DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 111, May 03, 1963 |
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THE TAX VOTE: WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
By PONCHITTA PIERCE Assistant to the Editor
If the proposed referendum to add $2.75 a semester to the fee bill for an addition to the Student Union is passed, what will it mean for students?
As envisioned by former ASSC President Bart Leddel, the money will be used to build a “center of student activity and euthusiasm.” Most of the $1.5 million from the special fee will be spent for an addition at the south end of the Grill, while the remaining sum will go toward renovating the present Student Union.
Describing his “concept” of the addition, Leddel explained that the new wing would probably include the usual student union furnishings — card room billiard room, lounge area, an atmospheric rathskeller and television and record rooms.
“But this is just my idea on what the Student Union will include,” Leddel stressed. “As of yet, there are no exact plans or blueprints. Students will have to place confidence in the Executive Cabinet to make the final decisions.”
While there is uncertainty about the addition, the present Student Union will undergo a trans-
formation, particularly the basement and third floor.
Definite plans have already been made to locate all student offices presently spread throughout the Student Union into the foreign students lounge on the third floor. How this will be done is still undetermined, Leddel said.
Comparing USC’s proposed union with UCLA's and Berkeley’s, he said students could not expect USC’s to be similar to ones costing $5 to $9 million.
“We’ll follow Stanford’s plan basically," he explained. “Stanford’s union was built at $2.5 million but donors were found and the fee was cancelled.”
The former president said if the referendum is approved, $60,000 will be raised yearly to pay back the 30-year loan frcm the Housing and Home Financing Agency (HHFA) at 3.5 per cent interest.
But the 12,000 students — those carrying six units or more including cne day classes—will not be taxed until the doors of the union open, the earliest possible date being September, 196'4.
In a circular passed out to the “students of USC,” Leddel and ASSC President Ken Del Conte
explained that “if and when the university administration is successful in its effort to raise donor funds, the special fee will be discontinued.”
Leddel further emphasized that there would be no increase in tuition because of the student union.
“The building will be financed by the fee and receipts from concessions within the union, such as cafeteria and bookstore profits,” he explained.
Also tied in the $2.75 “student union fee” is 25 cents for an “entertainment fund.” Under the present proposal, $2.50 will be put toward construction and 25 cents to ‘ provide better entertainment at less cost to students.”
“When students vote, they will be deciding upon the whole concept of a student union,” Leddel noted. “While we need a place to unify students, we also need money to sponsor activities.”
The executive observed that students are always crying for bigger and better entertainment but do not realize that the ASSC is limited to a $4,000 annual budget.
“With the ‘entertainment fund,’ we’ll be able to bring top-name entertainers to campus at cheaper prices for individual students,” he explained.
“For instance, anyone who has his ID card marked with ‘SU’—showing they are paying the fee— would see the Limelighters or other popular groups at a considerably low price, while others would have to pay the regular $2.50 to $3.”
The entertainment fund will be administered entirely by the Executive Cabinet. The approximately $6,000 yearly intake will be used as a bank to finance student projects, while all profits will go back into the general fund.”
The senior said that if the required 3,500 students do not vote and 1,751 do not vote “yes,-’ the student union probably would not be built within the next 10 years.
“In most cases, students will not be voting for themselves.” Leddel said, “but will be deciding whether future students would iike to have some of the things they themselves missed.”
“The Master Plan calls for a student union." he noted, “but priority is being given to academic rather than social buildings.”
“If students want a Student Union, they should begin now," he continued. “There has been enough talking, now let’s have seme voting.”
PAGE THREE Sun, Beach, Bullfights Beckon Rowites
University of Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Trojans, Bruins Will Meet In Four Sports
Vol. IIV
-C'
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1963
NO. Ill
Phi Beta Kappa Chooses 22
Honorary Taps 15 New Seniors Seven Juniors
HAPPY WINNERS — Susan Winer and Juri Eenmaa discuss future plans after receiving awards for the highest men's and women's Senior grade-point averages.
