DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 6, October 01, 1962 |
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PAGE THREE Globe-Trotting Trojans Tell Impressions
University of Southern Caîifornia
DAILY
TROJAH
PAGE FOUR Gridders Brace for Iowa After SMU Clash
VOL. LIV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962
NO. 6
SPRING SEMESTER
New Total Boosts All-Men s Grades
Scholarship averages for men’s campus living groups during the 1962 spring semester surpassed those of the previous year, figures released by the dean of students office revealed Friday.
Both the all-men’s—2.6390—and all-fraternity— 2.4001—grade point averages were higner than iasi fall’s marks.
Although the all-fraternity average was higher, only six living groups soared above the all-men’s marks.
Psi Upsilon's 2.9495 bested defending champ Alpha Epsilon Phi’s 2.8365. The Psi Upsilon average was the highest ever recorded by a USC fraternity.
Other fraternities placing above the all-men’s standard were Tau Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Zeta Beta Tau and Tau Epsilon Phi.
During the 1961 spring semester Sigma Alpha Mu set the top mark in the nation for a fraternity with over 30 members when it posted a 2.9375.
Seventeen groups finished above the all-fraternity average and 13 fell below it. Significant fluctuations included Sigma Phi Delta’s rise from 22nd to 12th, Tau Kappa Epsilon’s climb from 16th to 8th, and the demises of Phi Gamma Delta, from 10th to 22nd; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, from 12th to 24th; and Theta Xi, from 4th to 15th.
Stonier Hall’s 2.883 was well ahead of second place Touton Hall’s 2.467 in dormitory figures.
All-women’s sorority and all-women’s dormitory averages, which include summer and post sessions, have not been released yet.
ACLU s Wirin to Spark Series
National Figures To Speak Here For USP Forum
Wrong Digits Plague Editor
FRATERNITIES
Spring Previous
Gain or Loss Semester Semester
Rank in Rank Average Average
1. Psi Upsilon — 2.9495 —
2. Alpha Epsilon Pi -1 2.8365 2.9455
3. Tau Delta Phi —1 2.7513 2.5703
4. Sigma Alpha Mu + 3 2.7239 2.4813
5. Zeta Beta Tau 0 2.6726 2.5199
6. Tau Epsilon Phi —3 2.6699 2.5439
All-Men’s Average 2.6390 2.5641
7. Alpha Tau Omega + 4 2.5821 2.4063
8. Tau Kappa Epsilon + 8 2.5606' 2.3761
9. Beta Theta Pi + 4 2.5550 2.3986
10. Sigma Phi Epsilon —4 2.5548 2.5076
11. Chi Phi +6 2.5417 2.3736
12. Sigma Phi Delta + 10 2.5286 2.2391
13. Sigma Nu —4 2.5000 2.2966
14. Phi Sigma Kappa —6 2.4900 2.4324
15. Theta Xi —11 2.4863 2.5413
16. Phi Delta Theta —1 2.4853 2.3946
17. Kappa Alpha —3 2.4739 2.3949
All-Fraternity Average 2.4001 2.3660
18. Lambda Chi Alpha 0 2.3340 2.3542
19. Alpha Rho Chi + 1 2.3298 2.2701
20. Theta Chi + 1 2.3043 2.2694
21. Phi Kappa Tau —2 2.2897 2.3291
22. Phi Gamma Delta -12 2.2887 2.4250
23. Pi Kappa Alpha + 3 2.2838 2.1330
24. Sigma Alphi Epsilon —12 2.2718 2.4059
25. Kappa Alpha Psi + 4 2.2479 1.8085
26. Sigma Chi —1 2.2475 2.1677
27. Phi Kappa Psi —4 2.2294 2.2230
28. Delta Tau Delta —4 2.2050 2.1859
29. Delta Sigma Phi —2 2.1348 2.1304
30. Delta Chi —2 2.1254 2.0515
MEN S RESIDENCE HALLS
1. Stonier Hall — 2.883 —
All-Men’s Dorm Average 2.553 —
2. Touton Hall — 2.467 —
3. Marks Hall — 2.457
4. Trojan Hall — 2.410
SCampus Editor Mary Ellen Wynhausen’s face is as red as the student handbook’s cover this week because of mixups in telephone numbers, published in the freshman manual.
