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-PAGE FOUR-Much Ado’ Opening Set for Bovard
Vol. XLVt
. 71
LOS ANGELES, CALIF., FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955
No. 130
GONE FIJIS — Phi Gams are going native for the Fiji Islander to be held Saturday night at the chapter house. Getting in the mood
for the gala event are Fijis Blair Barnette and Tom Hargette with their dates, Kappa Marilyn McClure and Alpha Phi Sue Butcher.
SG Delegates Sweep Top Model UN Posts
By Harvey Zuckman Daily Trojan Staff Correspondent SAN FRANCISCb. May 5—SC’s Canadian delegation has en the driver’s seat in guiding the action of the junior tesman assembled at the fifth annual Model United Naas here at San Francisco State College.
Bill Van Alstyne, delegate to UNESCO, was selected rap-eur of this specialized agen- ■ ” "
Placid Tropics Set Mood For Fiji Islander
A return to primitiveness will be observed Saturday night by Trojans attending the Fiji Islander at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, 880 West Adams
“The luau, which is an annual function of all Fiji chapters throughout the United States, will begin at 8 in order to orient civilized guests to the carefree ways of old Fiji Land,” according to Walt White, president .
Dancing to the music of the Coral Islanders will begin at 8:30 p.m. It will be followed by a floor show of “native” talent at 10:30 p.m., including knife thrower Freddie Letuli, and a Hawaiian comedian by the name of Napua.
Highlight of the show will be songs and dances by Princess Luana, hula star of the Harry Owens television show.
The interior of the Fiji house has been converted into an island paradise with the use of bamboo huts, gardenias, palm branches, fish nets, cork floats, and other tropical growth. Guests will enter 1he dance through a waterfall, which will flow from the second floor of the chapter house into a pool below.
Invitations were distributed throughout the Row last week by Fiji pledges Lee Manuel, Don Brannan, Jim Karayn, and Jack Dimond. They were dressed in native costumes of black union suits, multi-colored hula skirts, derby hats, white bucks, and canes.
of the UN today. Bob Fine-?ie. acting delegate to the trus-:hip committee, was also elect-rapporteur for his group, t is the rapporteur’s job to rdinate the activities of h«s mittee and to make recom-ndations for action to the neral Assembly which meets day in the San Francisco Op-House.
inestone was instrumental in ting the trusteeship commit-to accept the British resolu-n regarding the explosive Cy-js question.
'he new rapporteur charged t British control over the lit-Eastern Mediterranean island s strictly a question of domes-jurisdiction, and4 not one lich the UN was capable of nsidering.
In the ad hoc membership mmittee, Kathy Norstrom of nada agreed to co-sponsor, ong with the United States and assia, a resolution to be intro-ced in the General Assembly dvocating the admission of Austria into UN membership.
With the two great power flocks agreeing on Austrian embership, Austria is virtually :rtain to be accepted at Friday’s neral Assembly session.
Moving over to the political and eurity committee, SCs Murray ring was appointed to a special rnmission to consider a Turko-ulgarian border incident last onth. when 20 soldiers from th countries were killed.
Dave Johnson. Canada’s acting elegate to the International lonetary Fund, was successful in etting his fellow delegates to his financial organization toi re-a proposal establishing international tariff commisson to reg-:late tariff rates.
Johnson pointed out that the nternational Trade Organization, •hich was just recently establish-already is responsible for such activity, and that a new organization would simply create wasteful duplication.
One reason for SC's domination f the conference thus far is the lack of preparation shown by .tost of the delegations. In fact, the San Francisco State administrative officers also have seemed unprepared to untangle the procedural squabbles that have broken out.
In the ad hoc membership com. mittee, things became so scrambled that the chairman had to call a 30-minute halt to the proceedings to restore order.
Friday the action moves to the opera house, where the UN charter was drafted 10 years ago.
The first plenary sesion of the General Assembly gets under way et 9 a.m. Friday and is open to the public.
Donald Hindley, head of SC’s Canadian delegation, will present a major welcoming address at approximately l<X-30 a.m.
IMPRESSED
Visitors Enjoy Troy; Express Praise for SC
By Jeanine Stiles
If SC's ears were burning this week it was because some foreign visitors and students gave the university a couple of nice compliments.
A. Babs Fafunwa, assistant Nigerian liaison officer in Washington, D.C., visited the campus Tuesday during his tour of West Coast colleges.
Guest speaker at a special university luncheon Tuesday, Fafunwa said that there are approximately 350 Nigerian students in the U.S. and about 50 more in i Canadian colleges.
He left L.A. on Wednesday to ! continue his tour in the San Francisco area.
Thursday’s luncheon was in honor of Momulu Dukuly, acting secretary of state of Liberia, and James B. Dennis, Liberian undersecretary of the treasury.