Two Students Win Scholastic Awards
Mortar Board vice pres- Eenmaa. who has achieved ident Susan Winer and phy- a 3.96 grade - point average, sics major Juri Eenmaa re-was given the University c e i v e d special achievement Trustees Award, awards at yesterday's Honor Miss Winer, who is attend-Convocation for attaining the jng USC on* a John W. Porter highest women's and men's Trust scholarship, was rescholarship in the Senior cently named a recipient of Class. the Woodrow Wilson Award
Miss Winer, a history ma- for graduate work, jor with a 3.89 grade - point she is a member of Phi average, was presented with Beta Kappa, national liberal the annual Emma Bovard arts scholastic honorary, and Award. The award, given by phi Kappa Phi, national all the Faculty Wives Club each university scholastic honor-year, is dedicated to the me- ary. she also serves as an ad-mory of the wife of the viser for the Freshman Fo-fourth president of the uni- rum.
versity. Eenmaa. who is attending
USC on a California State | scholarship, is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honorary.
He is also a member of Phi
Men Delay Convocation
The AMS annual Awards;?^/,3'’?8- ™. KaPfa *?*■
_ .. , , , , , the Estonian Lmversity Stu-
Convocation, scheduled for , . ... ' ,,
, , , dents Association, and the
Monday has been postponed „ , . 0 . . - T .
, ,IT j , , . , , Estonian Society 01 Los An-
to Wednesday due to a delay
in the arrival of awards too- \g Am the other undergra. ph.es and scrolls. AMS pre.-;duate studentg honored a, the ident Frank Barbaro an.|convocation ,hose
nounced yesterday. ^ ilected for academic scholar-The convocation will be ships and members of nation-held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in ai and local scholastic hon-133 FH. orary societies, which require
Honors will be presented to a minimum of 3.0 grade-point1 ed a revived set of by-laws
outstanding senior men for average for membership. that had not been used in at
excellence in athletics, leader- Scholars who earned 3.5 least a year and a half were
ship, scholastic activities and grade-point averages in all unable to reach a final decommunity activities. divisions and schools in each cision with the group's lead-
Blue Key. the national of the two previous semesters ership. men's honorary society, will were also recognized. At Monday’s meeting the
announce its new members, if Undergraduates in the hon-; members will consider a mo-
Publisher Claims Man Is Self-Made
The meaning of history indicates that man made himself, publisher Gerard Piel told students at an all-university academic honors convocation yesterday.
Speaking to students who had just been honored for academic attainment and others who had come to see them, Piel, publisher of Scientific American, explained that, despite recent indication that man had developed because of the tools he used, men had discovered in their own heads the “notion of purpose.”
Piel, who said he was speaking against the com-partmentation of human life and action, culture and science, noted that anthropoli-gists recently found tools along with fragments of hands that were not human,
“They are the hands of a primate who still used them at times for walking,” Piel said. He explained that the old concept of primates supposed that man had made his tools, tool-making being a symbol of membership in the species.
He claimed that stone tools that have been found show that evolution has quickened because it has entered a new mode where it is cultural as well as biological in that characteristics are transmitted from generation to generation by teaching and learning.
Piel maintained that the development of man’s culture and his technological progress were linked. He used colored slides to illustrate his points.
He explained that not until modem times when men have accelerated their acquisition of knowledge have the underprivileged peoples of (Continued on Page 2)
Music School To Premier Compositions
A program of contem-
Fifteen seniors and seven juniors have been named to the Epsilon chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honorary society, registrar David Evans announced yesterday The new members will be initiated at a meeting at the Roger Young Auditorium next Friday at 6 p.m Following the meeting, there will be a dinner at which Dr. James Bonner. professor of Biology at California Institute of Technology, will speak on the “New Biology.” Dr. Colin Lovell, president of the Epsi-ilon chapter, will preside.
