DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 68, February 10, 1961 |
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PAGE THREE
Social Season Begins For Active Rowitss
Southern
California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Trojans Down Dodgers On Satriano's HR
VOL. Ill
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1961
NO. 68
Guhin Files Petition for Presidency
Houses Clash Class Council Over Payment Seeks Seniors
" i Petitions for Senior C
Of IFC Dues
"HOOTENANNY" - These YWCA members, (l-r) Bonnie Brady, Amy Allen, Anne Storer, Marilyn Spigle and Lucia Kape-
tanich, practice up for tonight's noise-making session. All students are invited to attend and must bring’some instrument.
Star Orators Cop Two First Places
USC debaters brought back ! two first-place trophies from a \ midterm trip to Tacoma, Wash.. ' to participate in the annual Puget Sound Northwest Tourna- I ment.
poyd Lemon, USC debate : team captain, took first-place ! honors in the extemporaneous speaking contest and second in impromptu speaking. Mike \ Thorpe won first place in com- : petition in oratory.
Other honors taken by the Trojan debaters included John Deacon, third place in oratory; Ken Moes, second place in ex- ! tomporaneous speaking; and Lacy Sparks, third place in extemporaneous speaking. The debate team of John Deacon and Ken Moes took third place in debate competition.
Dr. James McBath, USC di- ■ rector of forensics, who traveled I with the team, felt the “Trojan speakers profited from this opportunity of meeting fresh arguments and ideas in the Pacific Northwest. Intersectional con-
ferences each year highlight our forensic season.”
Over 30 colleges and universities from the Northwest competed in the tournament.
61 Songfest Gets Started With Entries
Songfest is beginning to sing j out already as plans are being laid to make the 1861 production the “best on« since it originated eight years ago.”
Applications for entry into Songfest will begin this Wednesday and will close March 2. Applicants must submit their entries into the desired divisions along with an entrance fee of five dollars.
Since ho song, entry title or j theme may be used twice on the [ same program, there will be a j first come first serve basis ii the case of a duplicate entry One organization may enter < maximum of three divisions.
YWCA Group Will Entertain Noise Makers
“Hootenanny” will be the theme of the all-university YWCA party at 8 tonight when the “Y” will swing to the sounds o| a cacophony of instruments.
The party is open to all students. Only requirement is that each person must bring an instrument and make noise with it.
Even a set of half-empty coke bottles will do.
Refreshments will be served at the party. For those who tire of making noise, dancing and card playing will be available.
Main object of the party is to promote a friendly feeling among new USC students and encourage them to mix in with university life, reports YWCA Activities Chairman Lucia Kapetanich.
Trumpets, trombones, guitars and drums are already on the list of instruments to be brought to the “Hootenanny.”
Decorations will be “the students themselves.”
Casual clothes and a willingness to be an extrovert plus an instrument are all a student needs to attend.
A proposal to change the method of collecting fraternity dues snagged yesterday’s IFC meeting at the Phi Sigma Delta house.
The proposal was made by Treasurer Bert Lewis as part of his report. He said the houses would have to supply $900 to meet the budget and outlined a plan to have each fraternity pay in proportion to its membership.
Lewis set 73 cents per man as the figure for raising the money. In the past there has been a flat dues fee for all houses.
The meeting was deadlocked by two ties on the voting to accept the new plan. The small houses apparently passed the plan by only one vote, but representatives from the larger houses soon discovered that the plan would violate the IFC bylaws as they now stand.
By upholding the by-laws, the larger houses opposing the individual assessment plan nullified
■ lass
Council membership are now available, reports Senior Class President Ken I'nmacht.
Any senior student interested in joining the council this semester can obtain application forms in 305A SC or contact I'nmacht at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house.
Applicants may also get in touch with Sharon Williams at the Tri-Delt sorority house or phone RI 8-8624.
I'nmacht reminded seniors that their fee bill assessment for class activities will be $4.50.
Predestination To Be Topic Fbr Service
VonKleinSmid Wins Citation For Research
By CURT PATRICK
Research and investigation into the problems of hiring Mexican laborers and contact with the “Braceros” in the farm labor camps throughout the Southwest recently won USC Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid an award of merit from the U. S. Department of Labor.
The chancellor was honored ; bv outgoing Secretary of Labor j James Mitchell as a consultant to the Department of Labor dur- j ing 1960.
Aids Government
Chancellor Von KleinSmid. I along with a five-man commit- j tee, conducted research for the government and advised Washington in the field of Mexican-American labor relations.
