DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 97, March 24, 1961 |
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Helm, Appel to Vie in Run-off;
Miailovich Wins Yell King Crown
Southern
Cal ¡■forr'iiö
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. Lll
IQS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1961
NO. 97
58 Capture Posts In Close Contests
ASSC PRESIDENT
Chris Appel .............. 737*
Jim Hannon ............... 423
Hugh Helm ................ 989*
ASSC VICE PRESIDENT
Sue Hartford (elected) .... 1.768
ASSC SECRETARY
Maryalice Herrick ........ 1.153
< elected )
Cari Sampson ............. 838
ASSC, ASl'SC AMENDFENT (defeated)
YES ...................... 901
KO ............-.......... 1129
SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Gaiy Elder (elected» ..... 284
Steve Feldman ............ 266
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT
Mary Linda Woods (electedt 582
JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Steve Croddv ............. 226
Dann Moss (elected» ....... 234
JUNIOR VICE PRESIDENT
Jackie MaJouf (elected) .. 358
Steve Crandall ........... 83
SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT
Tmm Northcote............. 191
Dick Ziman (elected) .....277
SOPHOMORE VICE PRESIDENT
Melinda Fee .............. HI
Hilda Goin ............... 141*
Bonnie Rowland _......— 236*
AUS PRESIDENT
Kay Yunker (elected) ..... 765
A\YS VICE PRESIDENT
Marlene Coleman (elected) 771
AWS SECRETARY
Kay Wetzel (elected) ..... 772'
AWS TREASURER
Kathlene McKee (elected) .. 753
AMS PRESIDENT
Gil Garceili (elected) ... 616
Jim West ................. 544
AMS VICE PRESIDENT
Harold Stokes (elected) ..981
AMS
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Dick Evans (elected I .... 980
COMMUNICATIONS VICE PRESIDENT
Alen Applebaum (elected) .. write-in ............
COMMUNICATIONS SENATOR
Richard Beaulieu (elected) .... Dianne Riley (elected) .. 23
DENTISTRY SENATOR
Eleanor McChesney (elected)..58 Ernie Stone (elected) ... 46
ENGINEERING PRESIDENT
Bob Weiner (elected) .... 92 ! Ü
ENGINEERING VICE PRESIDENT
Marv Stone (write-in) ....
ENGINEERING SENATOR
James Maass (elected) .... 75
Richard Sheinberg ........ 11*
Douglas Stewart .......... 18*
Marv Stone..................9*
HEALTH AND P.E SENATOR
Denny Nolan (elected) .... 35
WINNING SMILES -Presidential candidates Hugh Helm and Chris Appel are all smiles as they leave ASSC Senate chambers after hearing news of their victory at the polls. Helm with 989 votes and Appel, with 737 votes, nosed out aspir-
ant Jim Harmon who tallied 423 in two-day balloting. Helm and Appel will try for sweepstakes in run-off election slated for April 4. Write-in Rich Miailovich captured yell king crown with a record 1,661. Some 2,200 students voted.
YELL KING
Steve Harris ...............307
Rich Miailovich (write-in) 1.661
ARCHITECTURE SENATOR
Mark Palmer (elected) ...... 26
BUSINESS PRESIDENT
Richard Levine (elected) .... 227 D.ck Tevrizian ............ 162
BUSINESS VICE PRESIDENT
Jim Lewis (elected) 290
BUSINESS SENATOR
Philip Anshutz (elected! .... 124 Anthony Cossa (elected) .... 131 Barry Friedman 'elected) ... . 21
Bam- Hershey ............... 17
David Hartquist (elected) . 65
Allen Katz ................. 9
Sherwood Kahlenberg.......... 5
James Miller (elected) ..... 19
Davie Moffitt........ .... 18
Carole Nelson (elected i ... 29
John Stephenson ............ 15
RIO SCIENCE PRESIDENT
David Goldberg (elected) .... 133
BIO VICE PRESIDENT
Bonnie Brady (elected) ..... Ill
BIO SCIENCES SENATOR
Tom Bell (elected) ......... 75
Richard Hall ............... 60
COMMUNICATIONS PRESIDENT
Bob Bach selected) .... 59 f *Runoff April 4
HUMANITIES PRESIDENT
Dick Moss (elected) ....... 105
HUMANITIES SENATOR
Runoff for all candidates.
