DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 27, October 31, 1962 |
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PAGE THREE
University Costs Bar Talented Minds
University of Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Hal Bedsole Takes Lead In AAWU Scoring
VOL. LIV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1962
NO. 27
Presentation of Helen' To Climax Variety Show
WAR PAINT
Raiders Dress
UCLA in Red
By TOM CAPRA Daily Trojan Managing Editor
It’s the same old story — Tommy turns blue and the next day UCLA turns red. Red from paint rather than anger.
It appears that an enterprising group of students from USC journeyed to the Westwood tar pits and painted some signs on Royce Hall and surrounding structures Monday night.
Sources close to the scene
MODERN STRUCTURE— This soon-to-be constructed men's residential dormitory, shown in an artist's conception, is part
of the university's expanded housing plans. A .$3.95 million loan for additional facilities was announced yesterday.
University Dorm Program
Gets $3.95 Million Boost
A $3.95 million loan to be used for housing facilities has been received by the university from the Community Facilities Administration in Washington D. C., President Topping announced yesterday.
The 40-year loan, which must be repaid to the Housing and Home Finance Agency at three and three-eighths per cent interest, will be used to build second and third housing units to accommodate 154 married students families, a women’:' residence hall that will house
: 192 students and three new ¡residences on the Row for 15?i ¡fraternity men.
! News of the loan came from I Sens. Thomas Kuehel and Clair Engle.
{ “This loan is particularly important to USC’s Master Plan, which calls for increasing the number of students who will live on or near the campus,” Sen. Kuehel said.
The first step in a general rehabilitation of tne Row will be the building of new houses for Sigma Cni, Bet?. Theta Pi.
YWCA Will Discuss Francis Amendment
Dr. Gerald Rigby, assistant professor of political science, will lead a discussion on the Francis Amendment (Proposition 24) today at 2:30 at the YWCA.
The speaker-discussion period is one in a series sponsored by the YWCA Student Concerns Committee, which recently held a talk on the Mississippi crisis.
Dr. Rigby has stated that the measure, meant to control subversive activities, has alarm-
Coed Wins Scholarship In Teaching
Graduate student France Mowat has been awarded a $1,000 scholarship for study of elementary education under the university’s directed teacher program.
The scholarship is furnished by Technicolor Corporation, a Los Angeles photograph processing firm. It is the first of s series of scholarships established by the firm to subsidiz? training of elementary school teachers.
Miss Mowat is a graduate o' Chancellor von KleinSmid Albert College and McGill will speak today at a luncheon University in Canada. She was sponsored by Phi Delta Phi, bom in Sudbury. Ontario. national legal fraternity.
A chemistry major, she ha:-1 More than 100 fraternity done technical writing and members are expected to at-most recently worked as a re tend this luncheon, which will
ing implications that the voter may not see.
"The amendment would give all appellate or superior courts, county grand juries, the state attorney general and sundry federal officers and agencies the authority to declare any organization subversive or Communist, and, as a result, to deny it all privileges of political bodies.’’ Dr. Rigby said.
He explained that amateur efforts at the difficult jcb of separating subversive elements from American society are frightening enough without giving ill equipped agencies such a widespread license for Communist hunting.
“While one may be as enthusiastic as his neighbor about protection of the values that! are America’s,” Dr. Rigby said, “he is not obligated to violate those values in the name of preserving them. While subversion must be prevented. this is not the way to go about it.”
and Chi Phi fraternities, Dr. Topping said. OMu-r new fraternity and sororiij houses aie expected to be 1 ui’i in Hi? future under similar arrangements.
Land Deeds
The fraternities will make use of the loan by deeding the land to the university, which will in turn build and operate the residences as part of its total housing system.
Sigma Chi has a lot on which its houses will be built. Houses presently occupied by the Betas and Chi Phis will be torn down to make way for their new homes.
The fraternities are expected to be ready for occupancy next fall.
Six-Story TTnit
The first six-story housing unit for 60 married student families is already under con struction at the southwest corner of the campus at Expositor Blvd. and McClintock Ave. Construction on the second and third units, which will also be six-story structures in the same area, will begin after the first of the year.
Construction on the new coed dormitory will 3 1 s o begin early in 1963. The building will be on Figueroa St. between West 34th and 35th Streets.
