SHE ICi Ii lAN WDLt COLLEGE ROUNDUP: 'Old King Football' Goes Out in Style The gridiron season apparently went out this fall on an artistic note as scholars on American cam- puses took brush in hand and vented their emotions on digni- fied statues, crusty edifices and other bric-a-brac. Tommy Trojan, monument on the University of Southern Cali- fornia was the worst victim. UCLA students plastered him with gal- lons of high-grade paint and then daubed the, sticky surface with feathers, according to the Daily Trojan. * * * THE GREAT RIVALRY be- tweeen the two schools swayed and almost cracked as USC officials listed the cost of scraping 'Tommy' and assorted campus buildings the vandals had used the remainder of their paint on at more than $1,- 000. The Daily Trojan and Daily Bruin, at UCLA, joined forces to clean up the rivalry and at last word the two institutions are on the verge of a non-aggression act. EVEN THE SEDATE 'environs' of Harvard were splashed with Brown paint when scholars of that school decided it was time for a drastic change on the oldest cam- pus in the United States. The Brown College students-+ caught Brown -handed - were promptly made to kick the ac-1 111 ademic bucket and dip into their pockets for more than $200 to pay for paint-remover, according to the Harvard Crimson. * * * STUDENTS of Utah University woke one morning to find that the block "U" that adorns the hill to the northeast of their campus was whitewashed over during the night with a "W". Utah redskins considered scalp- ing anyone from Wyoming who might be hanging around with a loose parting, according to the Utah Chronicle. *. * * MOST SUPREME outburst of collegiate nonsense came before two hard-luck ball clubs, the Pur- due Boilermakers and the Hoosiers of Indiana kicked off for the tra- ditional Old Oaken Bucket. The Hoosiers planned the fu- neral of "Old Jawn Purdue" in grand style and the metalsmiths elaborately prepared for the cremation of "Miss Indiana." As things approached the gurgling point, one of the two student publications printed this cryptic headline: "I.U. VS. P.U. FOR BUCKET." Indiana students climaxed the rivalry by dropping leaflets on the Purdue campus. "What the Hell can you expect-with a kid prexy from deah old Oxford, with a bunch of hick students with no I1 spirit, with an inexperienced high school coaching staff, with eleven old men . . . flops of the year? I.U. 40, Cow College 0. Incidentally, Purdue took the hide off 'deah old' Indiana, 39-0. * * * WHILE WE ARE whetting our throats with the final meaty dregs of football, savor this one: According to the Ohio State Lantern, at Ohio State Univer- sity (south of Toledo) the Buck- eyes are better than Michigan by 438 points-according to comparative scores. Unfortunately the Buckeyes were not able to keep up with tle hot sliderules of the Lantern sportsters and played 448 point- under-par ball. We knew it all the time. FROM A RECENT University of Pennsylvania Daily Pennsylvan- ian: Not so witty Not so funny Merely mild And continued sunny. ... weather report, no less. THE SILVER AND GOLD, at the University of Colorado re- cently hit the streets in yellow paper. Several unfortunate events on the Colorado campus during the past few months, which The Daily does not consider "news" and the natural urge to accuse have led S. and G. to deny "yellow journalism." Bell, Union To Meet To Parley Strike Issues Sigler's Panel Gives Recommendations DETROIT-(P)-The Michigan Bell Telephone Co. and Union rep- resentatives of its operators and accounting employes have agreed to make another attempt to settle their long dispute. The two parties will meet Mon- day or Tuesday to discuss recom- mendations that Governor Sigler's fact-finding panel handed down yesterday after a study of the issues. * * * ' PROF. RUSSEL A. SMITH, of the University Law School, is a member of the panel, which in- cludes Dr. David D. Henry, Presi- dent of Wayne University and Rev. A. H. Poetker of the University of Detroit. The Board recommended a 10- cent hourly wage hike for 18,- 000 workers, as well as a dues checkoff, reinstatement of 22 workers disciplined for their part in a series of "quickie" strikes, and a no-strike pledge on the part of the union. Michigan Bell said the pay in- crease recommended by the panel would cost an additional $7,000,- 000 a year in operating expenses and might mean a further boost in telephone rates. TALENTED RUSSIAN: Choral Union Series To Bring RudolfSerkin, Noted Pianist Rudolf Serkin, known as one of the top-ranking pianists of the day, will