New senior members include Consiline Antoville, English;
John Kelly Beem, mathema- porary music will be pressnt-itics: Richard S. Dodge, politi- ed by the School of Music cal science; Carol Dixon Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in Han-Drake, comparative literature; I cock Auditorium.
|Donna M. Duffy. English;! Headlining the program Robert H. Forbes, telecom- which will be held in colabo-munications; James R. Gre- ration with the Los Angeles gory, anthropology: Henry Chapter of the International ; Horace Hands, English: Eliza- Society for Contemporary beth A. Knox. Asiatic studies; Music. will be four parts of Lynn Paul Rehm. psycholgy; the “Studies in Variations,” a 'Joseph Romolo, medicine; [series of com positions written John Victor Simpson, biology; I by Ellis Kohs, associate pro-Neal James Stowe, social stu-,fessor of theory and compo-idies: Janet R. Weiner, psy- sition.
jchology; Joyce Young. chem-| The four compositions are j istry. variations of each other, ac-
I Juniors elected include Har- cording to Koha, and must old D. Barr, political science ;in°t be mistaken for tran-Suzette Bempechat. mathe- scriptions in which all ver-By ROGER GRACE taking her with him when he Generosity is shown to re- matics: Sharilvn Rae Hanson. si°ns are copies of each other
“Good Woman of Setzuan,” goes to Peking using the suit sometimes in regret when languages: Anthony G. Merz- with the only changes being
a play by Bertolt Brecht de- money she has promised to a kindly old couple loans lak. English: Robert M. Oates, those required for a change
picting poverty and greed, will give him after she sells the money to Shen Te which, due economics: Barbara D. Shell. of medium. Each of the stu-
open Monday at 8:30 p.m. in shop. to a series of circumstances political science; Bruce Henry dies is a composition in it-
Stop Gap Theater for a week’s Shui Ta arranges a mar- over which she has no con- Spector. political science. se,f- capable of being playH
run. riage for Shen Te with her trol, is repaid too late for w}th the jg seniors chosen alone’ and the four work3
Tickets are still available at admirer, the barber Shu Fu, them to pay taxes and keep for the faH semester by the have a, br°ader structure
the drama office, 3709 South but as soon as she returns to their property. chapter .the total of seniors p.layed in successlon-
Hoover St., with admission to lWOmen s clothing, the imprac- cast members include Wil- selected during 1962-63 school ' ,. „
week-night performances pric- 'ca^ character reasserts her jjam £)auphine, Steve Bellon, vear will be 31. The same num* J . u ies were, i'(TT.J ed at $1.50 and week-end tick- deu)tion to \ang Sun. je^ £jr0Se, David A c k 1 e s , ber were selected in the 1962- 1?T e ®um™er ° “
ets costing $2. Both the barber and Yang Frederick Kohler, Loise Leo- 62 academic year. tv 11 n>
Allison Price will star as Sun- first depicted in the play n a r d, Steve Kent. Eleanor ..Qn March 17, i960. presi- Part of rhP^ari^tions Shen Te, a prostitute whom “ ruthless, are portrayed as Vade Bon Couer, S h e r r i 11 dent Topping and the Phi VonJist of a woodwind
three gods from heaven de-|baslcalIy Sood m the end~ Forbes. Larry Brown and Me- Beta Kappa sponsored a rec- qUjntet piayed by Gary Gar-
MEETING OF GODS - Members of the cast of "Good Woman of Setzuan," Steve Bellon as God Number Two (left) and William Dauphine as God Number One,
rehearse for the Bartold Brecht play which opens in Stop Gap Theater for a week's run Monday at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are a v a i I a b I e at the drama office.
Brecht Drama Will Open One-Week Stop Cap Run
Issue Rages In Blue Key
Members of Blue Key yesterday decided to hold another meeting Monday at noon in the Senate Chambers, 301a SU, to continue a heated discussion over membership selection.
The men met yesterday for nearly an hour and 20 minutes to try to patch-up a disagreement that broke out last week.