This will bring the dormitory building program on the main campus and at the medical campus to more than $8 million. Dr. Topping said.
USC already has under construction on the main campus —under a nearly $4.1 million federal grant—two eight-story tower residence halls for 300 women and 200 men students and a six-story' building for 60 families.
Root-Tilden Law Grants To Be Given
! Law students may now apply for the Root-Tilden Scholarships in law, Richard Block, j pre-law adviser,-said yesterday.
i Block urged interested law j students to apply immediately for the scholarships, which are valued at $2,780 a year. The program provides for full tuition at the New York University School of Law and $1,500 living expenses.
Candidates must rank in the upper quarter of their college class, be male U.S. citizens between 20 and 28 and not have previously attended any law school. They must be single, and may not marry during their first or second years of law school to retain the scholarship.
Prospective applicants must submit preliminary Root-Tilden applications and copies of their official college transcript to the Root-Tilden scholarship committee.
Students who meet minimum requirements fc. the scholarship will be sent application forms.
Candidates must take the Law School Admission Test. The next test offered will be Feb. 9. Applications for this test must be turned in to the Educational Testing Service by Jan. 30.
Chancellor to Talk At Legal Luncheon
Fiancis E. Jones, professor of law.
The fraternity is striving to introduce new ideas of excep tional and experienced men to its members, Karabian said.
As one of the world’s fore-
search engineer at the Auto- open a series sponsored by most educators. Dr. von Klein-netics division of North Amer- the fraternity. iSmid has received many na-
ican Aviation, Inc. John Kams. program chair- tional and international hon-
She enrolled in tne USC man. said the law fraternity is nors. In 1942 he was awarded
graduate education course in Septemlier. Under the pro gram, she assists each morning in the fourth and sixth grade classrooms at Don Benito School in Paradena, with the guidance of a full-time teacher.
"honored to have the Chancel !the National Institute of So-lor as its first speaker.” cial Sciences Gold Medal Former ASSC President Wal- Award.
ly Karabian, now a law student, will introduce the Chan cellor and the other dignitaries who will attend.
Additional guests will be Dr.
Dr. von KleinSmid also is chancellor of the USC Institute of World Affairs, an organization that he founded.
The new von KleinSmid Cen-
"Wo learn teadrng theory Orrin Evans, associate dean of ter for International and Pub-and see the theory in practice the Law School; Dr. William lie affairs will be dedicated to at the same time,'’ she said. ,Burby, professor of law; andjhim.
Ties Denote Fraternity's
13 Initiates
Traditional purple and white bow ties are being worn on campus this week by new ini tiates of Chi Epsilon, national men’s professional civil engineering fraternity. President Herbert Drosdat said yesterday.
The 13 new initiates of the civil engineering fraternity are graduates Charles Brockmeier and William Moore and undergraduates William Elliot, Donald Froelich, Gabriel Hachigi-an, Thomas Kohli, George Nelson, Terry Oberrieder, James Ong, Lawrence Pilj, Donald Taylor, Gale Vandeventer and Martindale Kile.
Chi Epsilon members are chosen on their scholarship, character, practicality and sociability. They also must rank in the upper one-third of the civil engineering class.
An informal initiation where the students will take a series of tests will be held at the end of this week. The formal banquet initiation will Like place in December at a local restaurant.
In the past, the 15 active members have helped to sponsor the first meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineering. They also have brought various civil engineering speakers to the students.
(the Daily Bruin) report that more than 20 separate signs were painted on street signs, buildings and walks.
The modernistic and slightly off-color art contained the letters USC and also mentioned the word Squires. However, the Bruin claims that the UCLA dean of men has refused to blame the painting on USC students.
USC’s Assistant Dean of Stu-j dents, Tom Hull, had not heardl of the incident when contacted! by the Daily Trojan. Hull did; premise a full investigation' and a statement “within two| days.’’
A spokesman from the Daily I Bruin reported that UCLAj students were mildly incensed i over the painting but he said| ‘ it doesn’t bother us too much because it has become so rou tine.”
He speculated that the UCLA campus was painted ‘ return for the touch-up job our students did on Tommy Trojan over the weekend.”
