rainbow nine meets trojans tomorrow
TRANSCRIPT
RAINBOW NINE MEETS TROJANS TOMORROW Openin~ League Game; Hirota Captains Varsity
Team captain Jyun Hirota will Jead the Varsity nine onto the diamond of the Honolulu Stadium to- · morrow night a t 7 : 30 for the Rainbow's premier game in the Hawaii senior Winter Loop.
With Wayne Sakamoto in the catcher's box and Walter Hironaka pitching the curves, Coach Tommy Kaulukukui's baseball squad will clash with the Trojans, farm leag~e team of the senior league Tigers.
"Tough games in a tough league," says the Rainbow grid and baseball mentor who will send out a tea:in in · top stiape. UH fans will be watch-
English Books· Needed Second hand copies of Hubbell's
AMERICAN LIFE IN LITERATURE are needed ba~ly for the American literature · class, stated Dr. Willard Wilson, English department head.
Students who have copies are urged to sell them to the bookstore.
ing the first Rainbow team to ever play in the rugged senior winter league. We played in the junior league fast year, and in the pre-war years were entered in the commercial league.
Football star Hirota and Coach Kaulukukui have ace pitchers Sakamoto, George' Maruyama, and Roy Hirokawa lined up for the game. St. Louis college stars Dermot and Gordon Ornellas, whom baseball fans will have a hard time distinguishing because they are identical twins will greatly augment the squad. '
Lineups are as follows : Sakamoto-catcher Hironaka-pitcher D. Ornellas~first base D. Ornellas-first base Hirota (c)-second pase Ida-third base• S. Kaulukukui-shortstop Tanaka-left field Takayesu-right field G. Ornellas- center field Nosse may start at first for Arnel
las.
World Stadents Drive Starts Tomorrow Under Mary OkimDto
The Future of Man Rests in the Minds of the St~dents of the WorUl. With this theme, the annual World Student Service Fund Drive
sponsored by the .ASUH will be o~cially opened on the campus tomorrow at a 10 :30 convocation in Farrington hall.
Student solicitors will approach faculty members and students for contributions to the drive. General Chairman Mary Okimoto, arts and sciences junior has planned an elaborate ·canvassing program which is aimed to reach every student on the campus. ,
The Rev. Allan Hackett, pastor of Central Union church will deliver the mafo address at the convocation. He will speak on the purpose and the function of the drive. Other speakers on the program are: Dr. Johannes Rhader, Holland; Mrs. Frederick George Mann, England; Lea Moch, France; Mrs. Ligaya Reyes, Philippines; and Vice Council Zun-Han Wuu, China. .Each of the speakers will explain · how
WSSF is function-
ing in the various
countries.
Dehat~ Tryouts Set for Friday
Second semester students will be given the opportunity to tryout for the Varsity debate team on Friday, at 1: 10 in SS 105, ac~rding to Alfred Laureta, chairman of the board of debate and forensics.
All ASUH members will be eligi-ble to take advantage of this second chance to land a berth on the Var-sity squad. Interested students are requested to sign with Laureta at campus mail 128 or telephone him at 91619.
Participants should be prepared to discuss the negative or positive sides of the question: Shoulq Hawaii be -granted statehood.
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M . AW A
Vol. XXV UNIVERSITY OF HAW All, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1947 No. 28
Keichiro Yamato Appointed Graduate Manager to Fill J(aulukukui's Spot
Stanford Debaters Clash With UH pisputers in March
An unusual treat as a feature of the 40th anniversary program will be a Stanford-UH debate clash on the proposition, Resolved: That Hawaii should be granted statehood. According to Dr. Bower Aly, head of the speech department, the t eams will meet on Friday, March 21 at 8: 15 in the evening in Farrington hall.
Present plans hold that Stanford will debate the nega tive s ide of the proposition while UH will challenge with the affirmative. Criteria of judging will be the most effective arguments and speeches by individual members.