AIMME DAY
SC Hosts Annual Engineer Meeting
The annual meeting of the SC chapter of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers will be held Friday in the Art and Lecture Room of Doheny Memorial Library, AIMME President Donald Forster announced.
Student research papers will be read and movies will be presented as part of the day’s program. The day will be topped off with a dinner at the Rodger Young Auditorium.
The movies will be presented at different times during the day. The first, “The Care and Handling of Drill Pipe,” will be shown at 11 a.m. “Drilling Mud Control” and ‘‘Neutron Logging” will be shown at 1 p.m.
During the afternoon session from 2:30 to 4, J. E. Joujon-Roch of Shell Oil Company, and John Davis, past ASSC president and now division sales manager of Technical Oil Tool Company, will discuss “Disposal of Oil Field Wastes” and “Use of Precision Instruments In Surveying Oil Wells,” respectively.
The dinner will be at 6:30 p.m. and prizes will be awarded for student ‘papers by James D. Jughes of Lane-Wells Company and Warren Woodruff, and SC graduate and track star, will speak on the “Role of the Service Company in the Petroleum Industry.”
The meeting is open to anyone throughout the day. Reservations for the dinner meeting can be made at the petroleum engineering office, room 303, in the Engineering Building or by calling extension 303.
Songfest TV Appearances Slated Friday
Two television appearances have been scheduled Friday afternoon to plug the second annual SC Songfest, it was announced yesterday by Chairman .Bob Jani.
Robbie Carrol, Songfest co-chairman, and Jani will appear at 4 p.m. on Channel 13 with Jack McElroy. McElroy will interview the two and show pictures of last year’s event.
The Delta Gamma Quintet will appear at 5 p.m. on Gene Norman's show, Channel 9. The quintet includes Carolyn Johansing, Carol Harker, Nancy Rebstock, Vi Jameson, and Lou Scarbrough. They will sing “Bobo Holiday," their number in the Small Groups division of the show this year.
SC Welcomes Alumni Back Home' Saturday
Campus Carnival Ready for Guests
AFROTC — Preparing to leave for the Air Force ROTC Military Ball to be held Friday night in the Embassy Room of the Ambassador Hotel are (L. to R.) Jim Floracek, Delt; Minnie Brown, Pi Phi; Virginia Howells, Gamma Phi; and Tom Bege-low, Delt. •
Foreign Food Feed On Tap for Friday
By Bob Lenard
Anyone for Kubba? In case you’re not familiar with Syrian dishes Kubba is a “kind of meatball,” according to Miss Yolanda D’Amico of the Arab Student Association.
Kubba is just one of the many foreign delicacies that will be served when the Arab group presents its International Kitchen Friday night at 7 in the
basement of- the University Methodist Church.
More Foods
The country of Lebanon will be represented with Hommus, a type of legume. Pilaz, a rice dish from Greece, will be another foreign food on sale. Iraq’s Dolma is listed as another fine treat. Three Italian dishes, Pizza, Baked Macaroni, and Torroni will be served at the Italian booth.
Other countries whose foods will be represented are Turkey, Egypt, Russia, Philippines, and South American countries. Armenian appetizers will be prepared.
Another highlight of the evening will be an initiation ceremony during which outstanding personalities will be given honorary membership in the ASA. Those to be initiated are Dr. Rufus B. Von KleinSmid; Vice-President Albert Raubenheimer; Mrs. Dorothy Zech, foreign students adviser; Mrs. Arlien Johnson, dean of the School of Socil Work; and Mrs. Selma Khouri, member of the Syrian-American community.
There is no admission cost and the foods will be sold at nominal fees.
16 to Graduate From Course In Flight Safety
Sixteen Navy and Marine Corps pilots and three civilians will be graduated from the aviation safety training division of University College at the University of Southern California Friday.
Rear Admiral Joseph M. Carson, USN, chief of staff and aide to the commander of the Pacific Fleet Air Force, San Diego, will address the graduating class at a luncheon in the University Methodist Church, 817 West 34th Street.
He will be introduced by Earl C. Bolton, administrative assistant to SC President Fred D. Fagg Jr. Dr. Louis Kaplan, coordinator of flight safety training at SC, will award certificates to the graduates.
A Naval aviator 27 years. Admiral Carson commanded Fleet Air Wing 6 in the Korean war, and in the Inchon landing.
Air Force R0 To Designate Colonel at Ball
One of the five women vying for the title of Air Force ROTC honorary cadet colonel will be crowned at the annual AFROTC Military Ball Friday night in the Embassy Room of the Ambassador Hotel.
The other four candidates will serve as honorary cadet lieutenants.
The colonel and her staff will participate in the annual Federal Inspection May 10 on Bovard Field, when the SC cadet wing will pass in review for visiting military dignitaries from the University Headquarters.