‘‘It could have been one of our spirit groups just trying to stir up a little trouble,” the spokesman continued. “But it isn’t likely since the USC UCLA game is almost a month off.”
The painting exchange came very early this year — it usually waits until the week before the game.
Reunion Lets Reader Read
He couldn’t see the Words too well. They said “If you can read this,’don’t.” With great effort he continued.
The Daily Trojan reader only needed his glasses to see, and that was what the story was all about — his glasses. He lost them in Do-heny Library during the summer, and they that only had eyes for him were reported safe at the campus information office.
This happy reunion only goes to show that students do read the Daily Trojan — especially when they’re told not to.
Six
For
Acts
Top
to Vie Honors
The coronation and presentation of the 1962 Helen of Troy will climax the excitement of Trolios tonight at 7:30 in Bovard Auditorium.
After surviving two weeks of judging, the five aspirants made final appearances before judges at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last night, i
The winner and her attending court will not be announced, however, untii tonight's program.
★ ★ ★ Houses Start Homecoming Decorations
j the official judging Friday at 110 a.m., Jim D’Amato, committee chairman, announced yesterday.
Law Officer To Address Fraternity
Journeyman salaries for technical positions average from $6,090 to $9,476 per year, he said.
Francis Whelan, United States attorney for Southern California, will discuss the problems presented by his position at a luncheon sponsored by Phi Alpha Delta legal fra temity today at 12:20 in the Upstairs Commons Lounge.
Whelan will describe many of the problems he has had to deal with while representing the United States in appellate and original jurisdiction cases in Southern California.
A 1932 graduate of the University of California at Berkeley School of Law, he has served as assistant United States attorney and as special assistant to the United States attorney general.
Whelan has also been a commissioner of the Federal Court for the southern district of California.
For the past 40 years the Phi Alpha Delta luncheon pro-j ing higher caliber personnel, gram, which is open to the student body, has been a School of Law tradition. In the past two years, Senator Engle, Attorney General Stanley Mosk,
Pat Hillings, former member of Congress and Mayor Samuel Yorty have spoken.
| The five women vying for the j | title of Helen are Karen Han-:
[ sen, Susie Sale. Carol Soucek,
Patti Hill and Ethel Walker.
| The royal court will receive j j flowers and trophies and am en-j
graved silver platter will be Thirty-five organizations, vy-presented to Queen Helen. . ing for trophies for homecom-
Studio Tour j ing house decorations, will dis-
! The Trojan Royalty will be-,pjay their finished products at [gin their reign with a tour of | Warner Bros. Studios and | lunch at the studio’s famed j Green Room tomorrow.
Friday’s activities will in-jelude both an appearance on Winners in the mens and
the Tom Frandson Show in the women’s divisions will be an-afternoon and the Steven Allen nounced at Troy Jubilee. Queen An opportunity to meet gov- Show that night. The five Helen of Trey will present the emment representatives and:women have also received trophies.
discuss federal employment tickets to the premiere of “Mu- All entrants must be official-
tiny of the Bounty ’ Nov. 15 at jy recognized campus organi-the Egyptian Theater. zations, such as fraternities.
The week's activities will cul- sororities, dormitories or serv-minate with the Homecoming!ice groups, parade at the USC vs. Wash-1 and service groups
ington game Saturday. will display their decorations
Trolios Festivities I along University Avenue. Tou-
The festivities of Trolios, , t0n and College Hall will be which mark the official begin-,represented in front of Bovard ning of Homecoming Week, will Auditorium. Stonier Hall and be witnessed by more than ¡Town and Gown decorations 1,200 students, Trolios Qvair- j will be seen on the north side
i of Hancock Auditorium, while
Career Day Will Outline Federal Jobs
possibilities will be provided by Federal Career Day today from 9 to 4:30 p.m. in front of Bovard Auditorium.
Frank Mason, USC director of federal recruiting, said that the United States government has positions in every field from accounting to zoology. He stressed that the government is particularly in need of students with college degrees, and “the higher academic standing ¡man Dick Beaulieu said.
the graduate has attained, the higher h i s starting salary would be.”
Starting Salary Starting salary for one to three year programs for an average student is $4.565. while those in the upper 25 per cent of their class could receive $5,540 a year, Mason said.