Selection of squad members who will form the Stanford opposition will be held at tryouts on Friday, February 21. Those selected will also attend the national congress of Delta Eigma Rho, national debat-
Continued on page 2
Students Asked.To Get ASUH Medals
Gold arid silver medals, awarded to outstanding students from 1942 through 1946, are in the ASUH office, President Wadsworth Yee announced.
Students who received certificates for their medals are urged to pick up their medals as soon as possible by turning in their certificates. Graduates and ex-UH students should send in th~ir certificates by mail in order to receive their a ward~
Keichiro Yamato, senior, will fill the graduate manager's seat immediately and will draw down the monthly salary of $275 through the second semester and the summer term.
Y amato's appointment, subject to approval by President Gregg Sinclair, came at a special ASUH council meeting yesterday morning. With
Quonset Asked For Offices
\
By ASUH Council Sorely needed quonset huts will
grace the campus in the near future and will be used for laboratories by the science departments, according to Dean Wilfred J. Holmes.
The administration is practically assured of obtaining the quonsets to supplement teaching facilities on the campjus. Not so sure of obtaining a quonset for their own use is the ASUH.
Members of the council, who have asked for an additional hut in which to expand, met with Federal Works Administration engineer Wright L. Felt last week. Mr. Felt, who is division engineer of the western states (including Hawaii), is here from his San Francisco office and is studying the quonset applications.
"We are giving every consideration to the applicants," Oklahoma University graduate Felt stated. "The office of education has to determine the use in accordance with PL 697."
Since 1941 the FWA education office has spent between five and six million dollars in the territory on educational facilities. In the meantime, the ASUH is keeping its collective fingers crossed, hoping that a little more money will be allocated for the purchase of a hut for them.
Tommy Kaulukukui's recent resignation, the position has been open for three weeks. Well-qualified Yamato is a business and economics major, carrying only three units
towards his degree in June.
Rainbow football and baseball
K eichiro Yamato
coach Kaulukukui, who carries an
associate professorship in physical education, resigned because the duties of a grad manager conflicted heavily with his instructional and coaching du ties. The grad · manager's position is a full-time one, entailing executive secretarial jobs on the publications and board of athletic control boards. Yamato will also keep the ASUH books and budget. . Keichiro Yama
to, chaii-man of th e convocation has a n n o unced that music will be provided by the University band.
A radio program over KGMB
Kau, Malama Augment: Cagers; Two More Games Before
1
Madison Square Garden Jaunt
Yamato, who is 25 years old, reentered the University in February of 1946 after a four years absence. He served with the 442nd Infantry Regiment in Italy and France, and was awarded the Silver Star for
Mary Okimoto at 5 p.m. tonight Will be presented to the public by University students. Mrs. Mildred Simmons, executive secretary of the YWCA, will be in charg~ of the radio Program entitled "The Future of Man". The cast includes Revocado Medina, Kazue Amioka, Daniel Yamashita, Jean Yamauchi, Mercedes Hutchinson, James Bacon, Yuriko Kobayashi, Violet Chang, Sadie Yoshizaki, Ruth Funai, Donald MaYo, James Tani and Earl Robinson.
''D r. Staff" is Popular New Prof at University
A Wide-eyed new stude~t, over a cup of coffee in the cafeteria, asked Solemnly, "Who Is a better lit teacher? Coale or Staff?" .
'rhe attractive coed couldn't make Up her confused mind, and almost had decided on ''Dr. Staff" when a Worldly wise two-semester student Pointed out kindly that "Staff" Would have an awful lot of courses to · · give as there were about 20 ditto ll'larks under his name, after llt courses.
By Tets Ushijima After a two weeks layoff from the
University of Hawaii Invitational league, the Rainbow cagers return to the courts this week with two of the toughest games on their schedule. Tonight they meet the sharp shooting Nuuanu Y five and on Thursday night, the Kalihi Pirates.
