and Phil- lphia in order to study with ■ Lhevinne. At the age of 10 appeared with Philadelphia Ibeatra under Eugene Orman-lhas appeared before National tyention of the Federation of )ic Clubs in New York, and yeur has won the Sophomore d Competition in Dallas. mir?l Pollack is a fomer stu-of Lillian Steuber and is the Pent of a Juilliard scholar-whore he is now a student, [ell as the 1954 Olga Samaroff rd. The Trojan mentor has set up the show as a summer football clinic to acquaint fans with inside dope on the game. Hill explains various intricacies of the game with diagrams and movies. Later on he plans to have guests on the show. Last Thursday, the SC coach told about the buck lateral series as used by Troy, and what it means. He diagrammed various plays and showed movies of actual game situations. Thursday he plans to discuss tl>3 punting game and punt returns. Each snow contains a question and answer period which is designed chiefly for the fan to clear up any doubts or lack of knowledge he might have. The program was designed to help the football fan to appreciate and watch football more. This is the first year that such a summer show has been in existence. Hill usually doesn’t begin his broadcasts until fall. The program will last until January. Literature And Law' Lecture Set Wednesday At 3 Ths regular weekly literature series talks will resume Wednesday afternoon in the Art and Lecture room of Doheny. Dr. William H. Davenport, professor of English, will speak on “Literature and the Law” beginning at 3:15 p.m- Speaking at th3 first post session literature lecture, Dr. Davenport will discuss a new literature course that he taught in law school last year. He will explain how literature and law connect, and why it is a good idea to offer literature courses to law students. This literature course, the first of its kind, will be offered again next year. Railroad Expert Schedules Talk Taxation Institute Set Here October Meet Will Deal With Income Tax Revisions Recent revision of the income tax laws, the most sweeping in 100 years, will make the seventh annual Institute on Federal Taxation at the School of Law Oct. 20-22 the most important ever held, the planning committee of eight Los Angeles attorneys said Friday. Attorneys, accountants, life insurance underwriters, trust officers and executives dealing with federal tax problems may register at once for the intensive three-day program which will be held in Bovard auditorium. More than 25 speakers will review the new internal revenue code and its important changes Uiat affect every person and nearly every legal transaction in the nation. Talkers Some of the country’s most distinguished tax lawyers will address the SC institute. They include Norris Darrell, head of the tax department of Sullivan and Cromwell, New York City; and Harry Rudick, head of the tax department of Lord, Day & Lord, New York City, and professor of tax laws at New York University. Also, Lloyd Kennedy of Kennedy and Kennedy, Chicago, author of “Federal Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates;” and Prof. Boris I. Bittker of the Yale University law school, author of a casebook on federal taxation. More Talkers Other speakers will be the members of the planning committee including Louis M. Brown, John W. Ervin, Richard Forster, Arthur Gorman, Sidney Krystal, Arthur Manella, Carl Stutsman Jr., and Arthur B. Willis. All corporate, partnership, trust and other tax changes in the new law will be discussed by men who are recognized experts in their fields. Tuition for the institute will be $35. A $10 registration fee will make a reservation. Checks payable to the University of Southern California may be sent to the Tax Institute, 3518 University Avenue, Los Angeles 7-Information may be obtained by telephoning Richmond 2311, Ext. 340, or Richmond 7-0854. Professor Elected to Business Council Dr. Albert C. Fries, 4983 Valley Ridge Ave., head of the department of office administration in the School of Commerce, has been elected western regional member of the National Council for Business Education for three years. The national council is the executive board of the United Business Education Association, a department of the National Educa- Professor To Tell Part Rails Played In Growth of America The second post session noon assembly will take place tomorrow at 12:15 in Hancock Auditorium with Dr. William St. Clair Greever, associate professor of the University of Idaho delivering