IR PRESIDENT
Peter Burrows (elected) .... 66
Sandy Friedman .............. 4
IR VICE PRESIDENT
Bob Polonow ................ 10
Dave Sargent (elected) ..... 65
IR SENATOR
Bob Kendall (elected) ...... 65
MUSIC SENATOR
Donna Kay Dye (elected) .... 13
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY SENATOR
Nadine Turner (elected) ... 26
PHYSICAL SCIENCE PRESIDENT
Pete Machamer (elected) .... 35
PHYSICAL SCIENCE SENATOR
Mary Linda Morrison ........ 34
(elected)
PHARMACY PRESIDENT
Dan Casey (elected) ....... 159
Bruce Isenburg ............. 62
PHARMACY VICE PRESIDENT
John Prince ............... 104
Robert Sakamoto (elected) .. 122
PHARMACY SEC-TREAS.
Janet Taniguchi ........... 116*
Beverly Wong .............. 116*
PHARMACY SENATOR
Ernesto Beilina ........... 67*
Dennis Hayes .............. 105*
Robert Kii k .............. 48*
Fred Weissman ............. 11
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PRESIDENT
Ben Cortes ................ 5
Bruce Moe (elected) ....... 10
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SENATOR
Ronald Dowd (elected) ..... 10
SOCIAL STUDIES PRESIDENT
Brian Prentice (elected) .... 394
SOCIAL STUDIES MCE PRESIDENT
Richard Sandler (elected) . 391
SOCIAL STUDIES SENATOR
Judie Busch (elected) ..... 362
Mark Frazin (elected) .*... 56'
Dcnal Haight (elected) .... 23
Larry Ileiser ............. 16
Chuck Marson (elected) .... 22
Corah n Powell (elected) .. 44
William Sharp (elected) ... 21
Ilenry Taylor (electedi ... 34
Ronald Trainer............. 13
Carole Whitson ............ 18
Spring Recess to Bring Travel, Work For Cood-Will Wesley Club Members
By KONDELIA WELLS
Spring vacation,1 a week of i rest for most USC students, will be a week of work in Baja California for 13 Methodist-sponsored Wesley Foundation members and their two advisers.
The group, loaded with construction materials, tools and ! work clothes, will drive to Valle de las Palmas, said Genta Hawkins, Wesley Club president.
Valle de las Palmas is located
Yale Lecturer To Address Science Meet
Can computers think?
“Yes,” says Dr. Donald W. Taylor, professor of psychology at Yale University, who will defend his answer to this on Tues- ! day at 7:30 p.m. in the graduate j lounge of Town and Gown.
Dr. Taylor, who is on a nationwide lecture tour for ihe Society Sigma Xi, will speak for the combined USC and UCLA chapters of the scientific fraternity j on “Psychological Studies of Thinking.”
Lecture on Research
His lecture will also concern his research on differences between men and women in their ability to solve problems.
R-esults will be described concerning experiments on the effects of group participation i both in solving problems and in production of ideas in tasks requiring creative thinking.
Important findings will be cited from one study concerned j with factors related to creativity of physical scientists and engineers in a large research laboratory.
The problem of defining “thinking” will be discussed. Consideration will also be given to recent important work of other scientists who suggest that individual thinking be regarded as an information processing system and that computers can be used to stimulate important kinds of human thinking.
Harvard Graduate
«At Yale, Dr. Taylor teaches in Loth the departments of psychology and industrial administration. He is a graduate of Baker University, the University of Kansas and Harvard University.
From 1943 to 1945 he worked on radar counter-measures with the radio research laboratory at Harvard.
130 miles below the California border near Tecate in a remote | desert region.
In the valley they will live with a Mexican family doing farm work as “good-will mes-j scngers” sent by the Methodist Church of Southern California.
The work team will Jo several projects on a small farm owned i by the Juan Juargui family.
|Juargui works on a hacienda ; near his farm and earns §2.50 a day.
He, his wife and five children live in a half-completed one-room house which does not have a roof. The Wesley group will help Juargui finish his adobe home and add a roof, financing the cost of materials.
Miss Hawkins says that Juargui was chosen because he is conscientious, willing to work and has a definite goal in life. He is attemtping to clear his land for farming but lacks water.
Weil Diggers
The team will dig a well for the Juargui family using 5-foot pre formed cement rings as a base. The group will also clear his 10 acres of small trees and brush.