The Y's men will be out to get our boys tonight because a victory will put them in a position to play the Sports Stars for the leaglie championship. The Rainbows are tied for the second place with the Y'smen now and will be in a similar position should they win. From the latest developments, the Rainbow's chances of winning are great-
er. The squad has been augmented
tremendously with the addition of Bobby Kau, Robert Wong, George Malama, Bill Young, all former Rainbowites, anif D o n al d Fong. These boys have been with the team for practices and scrimmage games for a long time and are flt and fast for action. Only boys in school were used by Coach Bert Chan Wa in the Invitational league games up to the last game. From
tQnight on, the team that you see will be the complete Rainbow team for 1947.
The Nuuanuans are expected to put on a stubborn fight tonight. They take long shots and usually put them in. Harry Hee, former St. Louis flash, dumps them in from either hands and does some beautiful fake and pivot shots. Barney Pang's looping swish shots from outside can demoralize a team. In face, all of the boys we face tonight are shot artists plus, but they lack the height.
Here the Rainbows loom a favorite. We have a good pivot man in Damien Rocha, set shot artists in
Ka Leo Meeting ••• An important meeting of the Ka
Leo editorial staff is scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 9 at 12:45 p.m. in the Ka Leo office. All reporters and staff editors are asked to be present.
New students who are interested In working for Ka Leo are welcome. Don't forget! 12:45 p.m., Ka L.eo office, Thursday.
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Robert Wong, George Malama, Ed Loui, tall rebound inen in Don Fong and "Clown" Kahuanui, fast and elusives in Bobby Kau and Dick Mamiya. In other words, we have a team to beat-tonight and any other night . .
The University hoopseekers have never lost a game in some 30 league and scrimmage games. The only loss, a "technical foul" for using ineligible P!ayers, was to the Sports Stars, though we actually won the game. They have played some or the topnotch teams on the rock and have averaged over 50 points per game. According to Dick' Isaacs, the man responsible for the team's invasion of the mainland and· former right hand man of Ned Irish, basketball's czar at Madison Square Garden, the Rainbows are going to make a hit and will give the mainland teams stiff competition.
See the team for yourself tonight and Thursday night and you will be bound to go out talking - and it won't be hay!
Game time is 7: 30 and prices are 25 cents for students {don't forget your activity book! ) and 60 cents for the public.
Continu~d on page £
Registration Reveals W ahines Outnumbered
(By Daral Conklin)
As the second semester of the school year 1946-47 opens, one fact stands out clearly: our men, like _MacArthur, have returned. For the first time since 1941- and this should please the wahines-the men on the campus outnumber the women about three to two.
Dominating this large male group are the veterans. Whereas last term 46. 7 per cent of all men were veterans, this semester about 70 percent are.
Over 60 vets are in school under Public Law 16. Notable among this group is Sanji Kimoto, totally blind vet of the 442nd. Men like Sanji are not helpless or hopeless . • . treat them as equals!
So girls, it seems that now, for the first time in many years, there are more than enough men to go around, and it behooves you to take advantage of this favorable situation .
Page 2 KA LEO 0 HA WAil, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, . 1947
TMl VOICG MAW A It
Published twice a week by the Associ~ted Students of the University of Hawaii 3ubscription rates: $1.50 per semester, $3.00 yearly.
Work t:o be Pone • • • There is work to be done.
A clean, new semester lies ahead, full of hope and plans for the climax of a year that started off with a bang.
In extending its traditional welcome to all new students, Ka Leo points with pride to the work completed by the student body during the first semester.
The success of the Collegiate Carnival alone serves as proof that great things can be accomplished with student cooperation. The Theater Guild has provided us with first rate entertainment and stage pro-duction. ·
Th·e Rainbow football team has been the pride and joy of all connected ·with the University. Social functions and activities sponsor~d by classes and organizations have been faithfulJy attended and carried out.
In a few weeks the University will observe its ' 40th anniversary. Eminent educators and leaders from all over the _ mainland will be guests at this time. It provides us with an excellent opportunity to become acquainted with and gain much from contact with them.
A debate squad from Stanfo;d university will arrive to .argue out the question of statehood with our representatives who will be selected soo . Plans are also underway for a debate tour of the states.
