Daily Trojan, Vol. 47, No. 51, November 30, 1955 |
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page three —
rnett Named os INS player of Week
>*j
Daily
Tro j a fi
— PAGE FOUR —
Automation Expands Psychology Need
-HP*
IOS ANGELES, CAIIF., WEDNEDSAY, NOV. 30, 1955
NO. 51
sideria Dies Again Saint' Rehearsal
Operatic jay Has Cast
i
.iter and singing of nubiial announcement since died away and fe-clad Desideria lay nina folded her ■tmgly around the ■s body. "Help me! cried Desideria ; fell back lifeless, ins picked up their pUt them in their
■
jtljgrr-hrai'iil ol "The Saint ^Kr Street' in Bovard Au-
Kad end?d.
Ac boini; practiced wa.s gfe drama liy Gian-Carlo *0,1 - lie mi: premiered Dvjrd rui.t;- at S p m. Be-
V| st |
0k> there will l>e two ad-Bil perform,inccs Sunday inr Wednesday of next :■
V Associate
: y f (ir School of Mil-Hum. l « conducted Mm Jucloux. head of the ' di-by Bill Butler. New York tiatit'f compO'iT Menotti.
and settings have 1 by John Blankenchip. or and technical direc-i opera and drama dc
Courtesy L.A. Herald-Express TENSE SCENE—Jeanette Farra and Chris Lachona rehearse for Friday evening's West Coast premiere of "The Saint of Bleecker Street," in Bovard Auditorium. The 1954 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama has a cast of 150—the laregst in SC operatic history. It is directed by Walter Ducloux.
IFC Men Magazine Recognition
Gathering Fight May Start Anew
ss
the opening night cast __inette Karra as the pi-
ri, Chris Lachona as her brother Michele, and ^Bencl ,i s Desideria,
ifleBjealous mistress. Tenor wna i- just completed his San Fran-
raw
Be*: i ura nt Setting
rehearsal
^^Jf.nished Italian restau-m oused the dramatic A bar at cne side of jjfcei\i'i i |ilatform for • >: lv part
* ,ct
Mv Butler, who came from ^Keturn there after the ■
ttan's Phoenix Theater. Menotti Aide Nl ited with
eB*1,1 ' e the m iginal of Menotti's highly-i-iir' on Broad-1111961 ) lie Italian-born com-liim tni' his personal tontjthen. Since that time, to directed nearly all of )spr's original produc-
Wjr oi Bleecker Street"
I d the Pulitzer Prize sw York Drama Critics 1954 It ran for 90 peron Broadway. And it ’ il pi esc ntations in '[jSl;lla 1 >pera. in Vienna, ^ft I:
"Hf*! Cast
'•’,l Hi. largest in SC ,orS will !«• heard in PM The A Cappelia choir
SfrU'"' "" sro|e, while L,7. '.II lie heard
1 s
drama by Blankenchip
J°ld
S' •’ " and a
TW*1'
Trojan Democrats' Hold Yearly Drive
Initiating the 1956 membership drive for the Trojan Democratic Club, three publications are being distributed in a booth in front of the Student Union this week.
Current issues of the Democratic Digest, Free Press, and Democratic Bulletin are being handed out to prospective members of the organization I
Drive Planned To Get Funds ForMD Clinic
A goal of $110,000 has been set for a month-long drive to support the SC-directed muscular dystrophy center at the Good Hope Clinic.
Under the auspices of the Los Angeles County Muscular Dystrophy Association, 6000 volunteer workers will seek public contributions during December.
Directed by the Schopl of Medicine, the clinic began operation last year and has treated patients from all over the United States and Canada.
Municipal Judges Evelle Younger and Robert Clifton will be march chairmen. A five-day march will be conducted on a house-to-house basis starting Sunday.
I “Funds raised in the drive will I lie used to finance the dual program of patient service and research," said Hale Warn Jr., gen-t e nd i n g" "con ven t i ons a re "only a oral campaign chairman, few of jthe activities in which the He said that $55,000 will be used group participates. This year's of- to help finance « national officers are Joe Cerrell, president; I search program aimed at finding the cause and cure of the disease. The remaining $55,000 is earmarked for patient treatment.