Graduate students and certain management intern positions start at $6,675 a year, he added.
“We have planned a well-; Squires and Spurs and Trojan rounded program with a wide Hall will place theirs on the variety of acts that have a south side of Hancock, great deal of appeal to both A number of organizations students and faculty,” Beaulieu may have ,ost because
stated. Qf negligence ¡n complying with
Trolios will be geared toward official rules, D’Amato said, the theme “Trojan Spirit
Epsilon doing “Ministrolios, Kappa Delta will follow with! “Bells Should Be Ringing,” Alpha Epsilon Phi and Tau Delta Phi with “USC—Vintage 1880,” Kappa Alpha Theta with “Grill The director said there are ¡Hour Dilemma,” Kappa Alpha* more than 5,000 federal jobs with “Parody on Tom Dooley,” available to residents of South- and Delta Delta Delta and A1 ern California. pha Tau Omega with
“Out of this number, there Succeed at Football Without
Any group not adhering to the rules will be subject to disqualification. Violations include beginning construction before
. .... _. , _ „ , Tuesday at 9 a.m. or exceeding
pha Delta Pi and Tau Kappa' . . . __ *
L. .. . . . “ the maximum cost of $75 for
Through the Ages” and will include six competitive acts and two non-competitive acts.
The show will open with Ai-
construction materials.
Staff to Get Top Awards
are 3,000 to 4,000 career opportunities in which the college student w'ould be interested,” he said.
Possible Fields
Trying.”
Non-Competitive
The two non-competitive acts are a faculty act and the USC i Steel Band.
Awards for the best Daily
HowtoiTro^an reP°rter' copyreadcr and news editor for the past month will be presented at a mandatory staff meeting today at noon in the city room, 432 ISU.
Dr. Reining Will Speak
Dr. Henry Reining, dean of the School of Public Administration. will speak on Brazilian progress at the Faculty Center luncheon today at noon.
Dr. Reining, who just returned from a year in Brazil, is past president of the American Society for Public Administration. He has surveyed and impie m e n t e d improvements in training of personnel in public administration work in Teheran, Pakistan and the Philippines, as well as Brazil.
USC is currently under contract with the State Department's Agency for International Development to provide technical advice and assistance requested by the government of Brazil.
Editor Hal Drake said the Some of the possible fields Bill Ballanee of KFWB will awards will be presented to Mason mentioned are engineer- be master of ceremonies at the staff members who have shown ing, social sciences, manage- ^official "spirit raising” program the best performance during ment, accounting, intemation-j of Homecoming. fhe first month of publication,
al relations and medicine. ’ The six shows competing for He said other important mat-Another opportunity is work the trophies will be judged on;ters will also be discussed. The on space programs, demand-1 originality, theme, audience ap- meeting is mandatory for all mg higher caliber personnel, ¡peal and presentation. Daily Trojan staff members.
Nixon's Wife Will Discuss Woman s Campaign Role
Pat Nixon will speak today on ‘The Woman’s Role in a Political Campaign” following a j reception for her at noon in Towti and Gown Foyer.
Mrs. Nixon, wife of former Vice President and now gubernatorial candidate Richard Nixon, will meet with President Topping at 11:30 and then be escorted to Town and Gown Foyer by Trojan Young Republican (TYPJ President Harvey Harris.
Following the reception, Harris will introduce Mrs. Nixon and preface her talk with a brief speech on “University Students and the Republican Party.”
He will explain some functions of TYR, how it has contributed to the Republican party and some of the issues
PAT NIXON
. . . to speak
ginning of his “border-to-border drive to restore good government in California.”
Since the general election campaign opened on Sept. 12, she has shaken hands with 35,-000 women at receptions throughout the state.
“Her speech.'’ Harris said, “will be very informal and, in addition to comments on the role of women in campaigning, she will discuss some of the pressures on a woman whose husband is in politics.”
Mrs. Nixon’s appearance on campus will further augment TYR’s promise to keep Trojan* abreast of the California political scene.