The listed number f«ir Town and Gown residence hall included the correct digits. but in incorrect order, much to the dismay of the receptionist at the L. A. r*arling Company, local store fixture manufacturer.
The company informed the university that It was receiving numerous calls from people who could not be convinced that the L. A. Darling meant something other than Town and Gown.
The correct number for Town and Gown is RI 8-2579.
Other numbers incorrectly listed — and the proper proper numbers — were Touton Hall, RI 9-9660; and Marks Hall, RI 9-9010, second floor, RI 9-9092, and third floor, RI 9 9081.
Dean Predicts Sharp Rise In Business
The world is on the verge of a business boom that may overshadow any boom of the past— and American firms must play a leading role in its development, a USC expert said Friday.
Dr. Robert R. Dockson, dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration, told the National Defense Transportation Association that increased exports from the United States, will provide the basis for this boom.
“Why is it that the very men in America who purchase German. British or Italian automobiles operated on gasoline bought from North Africa; who smoke cigars from Cuba, Brazil or the Philippines: who wear woolens from England. silk ties from Italy, linen handkerchiefs from Ireland and raincoats from Japan, and who might even drink Scotch from you-know-where, refuse to understand that they might be able to sell their own products to some of the people selling to them?” he asked.
The percentage of American manufacturers exporting their products is lower than in any other industrialized nation, Dr. Dockson said. But, he predicted, as exports rise, so will imports.
He said the ability of United States manufacturers to produce can increase more than $30 billion a year leading to the creation of from 30 to 35 million new jobs to keep the expanding U.S. labor force employed productively.
ASSC Opens One Position For Senator
Petitioning will open today for only one senatorial position, Election Commissioner Dick Messer announced Friday.
Messer, trying to explain apparent ASSC confusion in filling senatorial vacancies that cropped up Thursday, said petitioning would be opened only in fields of study that do not have presidents. Biological sciences is the only field in this category.
Open, Closed
The confusion appeared when Messer earlier said petitioning would be opened for vacant Senate seats, and Administrative Assistant Mike Robinson said the ASSC couldn’t open petitioning because of a constitutional provision.
Messer said the ASSC constitution provided for filling Senate vacancies when field presidents were available to make appointments. He said biological sciences did not have a president and therefore would have its senator elected at the freshman elections.
Students in the field may pick up petitions in ASSC President Leddel's office, 321 SU, today, tomorrow and Wednesday.
He said other vacancies will be appointed by field presidents according to the constitution.
Still Open
Messer said petitioning is still open for Freshman Class president and vice president. No petitions have been filed for vice president. He said freshman women also may file for a new AWS post—representative from the Freshman class.
Candidat« must have campaign materials approved by the Election Committee before they may be used in the election, Messer said. The committee is checking material tomorrow through Thursday from 1 to 4 p.m. in Leddel’s office.
He indicated that candidates also would have to attend a mandatory meeting Thursday, the day petitioning closed, ait 2:30 p.m. in the Senate Chambers, 301 SU.
OLD AND NEW
: ?
A. L. WIRIN
. to speak Here
Ideal Woman To Be Sought By Committee
—Daily Trojan Photo by Frank L.. Kaplan
BIOLOGICAL BUILDING — A workman peers into the 20-foot hole that will one day become the Biosciences Research Center. The tower of one of the oldest buildings on the campus, Mudd Hall, looms over the excavation. The center, when finished, will dwarf Mudd tower with an eight story, research building complex.
Businessmen Open Posts
Petition forms for membership on the School of Business Council are now available in the undergraduate advisement office in Bridge Hall, Robert Quinn, business president, announced Friday.
The council will be responsible for governing the Business School’s student body. Council members will study and pass on bills concerning activities within the school.
BROWN, NIXON POLL
Students Pan Politicos
USC Expands Effort In Pakistan Project
By ALAN BINE ¡win easily if his only opposi-
Students at USC aren't too.tion were Pat Brown, keen on either of California's j The optimism was still there, gubernatorial candidates, an but not quite so great in the informal Daily Trojan poll indi-second poll — after he filed cated Friday. for the office.
The bulk of students of vot-j Former Gov. Goodwin Knight ing age interviewed said they insisted he had witnesses to would go along with the prove that Nixon had sent an "lesser of the two evils”—Gov. emissary to him early in Sep-
Edmund G. (Pat) Brown.