"Muscular dystrophy is a chronic and progressive disease that affects the muscles," said Dr. Elizabeth Austin, director of the center. "In particular, it attacks children and may cripple them for life."
by membership chairman, Si Rosenthal.
Meeting Monday at 3:15 p.m. in 129 FH, the club will elect delegates to the Fresno state convention, and vote for a treasurer, a secretary, and a member-a-large. Assemblyman Jesse Unruh, an SC alumnus, will address the group and be presented with an honorary membership.
Students Participate "Membership in the club offers students an opportunity to really participate in forming party policies and electing political officials," said Joe Cerrell, president.
Founded in 1954 under president Jimmy Smith, the club was sponsored by Dr. Russell Caldwell, associate professor of history.
Highlighted by such events as the recent reception for Democratic National Chairman Paul Butler, the club sponsored the forum in which Sen. Hubert Humphrey made his first public declaration in regard to the vice-presidency.
Cerrell President Publishing a monthly newslet ter, conducting forums, and at
Council President, Coordinator Leave Today, Tomorrow
Ron Weintraub, president of the Interfraternity Council, and Jerry Wulk, IFC coordinator, will leave by plane this week for St. Louis, Mo., to attend the annual National Interfraternity Council Convention, Friday and Saturday.
Wulk, new at the IFC coordinating post this year, will leave tonight at 10, via TWA. and Weintraub. in his second term as IFC president, will leave at 10 tomorrow night.
Wulk will arrive at the convention site earlier in order to represent Dean of Students Bernard L. Hyink at a conference for secretaries and deans to be held prior to the convention itself.
Agenda Topics
The convention will lie held in the Jefferson Hilton Hotel, with J. Edward Murphy of Pennsylvania presiding. On the agenda w'ill be such topics as scholarships, public relations, rushing, pledge training, the role of the IFC in pledge activities, and alumni relations.
Later the convention will be broken up into three panel-t.vpe groups, one for colleges or universities with 20 or more fraternities, one for those with 10 to 19, and one for those with less than 10. Ideas, suggestions, and opinions will bo exchanged among the delegates and an informal discussion held immediately thereafter.
One Delegate
Each attending institution is allowed one delegate but may send as many representatives as it sees fit.
A luncheon to get the convention rolling will be held in the hotel at 12:30 p.m. on Friday, and a banquet, concluding the convention, at 7 p.m. on Saturday.
At the next meeting of the IFC, Dec. 8, Dr. Robert Gordon, counselor of men, and Dean Hyink will discuss "house mothers." All representatives are urged to attend.
BAXTER TO SPEAK ABOUT ELIZABETHAN CHRISTMAS
What was Christmas like in Elizabethan days? What were the foods and drinks that pleased the Elizabethans’ fancy?
Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English, and nationally known for “Shakespeare on TV," and his wife, Evdia, have prepared an article, “Food and Feasts in Elizabeth's Day," which appears in the December issue of McCall's magazine and which describes Christmas of the Elizabethan era. •
The Baxters discuss the famous Elizabethan custom of roasting a boar's head for the holiday festivities. While they comment on the "wasp like waist" of Queen Elizabeth, they also explain that an “obvious feature of the cookery of the times was the lavish use of sugar.” Commenting on the Elizabethans' great consumption of ale, the Baxters write "all Englishmen front the bahy newly weaned to the Archbishop of Canterbury drank ale, and in quantities that surprise us.”
The article was written upon the request of IMiss Helen McCully, McCall's food editor. She got the idea for the Elizabethan Christmas story after hearing one of Dr. Baxter’s "Shakespeare on TV" broadcasts.
Mentioning these programs in the introduction to the Baxter article. Miss McCully wrote, "Through his brilliant TV broadcasts, which have won many awards, he (Dr. Baxter) has probably taught the largest English literature class in all history.”
