DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 4, September 27, 1962 |
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TYR Stokes Hopes For Nixon Program Republican gubernatorial Harris admitted that Nixon candidate Richard M. Nixon had declined an earlier invita-mav yet appear on campus af- tion from the ASSC Special ter-all, Harvey Harris, presi-! Events Committee. dent of Trojan Young Republicans (TYR), reported yesterday. Harris, irritated by yesterday's report that Nixon had declined an invitation to speak on campus, said he had talked with Nixon personally two weeks ago and that the former vice president said he might appear. "We are working diligently to bring Nixon to USC,” Har-his said. “Right now there are some scheduling difficulties, but we have been assured that he will come if possible.” Harris said Nixon’s wife, Pat, has already consented to appear on campus on Oct. 31. He added that Nixon will here “if at all possible.” He claimed, however, that the committee let the matter drop without trying to convince the former vice president that such an appearance would be beneficial to his campaign. “Nixon declined because he felt that TYR was doing a sufficient job of getting his views and qualities across to students and faculty,” Harris said. TYR Work He commented that TYR had been working independent of the ASSC to convince Nixon that an appearance here would be beneficial to the university as well as to his campaign. Acknowledging that the special events committee had been come arranging for another Republican leader to come in Nixon’s place. Harris said his group did not want to host someone else. “We want to bring Nixon to campus so that students can meet this candidate,” Harris said. Two other Republican office seekers had consented to come to the campus prior to Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown’s visit on Oct. 24, he added. John Busterud, candidate for state treasurer, will be on cam .1 Hey Mister, Get a Horse OR TRY A HELICOPTER Sophomores Will Sponsor Spirit Week Spirit Week, highlighted by a dance and a membership drive, will be the primary activity of the Sophomore j pus Oct. 9, and Pat McGee, Class, the class council decided candidate for the state senate, at its first fall meeting yester- will appear Oct. 16. Harris said, day. | Governor Brown Membership cards w’ill be Jack Gleason, chairman of By HAL DRAKE Daily Trojan Editor When USC was founded in 1880, the horseback ride to campus from downtown Los Angeles took almost an hour. Despite the steam, gas, jet and nuclear fission that have been tried since, the travel time sometimes hardly seems to have been reduced in the intervening 82 years. Unlike the 1880s, however, the problem is not hayfields, poor roads or lack of speed — xcept during rush hour. The delay—as any commuter student can tell you—is the distinctly modern dilemma of parking space. Urban universities throughout the state— from Berkeley to San Diego and even across town in Westwood—are plagued with squeezing their motorized student bodies onto the ever-dwindling undeveloped land suitable for parking. USC students who paid $15 for a semester park- ing permit gained on-the-spot training in this fact of modern metropolitan life yesterday when they were caught in a midmorning traffic jam scrambling from lot to lot to find stalls for their autos. The results were frayed tempers, missed lectures and muttered charges that the university had sold permits for more parking spaces than it has to offer. But the real reason for the un-ivory towerish tie-up, according to university Business Manager Elton D. Phillips, was much more obvious—the bulk of the students approaching from the main Exposition Boulevard artery tried to crowd onto the nearest lots, already packed, before making their way to the farther but less crowded lots on other parts of the campus. “It just was a matter of convenience,” Phillips explained. "They all ap- proached the same way, and so went to the same lot. Across the campus there may have been 50 spaces available.” Phillips noted that similar congestion occurred last year, when permit parking was used for the first time. “After about a week, the students knew which areas would be filled and which would be clear at the different hours,” he said. Anthony Lazzaro, assistant business manager and director of the physical plant, said that the number of permit spaces for students actually has been increased about 180 per cent over last year. Instead of the one 213-stall lot on 35th Place and Hoover Boulevard that was reserved for student permit - holders last year, five lots, with 750 spaces, now are being held for permit parking. Lazzaro suggested students pick up maps of (Continued on Page 3>i YOU SAID IT — One of the few remaining Parcca (coin operated) parking lots flashes its message of "Full” in glaring —Daily Trojan Photo red lights. These lots are slowly giving way to ones which will allow only holders of parking permits to enter. the Special Events Committee, announced Tuesday that Brown had accepted an invitation to appear here. The