Purpose of the advisement was to present recommendations to the Department regarding the
Hoop Star Appel Rumored in Ring For Top Office
“What About Predestination?” will be the subject of University
Chaplain John E. Cantelon's ser- j advisability of continuing House
Bill #78.
House Bill ¿87 is the law allowing American farmers the
MIKE GUHIN
. . enters race
mon at the Sunday Service in Bovard Auditorium at 11 a.m.
The Rev. Mr. Cantelon notes the \ote which had just approv- “predestination is one of
^ j those religious ideas about which
A special meeting cf the IFC get al] excited.” In his
will be held next Thursday to sermon hr wjn attempt to clari-present compromise plans. Then, fy much of the confusion con- men"t
a final vote on the dues issue is scheduled for the next regular meeting.
Since several large houses were not represented at the meeting, the delay should help the large fraternity bloc. This group favors a flat fee. giving each of them smaller dues than the membership plan rejected yesterday.
nected with the doctrine.
Every major denomination except the Methodists has predestination as an integral part of ceros.’
right to import, hire and house Mexican seasonal farm laborers.
The award was given particularly for von KleinSmid’s advise-on matters concerning the U.S. contract with the Mexican government regarding the itinerant laborers known as “Bra-
Artists Show Colorful Work In Harris Hall
By. JEANNE MAZZOTTI
Bold, colorful paintings by two young USC fine arts graduate vioUs reP'-v to Business Senator
By HAL DRAKE
Assistant City Editor
AMS President Mike Guhin filed a petition for the ASSC Presidency yesterday and expressed “great concern with the problem of returning student government to the students.”
Guhin's announcement was received amid rumors that basketball player Chris Appel filed for the same office before leaving for Stanford with the basketball team yesterday morning.
Relationships Issue
In a special release, Guhin im-i plied that improved student rela-; tionships might become an important campaign issue.
“I am greatly concerned with the problem of returning student government to the students.” he said.
“My platform will include my plans for such vital areas as student-faculty relationships, stu-dent-administration relationships and alumni relationships.” he added.
Guhin remarked that he will be anxious to meet with ail candidates in debate once the actual campaign begins, an ob-
its doctrine.
The chaplain will assure the congregation that it is most certainly not a Presbyterian monopoly.
“It should not be mixed up
with scientific determinism.”
IFC President Ron Goodgarrte sajd the chaplain. “Its basis is
reminded the members that grade definitely Biblical and there are
cards and the two dollar initia- many allusions to it in the gos-
tion fee are due on Feb. 16 for pcis Gf paul. Although John Cal-
all new initiates. | vin has taken most of the blame
Also disclosed at yesterday’s for it. he didn’t invent it.
meeting was the winning of the j “The doctrine teaching that
Alpha Tau Omega-sponsored God has already decided our
Help Week contest by the Phi fates for us or already knows , r^;ne jobs
Kappa Sigma fraternity. what we will do with our lives Thpy aJso p^^pd out that
The contest was conducted is repugnant to many Chris- legislation ' should prohibit the
during the fiaternity inspira- tians. * ^ llse of Mexicans in non-seasonal
tion” week, during which 29 of “But the fact is that the doc-the fraternities on the Row trine of predestination describes
•competed for the 2x/% ft. high j a very important aspect of Chris-
perpetual trophy. I tian existance.” he explained.
Five thousand of tiiese workers were in the U.S. last year.
Recommendations made by the committee to the Labor Department were largely in favor of extending the contract will terminate this year.
Changes Recommended The committee recommended several changes in the bill. For instance, they suggested that legislation should clearly confine the use of Mexicans to necessary crops, in temporary labor shortages and to unskilled, non-ma-
assistants are currently on display in the Harris Hall Downstairs Gallerv.
jobs and in the operation of any farm or packing equipment.
The committee further recommended that Mexicans should be
The works of the artists, Je- ! rome Savage and Ida Haubold, which are generally non-fepresentation-| al. allowing the broad areas of color to suggest forms to the viewer.
Miss Haubold's works, strong-1 ly suggestive of landscapes, are experiments in composition. She has attempted to solve the prob- > lem of a circle-centered composition in a large painting done in oranges and pinks, with a swirl- j ing. spherical green center.
In another untitled painting; by the young artist, the sweep- ' ing color areas of blue and black are arranged in strong, counteracting balances that create a J
on
Pirate Hijacks Coed s Mom On Fated Santa Maria Trip
By RI TH MILLER
Kappa Kappa Gamma's Anne Thomas had read about Captain Hook and his pirates in Peter Pan many times when she was a little girl, but she never dreamed that this type of fairy tale would come alive and that she would Le in the middle of it.