Student reaction to the query “Who will be California's next governor and why?” was quite a contrast to two similar campus polls taken last year.
The earlier polls, compiled before and after Richard M. Nixon declared his candidacy
Janet Rush, a junior majoring
in English, echoed a flock of
other feelings when she said he
was hurt, perhaps politically
destroyed, during his cam-
„ U f « *. * j * r Pai^° against President Ken-
tember of 1961 who tried to °f-1 nedv
Many of the students polled on campus Friday said they preferred Nixon, but thought Brown would win.
fer inducements aimed at keeping him out of the race.
“The controversy aroused by Knight will probably have little effect on the outcome of the election since it is balanced by Joe McCarthy’s < former director of the department of mo-
for the state's highest office,¡tor vehicles) controversy with carried a flavor of optimism Brown,” Dr. Desmond Ander-for the former rice president, son, assistant dean of the While Nixon was hinting that School of Public Administrate might run. his supporters ¡tion. said, when interviewed in the initial poll felt he could'during the second poll.
‘‘Nobody likes to back a loser twice,” she explained.
The flames involved in the Nixon-Knight feud were rekindled by Dave Friedberg, a junior economics student.
“Generally poor campaign management and the Knight conflict will hurt Nixon,” he said.
can’t get away with that,’ Friedberg quipped.
Dick Beaulieu, a junior in business, insisted that “many Republican voters of 1958 have forsaken the party in favor of an extreme right-winger and now, bitter over a loss, will not unite behind the party.”
One student, Harvey Dener-off, may have found a flaw in Nixon, even though he has only been in California for a month.
Deneroff, a graduate student in cinema from the Bronx, injected the view of a newcomer to California politics.
“Nixon has a national image — only a national image,” he said. “People can’t see Nixon in California. They think he's running for governor to aid his “He’s been slamming the drive for the presidency in Democrats, too, and you just ¡1968. ^jo do I.”
The School of Public Administration has added a new program to its expanding Pakistan Project.
Marshall Fels, the project’s training coordinator, said the new program is called Training of Trainers — TOT for short — and its general objective is to train employes of the Pakistan Government to become training administrators.
The major portion of the program, which lasts approximately seven months, is devoted to learning to determine training needs, organize training programs and evaluate training efforts.
Fels said part of the program is carried on in the Pakistan Project building, 823 W. 34th St., and part is pursued through field trips and internships in governmental and training organizations.
Students Travel
Fels explained that in addition to the lectures and participative exercises on campus and work in outside organizations, the program Includes a number of projects, such as the preparation of a major lesson plan that the participant can use on his return to Pakistan.
During the Spring, students in the project spent a week traveling through the western United States to observe the American free enterprise system.
Three Organizations
Fels said the tour included a view of the booming city of Phoenix and a look at the varying efforts of three Indian
of the university’s effort under its Pakistan contract with the United States Agency for International Development.
In Pakistan, an extension of the program is engaged in assisting the development of three National Institutes of Public Administration at Dacca, Lahore and Karachi.
The program also assists in the development of Public Administration curricula in universities, participating in research and performing a variety of consultative services to governmental agencies.
On campus, a group of Pakistani students are working towards master of science degrees in public administration, doctor of public administration and master of science in library science.
By DAN SMITH Daily Trojan City Editor A. L. Wirin, chief counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Southern California for the past 30 years, will open a new political speakers forum today at 2:15 in 133 FH.
Wirin, slated to speak on “Civil Liberties in the
United States,” is being spon-1 sored by the University Stu-1 dents Party (USP) as the first! speaker in a year-long series j that will include U.S. Sen. j Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., and:
California Atty. Gen. Stanley1 Mosk, USP President Steve Meiers said Friday.
Meiers said the program has. been initiated as a party ac-| tivity independent of the AS-|
SC.
31 Year»
Wirin has spent the past 31 j years arguing cases involving! such issues as freedom of j speech and association, police j practices, racial and religious [ discrimination, censorship, aca-1 j demic freedom and separation j j of church and state.