the principal address. Dr. Greever will speak on “The Role of Railways in American Development.” The Idaho pi’ofessor wrote his doctoral dissertation on how th? Santa Fe railway disposed of 13 million acres of land grants in Arizona and New Mexico. This dissertation has since been turned into a book entitled Arid Domain, published by Stanford University Press. RR History Dr. Greever, a post session history lecturer, will discuss the importance of railways in American history. Developing the his-torial angle, he will show how the railroads helped develop the west, and how their continuous business expansion made trade easier. “In building these roads, there were lots of financial maneuvers on such a large scale, that they affected th2 United States economic system,” he said. He said he would also discuss the part railroads played in becoming the first big business to become regulated. Precedents “This business expansion created certain problems and established precedents that eventually spread to other fields,” he said. Summer Session Dean John D. Cooke said that the assembly will commence at 12:15 instead of noon so as to give students more time to get to the assembly from class. Dr. Kurt von Schnuschnigg, professor of international relations at St. Louis University and former Chancellor of Austria, will speak at the following assembly a week from tomorrow. Four SC Students Enter Art Show Four SC students have entries for tho art show at the California State Fair at Sacramento Sept. 2 to 12. They are: Don Nice, Jean E. Stevenson, Frances Rasmussen, and Barbara Werts. The Troy quartet are among 100 students from 21 colleges, universities and private art schools who have submitted their work. Calendar Of Events TODAY—Education Series, “A British View of American Education,” Hancock auditorium, 10 a.m. TOMORROW—General Assembly, “The Role of Railways in American Development,” William St. Clair Greever, Bovard auditorium, noon. Religion in Life Series, “The Role of Mass Communications in Religion,” Robert O. Hall, Doheny Art and Lecture room, 3:15 p.m. WEDNESDAY — Literature Series, “Literature and the Law,” William H. Davenport, Doheny Art and Lecture room, 3:15 p.m. Scholarships Awarded To 31 SC Students Thirty-one youhg men and women students will be able to attend SC this fall on $13,000 in scholarships from the George H. Mayr Educational Foundation, Dean of Students Bernard L. Hyink announo2d Friday. t Sixteen new Mayr scholarship holders were chosen by the SC committee on student aid headed by Dr. Hyink and approved by the board of advisers of the foundation. Advisers are Milo W. Bekins, Leland P. Reeder and Ted M. Mayr. Mayr, a retired Beverly Hills druggist, established the foundation in 1949 to help worthy students get the college education he wa6 unable to afford. Much of the foundation’s assets ans in Los Angeles metropolitan real estate, especially downtown parking lots. New Grants New grants were made to Arlene Abrams, 4524 Vesper Ave., Sherman Oaks; Marcia Lee Bateman, 14715 S. Frailey Ave., Compton; Michael Blewett, 4517 Circle View Blvd.; Sara Jean Christensen, 847 Exposition Blvd.; Ann Christine Clark, 5179 High Crest Ave.; John Edwin Cochrane, 212 W. 64th St., Inglewood; William L. Donnelly, 8688 Madison Ave., South Gate; Jack Forbes, 1245 Cedaredge Ave.; Iris Ann Higbie, 328 Amethyst, Balboa Island; Gordon Mol, 1022 W. 40th PI.; Fleet E. Nuttall, 2636 Portland St.; Sharon L. Reeb, 832 S. 7th St., Alhambra; Frank J. Skrivanic, 1609 Bently Ave.; Karen Sue Stamp, 1733 W. 57th St.; Elizabeth Wittmann, 29581,-} Francis Ave., and William L. Zaun, 1340 Winchester Ave., Glendale. Afore Grants Renewals were given Jerry Lee Baker, 9713 Denker Ave.; Martha Belknap, 906 Country Club Dr., Burbank; Seyom Brown, 1277V* W. 38th St.; Cameron H. Burley, 612 Fremont Ave., South Pasadena: Marguerite Cooper, 2432 S. St. Andrews PI.; Patricia L. Dahlman, 847 Exposition Blvd.; Dora De Larios, 3501 Murifield Road; Marilyn G. Hayes, 13734 Oxnard St., Van Nuys; Merle Marlow, 9734 San Miguel Ave., South Gate; Barbara Jane Page, 15524 Clark, Bellflower; Julius Smith, 6601 W. Olympic Blvd.;, John P. Touton-ghi, 10615 Moorpark, North Hollywood; William Van Alstyne, 3657 Buckingham Road; William R. Wilcox, 2824 Carson St., Torrance; and Charlotte Wood, 440 26th St., Santa Monica. |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1533/uschist-dt-1954-08-09~001.tif |
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