Senate to Take Up Fund Drive, Film Rates Also
Arguments pro and con on uni- children will be presented tonight
versity recognition of Wampus ( f>>’ Barbara Irvine, Senate publi-maga/.ine. plans for "first night- i ,''u* ch"irl"an. Bob Jani. chairman for the variety show which
Ruthanne Marr, vice president; Morris Meadows, secietary-treasurer; Maxine Karpman. publications; Murray Bring, political action; Jerry Burns, publicity; Ron Weintraub and Si Rosenthal, delegates to the 15th Congressional District; and John Maher and Larry Lerner, delegates to the 85th Assembly District.
jumorist-Salesman Shulman 0 Unleash Wit on Campus
nationally know n [ of Minnesota, Shulman in being | unin and that 'Max' has becoi
"'itei „f the "On brought to campus through the ■ a byword on the I
imn u-hioh .............._ n...j__. it.......
appe , will be
Nurmi w hieh My in the DT campus today
gives advice on Lrom What Every Colo "How to be “peak in 133 FH [ Ynu Want to he "U tuoi Vou." will be its talk.
efforts of the ASSC Forum Committee, Don Masuda, chairman. The committee is beginning » program which will bring in a series of outside speaker* aimed at every interest at SC." i Hearing that Shulman will bo on campus, Frederic Coonradt, assistant professor of journalism
has become louith floor of the Student Union home of DT editorial and business oflices.” This year Shulman edited a “Guided Tour of Campus Humor" which he says contains the "Best stories, articles, poems, jokes, and nonsense from over 65 college humor magazines." In this hook he has divided college numor into
School Dean Plans Europe Lecture Tour
Dr Harry J. Deuel Jr., dean of
the graduate school, on special leave with a Fullbright lectureship at the University of Cambridge, England, is currently planning an extensive European lecture tour.
Dr. Deuel has been invited by the British Society for Nutrition to speak iiefore the Royal Society of Medicine Dec. 5 in London. He is a recognized authority on the nutritional value of fats and essential fatty acids. While a-broad. lie is also busy completing the manuscript of the third volume of his work entitled “The Lipids,’ a group of substances’ comprising certain fats.
Dr. Deuel recently spoke at the Dunn Nutritional laboratories at the University of Cambridge.
In late July and the early part nf August, Dr. Deuel attended the International Conference on Biochemical Porblesm of Lipids at Ghent, Belgium, and was named one of the five United States representatives for the future congresses of this group, which will be held at three year intervals
He served as chairman of the lipid section of the third International Biochemical Congress in Brussels, and attended a similar meeting on Vitamin “E" in Ven-
dumns that have DT earlier this 1 *•' told of "Ad-d Science; No. 1" 1 Si hultz, boiile-111 and bon vi-* "■> > plemioi i-d
rtftaisirfin uiuicMui r'.....-..............„____
and DT adviser, smilingly said eight sections: miscellany the
« a r _ ____ .1. .^^...UUi Uut.ifU t’OUinl tf»n
if
"It s fine that he’ll lie here. We sure need a little of the light touch around here."
Wampus Editor Arnold Diener, who considers Sliuiman one of the foremost humorists in the country, is planning to convince Shui-man to stay at SC and work oil I---- ------
the campus humor magazine. written "The teat her Merchant Phil Cook. DT business mana- "The Zebra Dei by, Sleep I ill ger. I eels that "nearly everyone Noon,' and “The Many Loves oi lhe University i on campus reads Shulman» eoi-' Dobie Gillis.
nl’ ns this ine Hen Is
Smooch.'
unelassifiable), history rewritten, verse, satire and burlesque, sports, lacerated languages, jokes, and the old grads.
“Barefoot Boy with Cheek ” the Shulman buok later made uito a musical comedy, is the humorist s best known work He also has
Official
Sol in
God s Role/ Topic Of Asilomar Meet
“What Does It Mean To Be” will be the theme of the 1955 Asilomar conference, an annual Pacific Southwest student YWCA-YMCA meeting held each year at the Asilomar Campgrounds, one mile from Pacific Grove on Monterey
Bay.
The conference, designed to w'ork toward a better understanding of God's role in history and in individual lives, will run from Dec. 26 to Jan. 1. Discussion leaders include professors from Claremont College, Occidental, Scripps, and Reed College.
Students and faculty members from colleges in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Hawaii are eligible for participation in the conference, and on each campus a special Asilomar committee is responsible for the selection of its delegates.