Instead of it being Captain Hook, the pirate this time was Portugese revolutionist Henriquc Galvat. And instead of it being Never-Never Land, the piracy took place off tAe coast of Caracas. Venezuela, on Jan. 22. The ship was the now world-famous Santa Maria.
Mother Trapped
No. Miss Thomas was not on the Santa Maria. But her mother was on the ship, and the USC Coed was here anxiouslv
! wondering about the fate of her ! mother and what Galvao and his ! cohorts intended to do with the passengers. Like the families of the other American passengers aboard, she was worried but could do nothing about it.
“I was listening to the radio ; on the night that it happened," said Miss Thomas, “when sud denly a newscaster interrupted the program with an announcement that the Santa Maria had | been hijacked two days out of Venezuela.
‘I was Shocked’
“At first I was shocked. I didn't know what to think or what to do. My mother had been in Lisbon. Portugal, since September. and the Santa Maria trip was the last-leg of her journey back to the United States."
Musicians to Mix Melody During Weekend Concerts
USC students '' ill anain be record with music ibis weekend by the School of Music.
Ranald Tarr will present a special recital tonight at 8:30 in Hancock Auditorium, and the Lrst ot a series cf three faculty concerts will be presented Sunil.:' at 8:30 pm.
Tan’s performance will be (T en in addition to the Dc toral lequiiements. The 29-year-old te.irhinc assistant is working on Ins D.M.A. at the School ol Music.
His program will include music from Brahms. Beethoven and Mozart as well as works bi-instructor Ingolf Dahl.
Tarr received his B.A. from the University of Washington and his M.A. at the University of Illinois.
The duo will play Bach's Sonata No. 4 in C Minor and Sonata No. 1 in B Minor, in addition to Mozart's Sonata in A Minor. K 3<>5 and Sonata in D Minor, K 306.
The reports issued over the ra I dio at the time she heard about the incident ran very brief. Typ-i ical broadcasts merely stated that a Portugese line', the San-\ ta Maria, on its way back to the i United States had been stopped and boarded by a revolutionist named Galvao in the name of the Portuguese Liberation movement.
In his own strong, clear phrasing, Galvao explained why he had taken over the Portugese liner. “We desired to prove, and we did prove, that Dictator Salazar, who has been military dictator of Portugal since the early 1920s, is not invulnerable. We beat him and we ridiculed him—him and his navy.”
“Fortunately, the hijackers allowed the pas engers to send telegrams to their immediate family, otherwise I would not have known bow my mother was. I would have gone insane with worry,” Miss Thomas commented.
Grueling Time
Mrs. Dorothy Thomas, now safely home with lifr family in Lcs Angeles, has told everyone about her grueling and frightening 12 days aboard the Santa Maria—the lack of food, the riots and the absolute hysteria.
When asked if her mother’s experience has discouraged her from ever sailing again, Miss Thomas said. "Oh no. I'm looking forward to taking a cruise next summer.
Special Stamp Exhibit Displayed in Library
.... . definite feeling of movement
paid prevailing domestic farm
, . I the canvas,
wages in each area in order to
avoid adverse effects on domes- |
Hugh Helm's challenge to debate campaign issues with other candidates.
Surprise Candidate
No verification of basketball guard Appel's rumored candidacy could be made, but the idea was met with surprise from all quarters.
Although Appel would not be considered a serious contender, he could possibly gain the "social vote” that went to write-in candidate Ed Nelson last year.
Nelson received more than 700 votes in a write-in campaign against current ASSC President Bill Steigerwalt. most of them the result of backing by five social fraternities on the Row.
However. basketball would probably prevent Appel from shaping an effective campaign against Guhin and Helm, and he ^ probably would have trouble
00
The Lee Hefner Combs memorial collection of books, pamphlets and periodicals on stamp collecting, given to USC by L.A. attorney Lee Combs, is currently on display in the treasure room of Doheny Library along with postal and revenue stamps of selected countries of world.
Savage makes free — — . . . .
... gathering more than 600 or
tic labor. ! stron-- Pers°nal color m unusual j ^
Employers should make even.’ Proportions. A striking example j
effort to recruit domestic labor, ! of his work is an untitled paint- , Day Of Decs.o*
they noted iin" ^one a rornan,i£- almost | Junior Class President Jim
Public \ttention Baroque style, with a vibrating Harmon has one more day to
The situation has been brought : oianSe color area suggesting decide on his plans for next year.
of revenue, stamps is Toppan’s I to the’ attention of the public in movement in itself. and any final deepen on h,s
“Historical Reference List of the recent weeks following strikes of An interesting method of ere- Part v%lM probably be follower
Revenue Stamps of the United American laborers against the .ating movement and shapes has
States,” published in Boston in large lettuce ranches in the Im- been used in the painting. No
Among many scarce books devoted to the collection and study
1899.