Mrs. Nixon's appearance is being co-sponsored by the Col-
Republican party and we feel legians for Nixon and the Tro-
in the Nixon-Brown gubema-ivery fortunate in having hfr jan Young Republicans. She is
torial race. speak to us.” Harris said. He the fourth and final speaker
“Mrs. Nixon has been an said she has campaigned with in the Young Republican lec-
important spokesman for the j her husband from the very be-iture series.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 27, October 31, 1962 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 27, October 31, 1962. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE University Costs Bar Talented Minds University of Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Hal Bedsole Takes Lead In AAWU Scoring VOL. LIV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1962 NO. 27 Presentation of Helen' To Climax Variety Show WAR PAINT Raiders Dress UCLA in Red By TOM CAPRA Daily Trojan Managing Editor It’s the same old story — Tommy turns blue and the next day UCLA turns red. Red from paint rather than anger. It appears that an enterprising group of students from USC journeyed to the Westwood tar pits and painted some signs on Royce Hall and surrounding structures Monday night. Sources close to the scene MODERN STRUCTURE— This soon-to-be constructed men's residential dormitory, shown in an artist's conception, is part of the university's expanded housing plans. A .$3.95 million loan for additional facilities was announced yesterday. University Dorm Program Gets $3.95 Million Boost A $3.95 million loan to be used for housing facilities has been received by the university from the Community Facilities Administration in Washington D. C., President Topping announced yesterday. The 40-year loan, which must be repaid to the Housing and Home Finance Agency at three and three-eighths per cent interest, will be used to build second and third housing units to accommodate 154 married students families, a women’:' residence hall that will house : 192 students and three new ¡residences on the Row for 15?i ¡fraternity men. ! News of the loan came from I Sens. Thomas Kuehel and Clair Engle. { “This loan is particularly important to USC’s Master Plan, which calls for increasing the number of students who will live on or near the campus,” Sen. Kuehel said. The first step in a general rehabilitation of tne Row will be the building of new houses for Sigma Cni, Bet?. Theta Pi. YWCA Will Discuss Francis Amendment Dr. Gerald Rigby, assistant professor of political science, will lead a discussion on the Francis Amendment (Proposition 24) today at 2:30 at the YWCA. The speaker-discussion period is one in a series sponsored by the YWCA Student Concerns Committee, which recently held a talk on the Mississippi crisis. Dr. Rigby has stated that the measure, meant to control subversive activities, has alarm- Coed Wins Scholarship In Teaching Graduate student France Mowat has been awarded a $1,000 scholarship for study of elementary education under the university’s directed teacher program. The scholarship is furnished by Technicolor Corporation, a Los Angeles photograph processing firm. It is the first of s series of scholarships established by the firm to subsidiz? training of elementary school teachers. Miss Mowat is a graduate o' Chancellor von KleinSmid Albert College and McGill will speak today at a luncheon University in Canada. She was sponsored by Phi Delta Phi, bom in Sudbury. Ontario. national legal fraternity. A chemistry major, she ha:-1 More than 100 fraternity done technical writing and members are expected to at-most recently worked as a re tend this luncheon, which will ing implications that the voter may not see. "The amendment would give all appellate or superior courts, county grand juries, the state attorney general and sundry federal officers and agencies the authority to declare any organization subversive or Communist, and, as a result, to deny it all privileges of political bodies.’’ Dr. Rigby said. He explained that amateur efforts at the difficult jcb of separating subversive elements from American society are frightening enough without giving ill equipped agencies such a widespread license for Communist hunting. “While one may be as enthusiastic as his neighbor about protection of the values that! are America’s,” Dr. Rigby said, “he is not obligated to violate those values in the name of preserving them. While subversion must be prevented. this is not the way to go about it.” and Chi Phi fraternities, Dr. Topping said. OMu-r new fraternity and sororiij houses aie expected to be 1 ui’i in Hi? future under similar arrangements. Land Deeds The fraternities will make use of the loan by deeding the land to the university, which will in turn build and operate the residences as part of its total housing system. Sigma Chi has a lot on which its houses will be built. Houses presently occupied by the Betas and Chi Phis will be torn down to make way