In addition, clothing collected j from Wesley drives will be distributed to all the people in the ! \ alley.
Miss Hawkins reports that most of the valley families lack
such basic necessities of life as adequate housing, sanitation and clothing.
This is the second work team sponsored by the Wesley foundation this year. Seventeen members spent three months in Europe last summer working in Hunoldstal, Germany.
The Wesley advisers, Jack Shaffer and his wife, said that the group wants to learn to live and work with a people of a different cultural background than their own.
Not Become Dependent
“The object is not to do so much for them that they will become dependent upon outside help as it is to give them enough financial and material support so that they are able to reach their goals by themselves,” Shaffer said.
Miss Hawkins added that the j Wesley group wants to get reactions and thoughts from people who have not had the educational advantages and necessities of life that Americans have.
"We would like to tie our experiences in Baja California w ith the Juargui family to the question we have been asking at our Wednesday night meetings here at USC,” she said.
The questions posed by Miss Hawkins included a search for man and a self-exploration of the self.
, She also said that the work I team would find out more about the dynamics of tbe Christian faith and the meaning of our j morals and values in relations to those of the families they i would visit.
Don Tice, Dena Parker, Nor-vene Foster, Penny Hall, Roger ! Sowcrsby, Burt Smith. Ed Van-deventer, Sue Pearson, Phil ! Hammons, Eva Nelo.n, Dick Newby, Doug Coy and Miss Hawkins will make the day-long trip to Valle do las Palmas Saturday and will stay in the area until March 31.
While living with the Mexican families, the group plans to become well-acquainted with cultural habits and customs prominent in the area. They will also be treated to many Spanish meaus served by the different groups in the valley.
Annual Court Convene
Professor to Advise Turkish Government
A USC professor of public administration will spend April in Turkey serving as consultant to the Turkish government.
At the government's request, Dr. Frank P. Sherwood, coordinator of the graduate program in the USC School of Public Administration. will work with a policy committee on public enterprise.
The committee, which will recommend what businesses the government should conduct, will be headed by Dr. Arif Payasiog-lu, who studied public administration at USC from 1953 to 1955 and currently is a professor of political science at the University of Ankara in Turkey.
Dr. Sherwood, w ho will arrive in Turkey on Tuesday, will participate as consultant through the International Cooperation Administration of the U.S. Department of State.
Turkey will hold an election
this fall on a new constitution and these Committees are study- : ing recommendations in many fields affected by the constitution since the overthrow of the Menderes government a year ago. ]
The committee with which Dr.
I Sherwood will w ork will consider management ancl report to the Turkish cabinet during the first week in May.
Dr. Sherwood is a political science graduate of Dartmouth College and has a degree in that j field and public administration ! from USC.
He also studied at Oxford University and the American University in Washington. D.C.
The USC School of Public Administration formerly taught graduate subjects in this field in Turkey and sponsored a program under which Turkish students could study at USC.
Next Monday
The Law School’s annual moot court will be called to order by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Clarke Stephens in the moot court room on the third floor of the law building on Monday at 7 p.m.
Judge Stephens. USC law pro- ; fessor Dorothy Nelson and Los i Angeles Attorney William Evans a USC graduate, will act as appellate judges for the third round of preliminary moot court competition.
Fourteen two-man teams of law students have worked on the mock cases since Feb. 15. Four teams argue each session.
Nation-Wide Competition
The competition is nationwide. Winners of the preliminary round at USC will meet in September for the finals. The winning team will compete in state trials with Loyola. Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley.
The state winner will go to New York in December to compete nationally.
Sheldon Sloan and Don Loza- ‘ binck are co-chairmen of this year’s moot court competition.
Court clerk Jim Dodds said that "the m<xj4 court gives students experience in arguing before a panel of judges. It is the one opportunity for free prac- j tice.’’ I
Hot Race Draws 2,200 to Polls In Record Tally
By HAL DRAKE Assistant City Editor
Business Senator Hugh Helm and basketball player Chris Appel nosed out Junior Class President Jim Harmon for the ASSC presidency last night as a record 2.200 students completed two days of intensive balloting in USC's most heated ASSC election.
An emotion-charged meeting of the ASSC Senate heard the final tally, which was Helm. 989; Appel. 737; and Harmon, 423.