Although the collection is pri-the marily of reference works de-! voted to revenue stamps, there
The exhibition is open from 8 are also many volumes pertain-a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through ing to stamp collecting in gen-Fridays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur- eral. These include catalogues, days and 1 to 6 p.m. Sundays. books about philately, histories In the collection given the ! and exhibitions of famous collec-USC library7 are 300 bound vol- ; tions. unies and many hundreds of Among Best
I perial Valley.
The American laborers, who 1 are currently organizing into un-j ions, claim that the Mexican “Braceros” should not be allowed to work on the farms.
attempt was made to paint the lower area of the canvas, while paint stains form the areas are allowed to
by a rush of petitions from students who are waiting in order to avoid his competition.
At present, Harmon has the upper presidencies of AMS and Senior sweep Class still available to him. and
downward naturally into an in- j probably very few petitions have teresting area composition. I yet been entered for either post.
pamphlets and periodicals that are out of print and collectors’
items. They come from the», will have one of the outstandin
United States, Canada, Great Britain. Japan, Hungary, France and Finland.
Son Remembers The philatelic collection was presented by Combs in memory of his son, who was killed in a traffic accident in the summer of 1959 while returning to California from his sophomore year at Yale University. Young Combs, named for his father and maternal grandfather, Oklahoma Supreme Court Judge Robert A.
USC Librarian Lewis F. Stieg said that the university’s library
Iranian Earns First Doctoral From New Graduate School
philatelic collections in the nation when present library materials are added to the Combs gift.
Attorney Combs, a 1929 graduate of the USC School of Law, is a member of the USC Associates; Legion Lex, support group for the Law School; and Skull and Dagger, all-university men's honor society.
He was a three-year pole vault letterman at Harvard University and continued his athletic inter-
F.questrian Leader
Currently, Combs is co-chairman of the U.S. Equestrian Team Committee. He is trustee of Harvard School in Los An-
Ilefner, former mayor of Okln- ^ gs regjonai chairman of the homa City, was valedictorian of j ^ g Olympic Games Committee, the 1937 class at Harvard School in Los Angeles and light heavyweight boxing champion at Yale.
Combs said he will continue to build the collection, which in- j eludes such scarce items as a complete run, bound in half- ?eles-
calf, of the Belgian publication, The Smithsonian Institution, “Le Timbre Posts,” Volumes 1- j Washington, D.C., also is a re-33. from 1863 to 1900. There is cipient of a Lee Hefner Combs also an almost complete run of' memorial collection of state de-“The Philatelic Journal of Amer- | cal revenue stamps, to which ica,” Volumes 1-19, from 1885 additions will t>e made, to 1905. | Both the USC and Smithson-
Also included are five volumes ¡an collections were appraised as of Moen’s “Catalogue Prix-cou- irreplaceable collectors' items by
The first doctorate degree in busin ?ss administ ration from the USC Graduate School of Business Administration has been conferred on Hassan Sat-tari-Tehrani, a native of Iran.
He will be the honoree at a farewell party tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. G. Chillingar of the Business Administration School. Friends and ' faculty members from the schools of Business Administration. Public Administration and Engineering will be at the party.
Sattari, who is here on an International Cooperation Administration scholarship, made a study of management method;; and problems of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railways for future reference to the ad-of Iranian State
HASSAN SATTARI-TEHRANI
. .• . earns doctorate
professor at the Institute for Administrative Affairs, University of Teheran, Iran.
Sattarit obtanied his bachelor of arts degree from the University of Teheran in 1955. Two years later he was graduated with a masters degree at the American University of Beirut, Lebanon
During his two yeans of stay in the United States. Sattari visited several states and attended conferences in Washington. DC. and in New York.
He acquainted himself with various organizations in the realm of business and public management. He is currently a member of the American Society of Public Administration and the Society for the Advancement of Management.
Sattari, the first student ever to receive a doctors degree from
ministration Railways.