He relinquished a successful practice in bankruptcy law ini'
1931 to become the first full-! time civil liberties latfyer. He i prepared his first brief for the! national American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of Robert j Bums, who became popularly! known as the “fugitive from a Georgia chain gang.”
flipnt«
Homecoming queen applica-Wirin since has represented, Uon forms wll ^ distributed Farists, Communists, Socialists, ^ 232 su today> Bill Heeres>
union leaders, opponents of or- j chair7nan> ^ Friday.
ganized labor, murderers and! TT
, , . , ,___| Heeres said deadline for remembers of racial and religious i ^ ^
I turning applications is Oct. 12.
minorities. j t .
He said he undertakes these1 Candidates - must be jumor or «• tu senior women who have attend-
cases “in the belief that every sc .
provision of the Bill of Rights . ruU scho°1
x. . „ prior to this semester. They
applies to everyone. i , . . _ _
Z,, _ . , . „ . _ also must have a 2.o grade
The Russian-born lawyer
said even though he is opposed avera»e-
to “all totalitarian doctrines,” A $2 entrance fee must ache will represent advocates of company applications, which them all if he feels their con- are due Get. 12. Heeres empha-stitutional rights are being vi- slze^ t^iat contestants must olated. j attend all judgings.
Future Speakers Preliminary judging will be
Meiers said USP’s political' held on Oct. 16, 18 and 23. forum series tentatively will I The semi-finals will be on Oct. bring more than 15 political 25, and the finals are sched-personalities to campus during uled for Oct. 30 dunng a din-the year. Ten have already con- ner at the Beverly Hilton Ho-sented to speak. tel.
Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy “Helen of Troy stands for and State Atty. Gen. Stanley the epitome of the USC worn-Mosk were among those who: an,” Heeres explained, promised to appear on campus “As in the past, Helen will later in the school year, the be selected on the basis of USP president said. I greater criteria than just pure
Meiers said his party had de- | beauty,” he added, cided to sponsor a speaker “Judging will also be based program independent of the j on the woman's intelligence, ASSCs speaker program be- poise, ability to carry on a oon-cause it did not feel the ASSC1 versation and her common program was adequate. sense.” he explained.
“We hope our program will1 Packets of applications were provide students with an op- sent out Friday to sorority port unity to hear speakers of .houses and women's dormitor-diverse attitudes and in this i ies. Independent women, soror-way increase their knowledge ity houses and women’s dorm-and enlarge their horizons,” ! itories may enter as many can-Meiers stated. | didates as desired, he said.
Dr. Baxter Will Inaugurate Fall Noon Reading Series
Dr. Frank C. Baxter, emeri-j tus professor of English, will open the ninth edition of the English department’s “Readings at Noon” today at 12:30 in 133 FH.
Dr. Baxter’s subject will be “John Evelyn: Diaries.’’ The Shakespearean scholar traditionally has appeared at the first of the annual English readings.
“Evelyn's diaries cover al-
most all of 17th century Eng-tribes in the Arizona-New Mex- land/, Dr Baxter ^ Friday
ico region. |“He was a curious, interested!
The participants in the TOTjman, who stood at the begin program will return to three different kinds of organizations, Fels said.
Part of the group will return to the National Institutes of Public Administration, part to the Secretariat Training Institute in Karachi, Pakistan,
and the remainder to operating a productive writer, turning agencies. Fels explained. out an incredible number of
The TOT program is one part j handbooks on a variety of sub- \ abatement and fire prevention
nings of modem science.
“Not a scientist himself, Evelyn was a civilized member of English society at a time when all men were interested in natural phenomena," he explained.
Dr. Baxter said Evelyn was jects — “from reforestation to Ham and Oliver Cromwell.
potato salad — only he spelled “He wrote about the plague, it 'sallat.’ His book" on smoke j the Dutch wars and all the
(Continued on Page 2),
w* «-•
FRANK C. BAXTER
, . to open series
came out just before the disastrous London fire!”
1 Evelyn also wrote on the techniques of reproducing pictures mechanically, and gave ! advice to English portrait painters in their craft, he said.
Dr. Baxter will describe the difference between Evelyn's diary and that of Samuel Pepys.
'They both wrote during a similar nine-year period, but neither knew the other was writing a diary.” the scholar noted. “Evelyn was a gentleman. but Pepys was definitely not of that class,” Dr. Baxter ;said. “Evelyn was versed in | virtuosity, the gentlemanly amateur science of the day.”