Members who had protest-
they are selected by then, at ors programs of the College the meeting. New members of Letters, Arts and Sciences
of the Iv nights al.so will be and those high school stu-
announced. dents taking accelerated pro-
Coffee and refreshments grams also will be served, Barbaro said, nition.
tion that calls for the entire membership to reevaluate the qualification of nominees for membership who were dis-received recog- qualified previously by a I four-man selection commitee.
clare to be a “good woman”,
and to whom they leave 1,000 A rrmfprfc silver dollars so that she may V»HMvV<l j
seek a new profession. T C _____________
Do« Direct, I O ipOIISOr
The play, under the direc- ii _ t
tion of Andrew Doe. visiting || O m @ I O U T S professor of drama, features Gordon Hoban in the role of
An architect’s tour
„ „ , j!homes in the Beverly Hills-
Yang Sun, an unemployed^ ,
0 4 CrontmiinH o r*oo rnor Tin 11 hnln
of Architecture will be con-
„ . , . , , ducted Sunday from noon to
Shen Te, wishing to become - .^q m
virtuous so as not to disappoint the gods, gives away free rice to the poor, allows indolent relatives to become parasites on her hospitality
ilinda Fee. ognition dinner for freshmen ner f]ute; Leroy Southerg,
Others in the cast are and sophomores with ^*igh oboe: Anthony Desiderio,
Swoozie Kurtz, Ken Robinson, scholastic averages^ - Evans ciarjnet; Waldemar Linder, Tom Dorsey, Micky \ itato, j said. Out of the 3< freshmen jj0rn> an(j Ray Nowlin, bas-Suzanne Benoit, Gary Sell- honored there, 18 have been
strom. Pat Murphy, David elected to Phi Beta Kappa. ^ quartet for piano and Anderle. Lee Zagon and Car- J^ew members were eiected g^j-jugg featuring E u d i c 6
of los Viniegra.___________________1 (Continued on Pagej) Shapil.Qt Stanford
Schonbach. viola: Gabor Rej-Ito, cello: and John Crown.
|piano; will encompass part two.
A Piano Sonata No. 2. played by Muriel Kerr will be
From Golding Novel
aviator with whom Shen Te Bren‘mM^ ar'a tha‘ml1 h.elP Prof ©SSOT tO 1^.630
falls in love after she has provide donatons for scho-opened a tobacco shop and!>ara^ tads_f„r thejchool become “respectable.”
luuuieu ounudv num uuuu <~u
A “three dimensional” story found in human beings. ac‘ ^p^fou^f a^^aU for The tour is being sponsor- by William Golding will be the cording to Reed,
ed by the Southern Califom- topic of the English depart- “In the story, Golding pre
ia Chapters of the American ment’s Reading At Noon Mon- sents a very depressing pic-
Institute of Architects (AIA) jay at 12:30 in 133 FH. Iture of human beings.” Reed
and~earns the title “Angel of and the Women’s Architect- Harry B. Reed, assistant said. “All of the characters
the Slums ” ural Part of the Pr0‘ professor of English, will read are boys except for two adults.
More Realism ceeds wil1 into a scholar- from Golding s “Lord of the one dead, that are presented
The character realizes sub- shiP fund for architecture Flies.” Reed has termed the only briefly.” he continued,
consciously that naive bene- students here- story as being three dimensi- Reed described the author's The Daily Trojan will not
a_ unaccompanied violin, played by Robert Gross.
volence is costing her dearly Tickets for the tour of and she must assume a more [homes designed by Los An-realistic and perhaps callous ¡geles architects cost $1.50 attitude. for students and $3 for
Shen Te appears in men's adults, Mrs. Richard Dor-clothing in the guise of her man, home tour chairman of imaginary cousin, Shui Ta,|the league, said.