In Charge
At SO, Li* Nordwall, national representative for the Y, is in charge of all Asilomar arrangements, and any woman wishing to
So They Don't Turn Out Good Grid Squads?
Are Ivy Leaguers odd-ha I Is?
Or are they more on the hall?
These and other similarity exciting question* will he answered, discussed, speculated upon, analyzed, mull« <l over, debated, and, In general, kicked around t<»day, when the Sociology Club meet* in 208 FH at ISlSft p.m.
All sociology and psychology majors are invited to attend the meeting, which will headline a talk on "Natural Superiority of Ivy League Men** by guest lecturer l»r. Robert Ellis.
The talk Is based on an article in the November Holiday magazine in which the advantages that go with holding a degree from a Western 0011 ege were compared with tlione gained wtli an Eastern college degree.
I>r. Edward C. McDonough, sponsor tif the newly-formed group, will introduce the speaker; Carol Percy, chairman of the club, will preside.
Veteran students attending school under Public l-aw 650, the Korean (i.l. Bill, must pick up their attendance check forms iu tiie Office of Veterau Affairs between Monday, No-\ ember til tuid But urday, Dec-S. Thi signature of the Director of Deferred Tuition ma> be obtained any Usy during this period.
Elwyu K. Brooks Assistant Registrar
Bus Workers Set Walkout For Midnight
H.v United Preiw
Metropolitan Coach Lines and Asbury Rapid Transit Company drivers voted X47 to 87 to strike at midnight tonight unless an agreement is reached to reconvene negotiations.
A strike of ttie 1100 drivers Involved would Bifeet 250.000 daily riders in Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Orange, and Riverside counties.
Don Sheets, general chairman for the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen here, announced the vote and said it would lie forwarded to general headquarters of the union in Cleveland for sti ike authorization.
Following approval by the general headquarters, the local committee then would set a date and time for a strike. Sheets did not close the door, however, on a re.umpion oi negotiations between the union and the transit lines which couiil avert a strike.
K F. McNally, general manager of Metropolitan Coach Lines, which nl-so owns the Asbury Transit Company, said the firm was eager to reconvene negotiations.
attend may contact her for lur-ther information.
As last year's representative, Miss Nordwall, a history major with a minor ii* philosophy, found the conference a "wonderful experience,” and said, "those who have gone have considered it a highlight in their lives.”
A series of seminars on various topics are planned for the conference, and each delegate may attend any one of the discussion groups. Included in the program are seminars on “Man, Woman and God,” conducted by Dr. Bruno Klopler of UCLA; "Communism: A World Power, by Dr. Frank Munk, of Reed College; "The Struggle To Be,'” by Dr. Frankly n Josselyn, chaplain, Occidental College; and "Living Religions of Mankind," by Dr. Charles Braden of Scripps College.
ers” for Troy's drama productions, consolidation of SC charity drives, and cut-rates for Trojans at local movie theatres will highlight tonight's ASSC meeting.
This evening's meeting, the first since Nov. 17, w ill also have three high school presidents and their friends present as guests of the university, ASSC President Jerry McMahon said yesterday.
Arnold Diener, editor of Wampus. SCs unofficial humor publication, will speak to the ASSC senators on why his magazine should become an official university publication, and therefore have the rights of having an office on campus, a telephone, a mailing address, and permission to sell in school buildings.
Action Suspended
Action on this matter was suspended by the Senate after Sena-tor-at-Large Judy Green moved to reconsider previous action by the legislative body.
The senators last month denied the magazine university sanction after a blistering attack on Wampus by AMS President Bob Gerst. He labeled the publication, among other things, “cheap, vulgar trash.”
Sidney Deem, Veteran’s Representative, will present a motion to the senators that would provide for gala “first-nighter" affairs for the opening of SC drama and musical performances.
He said yesterday that these "first nighters” would give more publicity to the drama and musical affairs.
Theater Discount
NSA Representative Harvey Zuckman will tell the senators about a discount for students proposed by the Fox West Coast Theaters. This group of theaters plans to give Trojans a specified discount after presentation of their student body cards.