The five candidates for the title are Michele Fox, Donna Webster, Marta Luke, Betty Metzger, and Georgia Rodee.
Miss Fox is a sophomore in LAS and affiliated with Alpha Phi sorority. Miss Webster, a Delta Gamma, is a freshman dental hygiene major, and Miss Luke is a freshman from Harris Plaza majoring in drama.
A Junior education major, Miss Metzger is ASSC vice president and a member of Alpha Delta Pi. Miss Rodee is a sophomore enrolled in the School of Music. She is affiliated with Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
By Phil Cook
Student side-show barkers and carnival booths will transform the SC campus into a circus grounds for children of graduates for Alumni Day Saturday.
Beginning at 9 a.m., registration for Trojans of the past 50 years and their families will be held at the coffee bar to
be set up on the lawn between Founders Hall and the Administration Building. Morley Drury, Ernie Smith, and other famous All-Americans from SCs past will welcome the alumni.
A nursery school and all of the facilities for caring for youngsters will be available.
A full morning of events has been scheduled, starting at 10 with the SC-UCLA freshman baseball game on Bovard Field. Youngsters should bring their swimming suits in order to take advantage of the facilities in the gymnasium pool.
Other morning events include the varied carnival-type booths set-up and manned by 29 different sororities and fraternities. There will be an arrow shooting booth, a dart game, a photo booth, and a tomato throw among the many amusements supervised by Joan Price, ASSC vice-president.
Troyville Trolley rides and scenic and instructive tours of the campus will be conducted by the Trojan Knights under President Howard Smith. Closed channel station KUSC-TV, will he in operation for visitors’ inspection, and ‘Trojan Tempo,” “football,” and ‘‘Tradition That is Troy,” all motion pictures, wiU be shown.
President Fred D. Fagg Jr. will welcome former Trojans at tne noon barbecue luncheon under the north lawn shade trees.
At this time the Asa V. Call Achievement Trophy will be awarded to the alumnus who has brought the greatest honor to the university during the past year. General Alumni Association Pre*. ident Kennedy Ellsworth will make the presentation.
The traditional faculty-alumni baseball classic is scheduled for 2 p.m. Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid will umprie the event, and Dr. Frank C. Baxter will announce all the rulings throughout the game.
Jess Hill, football coach, wiU put the varsity through its first spring practice game at 3, when the Red and Whites will work out before the alumni.
SC Professor Puts on Badge
Wesley Brown Jr., assistant professor in the School of Public Administration, has been chosen Chief of Police by the City Council of Redlands.
Meager Turnout Votes In First Day Run-offs
Freshman and commerce students will have their last chance to select their officers Friday as the final day of balloting begins in what has been termed a very slow spring election.
Apathy and lack of participa-
LYNNE ADAMS
... Phi
SUE SHERER
. . . Sigs
ADRIENNE ATWOOD
... search for
IRENE WALPOLE
.. . Palm
MARY KATSSKOS
. . . Springs
DIANNE OLSEN
. . . Queen
Six Co-Eds Vie for Moonlight Girl' Title
Sixty-five couples will leave for Palm Springs Friday for the Phi Sigma Kappa formal and the finals of the “Moonlight Girl” contest to be held Saturday night.
Lynne Adams, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Adrienne Atwood, Delta Delta Delta: Mary Kotsikos, Gamma Phi Beta; Dianne Olsen, Pi Beta Phi; Sue Sherer, Alpha Chi .Omega; and Irene Walpole, Kappa Alpha Theta are the six finalists left in the contest. They were chosen from an original field of 25.
The winner will be entered in the national Phi Sig queen contest. “The Moonlight Girl” and her two attendants will receive trophies.
Alex Cooper, KLAC disc Jockey and Phi Sig almunus, will crown the winner at Saturday night’s formal at the Shadow Mountain Club. Cooper also crowned last years winner, DG Eleanor Johnson.
The “Moonlight Girl” candidates have been attending candlelight dinners this week at the Phi Sig house for pre-
liminaries to the Saturday night crowning.
Before the formal there will be swimming, volleyball, and golf at the Shadow Mountain Club and a cocktail party at the Fire Cliff Lodge. Dale Rennie’s orchestra will be featured at the formal.
This is the same orchestra that played at the Phi Sig’s initiation formal last March. They also performed for the Walls of Troy fund raising dance and two or three other formals Qf Row houses.
tion were the pass words around the polling area Thursday when a meager few showed up to vote and work at the polls in Alumni Park.
Only 162 commerce students out of the 1443 enrolled in the school showed up to vote for the much contested office of president.
108 Freshmen
Sophomore vice president was also at stake, but only 108 of the 1124 freshman upheld their choice with a vote.
TRG-backed Nancy Bates-Lane and Leroy Barker are candidates for commerce president and TRG-backed candidates Cynthia Dixon and Joan Sparling are in the sophomore race.