perform here at 8:30 p.m. Friday in Hill Auditorium. No newcomer to Ann Arbor, Ser- kin has performed here three times previously, once in recital and twice in the May Festival programs as piano soloist with the Philadelphia Symphony. * * * BORN IN BOHEMIA of Russian parents, Serkin displayed his mu- sical talents at an early age. At four he played the piano well and could read music with facility. Wise parents however, the Serkins determined that their son's talents should not be ex- ploited. Not until a good many years later, after a period of hard training, did Serkin set forth on his first concert tour. After gaining international fame through his tours of Europe and recitals with his well-known fa- ther-in-law, the violinist Adolph Busch, Serkin first played in this country at the Coolidge Festival in Washington. HIS DEBUT as solo pianist did not come until Toscanini chose him as soloist in 1936 with the New York Philharmonic - Sym- phony. Serkin received an ovation such as had seldom been wit- nessed at Carnegie Hall and has since duplicated his original tri- umph in practically every Amer- ican city. Tickets for his performance here may be obtained at the Uni- versity Musical Society's offices, Burton Tower. BERLIN'S LADY DOGCATCHER--Berta Feder, first post-war dogcatcher in the German capital, demonstrated her original, weapon in luring the city's dogs, which are increasing in number- a lasso. Not alarmed, the curious spaniel takes the rope in his mouth. TEACHING DILEMMA: Emotional School Child Finds StudyDifficult Says Educator Eat at THEWHITE S POT BREAKFAST - LUNCH -- DINNER - SNACKS OPEN CONTINUOUSLY Sunday 5:00 P.M. to Saturday 2:30 P.M. Sunday Breakfast 8:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. THE WHITE SPOT... 517 E. William When downtown stop at the White Spot - 328 South Main AGAIN AVAILABLE The 1949 ,MICHIGAN CALENDAR containing a beautiful colored cover and twelve scenic views of the campus. Only $1.5io "Merely age," they a sudden paper short- said the morning after. * * * THE UCLA campus was recent- ly adorned with brand new, shin- ing, swing-top trash cans. They were too beautiful for words, according to the Daily Bruin. In fact they were too good for mere trash for some scholars. Maintenance men are now sort- ing the trash from letters stu- dents are mailing in the new cans. . . Late Charges TIJUANA, Mexico-More than 47 per cent c' the total electrical generating capacity in the United States is concentrated in the heav- ily industrialized Middle Atlantic and East North Central states. CHICAGO - (,P) - A Detroit educator said today that an emo- tionally upset child can not learn successfully. He called on social studies teachers to help children to ad- just emotionally to the conditions of present day life. Electricity Cut In Soviet Zone OfGermany BERLIN--(P)--Use of electricity in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany was ordered cut sharply today, reflecting the pinch of the Allied counter-blockade of the zone. The curtailments affect indus-j trial, commercial and domestic users. The order was announced1 by the Soviet-licensed ADN news agency. Power for homes will be cut offI five hours daily and use of edec-I tricity for cooking was forbidden where any other means are avail- able. Power to stores and offices, are to be cut off nine hours each1 day. Among the industrial re- strictions is a weekly "power sav- ing day" in addition to Sunday. The suggestion was made by Stanley E. Dimond of the Detroit Public Schools at a meeting of the national council for social studies. Dimond, council president, said: "We are, I suspect the bloodiest generation that has ever inhabited this globe. "For the youngest of parents there is memory of the world's greatest depression followed by the world's greatest war. For older parents there is mem- ory of World War I, a boom and bust, and then World War II. What is it like to be a child growing up in a world that is filled with conflict and disunity? One inevitable result is that people in order to survive in such a culture become coarser." Literary History. . Director of the Clements Li- brary, Randolph G. Adams, has discussed reports and chronicles in a recently published "Literary History of the United States," by Macmillan Co. The three-volume work offers a complete critical, biographical and historical record of American literature and its makers, explor- ing every facit of our literature, from earlier days to the present, according to the publishers. 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