Dick McAdoo, Trojan Chest director,' will outline his plans for the Troy Cheat drive to be held in early spring. He also will propose the consolidation of all SC charities under the Troy Cheat banner. He said the money will be apportioned percentagewise to the charities after the final collections.
‘Equal Opportunities’ '
Marguerite Cooper, Internation, al Relations Representative, will introduce a motion for the forming of a Senate committee "that would inquire into the extent that equal opportunities are being afforded to all students on this campus, and to inquire into the feelings of the sutdents and administration regarding such opportunities.”
Miss Cooper said yesterday that this committee would consider restriction in campus housing, boarding, and so forth.
Final arrangements for the variety show and dinners in sorority and fraternity houses for crippled
will feature motion picture and television personalities, also will report on the event's progress.
ASSC President McMahon alsft said yesterday that the Senate will consider a motion to formally invite English Professor Dr. Frank C. Baxter to give his annual readings in Bovard Auditorium Dec. 14 at 8 p.m.
More Keiuilutinna
Two more resolutions will he made hy Leroy Barker and Ruthanne Marn.
Barker, commerce president, will ask for a voting ASSC senator to be placed permanently on NSA Representative Zuck man's committee.
Miss Marr, LAS president, will ask for the approval of her group's new constitution.
More plans for tonight's meeting include reports by Bob Groutch, chairman of the Board of Financial Control; Jim Hurst, junior class president; Dick Walker, sophomore class president; Greg Taylor, independent men's representative; and Laureta Misraje, independent women’s representative.
McMahon announced last night that the high school presidents, who will attend the meeting to-high will be Jim McCunnliff, Dorsey High; Bob Tellander, North Hollywood High; and Juan Wong Venice High.
Factory Chiefs To Convene in Founders Hall
More than 500 industrial supsr* visors from I/OS Angeles area business firms are expected at the Human Relations Institute of the National Association of Foremen meeting in Founders Hall, Friday and Saturday.
The Los Angeles Institute Is the third conference of four similar education programs scheduled at Long Beach, Pomona, SC, and San Diego for the 14,000 members of NAF-affiliated companies in Southern California and for supervisors of non-affiliated concerns.
“The Sup?rvlsor as a Trainer* Is to be the subject of the opening meeting. Speakers will be E. H. Moore, management development analyst for Kaiser Ste?l Corporation, and A. Bruce Rozet, NAF education specialist. At the afternoon session Dr. Thomas Gordon, consulting psychologist for Edward Glasser and Associates, will speak on "Leadership and Communications."
Saturday morning will bring a panel discussion of "Industrial Relations and Human Relations,” with Dr. William Levy, NAF executive director of education and research, serving as moderator.
Fox West Coast Will Sell Reduced Admission Tickets
Alter nearly six months of negotiation, the NSA committee disclosed yesterday that it had worked out a satisfactory agreement with Fox West Coast Theaters to sell movie discount cards at SC during February.
The contract, which had previously been approved by the ASSC Senate, calls for the sale of student discount cards which will entitle the bearer to reduced admissions at ali Fox West Coast Theaters excepting those charging 50 cents or less or presenting a road-show engagement.
While the exact amount of the discount will vary trom theater
to theater, the average discount will be aliout 25 per cent.
The cards will sell for 50 cents and will lie honored throughout Southern California and Arizona. There are no restrictions on the card as to the number of times it may be used during ihe effective period. The discount service is also unlimited as to the days of the wek and the times of day.
This means the card will be honored on Saturday evenings as well as other times.
“A student who uses the card twice at first-run theaters, such as Grauman's Chinese, will save more than the price of the card in admissions," Stan Brown, ad-
vertising manager at Fox West Coast, said. "After that the use of the card is all pure savings.”
According to Harvey Zuckman, NSA coordinator, the theater discount service is a pilot experiment. and therefore the service will be in operation only during the spring semester. The discount card will become effective February 1 and will expire June 31, 1956.
"Before Fox West Coast enlarges the service to full-year status, it wants to test student reaction to the plan on a smaller scale,” Zuckman said “That is the reason why only 2000 cards will be initially ottered lor sale.”