onal. style as highly descriptive be published on Mondays
“The story is an adventure and full of imagery. during the month of May,
tale, a political parable and a The story is about a group Editor Hal Drake announced horror story all in one,” Reed j of boys who are cast away on yesterday, explained. Golding, according a tropical island. Goldins de- Drake said the editions to Reed, uses all three types scribes how they develop their were eliminated so that tha
of writing to make his work own civilization. After a pe- campus newspaper would bm
who expel Is the parasites “Since the league is stu- effective. riod of time has elapsed, dis- able to publish later into the
from the shop. dent orientated, we hope that “Lord of the Flies” expres- sention develops between the semester. He said the publi-
The “cousin” reappears lat- many students will attend ses the idea that political sys- two potential leaders. Gradu- cation budget does not in-
er in the play and learns that the tour and that future terns, under every circum- nl demoralization sets in and elude enough funds to do this
Yang Sun, now Shen Te s fi- architects will be inspired,” stance, have the same defects Goldin- ,-r mrlet?*» his task of w i t h a five-publications-a-
ancee, has no intention of, Mrs. Dorman added. ,and inadequacies that are, satirizing political systems. I week schedule.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 111, May 03, 1963 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 54, No. 111, May 03, 1963. |
| Full text |
THE TAX VOTE: WHAT DOES IT MEAN? By PONCHITTA PIERCE Assistant to the Editor If the proposed referendum to add $2.75 a semester to the fee bill for an addition to the Student Union is passed, what will it mean for students? As envisioned by former ASSC President Bart Leddel, the money will be used to build a “center of student activity and euthusiasm.” Most of the $1.5 million from the special fee will be spent for an addition at the south end of the Grill, while the remaining sum will go toward renovating the present Student Union. Describing his “concept” of the addition, Leddel explained that the new wing would probably include the usual student union furnishings — card room billiard room, lounge area, an atmospheric rathskeller and television and record rooms. “But this is just my idea on what the Student Union will include,” Leddel stressed. “As of yet, there are no exact plans or blueprints. Students will have to place confidence in the Executive Cabinet to make the final decisions.” While there is uncertainty about the addition, the present Student Union will undergo a trans- formation, particularly the basement and third floor. Definite plans have already been made to locate all student offices presently spread throughout the Student Union into the foreign students lounge on the third floor. How this will be done is still undetermined, Leddel said. Comparing USC’s proposed union with UCLA's and Berkeley’s, he said students could not expect USC’s to be similar to ones costing $5 to $9 million. “We’ll follow Stanford’s plan basically" he explained. “Stanford’s union was built at $2.5 million but donors were found and the fee was cancelled.” The former president said if the referendum is approved, $60,000 will be raised yearly to pay back the 30-year loan frcm the Housing and Home Financing Agency (HHFA) at 3.5 per cent interest. But the 12,000 students — those carrying six units or more including cne day classes—will not be taxed until the doors of the union open, the earliest possible date being September, 196'4. In a circular passed out to the “students of USC,” Leddel and ASSC President Ken Del Conte explained that “if and when the university administration is successful in its effort to raise donor funds, the special fee will be discontinued.” Leddel further emphasized that there would be no increase in tuition because of the student union. “The building will be financed by the fee and receipts from concessions within the union, such as cafeteria and bookstore profits,” he explained. Also tied in the $2.75 “student union fee” is 25 cents for an “entertainment fund.” Under the present proposal, $2.50 will be put toward construction and 25 cents to ‘ provide better entertainment at less cost to students.” “When students vote, they will be deciding upon the whole concept of a student union,” Leddel noted. “While we need a place to unify students, we also need money to sponsor activities.” The executive observed that students are always crying for bigger and better entertainment but do not realize that the ASSC is limited to a $4,000 annual budget. “With the ‘entertainment fund,’ we’ll be able to bring top-name entertainers to campus at cheaper prices for individual students,” he explained. “For instance, anyone who has his ID card marked with ‘SU’—showing they are paying the fee— would see the Limelighters or other popular groups at a considerably low price, while others would have to pay the regular $2.50 to $3.” The entertainment fund will be administered entirely by the Executive Cabinet. The approximately $6,000 yearly intake will be used as a bank to finance