visit will be sponsored by the Trojan Democratic Club. Gleason indicated that Brown's appearance here would be the first of several pro- sold for $1 each at a table outside the Student Union at the beginning of Spirit Week, scheduled to begin Oct. 15. “It is my hope that the Sophomore Class will exhibit utmost spirit and show much enthusiam in the purchasing of membership cards,” Rich Moore, class president, said. “It grams his committee is helping is only with complete partici- to coordinate with other cam-pation that we can carry out pus organizations, the many activities on our agen- He said a schedule of month-da,” he added. jly entertainment programs is An all-university quad dance:now being planned. In addition, and rally Oct. 17 will feature the AMS officers have expres-“The Imposters.” This group, sed a desire to sponsor a series headed by Tom Berkenhead, | of speakers, Gleason pointed played at an all-fraternity out. street dance sponsored by Phi Kappa Tau last year. The rally, which will be held in conjunction with the dance, will be led by the ASSC Yell Leaders. Future events on the sophomore calendar include a High School Leader's Day March 9 and other activities sponsored; by the Sophomore Class Foreign Four usc professors will Students Committee. The com-: Qn and Con_ mittee is now helping with the temporary Life» in a specjal opening of the International University of Southern California DAILY « TROJAN VOL. LIV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1962 NO. 4 Professors Will Lecture On Religion Student 7 p.m. House tomorrow at Talks Begin On Religion series of lectures in the Faculty Center, beginning next week. The programs, open to the faculty and members of the administration, will be sponsored by the university’s committee on religious interests and by Chaplain John Cantelon. Dr. John A. Russell, head of Chaplain John Cantelon in- the astronomy department, will augurated a series of eight 40- open the series Wednesday minute lectures on “Under- with a discussion of “Presup-standing the Kingdom of God” positions in the Teaching of with a noon talk yesterday in Astronomy.” the Little Chapel of Silence. The series will continue Oct. Dr. Cantelon will give a sec- 19 with Dr. Robert D. Void, ond lecture next Wednesday, professor of chemistry, discuss-His talk will be titled “The ing “Presuppositions in the Kingdom in the Preaching of Teaching of Chemistry.” Jesus and John the Baptist.” A two-part lecture on “Pre- Episcopal Chaplain James suppositions in the Teaching of Leovv will speak Oct. 10 on the Humanities” will be given ‘ The Kingdom of God and the j Nov. 2 and 16 by Dr. Richard Nation of Israel.” He will de- L. Trapp, assistant professor of Signs Warn Playwrights Of Deliquents See 'Reality' Officer Says PHOTODUPLICATION—Marie Louie takes time out from a busy schedule to show freshman Jim Ashton the secrets behind —Daily Trojan Photo a Xerox 914 copier. Now 11 years old, the photoduplication department attracts many students to its services. Duplication Service Grows As Library Aids Students liver a second lecture Oct. 17 on “The Kingdom of the Prophets.” Rev. Jack Shaffer, director of the Wesley Foundation, will speak on “The Kingdom and Race” Oct. 24 and "The Kingdom and War” Oct. 31. Rev. Charles Doak, Presbyterian pastor, will speak Nov. 7 on “The Kingdom and the Church as Community” and Nov. 14 on “The Kingdom and the Church as Institution.” classics. The program will conclude Nov. 30 when Samuel T. Hurst, dean of the School of Architecture, will speak on “Religion and the Arts.” Copying has grown into a big business at USC, especially with the aid of Doheny Library’s photoduplication department. Although the department of- The Faculty Center also fers Trojans many services, sponsors a series of wreekly noon lectures that brings prominent speakers and scholars to the university. Members of the USC faculty and administration discuss their works and ideas at these luncheons. Dean Urges Change In Care of Insane This state’s criminally in-1 who are potent ially dangerous sane, because they are a secur- to society,” Dr. Kingsley ex-itv problem, should be under plained, the jurisdiction of the Califor- He said that prevailing def-nia Department of Corrections initions of criminal responsibil-rather than the Department of. ity are in some respects un-Mental Health. Dr. Robert sound both legally and men-Kingsley, dean of the School tally. of Law, said recently. “We need a broader defini- Speaking to a luncheon tion of criminal insanity and meeting at Town Hall, Dr. more detailed and strict rules Kingsley said he was not criti- governing the supervision and cizing the handling of the crim-, custodial care of these people inally insane by the state hos- so that they will not be retum-pitals, but he recommended ed to society while they are that the problem be “put where it l>elongs,” involving a change in the California Criminal Code. “Mental hospitals are not built, staffed or operated for people who pose a security problem, while the Department of Corrections already is han- still in