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 47, No. 51, November 30, 1955 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 47, No. 51, November 30, 1955. |
| Full text |
page three — rnett Named os INS player of Week >*j Daily Tro j a fi — PAGE FOUR — Automation Expands Psychology Need -HP* IOS ANGELES, CAIIF., WEDNEDSAY, NOV. 30, 1955 NO. 51 sideria Dies Again Saint' Rehearsal Operatic jay Has Cast i .iter and singing of nubiial announcement since died away and fe-clad Desideria lay nina folded her ■tmgly around the ■s body. "Help me! cried Desideria ; fell back lifeless, ins picked up their pUt them in their ■ jtljgrr-hrai'iil ol "The Saint ^Kr Street' in Bovard Au- Kad end?d. Ac boini; practiced wa.s gfe drama liy Gian-Carlo *0,1 - lie mi: premiered Dvjrd rui.t;- at S p m. Be- V st 0k> there will l>e two ad-Bil perform,inccs Sunday inr Wednesday of next :■ V Associate : y f (ir School of Mil-Hum. l « conducted Mm Jucloux. head of the ' di-by Bill Butler. New York tiatit'f compO'iT Menotti. and settings have 1 by John Blankenchip. or and technical direc-i opera and drama dc Courtesy L.A. Herald-Express TENSE SCENE—Jeanette Farra and Chris Lachona rehearse for Friday evening's West Coast premiere of "The Saint of Bleecker Street" in Bovard Auditorium. The 1954 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama has a cast of 150—the laregst in SC operatic history. It is directed by Walter Ducloux. IFC Men Magazine Recognition Gathering Fight May Start Anew ss the opening night cast __inette Karra as the pi- ri, Chris Lachona as her brother Michele, and ^Bencl ,i s Desideria, ifleBjealous mistress. Tenor wna i- just completed his San Fran- raw Be*: i ura nt Setting rehearsal ^^Jf.nished Italian restau-m oused the dramatic A bar at cne side of jjfcei\i'i i ilatform for • >: lv part * ,ct Mv Butler, who came from ^Keturn there after the ■ ttan's Phoenix Theater. Menotti Aide Nl ited with eB*1,1 ' e the m iginal of Menotti's highly-i-iir' on Broad-1111961 ) lie Italian-born com-liim tni' his personal tontjthen. Since that time, to directed nearly all of )spr's original produc- Wjr oi Bleecker Street" I d the Pulitzer Prize sw York Drama Critics 1954 It ran for 90 peron Broadway. And it ’ il pi esc ntations in '[jSl;lla 1 >pera. in Vienna, ^ft I: "Hf*! Cast '•’,l Hi. largest in SC ,orS will !«• heard in PM The A Cappelia choir SfrU'"' "" sro e, while L,7. '.II lie heard 1 s drama by Blankenchip J°ld S' •’ " and a TW*1' Trojan Democrats' Hold Yearly Drive Initiating the 1956 membership drive for the Trojan Democratic Club, three publications are being distributed in a booth in front of the Student Union this week. Current issues of the Democratic Digest, Free Press, and Democratic Bulletin are being handed out to prospective members of the organization I Drive Planned To Get Funds ForMD Clinic A goal of $110,000 has been set for a month-long drive to support the SC-directed muscular dystrophy center at the Good Hope Clinic. Under the auspices of the Los Angeles County Muscular Dystrophy Association, 6000 volunteer workers will seek public contributions during December. Directed by the Schopl of Medicine, the clinic began operation last year and has treated patients from all over the United States and Canada. Municipal Judges Evelle Younger and Robert Clifton will be march chairmen. A five-day march will be conducted on a house-to-house basis starting Sunday. I “Funds raised in the drive will I lie used to finance the dual program of patient service and research" said Hale Warn Jr., gen-t e nd i n g" "con ven t i ons a re "only a oral campaign chairman, few of jthe activities in which the He said that $55,000 will be used group participates. This year's of- to help finance « national officers are Joe Cerrell, president; I search program aimed at finding the cause and cure of the disease. The remaining $55,000 is earmarked for patient treatment. "Muscular dystrophy is a chronic and progressive disease that affects the muscles" said Dr. Elizabeth Austin, director of the center. "In particular, it attacks children and may cripple them for life." by membership chairman, Si Rosenthal. Meeting Monday at 3:15 p.m. in 129 FH, the club will elect delegates to the Fresno state convention, and vote for a treasurer, a secretary, and a member-a-large. Assemblyman Jesse Unruh, an SC