Evelyn lived in the heart of royal society. He was well acquainted with King Charles I and U, James II, King Wil-
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 6, October 01, 1962 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 6, October 01, 1962. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE Globe-Trotting Trojans Tell Impressions University of Southern Caîifornia DAILY TROJAH PAGE FOUR Gridders Brace for Iowa After SMU Clash VOL. LIV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 NO. 6 SPRING SEMESTER New Total Boosts All-Men s Grades Scholarship averages for men’s campus living groups during the 1962 spring semester surpassed those of the previous year, figures released by the dean of students office revealed Friday. Both the all-men’s—2.6390—and all-fraternity— 2.4001—grade point averages were higner than iasi fall’s marks. Although the all-fraternity average was higher, only six living groups soared above the all-men’s marks. Psi Upsilon's 2.9495 bested defending champ Alpha Epsilon Phi’s 2.8365. The Psi Upsilon average was the highest ever recorded by a USC fraternity. Other fraternities placing above the all-men’s standard were Tau Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Zeta Beta Tau and Tau Epsilon Phi. During the 1961 spring semester Sigma Alpha Mu set the top mark in the nation for a fraternity with over 30 members when it posted a 2.9375. Seventeen groups finished above the all-fraternity average and 13 fell below it. Significant fluctuations included Sigma Phi Delta’s rise from 22nd to 12th, Tau Kappa Epsilon’s climb from 16th to 8th, and the demises of Phi Gamma Delta, from 10th to 22nd; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, from 12th to 24th; and Theta Xi, from 4th to 15th. Stonier Hall’s 2.883 was well ahead of second place Touton Hall’s 2.467 in dormitory figures. All-women’s sorority and all-women’s dormitory averages, which include summer and post sessions, have not been released yet. ACLU s Wirin to Spark Series National Figures To Speak Here For USP Forum Wrong Digits Plague Editor FRATERNITIES Spring Previous Gain or Loss Semester Semester Rank in Rank Average Average 1. Psi Upsilon — 2.9495 — 2. Alpha Epsilon Pi -1 2.8365 2.9455 3. Tau Delta Phi —1 2.7513 2.5703 4. Sigma Alpha Mu + 3 2.7239 2.4813 5. Zeta Beta Tau 0 2.6726 2.5199 6. Tau Epsilon Phi —3 2.6699 2.5439 All-Men’s Average 2.6390 2.5641 7. Alpha Tau Omega + 4 2.5821 2.4063 8. Tau Kappa Epsilon + 8 2.5606' 2.3761 9. Beta Theta Pi + 4 2.5550 2.3986 10. Sigma Phi Epsilon —4 2.5548 2.5076 11. Chi Phi +6 2.5417 2.3736 12. Sigma Phi Delta + 10 2.5286 2.2391 13. Sigma Nu —4 2.5000 2.2966 14. Phi Sigma Kappa —6 2.4900 2.4324 15. Theta Xi —11 2.4863 2.5413 16. Phi Delta Theta —1 2.4853 2.3946 17. Kappa Alpha —3 2.4739 2.3949 All-Fraternity Average 2.4001 2.3660 18. Lambda Chi Alpha 0 2.3340 2.3542 19. Alpha Rho Chi + 1 2.3298 2.2701 20. Theta Chi + 1 2.3043 2.2694 21. Phi Kappa Tau —2 2.2897 2.3291 22. Phi Gamma Delta -12 2.2887 2.4250 23. Pi Kappa Alpha + 3 2.2838 2.1330 24. Sigma Alphi Epsilon —12 2.2718 2.4059 25. Kappa Alpha Psi + 4 2.2479 1.8085 26. Sigma Chi —1 2.2475 2.1677 27. Phi Kappa Psi —4 2.2294 2.2230 28. Delta Tau Delta —4 2.2050 2.1859 29. Delta Sigma Phi —2 2.1348 2.1304 30. Delta Chi —2 2.1254 2.0515 MEN S RESIDENCE HALLS 1. Stonier Hall — 2.883 — All-Men’s Dorm Average 2.553 — 2. Touton Hall — 2.467 — 3. Marks Hall — 2.457 4. Trojan Hall — 2.410 SCampus Editor Mary Ellen Wynhausen’s face is as red as the student handbook’s cover this week because of mixups in telephone numbers, published in the freshman manual. The listed number f«ir Town and Gown residence hall included the correct digits. but in incorrect order, much to the dismay of the receptionist at the L. A. r*arling Company, local store fixture manufacturer. The company informed the university that It was receiving numerous calls from people who could not be convinced that the L. A. Darling meant something other than Town and Gown. The correct number for Town and Gown is RI 8-2579. Other numbers incorrectly listed — and the proper proper numbers — were Touton Hall, RI 9-9660; and Marks Hall, RI 9-9010, second floor, RI 9-9092, and third floor, RI 9 9081. Dean Predicts Sharp Rise In Business The world is on the verge of a business boom that may overshadow any boom of the past— and American firms must play a leading role in its development, a USC expert said Friday. Dr. Robert R. Dockson, dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration, told the National Defense Transportation Association that increased exports from the United States, will provide the basis for this