an emotionally disturbed and potentially dangerous state” Kingsley said. Tne law dean added that his remarks reflected the findings made last June in the first report of the Governor's Special Commission on Insanity and Criminal Offenders, of which diing the mentally ill persons Dean Kingsley is a member. He added that many students cation department offers mi- also want copies of material fiom departments which do not circulate’ at all, such as the Von KleinSmid Library of World Affairs. Located on the ground floor j of Doheny Library, between the graduate study room and college library, the photoduplication department is open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m .and from 2 to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Material Costs Cost of copying material runs from 15 cents for one page to $15 or more for larger jobs .depending upon the num j her of pages and the time al-j lowed for the work, Dr. Spreitz j er said. most students make greater use of “copying” to review tests rather than books and to take home magazine pages rather than the whole magazine. “January and May are always our most active months.” reported Dr. Francis F. Spreitz-er. head of the bindery, preparations and photoduplication department of the university libra ry. “We have five times as much business during these months copying every type of final imaginable,” he said. Copy Service Photoduplication services, which began on campus in 1951 with microfilming, originally were not intended for copying exams. Dr. Spreitzer explained. But as student demand increased, the policy changed. Aside from the “busy months,” regular orders for the department cover copying parts of library books and journal articles, which last year amounted to more than 77,000 pages. 'There are many reasons why students use our services,” Dr. Spreitzer said. “Some of our customers prefer to study visual department. crofilming, verifax, thermographic and electrostatic copying services. The latest adition to the department is the electrostatic machine, which copies both “direct” and from intermediate mricofilm and which triples the amount of work done by the verifax copyer. Since 1951, the department has included in its services the filming of thesis which are sold throughout the nation. Book-copying was started in 1959. Potential trouble children often hang out signs that if properly analyzed in time could reduce juvenile delinquency, an executive officer of USC’s Youth Studies Center said recently. •’The only trouble is that most parents, educators, church and community leaders can’t i read the signs,” Dan Pursuit, ! formerly director of USCs De-: linquency Control Institute, j said. Pursuit described a number of signs that point to eventual troublée “worn” by today’s youngsters. Important Sign “The sign that reads ‘I want to be important NOW,’ if not detected or simply neglected, can, and in many cases has, led to juvenile delinquency,” he said. “Defined over a period of years by sociologists, phychol-ogists, social workers and physicians, the trouble signs belong in two distinct groups— acting-out behavior and beha- Rlidding playwrights and aspiring dramatists got their first exposure to the seamy realism of naturalistic writing this week when they assembled at 118 FH for the Students Get Homecoming News, Forms Distribution of homecoming information packets to fraternities, sororities, dorms and service groups, begins today, University College playwrit- ^ Frinier. ASSC Homecoming class of lecturer Morgan ing Committee Chairman, an-Cox. nounced. j Frinier said the packets con-I tain entry information for homecoming, the theme of which is 'Trojan Spirit Through the Years,” and applications and deadlines for such events as House decorations and Trolios. ) Completed application forms The University Students Par-, ^ returned to 232 SU by ty. (USP) yesterday lashed out^oct. 12 at ASSC President Bart UM-, ' Qu(.,n c„nl„, <fel with a charge of having; QuMn c(Jntest licatbms done nothing but call a halt;^ M ^ 1^|udc,| |n the to student government. ; informatio„ but m Referring to this week’s I available in 232 SU, Frinier scheduled ASSC Senate meet- said. ing, which Mike Robinson. Lad-| The Homecoming Committee 118 FH is a ladies’ room. Student Party Blasts Leddel officially began their fall schedule with a kick-off dinner at Julie’s Tuesday. Frinier and Wendy Bishon- del’s administrative assistant, called off Monday, USP President Steve Meiers said Leddel had been expected to present students with plans for thisl ~ * year's ASSC activities at the . f. vior that is withdrawn,” he Senate meeti and Executive Z, continued. Cabinet meetinc I"*1 shop “ dunnff the “The simplest early therapy i . ” j banquet, but did remind the for treatment of youngsters N«ther the Senate meeting|Cominittee members that 5« displaying a group of these ; “L ^ meeting were weeks remain until this year’s signs is a little well-timed and held, he said. homecoming weekend. “This calls for early dead- well-placed praise,” Pursuit: Meiers said USP’s council of said. ! representatives