alumnus, will address the group and be presented with an honorary membership. Students Participate "Membership in the club offers students an opportunity to really participate in forming party policies and electing political officials" said Joe Cerrell, president. Founded in 1954 under president Jimmy Smith, the club was sponsored by Dr. Russell Caldwell, associate professor of history. Highlighted by such events as the recent reception for Democratic National Chairman Paul Butler, the club sponsored the forum in which Sen. Hubert Humphrey made his first public declaration in regard to the vice-presidency. Cerrell President Publishing a monthly newslet ter, conducting forums, and at Council President, Coordinator Leave Today, Tomorrow Ron Weintraub, president of the Interfraternity Council, and Jerry Wulk, IFC coordinator, will leave by plane this week for St. Louis, Mo., to attend the annual National Interfraternity Council Convention, Friday and Saturday. Wulk, new at the IFC coordinating post this year, will leave tonight at 10, via TWA. and Weintraub. in his second term as IFC president, will leave at 10 tomorrow night. Wulk will arrive at the convention site earlier in order to represent Dean of Students Bernard L. Hyink at a conference for secretaries and deans to be held prior to the convention itself. Agenda Topics The convention will lie held in the Jefferson Hilton Hotel, with J. Edward Murphy of Pennsylvania presiding. On the agenda w'ill be such topics as scholarships, public relations, rushing, pledge training, the role of the IFC in pledge activities, and alumni relations. Later the convention will be broken up into three panel-t.vpe groups, one for colleges or universities with 20 or more fraternities, one for those with 10 to 19, and one for those with less than 10. Ideas, suggestions, and opinions will bo exchanged among the delegates and an informal discussion held immediately thereafter. One Delegate Each attending institution is allowed one delegate but may send as many representatives as it sees fit. A luncheon to get the convention rolling will be held in the hotel at 12:30 p.m. on Friday, and a banquet, concluding the convention, at 7 p.m. on Saturday. At the next meeting of the IFC, Dec. 8, Dr. Robert Gordon, counselor of men, and Dean Hyink will discuss "house mothers." All representatives are urged to attend. BAXTER TO SPEAK ABOUT ELIZABETHAN CHRISTMAS What was Christmas like in Elizabethan days? What were the foods and drinks that pleased the Elizabethans’ fancy? Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English, and nationally known for “Shakespeare on TV" and his wife, Evdia, have prepared an article, “Food and Feasts in Elizabeth's Day" which appears in the December issue of McCall's magazine and which describes Christmas of the Elizabethan era. • The Baxters discuss the famous Elizabethan custom of roasting a boar's head for the holiday festivities. While they comment on the "wasp like waist" of Queen Elizabeth, they also explain that an “obvious feature of the cookery of the times was the lavish use of sugar.” Commenting on the Elizabethans' great consumption of ale, the Baxters write "all Englishmen front the bahy newly weaned to the Archbishop of Canterbury drank ale, and in quantities that surprise us.” The article was written upon the request of IMiss Helen McCully, McCall's food editor. She got the idea for the Elizabethan Christmas story after hearing one of Dr. Baxter’s "Shakespeare on TV" broadcasts. Mentioning these programs in the introduction to the Baxter article. Miss McCully wrote, "Through his brilliant TV broadcasts, which have won many awards, he (Dr. Baxter) has probably taught the largest English literature class in all history.” Senate to Take Up Fund Drive, Film Rates Also Arguments pro and con on uni- children will be presented tonight versity recognition of Wampus ( f>>’ Barbara Irvine, Senate publi-maga/.ine. plans for "first night- i ,''u* ch"irl"an. Bob Jani. chairman for the variety show which Ruthanne Marr, vice president; Morris Meadows, secietary-treasurer; Maxine Karpman. publications; Murray Bring, political action; Jerry Burns, publicity; Ron Weintraub and Si Rosenthal, delegates to the 15th Congressional District; and John Maher and Larry Lerner, delegates to the 85th Assembly District. jumorist-Salesman