for their new homes. The fraternities are expected to be ready for occupancy next fall. Six-Story TTnit The first six-story housing unit for 60 married student families is already under con struction at the southwest corner of the campus at Expositor Blvd. and McClintock Ave. Construction on the second and third units, which will also be six-story structures in the same area, will begin after the first of the year. Construction on the new coed dormitory will 3 1 s o begin early in 1963. The building will be on Figueroa St. between West 34th and 35th Streets. This will bring the dormitory building program on the main campus and at the medical campus to more than $8 million. Dr. Topping said. USC already has under construction on the main campus —under a nearly $4.1 million federal grant—two eight-story tower residence halls for 300 women and 200 men students and a six-story' building for 60 families. Root-Tilden Law Grants To Be Given ! Law students may now apply for the Root-Tilden Scholarships in law, Richard Block, j pre-law adviser,-said yesterday. i Block urged interested law j students to apply immediately for the scholarships, which are valued at $2,780 a year. The program provides for full tuition at the New York University School of Law and $1,500 living expenses. Candidates must rank in the upper quarter of their college class, be male U.S. citizens between 20 and 28 and not have previously attended any law school. They must be single, and may not marry during their first or second years of law school to retain the scholarship. Prospective applicants must submit preliminary Root-Tilden applications and copies of their official college transcript to the Root-Tilden scholarship committee. Students who meet minimum requirements fc. the scholarship will be sent application forms. Candidates must take the Law School Admission Test. The next test offered will be Feb. 9. Applications for this test must be turned in to the Educational Testing Service by Jan. 30. Chancellor to Talk At Legal Luncheon Fiancis E. Jones, professor of law. The fraternity is striving to introduce new ideas of excep tional and experienced men to its members, Karabian said. As one of the world’s fore- search engineer at the Auto- open a series sponsored by most educators. Dr. von Klein-netics division of North Amer- the fraternity. iSmid has received many na- ican Aviation, Inc. John Kams. program chair- tional and international hon- She enrolled in tne USC man. said the law fraternity is nors. In 1942 he was awarded graduate education course in Septemlier. Under the pro gram, she assists each morning in the fourth and sixth grade classrooms at Don Benito School in Paradena, with the guidance of a full-time teacher. "honored to have the Chancel !the National Institute of So-lor as its first speaker.” cial Sciences Gold Medal Former ASSC President Wal- Award. ly Karabian, now a law student, will introduce the Chan cellor and the other dignitaries who will attend. Additional guests will be Dr. Dr. von KleinSmid also is chancellor of the USC Institute of World Affairs, an organization that he founded. The new von KleinSmid Cen- "Wo learn teadrng theory Orrin Evans, associate dean of ter for International and Pub-and see the theory in practice the Law School; Dr. William lie affairs will be dedicated to at the same time,'’ she said. ,Burby, professor of law; andjhim. Ties Denote Fraternity's 13 Initiates Traditional purple and white bow ties are being worn on campus this week by new ini tiates of Chi Epsilon, national men’s professional civil engineering fraternity. President Herbert Drosdat said yesterday. The 13 new initiates of the civil engineering fraternity are graduates Charles Brockmeier and William Moore and undergraduates William Elliot, Donald Froelich, Gabriel Hachigi-an, Thomas Kohli, George Nelson, Terry Oberrieder, James Ong, Lawrence Pilj, Donald Taylor, Gale Vandeventer and Martindale Kile. Chi Epsilon members are chosen on their scholarship, character, practicality and sociability. They also must rank in the upper one-third of the civil engineering class. An informal initiation where the students will take a series of tests will be held at the end of this week. The formal banquet initiation will Like place in December at a local restaurant. In the past, the 15 active members have helped to sponsor the first meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineering. They also have brought various civil engineering speakers to the students. (the Daily Bruin) report that more than 20 separate signs were painted on street signs, buildings and walks. The modernistic and slightly off-color art contained the letters USC and also mentioned the word Squires. However, the Bruin claims that the UCLA dean of men has refused to blame the painting on USC students. USC’s Assistant Dean of Stu-j dents, Tom Hull, had not heardl of the incident when contacted! by the Daily Trojan. Hull did; premise a full investigation' and a statement “within two days.’’ A spokesman from the Daily I Bruin reported that UCLAj students were mildly incensed i over the painting but he said ‘ it doesn’t bother us too much because it has become so rou tine.” He speculated that the UCLA campus was painted ‘ return for the touch-up job our students did on Tommy Trojan over the weekend.” ‘‘It could have been one of our spirit groups just trying to stir up a little trouble,” the spokesman continued. “But it isn’t likely since the USC UCLA game is almost a month off.” The painting exchange came very early this year — it usually waits until the week before the game. Reunion Lets Reader Read He couldn’t see the Words too well. They said “If you can read this,’don’t.” With great effort he continued. The Daily Trojan reader only needed his glasses to see, and that was what the story was all about — his glasses. He lost them in Do-heny Library during the summer, and they that only had eyes for him were reported safe at the campus information office. This happy reunion only goes to show that students do read the Daily Trojan — especially when they’re told not to. Six For Acts Top to Vie Honors The coronation and presentation of the 1962 Helen of Troy will climax the excitement of Trolios tonight at 7:30 in Bovard Auditorium. After surviving two weeks of judging, the five aspirants made final appearances before judges at the Beverly Hilton Hotel last night, i The winner and her attending court will not be announced, however, untii tonight's program. ★ ★ ★ Houses Start Homecoming Decorations j the official judging Friday at 110 a.m., Jim D’Amato, committee chairman, announced yesterday. Law Officer To Address Fraternity Journeyman salaries for technical positions average from $6,090 to $9,476 per year, he said. Francis Whelan, United States attorney for Southern California, will discuss the problems presented by his position at a luncheon sponsored by Phi Alpha Delta legal fra temity today at 12:20 in the Upstairs Commons Lounge. Whelan will describe many of the problems he has had to deal with while representing the United States in appellate and original jurisdiction cases in Southern California. A 1932 graduate of the University of California at Berkeley School of Law, he has served as assistant United States attorney and as special assistant to the United States attorney general. Whelan has also been a commissioner of the Federal Court for the southern district of California. For the past 40 years the Phi Alpha Delta luncheon pro-j ing higher caliber personnel, gram, which is open to the student body, has been a School of Law tradition. In the past two years, Senator Engle, Attorney General Stanley Mosk, Pat Hillings, former member of Congress and Mayor Samuel Yorty have spoken. The five women vying for the j title of Helen are Karen Han-: [ sen, Susie Sale. Carol Soucek, Patti Hill and Ethel Walker. The royal court will receive j j flowers and trophies and am en-j graved silver platter will be Thirty-five organizations, vy-presented to Queen Helen. . ing for trophies for homecom- Studio Tour j ing house decorations, will dis- ! The Trojan Royalty will be-,pjay their finished products at [gin their reign with a tour of Warner Bros. Studios and lunch at the studio’s famed j Green Room tomorrow. Friday’s activities will in-jelude both an appearance on Winners in the mens and the Tom Frandson Show in the women’s divisions will be an-afternoon and the Steven Allen nounced at Troy Jubilee. Queen An opportunity to meet gov- Show that night. The five Helen of Trey will present the emment representatives and:women have also received trophies. discuss federal employment tickets to the premiere of “Mu- All entrants must be official- tiny of the Bounty ’ Nov. 15 at jy recognized campus organi-the Egyptian Theater. zations, such as fraternities. The week's activities will cul- sororities, dormitories or serv-minate with the Homecoming!ice groups, parade at the USC vs. Wash-1 and service groups ington game Saturday. will display their decorations Trolios Festivities I along University Avenue. Tou- The festivities of Trolios, , t0n and College Hall will be which mark the official begin-,represented in front of Bovard ning of Homecoming Week, will Auditorium. Stonier Hall and be witnessed by more than ¡Town and Gown decorations 1,200 students, Trolios Qvair- j will be seen on the north side i of Hancock Auditorium, while Career Day Will Outline Federal Jobs possibilities will be provided by Federal Career Day today from 9 to 4:30 p.m. in front of Bovard Auditorium. Frank Mason, USC director of federal recruiting, said that the United States government has positions in every field from accounting to zoology. He stressed that the government is particularly in need of students with college degrees, and “the higher academic standing ¡man Dick Beaulieu said. the graduate has attained, the higher h i s starting salary would be.” Starting Salary Starting salary