had decided at ijj,es. good organization and a “Just saying ‘Keep up the ameeting yesterday that an of-, ?ood supply of ‘elbow grease,’” good work,’ or ‘You’re doing! f*cial protest should be brought pmiier said, a good job’ is letting the child to the attention of students, know you’ve read that sign he Trojan History He said the representatives I Frinier said the committee also were perturbed because j hopes that entries for special the ASSC administration hadjeventg ^jj folios the theme not opened petitioning for,of Troy’s history. ASSC Senate posts not filled at | He pointed out that this is the spring elections. j the 50th anniversary of the Meiers claimed that these; coining of the word ‘Trojans” positions were to be voted on in connection with USC. A Los during freshmen elections so Angeles Times writer saw a that fields of study could be 1912 USC football team in “A child who exhibits several jpropertly represented in the training and described them as (Continued on Page 3) Senate. working like ‘Trojans.” wears all the time . . . the one that says, I want to be important NOW.’’ Delinquent Road He emphasized, however, that reading one or a few of these signs in a child does not mean he is on the road to delinquency. Patriarch Sees Southland One of the Orient’s most| The Foreign Leader Program| The visitors meet members,pie as a result of their obser-“With large jobs, the more prominent religious leaders has sponsored other such di- of the faculty and administre j vat ions and experiences in this time we have, the better it isivisited the Southland last week tinguished world leaders dur- tion, as well as un’versity stu country,’ the director said, for us and the students," he ex-'in connection with USCs ing the past two years and has dents. Olmstead noted that the uni- plained. “The cost is usually Foreign Leader program, Ron planned a similiar program this The guests also visit hospi- versity at present has several less and the end product nicer Olmstead, the program's direc-when the order is not rushed.” tor. announced yesterday. Although has grown into “big business. year. Olmstead said. Itals, cou’-ts. business establish-¡other visitors. They include Other recent visitors haveiments, factories, schools andOma Benitez, director of Bih-His Beatitude Paul Peter j been the director-general of the universities, radio a n d televi-; liographic Institute. University photoduplication Meouch_ patriarch of Antioch National University of Iranjsion studios, and enjoy recrea- of Buenos Aires: Manit Pol- and the president of Taegu Col-itional and entertainment facili-! Aree. art instructor at the lege in Korea. I ties*. ¡University of Fine Arts. Bang- The program this year will Between 500 and 600 busi- kok, Thailand: Esko Pemqja. include such visitors as the min-¡ness, professional, political, cul- j seismologist at the University for the library, the department does not copy personal documents and transcripts. “Ours is a library copying service set up solely to facilitate study and use of campus materials,” Dr. Spreitzer noted. “Materials such as marriage and all the Orient, was in the Southern California area from Saturday to Thursday as part of the Foreign Leader Program, which is coordinated with the U. S. Department of State. Olmstead said Patriarch Me-ouchi was greeted upon his arrival at International Airport and birth certificates are han-jfoy more than 350 well-wishers, died by the university’s audio Later a banquet was held in his i honor at the Statler-Hilton Ho- the material at home, others 'hate' to take notes, and some just won't take the time.” Using the most modern equip- tel where comedian Danny ment to meet student and fac- Thomas acted-as master of cer-ulty demands, the photodupli- emonies before 1,200 guests. ister of education of Somalia and the wife of the president of the Republic of Togo. turai and academic leadersiof Helsinki: and Kiyofchi Ya-from more than 60 countries | mamoto, official of the Ministake advantage of the program try of Education, Tokyo, Japan. According to Olmstead, th.? annually. Other visitors include Dr. Foreign Leader Program at tempts to give world leaders as full an understanding of the university and of the Los Angeles area as is possible during their three to ten day stays in the area. ‘The program is intended to Zoran Knzisnik, directo'r gen-develop in other countires an eral of the museums of Yugo-informal nucleus of influential ¡ slavia; Tomio Goto, research persons who can be expected, official for the Ministry of Ed-to interpret and increase un- ucation. Tokyo, Japan: and Me. derstandmg of the United and Mrs. Tay Hooi Keat. fed-States among their own peo-1 Continued on Page 2)
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Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 4, September 27, 1962 |
Full text |
TYR Stokes Hopes For Nixon Program
Republican gubernatorial Harris admitted that Nixon candidate Richard M. Nixon had declined an earlier invita-mav yet appear on campus af- tion from the ASSC Special ter-all, Harvey Harris, presi-! Events Committee.