A great deal is expected from our basketball team which leayes for -the'· ni~ihland ·fo two ·weeks. Varsity swimming, too, invades the campus
• ·. soon, and -evjdence points to a glorious season.
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Offering new and varied courses this semester are visiting profes~ors. ~Quonset' huts will sprout on the campus to relieve overfilled classrooms. Plays written by our owri students are to be produced by the Theater Guild. 'Plans for building a war memorial are underway and a Univer-
" sity radio program will be conducted over a local station. - · There is much to be ,done. Ka Leo hopes the newcomers will not
misinterpret and think that this comprises all of a college education. _The blood and sweat of exam times are no laughing matter. The results
. ~f a haphazard life here have been told countless numbers of times by -the formal Il°otes serit out fro~ the Dean's office.
The .ideal student is the one .who takes part in extracurricular activities with a careful eye on his studies.
We grow with each accomplishment. Work hard and grow with _the University by developing your personality through a richer and fuller college life.
Stan/ ord vs UH Continued from page 1 ing fraternity in Chicago. · Each participant will be given eight minutes to deliver a sp_eech on a topic which will be announced later. Judges for the tryouts will be Dr Ralph c~ Roeber, Dr. Joel Trapido, Miss Genevieve . Arnold, Dr. Robert W. Clopton and pr. Stanmore Townes.
Mignon Beauty Shop 1085 S. Beretania St.
1 Phone 58709
Kunikiyo Florist Phones - 3135 - 3113 . ·
1111 FORT STREET
Keichiro Yamato Continued from page 1
bravery in action and the Purple Heart with a cluster. He was wounded twice in Italy and received a commission on the battlefield in France, being discharged with .the rank of First Lieutenant in early 1946.
Kaulukukui's position is going to a man who has had invaluable experience as finance chairman of the Collegiate Carnival, a $100,000 project, and who has held other committee jobs.
The appointment is a temporary one as Yamato plans to do graduate work on the mainland next year. His salary, set at $275 monthly, has been , supplemented - by the additional · student assessment of 50 cents that was given the nod by UH students in a plebiscite held before the end of the first semester.
l(RISPY KRUST BAI\ERY 1081 S. BERETANIA ST. PHONE 2806
FAMOUS NAME BRANDS of Merchandise
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OTIS ELEVATORS
OvoN HAMM-YOUNG co. ~1 0 N 0 l U I. 11 • HI I n • "r\o i-4. ! Lt' ~ u • 1 •1 ! :
Twelfth Annual Narcissus Ball f!n Februa~y 8
Yee W elcoineS ·· N,e~/ St:Ucie~~
A narcissus dis p 1 a y, CChinese scrolls, and oriental 'doors decorated with weeping willows and bamboo-all symbolizing long life and good luck-will furnish the atmosphere for the twelfth annuai Te Chih Sheh Narcissus Ball on February 8 from 8 p .m. to midnight at Hemenway hall. Archie's Rhythm Makers will - play for the formal
Wadsworth Yee
. O~ _behalf .:..o~ ~tb,e ASUiJ_ st,u~nt counc1l, f am ta:klng this opJ>ortUni.
ty ~o ~elcpme ,all new student , lo
our •. ca.,)npqs. Li.fe on .- the _ c~us has been very act.ive this year, and I kn~w ql,atx ._,o.µ._ w1~l ?~n~riRu~e Your efforts . t()!·.~he. 1 f1,1rtl)._~r_ i~p:r;ovement
. of . our _:-~am.-P,U~; , .. ~P the inco~jng veter.~·US, . th~ ASU,H W:il!, gladlf aid you in . p.rient~n,l?, yo-qr~ el:ves · to~[. lege life. To m~):ce .the. year a ~C· cess, the ~?th: .Y.~ar,,9f tbe Univ;~rst. ty" :ve: w~l~ .. µe~p. ,th~ lt~~ua of every. one. .... .. ·
;,. • j_1,_; <;(L_ ... ,c..• I :
. In c;:l9sin~ Kll.~~ yea..r, let's have a he!,luva-g.~~g .s~LcoD:d _se~estert ;·
- -' ~· _:.: ·? Wadsworth Yee ,, , •, 1• f , ·• ASUH; ~,r:eside~t
Guests for the evening will be President and Mrs. Gregg -M. Sinclair, Dean and Mrs. Paul S. Bachm·an ,Dean and Mrs. Bruce White, Dean and Mrs. Wilfred J. Holmes, Dean and Mrs. Benjamin 0. Wist, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Keller, Consul-General . and Mrs.. King Chau Mui, Dr. William Hung, Dr. and Mrs. Earl M. Bilger, Dr. and Mrs. Chuk-Woon Taam, Dr .• and Mrs. Al-
Dr. Bushnell, Former VH:- ·student ' Is Now Professor OJ,J,Jrf,,cj~fjqlogy.