student projects, while all profits will go back into the general fund.” The senior said that if the required 3,500 students do not vote and 1,751 do not vote “yes,-’ the student union probably would not be built within the next 10 years. “In most cases, students will not be voting for themselves.” Leddel said, “but will be deciding whether future students would iike to have some of the things they themselves missed.” “The Master Plan calls for a student union." he noted, “but priority is being given to academic rather than social buildings.” “If students want a Student Union, they should begin now" he continued. “There has been enough talking, now let’s have seme voting.” PAGE THREE Sun, Beach, Bullfights Beckon Rowites University of Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Trojans, Bruins Will Meet In Four Sports Vol. IIV -C' LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1963 NO. Ill Phi Beta Kappa Chooses 22 Honorary Taps 15 New Seniors Seven Juniors HAPPY WINNERS — Susan Winer and Juri Eenmaa discuss future plans after receiving awards for the highest men's and women's Senior grade-point averages. Two Students Win Scholastic Awards Mortar Board vice pres- Eenmaa. who has achieved ident Susan Winer and phy- a 3.96 grade - point average, sics major Juri Eenmaa re-was given the University c e i v e d special achievement Trustees Award, awards at yesterday's Honor Miss Winer, who is attend-Convocation for attaining the jng USC on* a John W. Porter highest women's and men's Trust scholarship, was rescholarship in the Senior cently named a recipient of Class. the Woodrow Wilson Award Miss Winer, a history ma- for graduate work, jor with a 3.89 grade - point she is a member of Phi average, was presented with Beta Kappa, national liberal the annual Emma Bovard arts scholastic honorary, and Award. The award, given by phi Kappa Phi, national all the Faculty Wives Club each university scholastic honor-year, is dedicated to the me- ary. she also serves as an ad-mory of the wife of the viser for the Freshman Fo-fourth president of the uni- rum. versity. Eenmaa. who is attending USC on a California State scholarship, is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honorary. He is also a member of Phi Men Delay Convocation The AMS annual Awards;?^/,3'’?8- ™. KaPfa *?*■ _ .. , , , , , the Estonian Lmversity Stu- Convocation, scheduled for , . ... ' ,, , , , dents Association, and the Monday has been postponed „ , . 0 . . - T . , ,IT j , , . , , Estonian Society 01 Los An- to Wednesday due to a delay in the arrival of awards too- \g Am the other undergra. ph.es and scrolls. AMS pre.-;duate studentg honored a, the ident Frank Barbaro an. convocation ,hose nounced yesterday. ^ ilected for academic scholar-The convocation will be ships and members of nation-held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in ai and local scholastic hon-133 FH. orary societies, which require Honors will be presented to a minimum of 3.0 grade-point1 ed a revived set of by-laws outstanding senior men for average for membership. that had not been used in at excellence in athletics, leader- Scholars who earned 3.5 least a year and a half were ship, scholastic activities and grade-point averages in all unable to reach a final decommunity activities. divisions and schools in each cision with the group's lead- Blue Key. the national of the two previous semesters ership. men's honorary society, will were also recognized. At Monday’s meeting the announce its new members, if Undergraduates in the hon-; members will consider a mo- Publisher Claims Man Is Self-Made The meaning of history indicates that man made himself, publisher Gerard Piel told students at an all-university academic honors convocation yesterday. Speaking to students who had just been honored for academic attainment and others who had come to see them, Piel, publisher of Scientific American, explained that, despite recent indication that man had developed because of the tools he used, men had discovered in their own heads the “notion of purpose.” Piel, who said he was speaking against the com-partmentation of human life and action, culture and science, noted that anthropoli-gists recently found tools along with fragments of hands that were not human, “They are the hands of a primate who still used them at times for walking,” Piel said. He explained that the old concept of primates supposed that man had made his tools, tool-making being a symbol of membership in the species. He claimed that stone tools that have been found show that evolution has quickened because it has entered a new mode where it is cultural as well as biological in that characteristics are transmitted from generation to generation by teaching and learning. Piel maintained that the development of man’s culture and his technological progress were linked. He used colored slides to illustrate his points. He explained that not until modem times when men have accelerated their acquisition of knowledge have the underprivileged peoples of (Continued on Page 2) Music School To Premier Compositions A program of contem- Fifteen seniors and seven juniors have been named