Sattari hopes that with the | Railway and as lieutenant in the education I obtained at U^C I i Iranian army, can contribute to the develop- | He was also an organization the School of Business Adminis-ment of Iran, whose basic need and method specialist, associate tration, is happy at the prosat present is skilled men in the management adviser to the Min- pect of being able to share his field of business management." | ¡stry of Roads and associate pub- know ledge of business manag*-
Prior to his studies at USC. lie administration consultant to ment with other students at the Sattari served in technical and the Ministry of Customs and ; University of Teheran, where he
rant de Timbre Poste," sixth ed- a leading California philatelist, administrative positions as civil monopolies
is expected to teach soon after
ition, 1886,
Elbert S. A, Hubbard.
| consultant of the Iranian State I He was a part-tune assistant j his arrival there.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 68, February 10, 1961 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 68, February 10, 1961. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE Social Season Begins For Active Rowitss Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Trojans Down Dodgers On Satriano's HR VOL. Ill LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1961 NO. 68 Guhin Files Petition for Presidency Houses Clash Class Council Over Payment Seeks Seniors " i Petitions for Senior C Of IFC Dues "HOOTENANNY" - These YWCA members, (l-r) Bonnie Brady, Amy Allen, Anne Storer, Marilyn Spigle and Lucia Kape- tanich, practice up for tonight's noise-making session. All students are invited to attend and must bring’some instrument. Star Orators Cop Two First Places USC debaters brought back ! two first-place trophies from a \ midterm trip to Tacoma, Wash.. ' to participate in the annual Puget Sound Northwest Tourna- I ment. poyd Lemon, USC debate : team captain, took first-place ! honors in the extemporaneous speaking contest and second in impromptu speaking. Mike \ Thorpe won first place in com- : petition in oratory. Other honors taken by the Trojan debaters included John Deacon, third place in oratory; Ken Moes, second place in ex- ! tomporaneous speaking; and Lacy Sparks, third place in extemporaneous speaking. The debate team of John Deacon and Ken Moes took third place in debate competition. Dr. James McBath, USC di- ■ rector of forensics, who traveled I with the team, felt the “Trojan speakers profited from this opportunity of meeting fresh arguments and ideas in the Pacific Northwest. Intersectional con- ferences each year highlight our forensic season.” Over 30 colleges and universities from the Northwest competed in the tournament. 61 Songfest Gets Started With Entries Songfest is beginning to sing j out already as plans are being laid to make the 1861 production the “best on« since it originated eight years ago.” Applications for entry into Songfest will begin this Wednesday and will close March 2. Applicants must submit their entries into the desired divisions along with an entrance fee of five dollars. Since ho song, entry title or j theme may be used twice on the [ same program, there will be a j first come first serve basis ii the case of a duplicate entry One organization may enter < maximum of three divisions. YWCA Group Will Entertain Noise Makers “Hootenanny” will be the theme of the all-university YWCA party at 8 tonight when the “Y” will swing to the sounds o a cacophony of instruments. The party is open to all students. Only requirement is that each person must bring an instrument and make noise with it. Even a set of half-empty coke bottles will do. Refreshments will be served at the party. For those who tire of making noise, dancing and card playing will be available. Main object of the party is to promote a friendly feeling among new USC students and encourage them to mix in with university life, reports YWCA Activities Chairman Lucia Kapetanich. Trumpets, trombones, guitars and drums are already on the list of instruments to be brought to the “Hootenanny.” Decorations will be “the students themselves.” Casual clothes and a willingness to be an extrovert plus an instrument are all a student needs to attend. A proposal to change the method of collecting fraternity dues snagged yesterday’s IFC meeting at the Phi Sigma Delta house. The proposal was made by Treasurer Bert Lewis as part of his report. He said the houses would have to supply $900 to meet the budget and outlined a plan to have each fraternity pay in proportion to its membership. Lewis set 73 cents per man as the figure for raising the money. In the past there has been a flat dues fee for all houses. The meeting was deadlocked by two ties on the voting to accept the new plan. The small houses apparently passed the plan by only one vote, but representatives from the larger houses soon discovered that the plan would violate the IFC bylaws as they now stand. By upholding the by-laws, the larger houses opposing the individual assessment plan nullified ■ lass Council membership are now available, reports Senior Class President Ken I'nmacht. Any senior student interested in joining the council this semester can obtain application forms in 305A SC or contact I'nmacht at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house. Applicants may also get in touch with Sharon Williams at the Tri-Delt sorority house or phone RI 8-8624. I'nmacht reminded seniors that their fee bill assessment for class activities will be $4.50. Predestination To Be Topic Fbr Service