Ian F. Saunders, Charles A. Moore, Johannes Rhader, kuo Uyehara.
Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs.
Dr. and Mrs.
Vice-Consul Zun Han Wu, Mr. and Mrs. Kwai Hin Chang, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Tongg, Dr. and Mrs." Peter Yap, Miss Barbara Clark, Mr. Philip Lottich, Mr. and Mrs. Wadworth :Yee, Mr. Elbert Yee, Mr. Raymond Ho, Mr. Edwin Liu, Miss Dorothy
Six years away from Hawaii was
six years too long for him. Tin, · . shy, and fri endly, Dr. 0. A. Bush-
nell, assistant professor of bacteri
ology, is an ardent Hawaiian who
found six years on the mainland .
"one freezing homesick winter after the other."
Born in Honolulu, Dr. Bushnell
Wong, Miss Dorothy Yoshima, Mr. was graduated from St. Louis ColGeorge Lorch, Mr. Doublas Reen, lege in 1930 and from the Universi
. ty of Hawaii in 1934. While a stu-and James Mita. Chaperones will be Mr. and. Mrs.
Kim Fan Chong, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tongg, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hauenchild.
Florence Wee, Juanita Sen, Aileen Young, Faith Wong, Molly Ing, -Thelma Chock and Helen Chang will be hostesses dressed in attractive mandarin jackets.
General chairman for_ the dance is Yuk - Jun Leong. Committee chairman are: Yun How Chock, tickets; Juanita Sen, decorations; Francis Siu, refreshments; . Anna Ching, hostesses; Robert Wat, clean-up; Kam Lang Chang, publicity. President of the club is Linda Liu.
UHTG To Present Student Plays
Three one-act plays written by University students will be informally presented to the student body on Saturday, Feb1~uary 8 by Dr. Joel Trapido and the UH Theater Guild.
No elaborate staging effects will be used for these student originals written in Dr. Willard Wilson's playwriting course. A discussion lead by Dr. Wilson will follow each play.
"Agatha's April" by Florence Maney is a charming fantasy of a new England spinster who becomes obsessed with the desire to gt;ow into a tree.
"Reunion", as its title indicates, is a "bull session" of AJA veterans written by Bessie Toishigawa.
Grad assistant, Ross Garner's play "M4" presents an insight of the interior of a tank.
Free tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Hauenchild in Hemenc way hall.
Standard Market Fruits • Groceries
PHONE 3868 1049 S. Beretania Street
dent here, he was the student body president, president of the Theater Guild and of Hawaii Quill Literary Society, and secretary of the Hui Lokahi fraternity and of his class. He also worked on the Ka' Palapala and Ka Leo staffs and during his senior year conducted a column in the latter for the ASUH.
After his graduation as a real dean he attended the University of Wisconsin on a research scholarship in Bacteriology and received his Ph.D. there in 1937. "The campus certainly has changed," was his first comment on his alma mater. "It's very nice to be back, too," he
-added.
For two years after receiving his Ph.D., Dr. Bushnell was assistant curator of the American Type Culture Collection at Washington, D. C., and for another two years taught · bacteriology at the Georgetown University School of -Medicine, also in Washington, D.C. Then-"I got so homesick; I came home."