Quite in contrast to election area on University Avenue was Fraternity Row. Parades of campaigning cars lined the streets during the noon hour with honking horns and campaign slogans blasting.
Spirit Builders
Some of the women backing their candidate in the commerce race even formed car-pools to take voters to the polls. Some obstinate fraternity man devised effective water bombs to liven up the campaign.
Campaigners wfll begin work again Friday as soon as the polls open at 9:30 a.m. and will continue to boost spirit.
Commissioner of Elections Bette Dobkin said things were going smoothly and there were no questionable acts occuring during voting.
f
-PAGETHREE-Football Preview For Alumni
Tr
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| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 46, No. 130, May 06, 1955 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 46, No. 130, May 06, 1955. |
| Full text |
-PAGE FOUR-Much Ado’ Opening Set for Bovard Vol. XLVt . 71 LOS ANGELES, CALIF., FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1955 No. 130 GONE FIJIS — Phi Gams are going native for the Fiji Islander to be held Saturday night at the chapter house. Getting in the mood for the gala event are Fijis Blair Barnette and Tom Hargette with their dates, Kappa Marilyn McClure and Alpha Phi Sue Butcher. SG Delegates Sweep Top Model UN Posts By Harvey Zuckman Daily Trojan Staff Correspondent SAN FRANCISCb. May 5—SC’s Canadian delegation has en the driver’s seat in guiding the action of the junior tesman assembled at the fifth annual Model United Naas here at San Francisco State College. Bill Van Alstyne, delegate to UNESCO, was selected rap-eur of this specialized agen- ■ ” " Placid Tropics Set Mood For Fiji Islander A return to primitiveness will be observed Saturday night by Trojans attending the Fiji Islander at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, 880 West Adams “The luau, which is an annual function of all Fiji chapters throughout the United States, will begin at 8 in order to orient civilized guests to the carefree ways of old Fiji Land,” according to Walt White, president . Dancing to the music of the Coral Islanders will begin at 8:30 p.m. It will be followed by a floor show of “native” talent at 10:30 p.m., including knife thrower Freddie Letuli, and a Hawaiian comedian by the name of Napua. Highlight of the show will be songs and dances by Princess Luana, hula star of the Harry Owens television show. The interior of the Fiji house has been converted into an island paradise with the use of bamboo huts, gardenias, palm branches, fish nets, cork floats, and other tropical growth. Guests will enter 1he dance through a waterfall, which will flow from the second floor of the chapter house into a pool below. Invitations were distributed throughout the Row last week by Fiji pledges Lee Manuel, Don Brannan, Jim Karayn, and Jack Dimond. They were dressed in native costumes of black union suits, multi-colored hula skirts, derby hats, white bucks, and canes. of the UN today. Bob Fine-?ie. acting delegate to the trus-:hip committee, was also elect-rapporteur for his group, t is the rapporteur’s job to rdinate the activities of h«s mittee and to make recom-ndations for action to the neral Assembly which meets day in the San Francisco Op-House. inestone was instrumental in ting the trusteeship commit-to accept the British resolu-n regarding the explosive Cy-js question. 'he new rapporteur charged t British control over the lit-Eastern Mediterranean island s strictly a question of domes-jurisdiction, and4 not one lich the UN was capable of nsidering. In the ad hoc membership mmittee, Kathy Norstrom of nada agreed to co-sponsor, ong with the United States and assia, a resolution to be intro-ced in the General Assembly dvocating the admission of Austria into UN membership. With the two great power flocks agreeing on Austrian embership, Austria is virtually :rtain to be accepted at Friday’s neral Assembly session. Moving over to the political and eurity committee, SCs Murray ring was appointed to a special rnmission to consider a Turko-ulgarian border incident last onth. when 20 soldiers from th countries were killed. Dave Johnson. Canada’s acting elegate to the International lonetary Fund, was successful in etting his fellow delegates to his financial organization toi re-a proposal establishing international tariff commisson to reg-:late tariff rates. Johnson pointed out that the nternational Trade Organization, •hich was just recently establish-already is responsible for such activity, and that a new organization would simply create wasteful duplication. One reason for SC's domination f the conference thus far is the lack of preparation shown by .tost of the delegations. In fact, the San Francisco State administrative officers also have seemed unprepared to untangle the procedural squabbles that have broken out. In the ad hoc membership com. mittee, things became so scrambled that the chairman had to call a 30-minute halt to the proceedings to restore order. Friday the action moves to the opera house, where the UN charter was drafted 10 years ago. The first plenary sesion of the General Assembly gets under way et 9 a.m. Friday and is open to the public. Donald Hindley, head of SC’s Canadian delegation, will present a major welcoming address at approximately l |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1544/uschist-dt-1955-05-06~001.tif |
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