VonKleinSmid Wins Citation For Research By CURT PATRICK Research and investigation into the problems of hiring Mexican laborers and contact with the “Braceros” in the farm labor camps throughout the Southwest recently won USC Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid an award of merit from the U. S. Department of Labor. The chancellor was honored ; bv outgoing Secretary of Labor j James Mitchell as a consultant to the Department of Labor dur- j ing 1960. Aids Government Chancellor Von KleinSmid. I along with a five-man commit- j tee, conducted research for the government and advised Washington in the field of Mexican-American labor relations. Purpose of the advisement was to present recommendations to the Department regarding the Hoop Star Appel Rumored in Ring For Top Office “What About Predestination?” will be the subject of University Chaplain John E. Cantelon's ser- j advisability of continuing House Bill #78. House Bill ¿87 is the law allowing American farmers the MIKE GUHIN . . enters race mon at the Sunday Service in Bovard Auditorium at 11 a.m. The Rev. Mr. Cantelon notes the \ote which had just approv- “predestination is one of ^ j those religious ideas about which A special meeting cf the IFC get al] excited.” In his will be held next Thursday to sermon hr wjn attempt to clari-present compromise plans. Then, fy much of the confusion con- men"t a final vote on the dues issue is scheduled for the next regular meeting. Since several large houses were not represented at the meeting, the delay should help the large fraternity bloc. This group favors a flat fee. giving each of them smaller dues than the membership plan rejected yesterday. nected with the doctrine. Every major denomination except the Methodists has predestination as an integral part of ceros.’ right to import, hire and house Mexican seasonal farm laborers. The award was given particularly for von KleinSmid’s advise-on matters concerning the U.S. contract with the Mexican government regarding the itinerant laborers known as “Bra- Artists Show Colorful Work In Harris Hall By. JEANNE MAZZOTTI Bold, colorful paintings by two young USC fine arts graduate vioUs reP'-v to Business Senator By HAL DRAKE Assistant City Editor AMS President Mike Guhin filed a petition for the ASSC Presidency yesterday and expressed “great concern with the problem of returning student government to the students.” Guhin's announcement was received amid rumors that basketball player Chris Appel filed for the same office before leaving for Stanford with the basketball team yesterday morning. Relationships Issue In a special release, Guhin im-i plied that improved student rela-; tionships might become an important campaign issue. “I am greatly concerned with the problem of returning student government to the students.” he said. “My platform will include my plans for such vital areas as student-faculty relationships, stu-dent-administration relationships and alumni relationships.” he added. Guhin remarked that he will be anxious to meet with ail candidates in debate once the actual campaign begins, an ob- its doctrine. The chaplain will assure the congregation that it is most certainly not a Presbyterian monopoly. “It should not be mixed up with scientific determinism.” IFC President Ron Goodgarrte sajd the chaplain. “Its basis is reminded the members that grade definitely Biblical and there are cards and the two dollar initia- many allusions to it in the gos- tion fee are due on Feb. 16 for pcis Gf paul. Although John Cal- all new initiates. vin has taken most of the blame Also disclosed at yesterday’s for it. he didn’t invent it. meeting was the winning of the j “The doctrine teaching that Alpha Tau Omega-sponsored God has already decided our Help Week contest by the Phi fates for us or already knows , r^;ne jobs Kappa Sigma fraternity. what we will do with our lives Thpy aJso p^^pd out that The contest was conducted is repugnant to many Chris- legislation ' should prohibit the during the fiaternity inspira- tians. * ^ llse of Mexicans in non-seasonal tion” week, during which 29 of “But the fact is that the doc-the fraternities on the Row trine of predestination describes •competed for the 2x/% ft. high j a very important aspect of Chris- perpetual trophy. I tian existance.” he explained. Five thousand of tiiese workers were in the U.S. last year. Recommendations made by the committee to the Labor Department were largely in favor of extending the contract will terminate this year. Changes Recommended The committee recommended several changes in the bill. For instance, they suggested that legislation should clearly confine the use of Mexicans to necessary crops, in temporary labor shortages and to unskilled, non-ma- assistants are currently on display in the Harris Hall Downstairs Gallerv. jobs and in the operation of any farm or packing equipment. The committee further recommended that Mexicans should be The works of the artists, Je- ! rome Savage and Ida Haubold, which are generally non-fepresentation- al. allowing the broad areas of color to suggest forms to the viewer. Miss Haubold's works, strong-1 ly suggestive of landscapes, are experiments in composition. She has attempted to solve the prob- > lem of a circle-centered composition in a large painting done in oranges and pinks, with a swirl- j ing. spherical green center. In another untitled painting; by the young artist, the sweep- ' ing color areas of blue and black are arranged in strong, counteracting balances that create a J on Pirate Hijacks Coed s Mom On Fated Santa Maria