In 1940 he joined the Territorial Board of Health and worked on Maui and Kauai for two years. With the adven~ of the war, he entered the army sanitation corps as a
Interested in Bridge? Lessons for Beginners
Are you. interested in learning to play bri.dge?
Classes for beginners will be conducted .. by Ton Seek P~i and Minoru Ikehara, under the auspices of the University YMCA. An organization meeting will be held on Wednesday, Feb. 5th, 2: 10 p.m. in the west lounge of Atherton House. All students are cordially invited to attend.
Phone 57469 P.O. Box 3435
CECil. G. BENNY MANUFACTURING JEWELER
ENGRAVER
1120 Fort Street Honolulu 1. Hawaii
Leong Boo Credit Jewelers 1025 Nuuanu Avenue Telephone 65358
$econ'd ·Ueute-naint and· wa:s· assigned to various: army general ·hosp'ita18•118
a bacteriologist: -- "1• wa:s stationed at Schofield most;-. b:ll ·the 'time-for wh!ch I::: am .very• grateful;'" be slllll· ingly remarked, "but I •ended up fa Okimi.::w:~ and~ ,Japan_." Jl,e Wl\i dis· charg-ed, a capta,ln. ·n June,. 19~.
-"Hawaii has .. been . very: .-good.to me,'' said \Dr. Bushnell. "I feel that I car} . .' best ._s·l1o\v :rny aPp~ecfa:tion to her in a position. such -as -this',. where I can sh~r'e my, kl).o":'ledge an<} trllin· ing with -6thJ r& of H·a~aH's ~oJng people." The· University of Hawaii, he fee·ls, ds1 ra'.'n i3xeellent ' university
. which, urtf o,rtunately, ·is not appre· ciated e~·ou~h b;v , i~landers ... "H. is jui;;t. as ,good~ .if , :pot better.) than most of 'the ma'.n/ i:niiril'and . uhlver· sities I bi.i.ve · !::r~en :·•· What the uni· versfty needs 'most: he' believes, is appre'cia:tibn 'ki;d. supkort ·froin' the people o{ tli~ ter'i'itO'ty. i . > '
' • - 1.. l' f 't ·· tJ :·1 T- 1 ~,I -· , ·.·I
Clas~ical, ~:i}1~$ic m11siy, espec~lly M.ozar't, i~ii ·hikirt~' a'.r~ 1br.: J3iish· neg'.s chle,f ~e~N, qf rel~~;t~J~: ·~He is, fain~li,ar . witli. 'most r o~ th~ . ~ra)ls on Qah1:'; . aµ~·· -~he_ r ~any · coric~rts and plays ''he ·attended on the ma~· l~nd wer~, ~~ .t!M~~~, ·!i~ovt the o~Iy things which made his stay. . t_here
.. ' ".' , • '.;' I ~ ' \ t • , t. ~
bearapl:. . , c . ,1 "°'·:, . , . . Dr, Bus~n1W ~~~ l!ves qn , K~~}o·
lani Blvd. ;with Mrs. Bushnell. , . , : .. . ~
Eve~ybody .:c~me ! AS-UH- students are being given
the opportunity hr being the firSt to see the . .stage p . esentation p,t ~ . ~
Kneub~u1:s, ·.The; Harp . in _ lows. The Hdnohilu --Co Theater' .i~ gi~ihg' _a · ~pee · rehearsal of the play' 'for . only op., Moi;i~~Y; :!J'ebr~a~ 7: 30 p.mt in .far-ring.ton ha ets may - l;>.e ,.' ~btained' tr
~ • 1 • _ I ' ~ I / J :...,_ •. '
Hauenchild , at- ~_ Hemenw . starting · Feb. 5 through t ASUH tickets inust be sho~r.and both the book ' and ' ticket shdid.it be presented at the play.
' 11 'I".
• • .·.. 1··· .•'1
David · Muramo ,p~oto Shop.
12fo NµuA.Ni, ''.A . ' PHONE: 68114
~FLOWERS'FOR ·ALL OCO
Hale-Pua N