Controversial yell king write-in Rich Miailovich was awarded the yell king post by a special resolution passed by the Senate after he scored 1,661 votes in his unofficial campaign against Steve Harris, who gathered a final total of 307.
An overflow crowd packed into the Senate Chambers to hear Elections Commissioner Artie Kay read the results of the hotly contested two-day election.
Both Helm and Appel were overcome by the results, which were followed by a statement of congratulations from defeated presidential candidate Jim Harmon.
Helm and Appel will vie for the presidency in a special run-off election April 4.
Miailovich’s overwhelming success in his write-in campaign was insured by the Senate's special request for a waiver of regular yell leader procedure in order to officially recognize Miailovich’s victory.
Any doubt whether the success by the write-in candidate would be verified—since he had been officially rejected by the ASSC Selection Committee in a controversial decision—was removed when Dean of Students Robert J-Downey immediately signed the resolution into effsct after it was passed by the senators.
Introduced by Helm, who presided over the Senate meeting as president pro tem in the absence of ASSC President Bill Steigerwalt, the resolution was suggested by Miailovich’s opponent, Steve Harris.
The resolution makes Miailovich yell king and retains the five yell leaders.
Controversy over the election, which highlighted the tense Senate meeting, flared all yesterday afternoon and continued into the night with charges of voting mistakes and criticism of the balloting procedure.
Pharmacy students, through their representative. Pharmacy President Joel Hoffman, claimed they would ask for an immediate recount of ballots for pharmacy senator after learning that a reportedly front-running candidate only received 11 votes.
“The tally shows that Fred Weissman received only 11 votes, but I personally know more than 11 students who voted for him,” Hoffman explained. “He would have been more likely to have gotten 111 votes.”
Complaints were also flying about the slowness at the ballot lines, which was blamed for having discouraged at least another 200 students from voting.
Student charges claimed that the average wait in the lines was 30 minutes, which was considered too long for many student« with a full class load.
An expected large turnout of independent and commuter students was said to have been considerably weakened by the slowness of the ballot lines, although Row and dormitory students seemed less affected by the wait.
An estimated 200 more were discouraged from voting by waiting lines that often stretched a block long.
Four Fraternities Deny TNE Affiliation Charge
By BARBARA EPSTEIN Daily Trojan Feature Editor
Representatives of four fraternities labeled by Representation Party Chairman Mike Robinson as TNE fraternities” hotly denied any affiliation with ths organization yesterday and threatened possible legal action.
Spokesmen "for Theta Chi, Theta Xi, Tau Epsilon Phi and Phi Gamma Delta fraternities accused Robinson of making “groundless accusations” against them and demanded a retraction.
All were bitter at having their fraternities linked with Theta Nu Epsilon, which has been considered a subversive organization by the United States attorney general.
Robinson, a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, said he had not meant to refer to the national subversive TNE group when he singled out the four fraternities as “TNE” members.
“When I said TNE, I was .referring to the group of houses who are popularly known by that name on this campus and who are in control of student government, ’ Robinson explained.
Spokesmen for the four houses denied that their fraternities belonged to any such clique.
Robinson admitted that he didn’t have any “proof” to back up his accusation.
“There is only circumstantial proof which I don't have in my possession,” he said. He hinted that there might be some proof forthcoming but it won't come from me.
Meanwhile members of all four fraternities were smarting at having their name blackened as TNE affiliates.
Tom Lamia, fall Fiji president, said that his house “might consider” taking action.
“TNE and Phi Gamma Delta are wholly irreconciliable.' he said. “I don’t think they’ll ever get together on this
campus or any other.”
He charged Robinson of leveling “wholly untrue’ and “unfounded accusations.”
Vince Stefano, speaking for Theta Xi, said that there has been talk” of taking some type of action. He reported that members of his house have been “very upset” over
Robinson’s charges.
"The charges are totally erroneous and unsubstantiated,” he declared. "We feel they were meant with malice and mal intent.”
Theta Chi President Ed Kennedy also condemned Robinson for smearing his fraternity s name.