boom. “Why is it that the very men in America who purchase German. British or Italian automobiles operated on gasoline bought from North Africa; who smoke cigars from Cuba, Brazil or the Philippines: who wear woolens from England. silk ties from Italy, linen handkerchiefs from Ireland and raincoats from Japan, and who might even drink Scotch from you-know-where, refuse to understand that they might be able to sell their own products to some of the people selling to them?” he asked. The percentage of American manufacturers exporting their products is lower than in any other industrialized nation, Dr. Dockson said. But, he predicted, as exports rise, so will imports. He said the ability of United States manufacturers to produce can increase more than $30 billion a year leading to the creation of from 30 to 35 million new jobs to keep the expanding U.S. labor force employed productively. ASSC Opens One Position For Senator Petitioning will open today for only one senatorial position, Election Commissioner Dick Messer announced Friday. Messer, trying to explain apparent ASSC confusion in filling senatorial vacancies that cropped up Thursday, said petitioning would be opened only in fields of study that do not have presidents. Biological sciences is the only field in this category. Open, Closed The confusion appeared when Messer earlier said petitioning would be opened for vacant Senate seats, and Administrative Assistant Mike Robinson said the ASSC couldn’t open petitioning because of a constitutional provision. Messer said the ASSC constitution provided for filling Senate vacancies when field presidents were available to make appointments. He said biological sciences did not have a president and therefore would have its senator elected at the freshman elections. Students in the field may pick up petitions in ASSC President Leddel's office, 321 SU, today, tomorrow and Wednesday. He said other vacancies will be appointed by field presidents according to the constitution. Still Open Messer said petitioning is still open for Freshman Class president and vice president. No petitions have been filed for vice president. He said freshman women also may file for a new AWS post—representative from the Freshman class. Candidat« must have campaign materials approved by the Election Committee before they may be used in the election, Messer said. The committee is checking material tomorrow through Thursday from 1 to 4 p.m. in Leddel’s office. He indicated that candidates also would have to attend a mandatory meeting Thursday, the day petitioning closed, ait 2:30 p.m. in the Senate Chambers, 301 SU. OLD AND NEW : ? A. L. WIRIN . to speak Here Ideal Woman To Be Sought By Committee —Daily Trojan Photo by Frank L.. Kaplan BIOLOGICAL BUILDING — A workman peers into the 20-foot hole that will one day become the Biosciences Research Center. The tower of one of the oldest buildings on the campus, Mudd Hall, looms over the excavation. The center, when finished, will dwarf Mudd tower with an eight story, research building complex. Businessmen Open Posts Petition forms for membership on the School of Business Council are now available in the undergraduate advisement office in Bridge Hall, Robert Quinn, business president, announced Friday. The council will be responsible for governing the Business School’s student body. Council members will study and pass on bills concerning activities within the school. BROWN, NIXON POLL Students Pan Politicos USC Expands Effort In Pakistan Project By ALAN BINE ¡win easily if his only opposi- Students at USC aren't too.tion were Pat Brown, keen on either of California's j The optimism was still there, gubernatorial candidates, an but not quite so great in the informal Daily Trojan poll indi-second poll — after he filed cated Friday. for the office. The bulk of students of vot-j Former Gov. Goodwin Knight ing age interviewed said they insisted he had witnesses to would go along with the prove that Nixon had sent an "lesser of the two evils”—Gov. emissary to him early in Sep- Edmund G. (Pat) Brown. Student reaction to the query “Who will be California's next governor and why?” was quite a contrast to two similar campus polls taken last year. The earlier polls, compiled before and after Richard M. Nixon declared his candidacy Janet Rush, a junior majoring in English, echoed a flock of other feelings when she said he was hurt, perhaps politically destroyed, during his cam- „ U f « *. * j * r Pai^° against President Ken- tember of 1961 who tried to °f-1 nedv Many of the students polled on campus Friday said they preferred Nixon, but thought Brown would win. fer inducements aimed