Trip By RI TH MILLER Kappa Kappa Gamma's Anne Thomas had read about Captain Hook and his pirates in Peter Pan many times when she was a little girl, but she never dreamed that this type of fairy tale would come alive and that she would Le in the middle of it. Instead of it being Captain Hook, the pirate this time was Portugese revolutionist Henriquc Galvat. And instead of it being Never-Never Land, the piracy took place off tAe coast of Caracas. Venezuela, on Jan. 22. The ship was the now world-famous Santa Maria. Mother Trapped No. Miss Thomas was not on the Santa Maria. But her mother was on the ship, and the USC Coed was here anxiouslv ! wondering about the fate of her ! mother and what Galvao and his ! cohorts intended to do with the passengers. Like the families of the other American passengers aboard, she was worried but could do nothing about it. “I was listening to the radio ; on the night that it happened" said Miss Thomas, “when sud denly a newscaster interrupted the program with an announcement that the Santa Maria had been hijacked two days out of Venezuela. ‘I was Shocked’ “At first I was shocked. I didn't know what to think or what to do. My mother had been in Lisbon. Portugal, since September. and the Santa Maria trip was the last-leg of her journey back to the United States." Musicians to Mix Melody During Weekend Concerts USC students '' ill anain be record with music ibis weekend by the School of Music. Ranald Tarr will present a special recital tonight at 8:30 in Hancock Auditorium, and the Lrst ot a series cf three faculty concerts will be presented Sunil.:' at 8:30 pm. Tan’s performance will be (T en in addition to the Dc toral lequiiements. The 29-year-old te.irhinc assistant is working on Ins D.M.A. at the School ol Music. His program will include music from Brahms. Beethoven and Mozart as well as works bi-instructor Ingolf Dahl. Tarr received his B.A. from the University of Washington and his M.A. at the University of Illinois. The duo will play Bach's Sonata No. 4 in C Minor and Sonata No. 1 in B Minor, in addition to Mozart's Sonata in A Minor. K 3<>5 and Sonata in D Minor, K 306. The reports issued over the ra I dio at the time she heard about the incident ran very brief. Typ-i ical broadcasts merely stated that a Portugese line', the San-\ ta Maria, on its way back to the i United States had been stopped and boarded by a revolutionist named Galvao in the name of the Portuguese Liberation movement. In his own strong, clear phrasing, Galvao explained why he had taken over the Portugese liner. “We desired to prove, and we did prove, that Dictator Salazar, who has been military dictator of Portugal since the early 1920s, is not invulnerable. We beat him and we ridiculed him—him and his navy.” “Fortunately, the hijackers allowed the pas engers to send telegrams to their immediate family, otherwise I would not have known bow my mother was. I would have gone insane with worry,” Miss Thomas commented. Grueling Time Mrs. Dorothy Thomas, now safely home with lifr family in Lcs Angeles, has told everyone about her grueling and frightening 12 days aboard the Santa Maria—the lack of food, the riots and the absolute hysteria. When asked if her mother’s experience has discouraged her from ever sailing again, Miss Thomas said. "Oh no. I'm looking forward to taking a cruise next summer. Special Stamp Exhibit Displayed in Library .... . definite feeling of movement paid prevailing domestic farm , . I the canvas, wages in each area in order to avoid adverse effects on domes- Hugh Helm's challenge to debate campaign issues with other candidates. Surprise Candidate No verification of basketball guard Appel's rumored candidacy could be made, but the idea was met with surprise from all quarters. Although Appel would not be considered a serious contender, he could possibly gain the "social vote” that went to write-in candidate Ed Nelson last year. Nelson received more than 700 votes in a write-in campaign against current ASSC President Bill Steigerwalt. most of them the result of backing by five social fraternities on the Row. However. basketball would probably prevent Appel from shaping an effective campaign against Guhin and Helm, and he ^ probably would have trouble 00 The Lee Hefner Combs memorial collection of books, pamphlets and periodicals on stamp collecting, given to USC by L.A. attorney Lee Combs, is currently on display in the treasure room of Doheny Library along with postal and revenue stamps of selected countries of world. Savage makes free — — . . . . ... gathering more than 600 or tic labor. ! stron-- Pers°nal color m unusual j ^ Employers should make even.’ Proportions. A striking example j effort to recruit domestic labor, ! of his work is an untitled paint- , Day Of Decs.o* they noted iin" ^one a rornan,i£- almost Junior Class President Jim Public \ttention Baroque style, with a vibrating Harmon has one more day to The situation has been brought : oianSe color area suggesting decide on his plans for next year. of revenue, stamps is Toppan’s I to the’ attention of the public in movement in itself. and any final deepen on h,s “Historical Reference List of the recent weeks following strikes of An interesting method of ere- Part v%lM probably be follower Revenue Stamps of the United American laborers against the .ating movement and shapes has States,” published in Boston in large lettuce ranches in the Im- been used in the painting. No Among many scarce books devoted to the collection and study 1899. Although the collection is pri-the marily of reference works de-! voted