for one to three year programs for an average student is $4.565. while those in the upper 25 per cent of their class could receive $5,540 a year, Mason said. Graduate students and certain management intern positions start at $6,675 a year, he added. “We have planned a well-; Squires and Spurs and Trojan rounded program with a wide Hall will place theirs on the variety of acts that have a south side of Hancock, great deal of appeal to both A number of organizations students and faculty,” Beaulieu may have ,ost because stated. Qf negligence ¡n complying with Trolios will be geared toward official rules, D’Amato said, the theme “Trojan Spirit Epsilon doing “Ministrolios, Kappa Delta will follow with! “Bells Should Be Ringing,” Alpha Epsilon Phi and Tau Delta Phi with “USC—Vintage 1880,” Kappa Alpha Theta with “Grill The director said there are ¡Hour Dilemma,” Kappa Alpha* more than 5,000 federal jobs with “Parody on Tom Dooley,” available to residents of South- and Delta Delta Delta and A1 ern California. pha Tau Omega with “Out of this number, there Succeed at Football Without Any group not adhering to the rules will be subject to disqualification. Violations include beginning construction before . .... _. , _ „ , Tuesday at 9 a.m. or exceeding pha Delta Pi and Tau Kappa' . . . __ * L. .. . . . “ the maximum cost of $75 for Through the Ages” and will include six competitive acts and two non-competitive acts. The show will open with Ai- construction materials. Staff to Get Top Awards are 3,000 to 4,000 career opportunities in which the college student w'ould be interested,” he said. Possible Fields Trying.” Non-Competitive The two non-competitive acts are a faculty act and the USC i Steel Band. Awards for the best Daily HowtoiTro^an reP°rter' copyreadcr and news editor for the past month will be presented at a mandatory staff meeting today at noon in the city room, 432 ISU. Dr. Reining Will Speak Dr. Henry Reining, dean of the School of Public Administration. will speak on Brazilian progress at the Faculty Center luncheon today at noon. Dr. Reining, who just returned from a year in Brazil, is past president of the American Society for Public Administration. He has surveyed and impie m e n t e d improvements in training of personnel in public administration work in Teheran, Pakistan and the Philippines, as well as Brazil. USC is currently under contract with the State Department's Agency for International Development to provide technical advice and assistance requested by the government of Brazil. Editor Hal Drake said the Some of the possible fields Bill Ballanee of KFWB will awards will be presented to Mason mentioned are engineer- be master of ceremonies at the staff members who have shown ing, social sciences, manage- ^official "spirit raising” program the best performance during ment, accounting, intemation-j of Homecoming. fhe first month of publication, al relations and medicine. ’ The six shows competing for He said other important mat-Another opportunity is work the trophies will be judged on;ters will also be discussed. The on space programs, demand-1 originality, theme, audience ap- meeting is mandatory for all mg higher caliber personnel, ¡peal and presentation. Daily Trojan staff members. Nixon's Wife Will Discuss Woman s Campaign Role Pat Nixon will speak today on ‘The Woman’s Role in a Political Campaign” following a j reception for her at noon in Towti and Gown Foyer. Mrs. Nixon, wife of former Vice President and now gubernatorial candidate Richard Nixon, will meet with President Topping at 11:30 and then be escorted to Town and Gown Foyer by Trojan Young Republican (TYPJ President Harvey Harris. Following the reception, Harris will introduce Mrs. Nixon and preface her talk with a brief speech on “University Students and the Republican Party.” He will explain some functions of TYR, how it has contributed to the Republican party and some of the issues PAT NIXON . . . to speak ginning of his “border-to-border drive to restore good government in California.” Since the general election campaign opened on Sept. 12, she has shaken hands with 35,-000 women at receptions throughout the state. “Her speech.'’ Harris said, “will be very informal and, in addition to comments on the role of women in campaigning, she will discuss some of the pressures on a woman whose husband is in politics.” Mrs. Nixon’s appearance on campus will further augment TYR’s promise to keep Trojan* abreast of the California political scene. Mrs. Nixon's appearance is being co-sponsored by the Col- Republican party and we feel legians for Nixon and the Tro- in the Nixon-Brown gubema-ivery fortunate in having hfr jan Young Republicans. She is torial race. speak to us.” Harris said. He the fourth and final speaker “Mrs. Nixon has been an said she has campaigned with in the Young Republican lec- important spokesman for the j her husband from the very be-iture series. |
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