dent of Trojan Young Republicans (TYR), reported yesterday.
Harris, irritated by yesterday's report that Nixon had declined an invitation to speak on campus, said he had talked with Nixon personally two weeks ago and that the former vice president said he might appear.
"We are working diligently to bring Nixon to USC,” Har-his said. “Right now there are some scheduling difficulties, but we have been assured that he will come if possible.”
Harris said Nixon’s wife, Pat, has already consented to appear on campus on Oct. 31. He added that Nixon will here “if at all possible.”
He claimed, however, that the committee let the matter drop without trying to convince the former vice president that such an appearance would be beneficial to his campaign.
“Nixon declined because he felt that TYR was doing a sufficient job of getting his views and qualities across to students and faculty,” Harris said.
TYR Work He commented that TYR had been working independent of the ASSC to convince Nixon that an appearance here would be beneficial to the university as well as to his campaign.
Acknowledging that the special events committee had been come arranging for another Republican leader to come in Nixon’s place. Harris said his group did not want to host someone else.
“We want to bring Nixon to campus so that students can meet this candidate,” Harris said.
Two other Republican office seekers had consented to come to the campus prior to Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown’s visit on Oct. 24, he added.
John Busterud, candidate for state treasurer, will be on cam
.1
Hey Mister, Get a Horse
OR TRY A HELICOPTER
Sophomores Will Sponsor Spirit Week
Spirit Week, highlighted by a dance and a membership drive, will be the primary
activity of the Sophomore j pus Oct. 9, and Pat McGee, Class, the class council decided candidate for the state senate, at its first fall meeting yester- will appear Oct. 16. Harris said, day. | Governor Brown
Membership cards w’ill be Jack Gleason, chairman of
By HAL DRAKE
Daily Trojan Editor
When USC was founded in 1880, the horseback ride to campus from downtown Los Angeles took almost an hour.
Despite the steam, gas, jet and nuclear fission that have been tried since, the travel time sometimes hardly seems to have been reduced in the intervening 82 years.
Unlike the 1880s, however, the problem is not hayfields, poor roads or lack of speed — xcept during rush hour. The delay—as any commuter student can tell you—is the distinctly modern dilemma of parking space.
Urban universities throughout the state— from Berkeley to San Diego and even across town in Westwood—are plagued with squeezing their motorized student bodies onto the ever-dwindling undeveloped land suitable for parking.
USC students who paid $15 for a semester park-
ing permit gained on-the-spot training in this fact of modern metropolitan life yesterday when they were caught in a midmorning traffic jam scrambling from lot to lot to find stalls for their autos.
The results were frayed tempers, missed lectures and muttered charges that the university had sold permits for more parking spaces than it has to offer.
But the real reason for the un-ivory towerish tie-up, according to university Business Manager Elton D. Phillips, was much more obvious—the bulk of the students approaching from the main Exposition Boulevard artery tried to crowd onto the nearest lots, already packed, before making their way to the farther but less crowded lots on other parts of the campus.
“It just was a matter of convenience,” Phillips explained. "They all ap-
proached the same way, and so went to the same lot. Across the campus there may have been 50 spaces available.”
Phillips noted that similar congestion occurred last year, when permit parking was used for the first time.
“After about a week, the students knew which areas would be filled and which would be clear at the different hours,” he said.
Anthony Lazzaro, assistant business manager and director of the physical plant, said that the number of permit spaces for students actually has been increased about 180 per cent over last year.
Instead of the one 213-stall lot on 35th Place and Hoover Boulevard that was reserved for student permit - holders last year, five lots, with 750 spaces, now are being held for permit parking.