Shulman 0 Unleash Wit on Campus nationally know n [ of Minnesota, Shulman in being unin and that 'Max' has becoi "'itei „f the "On brought to campus through the ■ a byword on the I imn u-hioh .............._ n...j__. it....... appe , will be Nurmi w hieh My in the DT campus today gives advice on Lrom What Every Colo "How to be “peak in 133 FH [ Ynu Want to he "U tuoi Vou." will be its talk. efforts of the ASSC Forum Committee, Don Masuda, chairman. The committee is beginning » program which will bring in a series of outside speaker* aimed at every interest at SC." i Hearing that Shulman will bo on campus, Frederic Coonradt, assistant professor of journalism has become louith floor of the Student Union home of DT editorial and business oflices.” This year Shulman edited a “Guided Tour of Campus Humor" which he says contains the "Best stories, articles, poems, jokes, and nonsense from over 65 college humor magazines." In this hook he has divided college numor into School Dean Plans Europe Lecture Tour Dr Harry J. Deuel Jr., dean of the graduate school, on special leave with a Fullbright lectureship at the University of Cambridge, England, is currently planning an extensive European lecture tour. Dr. Deuel has been invited by the British Society for Nutrition to speak iiefore the Royal Society of Medicine Dec. 5 in London. He is a recognized authority on the nutritional value of fats and essential fatty acids. While a-broad. lie is also busy completing the manuscript of the third volume of his work entitled “The Lipids,’ a group of substances’ comprising certain fats. Dr. Deuel recently spoke at the Dunn Nutritional laboratories at the University of Cambridge. In late July and the early part nf August, Dr. Deuel attended the International Conference on Biochemical Porblesm of Lipids at Ghent, Belgium, and was named one of the five United States representatives for the future congresses of this group, which will be held at three year intervals He served as chairman of the lipid section of the third International Biochemical Congress in Brussels, and attended a similar meeting on Vitamin “E" in Ven- dumns that have DT earlier this 1 *•' told of "Ad-d Science; No. 1" 1 Si hultz, boiile-111 and bon vi-* "■> > plemioi i-d rtftaisirfin uiuicMui r'.....-..............„____ and DT adviser, smilingly said eight sections: miscellany the « a r _ ____ .1. .^^...UUi Uut.ifU t’OUinl tf»n if "It s fine that he’ll lie here. We sure need a little of the light touch around here." Wampus Editor Arnold Diener, who considers Sliuiman one of the foremost humorists in the country, is planning to convince Shui-man to stay at SC and work oil I---- ------ the campus humor magazine. written "The teat her Merchant Phil Cook. DT business mana- "The Zebra Dei by, Sleep I ill ger. I eels that "nearly everyone Noon,' and “The Many Loves oi lhe University i on campus reads Shulman» eoi-' Dobie Gillis. nl’ ns this ine Hen Is Smooch.' unelassifiable), history rewritten, verse, satire and burlesque, sports, lacerated languages, jokes, and the old grads. “Barefoot Boy with Cheek ” the Shulman buok later made uito a musical comedy, is the humorist s best known work He also has Official Sol in God s Role/ Topic Of Asilomar Meet “What Does It Mean To Be” will be the theme of the 1955 Asilomar conference, an annual Pacific Southwest student YWCA-YMCA meeting held each year at the Asilomar Campgrounds, one mile from Pacific Grove on Monterey Bay. The conference, designed to w'ork toward a better understanding of God's role in history and in individual lives, will run from Dec. 26 to Jan. 1. Discussion leaders include professors from Claremont College, Occidental, Scripps, and Reed College. Students and faculty members from colleges in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Hawaii are eligible for participation in the conference, and on each campus a special Asilomar committee is responsible for the selection of its delegates. In Charge At SO, Li* Nordwall, national representative for the Y, is in charge of all Asilomar arrangements, and any woman wishing to So They Don't Turn Out Good Grid Squads? Are Ivy Leaguers odd-ha I Is? Or are they more on the hall? These and other similarity exciting question* will he answered, discussed, speculated upon, analyzed, mull« |
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