at keeping him out of the race. “The controversy aroused by Knight will probably have little effect on the outcome of the election since it is balanced by Joe McCarthy’s < former director of the department of mo- for the state's highest office,¡tor vehicles) controversy with carried a flavor of optimism Brown,” Dr. Desmond Ander-for the former rice president, son, assistant dean of the While Nixon was hinting that School of Public Administrate might run. his supporters ¡tion. said, when interviewed in the initial poll felt he could'during the second poll. ‘‘Nobody likes to back a loser twice,” she explained. The flames involved in the Nixon-Knight feud were rekindled by Dave Friedberg, a junior economics student. “Generally poor campaign management and the Knight conflict will hurt Nixon,” he said. can’t get away with that,’ Friedberg quipped. Dick Beaulieu, a junior in business, insisted that “many Republican voters of 1958 have forsaken the party in favor of an extreme right-winger and now, bitter over a loss, will not unite behind the party.” One student, Harvey Dener-off, may have found a flaw in Nixon, even though he has only been in California for a month. Deneroff, a graduate student in cinema from the Bronx, injected the view of a newcomer to California politics. “Nixon has a national image — only a national image,” he said. “People can’t see Nixon in California. They think he's running for governor to aid his “He’s been slamming the drive for the presidency in Democrats, too, and you just ¡1968. ^jo do I.” The School of Public Administration has added a new program to its expanding Pakistan Project. Marshall Fels, the project’s training coordinator, said the new program is called Training of Trainers — TOT for short — and its general objective is to train employes of the Pakistan Government to become training administrators. The major portion of the program, which lasts approximately seven months, is devoted to learning to determine training needs, organize training programs and evaluate training efforts. Fels said part of the program is carried on in the Pakistan Project building, 823 W. 34th St., and part is pursued through field trips and internships in governmental and training organizations. Students Travel Fels explained that in addition to the lectures and participative exercises on campus and work in outside organizations, the program Includes a number of projects, such as the preparation of a major lesson plan that the participant can use on his return to Pakistan. During the Spring, students in the project spent a week traveling through the western United States to observe the American free enterprise system. Three Organizations Fels said the tour included a view of the booming city of Phoenix and a look at the varying efforts of three Indian of the university’s effort under its Pakistan contract with the United States Agency for International Development. In Pakistan, an extension of the program is engaged in assisting the development of three National Institutes of Public Administration at Dacca, Lahore and Karachi. The program also assists in the development of Public Administration curricula in universities, participating in research and performing a variety of consultative services to governmental agencies. On campus, a group of Pakistani students are working towards master of science degrees in public administration, doctor of public administration and master of science in library science. By DAN SMITH Daily Trojan City Editor A. L. Wirin, chief counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Southern California for the past 30 years, will open a new political speakers forum today at 2:15 in 133 FH. Wirin, slated to speak on “Civil Liberties in the United States,” is being spon-1 sored by the University Stu-1 dents Party (USP) as the first! speaker in a year-long series j that will include U.S. Sen. j Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., and: California Atty. Gen. Stanley1 Mosk, USP President Steve Meiers said Friday. Meiers said the program has. been initiated as a party ac- tivity independent of the AS- SC. 31 Year» Wirin has spent the past 31 j years arguing cases involving! such issues as freedom of j speech and association, police j practices, racial and religious [ discrimination, censorship, aca-1 j demic freedom and separation j j of church and state. He relinquished a successful practice in bankruptcy law ini' 1931 to become the first full-! time civil liberties latfyer. He i prepared his first brief for the! national American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of Robert j Bums, who became popularly! known