to revenue stamps, there The exhibition is open from 8 are also many volumes pertain-a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through ing to stamp collecting in gen-Fridays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur- eral. These include catalogues, days and 1 to 6 p.m. Sundays. books about philately, histories In the collection given the ! and exhibitions of famous collec-USC library7 are 300 bound vol- ; tions. unies and many hundreds of Among Best I perial Valley. The American laborers, who 1 are currently organizing into un-j ions, claim that the Mexican “Braceros” should not be allowed to work on the farms. attempt was made to paint the lower area of the canvas, while paint stains form the areas are allowed to by a rush of petitions from students who are waiting in order to avoid his competition. At present, Harmon has the upper presidencies of AMS and Senior sweep Class still available to him. and downward naturally into an in- j probably very few petitions have teresting area composition. I yet been entered for either post. pamphlets and periodicals that are out of print and collectors’ items. They come from the», will have one of the outstandin United States, Canada, Great Britain. Japan, Hungary, France and Finland. Son Remembers The philatelic collection was presented by Combs in memory of his son, who was killed in a traffic accident in the summer of 1959 while returning to California from his sophomore year at Yale University. Young Combs, named for his father and maternal grandfather, Oklahoma Supreme Court Judge Robert A. USC Librarian Lewis F. Stieg said that the university’s library Iranian Earns First Doctoral From New Graduate School philatelic collections in the nation when present library materials are added to the Combs gift. Attorney Combs, a 1929 graduate of the USC School of Law, is a member of the USC Associates; Legion Lex, support group for the Law School; and Skull and Dagger, all-university men's honor society. He was a three-year pole vault letterman at Harvard University and continued his athletic inter- F.questrian Leader Currently, Combs is co-chairman of the U.S. Equestrian Team Committee. He is trustee of Harvard School in Los An- Ilefner, former mayor of Okln- ^ gs regjonai chairman of the homa City, was valedictorian of j ^ g Olympic Games Committee, the 1937 class at Harvard School in Los Angeles and light heavyweight boxing champion at Yale. Combs said he will continue to build the collection, which in- j eludes such scarce items as a complete run, bound in half- ?eles- calf, of the Belgian publication, The Smithsonian Institution, “Le Timbre Posts,” Volumes 1- j Washington, D.C., also is a re-33. from 1863 to 1900. There is cipient of a Lee Hefner Combs also an almost complete run of' memorial collection of state de-“The Philatelic Journal of Amer- cal revenue stamps, to which ica,” Volumes 1-19, from 1885 additions will t>e made, to 1905. Both the USC and Smithson- Also included are five volumes ¡an collections were appraised as of Moen’s “Catalogue Prix-cou- irreplaceable collectors' items by The first doctorate degree in busin ?ss administ ration from the USC Graduate School of Business Administration has been conferred on Hassan Sat-tari-Tehrani, a native of Iran. He will be the honoree at a farewell party tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at the home of Dr. G. Chillingar of the Business Administration School. Friends and ' faculty members from the schools of Business Administration. Public Administration and Engineering will be at the party. Sattari, who is here on an International Cooperation Administration scholarship, made a study of management method;; and problems of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railways for future reference to the ad-of Iranian State HASSAN SATTARI-TEHRANI . .• . earns doctorate professor at the Institute for Administrative Affairs, University of Teheran, Iran. Sattarit obtanied his bachelor of arts degree from the University of Teheran in 1955. Two years later he was graduated with a masters degree at the American University of Beirut, Lebanon During his two yeans of stay in the United States. Sattari visited several states and attended conferences in Washington. DC. and in New York. He acquainted himself with various organizations in the realm of business and public management. He is currently a member of the American Society of Public Administration and the Society for the Advancement of Management. Sattari, the first student ever to receive a doctors degree from ministration Railways. Sattari hopes that with the Railway and as lieutenant in the education I obtained at U^C I i Iranian army, can contribute to the develop- He was also an organization the School of Business Adminis-ment of Iran, whose basic need and method specialist, associate tration, is happy at the prosat present is skilled men in the management adviser to the Min- pect of being able to share his field of business management." ¡stry of Roads and associate pub- know ledge of business manag*- Prior to his studies at USC. lie administration consultant to ment with other students at the Sattari served in technical and the Ministry of Customs and ; University of Teheran, where he rant de Timbre Poste" sixth ed- a leading California philatelist, administrative positions as civil monopolies is expected to teach soon after ition, 1886, Elbert S. A, Hubbard. consultant of the Iranian State I He was a part-tune assistant j his arrival there. |
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