Lazzaro suggested students pick up maps of (Continued on Page 3>i
YOU SAID IT — One of the few remaining Parcca (coin operated) parking lots flashes its message of "Full” in glaring
—Daily Trojan Photo red lights. These lots are slowly giving way to ones which will allow only holders of parking permits to enter.
the Special Events Committee, announced Tuesday that Brown had accepted an invitation to appear here. The visit will be sponsored by the Trojan Democratic Club.
Gleason indicated that Brown's appearance here would be the first of several pro-
sold for $1 each at a table outside the Student Union at the beginning of Spirit Week, scheduled to begin Oct. 15.
“It is my hope that the Sophomore Class will exhibit utmost spirit and show much enthusiam in the purchasing of membership cards,” Rich Moore, class president, said. “It grams his committee is helping is only with complete partici- to coordinate with other cam-pation that we can carry out pus organizations, the many activities on our agen- He said a schedule of month-da,” he added. jly entertainment programs is
An all-university quad dance:now being planned. In addition, and rally Oct. 17 will feature the AMS officers have expres-“The Imposters.” This group, sed a desire to sponsor a series headed by Tom Berkenhead, | of speakers, Gleason pointed played at an all-fraternity out. street dance sponsored by Phi Kappa Tau last year.
The rally, which will be held in conjunction with the dance, will be led by the ASSC Yell Leaders.
Future events on the sophomore calendar include a High School Leader's Day March 9 and other activities sponsored;
by the Sophomore Class Foreign Four usc professors will Students Committee. The com-: Qn and Con_
mittee is now helping with the temporary Life» in a specjal opening of the International
University of Southern California
DAILY « TROJAN
VOL. LIV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1962
NO. 4
Professors Will Lecture On Religion
Student 7 p.m.
House tomorrow at
Talks Begin On Religion
series of lectures in the Faculty Center, beginning next week.
The programs, open to the faculty and members of the administration, will be sponsored by the university’s committee on religious interests and by Chaplain John Cantelon.
Dr. John A. Russell, head of Chaplain John Cantelon in- the astronomy department, will augurated a series of eight 40- open the series Wednesday minute lectures on “Under- with a discussion of “Presup-standing the Kingdom of God” positions in the Teaching of with a noon talk yesterday in Astronomy.” the Little Chapel of Silence. The series will continue Oct.
Dr. Cantelon will give a sec- 19 with Dr. Robert D. Void, ond lecture next Wednesday, professor of chemistry, discuss-His talk will be titled “The ing “Presuppositions in the Kingdom in the Preaching of Teaching of Chemistry.”
Jesus and John the Baptist.” A two-part lecture on “Pre-
Episcopal Chaplain James suppositions in the Teaching of Leovv will speak Oct. 10 on the Humanities” will be given ‘ The Kingdom of God and the j Nov. 2 and 16 by Dr. Richard Nation of Israel.” He will de- L. Trapp, assistant professor of
Signs Warn Playwrights Of Deliquents See 'Reality'
Officer Says
PHOTODUPLICATION—Marie Louie takes time out from a busy schedule to show freshman Jim Ashton the secrets behind
—Daily Trojan Photo
a Xerox 914 copier. Now 11 years old, the photoduplication department attracts many students to its services.
Duplication Service Grows As Library Aids Students
liver a second lecture Oct. 17 on “The Kingdom of the Prophets.”
Rev. Jack Shaffer, director of the Wesley Foundation, will speak on “The Kingdom and Race” Oct. 24 and "The Kingdom and War” Oct. 31.
Rev. Charles Doak, Presbyterian pastor, will speak Nov. 7 on “The Kingdom and the Church as Community” and Nov. 14 on “The Kingdom and the Church as Institution.”
classics.
The program will conclude Nov. 30 when Samuel T. Hurst, dean of the School of Architecture, will speak on “Religion and the Arts.”
Copying has grown into a big business at USC, especially with the aid of Doheny Library’s photoduplication department.
Although the department of-
The Faculty Center also fers Trojans many services,
sponsors a series of wreekly noon lectures that brings prominent speakers and scholars to the university. Members of the USC faculty and administration discuss their works and ideas at these luncheons.