as the “fugitive from a Georgia chain gang.” flipnt« Homecoming queen applica-Wirin since has represented, Uon forms wll ^ distributed Farists, Communists, Socialists, ^ 232 su today> Bill Heeres> union leaders, opponents of or- j chair7nan> ^ Friday. ganized labor, murderers and! TT , , . , ,___ Heeres said deadline for remembers of racial and religious i ^ ^ I turning applications is Oct. 12. minorities. j t . He said he undertakes these1 Candidates - must be jumor or «• tu senior women who have attend- cases “in the belief that every sc . provision of the Bill of Rights . ruU scho°1 x. . „ prior to this semester. They applies to everyone. i , . . _ _ Z,, _ . , . „ . _ also must have a 2.o grade The Russian-born lawyer said even though he is opposed avera»e- to “all totalitarian doctrines,” A $2 entrance fee must ache will represent advocates of company applications, which them all if he feels their con- are due Get. 12. Heeres empha-stitutional rights are being vi- slze^ t^iat contestants must olated. j attend all judgings. Future Speakers Preliminary judging will be Meiers said USP’s political' held on Oct. 16, 18 and 23. forum series tentatively will I The semi-finals will be on Oct. bring more than 15 political 25, and the finals are sched-personalities to campus during uled for Oct. 30 dunng a din-the year. Ten have already con- ner at the Beverly Hilton Ho-sented to speak. tel. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy “Helen of Troy stands for and State Atty. Gen. Stanley the epitome of the USC worn-Mosk were among those who: an,” Heeres explained, promised to appear on campus “As in the past, Helen will later in the school year, the be selected on the basis of USP president said. I greater criteria than just pure Meiers said his party had de- beauty,” he added, cided to sponsor a speaker “Judging will also be based program independent of the j on the woman's intelligence, ASSCs speaker program be- poise, ability to carry on a oon-cause it did not feel the ASSC1 versation and her common program was adequate. sense.” he explained. “We hope our program will1 Packets of applications were provide students with an op- sent out Friday to sorority port unity to hear speakers of .houses and women's dormitor-diverse attitudes and in this i ies. Independent women, soror-way increase their knowledge ity houses and women’s dorm-and enlarge their horizons,” ! itories may enter as many can-Meiers stated. didates as desired, he said. Dr. Baxter Will Inaugurate Fall Noon Reading Series Dr. Frank C. Baxter, emeri-j tus professor of English, will open the ninth edition of the English department’s “Readings at Noon” today at 12:30 in 133 FH. Dr. Baxter’s subject will be “John Evelyn: Diaries.’’ The Shakespearean scholar traditionally has appeared at the first of the annual English readings. “Evelyn's diaries cover al- most all of 17th century Eng-tribes in the Arizona-New Mex- land/, Dr Baxter ^ Friday ico region. “He was a curious, interested! The participants in the TOTjman, who stood at the begin program will return to three different kinds of organizations, Fels said. Part of the group will return to the National Institutes of Public Administration, part to the Secretariat Training Institute in Karachi, Pakistan, and the remainder to operating a productive writer, turning agencies. Fels explained. out an incredible number of The TOT program is one part j handbooks on a variety of sub- \ abatement and fire prevention nings of modem science. “Not a scientist himself, Evelyn was a civilized member of English society at a time when all men were interested in natural phenomena" he explained. Dr. Baxter said Evelyn was jects — “from reforestation to Ham and Oliver Cromwell. potato salad — only he spelled “He wrote about the plague, it 'sallat.’ His book" on smoke j the Dutch wars and all the (Continued on Page 2), w* «-• FRANK C. BAXTER , . to open series came out just before the disastrous London fire!” 1 Evelyn also wrote on the techniques of reproducing pictures mechanically, and gave ! advice to English portrait painters in their craft, he said. Dr. Baxter will describe the difference between Evelyn's diary and that of Samuel Pepys. 'They both wrote during a similar nine-year period, but neither knew the other was writing a diary.” the scholar noted. “Evelyn was a gentleman. but Pepys was definitely not of that class,” Dr. Baxter ;said. “Evelyn was versed in virtuosity, the gentlemanly amateur science of the day.” Evelyn lived in the heart of royal society. He was well acquainted with King Charles I and U, James II, King Wil- |
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