to the Epsilon chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honorary society, registrar David Evans announced yesterday The new members will be initiated at a meeting at the Roger Young Auditorium next Friday at 6 p.m Following the meeting, there will be a dinner at which Dr. James Bonner. professor of Biology at California Institute of Technology, will speak on the “New Biology.” Dr. Colin Lovell, president of the Epsi-ilon chapter, will preside. New senior members include Consiline Antoville, English; John Kelly Beem, mathema- porary music will be pressnt-itics: Richard S. Dodge, politi- ed by the School of Music cal science; Carol Dixon Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in Han-Drake, comparative literature; I cock Auditorium. Donna M. Duffy. English;! Headlining the program Robert H. Forbes, telecom- which will be held in colabo-munications; James R. Gre- ration with the Los Angeles gory, anthropology: Henry Chapter of the International ; Horace Hands, English: Eliza- Society for Contemporary beth A. Knox. Asiatic studies; Music. will be four parts of Lynn Paul Rehm. psycholgy; the “Studies in Variations,” a 'Joseph Romolo, medicine; [series of com positions written John Victor Simpson, biology; I by Ellis Kohs, associate pro-Neal James Stowe, social stu-,fessor of theory and compo-idies: Janet R. Weiner, psy- sition. jchology; Joyce Young. chem- The four compositions are j istry. variations of each other, ac- I Juniors elected include Har- cording to Koha, and must old D. Barr, political science ;in°t be mistaken for tran-Suzette Bempechat. mathe- scriptions in which all ver-By ROGER GRACE taking her with him when he Generosity is shown to re- matics: Sharilvn Rae Hanson. si°ns are copies of each other “Good Woman of Setzuan,” goes to Peking using the suit sometimes in regret when languages: Anthony G. Merz- with the only changes being a play by Bertolt Brecht de- money she has promised to a kindly old couple loans lak. English: Robert M. Oates, those required for a change picting poverty and greed, will give him after she sells the money to Shen Te which, due economics: Barbara D. Shell. of medium. Each of the stu- open Monday at 8:30 p.m. in shop. to a series of circumstances political science; Bruce Henry dies is a composition in it- Stop Gap Theater for a week’s Shui Ta arranges a mar- over which she has no con- Spector. political science. se,f- capable of being playH run. riage for Shen Te with her trol, is repaid too late for w}th the jg seniors chosen alone’ and the four work3 Tickets are still available at admirer, the barber Shu Fu, them to pay taxes and keep for the faH semester by the have a, br°ader structure the drama office, 3709 South but as soon as she returns to their property. chapter .the total of seniors p.layed in successlon- Hoover St., with admission to lWOmen s clothing, the imprac- cast members include Wil- selected during 1962-63 school ' ,. „ week-night performances pric- 'ca^ character reasserts her jjam £)auphine, Steve Bellon, vear will be 31. The same num* J . u ies were, i'(TT.J ed at $1.50 and week-end tick- deu)tion to \ang Sun. je^ £jr0Se, David A c k 1 e s , ber were selected in the 1962- 1?T e ®um™er ° “ ets costing $2. Both the barber and Yang Frederick Kohler, Loise Leo- 62 academic year. tv 11 n> Allison Price will star as Sun- first depicted in the play n a r d, Steve Kent. Eleanor ..Qn March 17, i960. presi- Part of rhP^ari^tions Shen Te, a prostitute whom “ ruthless, are portrayed as Vade Bon Couer, S h e r r i 11 dent Topping and the Phi VonJist of a woodwind three gods from heaven de- baslcalIy Sood m the end~ Forbes. Larry Brown and Me- Beta Kappa sponsored a rec- qUjntet piayed by Gary Gar- MEETING OF GODS - Members of the cast of "Good Woman of Setzuan" Steve Bellon as God Number Two (left) and William Dauphine as God Number One, rehearse for the Bartold Brecht play which opens in Stop Gap Theater for a week's run Monday at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are a v a i I a b I e at the drama office. Brecht Drama Will Open One-Week Stop Cap Run Issue Rages In Blue Key Members of Blue Key yesterday decided to hold another meeting Monday at noon in the Senate Chambers, 301a SU, to continue a heated discussion over membership selection. The men met yesterday for nearly an hour and 20 minutes to try to patch-up a disagreement that broke out last week. Members who had protest- they are selected by then, at ors programs of the College the meeting. New members of Letters, Arts and Sciences of the Iv nights al.so will be and those high school stu- announced. dents taking accelerated pro- Coffee and refreshments grams also will be served, Barbaro said, nition. tion that calls for the entire membership to reevaluate the qualification of nominees for membership who were dis-received recog- qualified previously by a I four-man selection commitee. clare to be a “good woman”, and to whom they leave 1,000 A rrmfprfc silver dollars so that she may V»HMvV |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1314/uschist-dt-1963-05-03~001.tif |
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