Dean Urges Change In Care of Insane
This state’s criminally in-1 who are potent ially dangerous sane, because they are a secur- to society,” Dr. Kingsley ex-itv problem, should be under plained, the jurisdiction of the Califor- He said that prevailing def-nia Department of Corrections initions of criminal responsibil-rather than the Department of. ity are in some respects un-Mental Health. Dr. Robert sound both legally and men-Kingsley, dean of the School tally.
of Law, said recently. “We need a broader defini-
Speaking to a luncheon tion of criminal insanity and meeting at Town Hall, Dr. more detailed and strict rules Kingsley said he was not criti- governing the supervision and cizing the handling of the crim-, custodial care of these people inally insane by the state hos- so that they will not be retum-pitals, but he recommended ed to society while they are
that the problem be “put where it l>elongs,” involving a change in the California Criminal Code.
“Mental hospitals are not built, staffed or operated for people who pose a security problem, while the Department of Corrections already is han-
still in an emotionally disturbed and potentially dangerous state” Kingsley said.
Tne law dean added that his remarks reflected the findings made last June in the first report of the Governor's Special Commission on Insanity and Criminal Offenders, of which
diing the mentally ill persons Dean Kingsley is a member.
He added that many students cation department offers mi-
also want copies of material fiom departments which do not circulate’ at all, such as the Von KleinSmid Library of World Affairs.
Located on the ground floor j of Doheny Library, between the graduate study room and college library, the photoduplication department is open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m .and from 2 to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Material Costs
Cost of copying material runs from 15 cents for one page to $15 or more for larger jobs .depending upon the num j her of pages and the time al-j lowed for the work, Dr. Spreitz j er said.
most students make greater use of “copying” to review tests rather than books and to take home magazine pages rather than the whole magazine.
“January and May are always our most active months.” reported Dr. Francis F. Spreitz-er. head of the bindery, preparations and photoduplication department of the university libra ry.
“We have five times as much business during these months copying every type of final imaginable,” he said.
Copy Service
Photoduplication services, which began on campus in 1951 with microfilming, originally were not intended for copying exams. Dr. Spreitzer explained.
But as student demand increased, the policy changed.
Aside from the “busy months,” regular orders for the department cover copying parts of library books and journal articles, which last year amounted to more than 77,000 pages.
'There are many reasons why students use our services,”
Dr. Spreitzer said. “Some of our customers prefer to study visual department.
crofilming, verifax, thermographic and electrostatic copying services.
The latest adition to the department is the electrostatic machine, which copies both “direct” and from intermediate mricofilm and which triples the amount of work done by the verifax copyer.
Since 1951, the department has included in its services the filming of thesis which are sold throughout the nation. Book-copying was started in 1959.
Potential trouble children often hang out signs that if properly analyzed in time could reduce juvenile delinquency, an executive officer of USC’s Youth Studies Center said recently.
•’The only trouble is that most parents, educators, church and community leaders can’t i read the signs,” Dan Pursuit, ! formerly director of USCs De-: linquency Control Institute, j said.
Pursuit described a number of signs that point to eventual troublée “worn” by today’s youngsters.
Important Sign
“The sign that reads ‘I want to be important NOW,’ if not detected or simply neglected, can, and in many cases has, led to juvenile delinquency,” he said.
“Defined over a period of years by sociologists, phychol-ogists, social workers and physicians, the trouble signs belong in two distinct groups— acting-out behavior and beha-
Rlidding playwrights and aspiring dramatists got their first exposure to the seamy realism of naturalistic writing this week when they assembled at 118 FH for the
Students Get Homecoming News, Forms
Distribution of homecoming information packets to fraternities, sororities, dorms and service groups, begins today, University College playwrit- ^ Frinier. ASSC Homecoming class of lecturer Morgan ing Committee Chairman, an-Cox. nounced.
j Frinier said the packets con-I tain entry information for homecoming, the theme of which is 'Trojan Spirit Through the Years,” and applications and deadlines for such events as House decorations and Trolios.
) Completed application forms The University Students Par-, ^ returned to 232 SU by
ty. (USP) yesterday lashed out^oct. 12 at ASSC President Bart UM-, ' Qu(.,n c„nl„,
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Archival file | uaic_Volume1311/uschist-dt-1962-09-27~001.tif |