“We are not members of TNE, and we thoroughly re-
(Continued on Page 2)
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| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 97, March 24, 1961 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 52, No. 97, March 24, 1961. |
| Full text |
Helm, Appel to Vie in Run-off; Miailovich Wins Yell King Crown Southern Cal ¡■forr'iiö DAI LY TROJAN VOL. Lll IQS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1961 NO. 97 58 Capture Posts In Close Contests ASSC PRESIDENT Chris Appel .............. 737* Jim Hannon ............... 423 Hugh Helm ................ 989* ASSC VICE PRESIDENT Sue Hartford (elected) .... 1.768 ASSC SECRETARY Maryalice Herrick ........ 1.153 < elected ) Cari Sampson ............. 838 ASSC, ASl'SC AMENDFENT (defeated) YES ...................... 901 KO ............-.......... 1129 SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT Gaiy Elder (elected» ..... 284 Steve Feldman ............ 266 SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT Mary Linda Woods (electedt 582 JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT Steve Croddv ............. 226 Dann Moss (elected» ....... 234 JUNIOR VICE PRESIDENT Jackie MaJouf (elected) .. 358 Steve Crandall ........... 83 SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT Tmm Northcote............. 191 Dick Ziman (elected) .....277 SOPHOMORE VICE PRESIDENT Melinda Fee .............. HI Hilda Goin ............... 141* Bonnie Rowland _......— 236* AUS PRESIDENT Kay Yunker (elected) ..... 765 A\YS VICE PRESIDENT Marlene Coleman (elected) 771 AWS SECRETARY Kay Wetzel (elected) ..... 772' AWS TREASURER Kathlene McKee (elected) .. 753 AMS PRESIDENT Gil Garceili (elected) ... 616 Jim West ................. 544 AMS VICE PRESIDENT Harold Stokes (elected) ..981 AMS SECRETARY-TREASURER Dick Evans (elected I .... 980 COMMUNICATIONS VICE PRESIDENT Alen Applebaum (elected) .. write-in ............ COMMUNICATIONS SENATOR Richard Beaulieu (elected) .... Dianne Riley (elected) .. 23 DENTISTRY SENATOR Eleanor McChesney (elected)..58 Ernie Stone (elected) ... 46 ENGINEERING PRESIDENT Bob Weiner (elected) .... 92 ! Ü ENGINEERING VICE PRESIDENT Marv Stone (write-in) .... ENGINEERING SENATOR James Maass (elected) .... 75 Richard Sheinberg ........ 11* Douglas Stewart .......... 18* Marv Stone..................9* HEALTH AND P.E SENATOR Denny Nolan (elected) .... 35 WINNING SMILES -Presidential candidates Hugh Helm and Chris Appel are all smiles as they leave ASSC Senate chambers after hearing news of their victory at the polls. Helm with 989 votes and Appel, with 737 votes, nosed out aspir- ant Jim Harmon who tallied 423 in two-day balloting. Helm and Appel will try for sweepstakes in run-off election slated for April 4. Write-in Rich Miailovich captured yell king crown with a record 1,661. Some 2,200 students voted. YELL KING Steve Harris ...............307 Rich Miailovich (write-in) 1.661 ARCHITECTURE SENATOR Mark Palmer (elected) ...... 26 BUSINESS PRESIDENT Richard Levine (elected) .... 227 D.ck Tevrizian ............ 162 BUSINESS VICE PRESIDENT Jim Lewis (elected) 290 BUSINESS SENATOR Philip Anshutz (elected! .... 124 Anthony Cossa (elected) .... 131 Barry Friedman 'elected) ... . 21 Bam- Hershey ............... 17 David Hartquist (elected) . 65 Allen Katz ................. 9 Sherwood Kahlenberg.......... 5 James Miller (elected) ..... 19 Davie Moffitt........ .... 18 Carole Nelson (elected i ... 29 John Stephenson ............ 15 RIO SCIENCE PRESIDENT David Goldberg (elected) .... 133 BIO VICE PRESIDENT Bonnie Brady (elected) ..... Ill BIO SCIENCES SENATOR Tom Bell (elected) ......... 75 Richard Hall ............... 60 COMMUNICATIONS PRESIDENT Bob Bach selected) .... 59 f *Runoff April 4 HUMANITIES PRESIDENT Dick Moss (elected) ....... 105 HUMANITIES SENATOR Runoff for all candidates. IR PRESIDENT Peter Burrows (elected) .... 66 Sandy Friedman .............. 4 IR VICE PRESIDENT Bob Polonow ................ 10 Dave Sargent (elected) ..... 65 IR SENATOR Bob Kendall (elected) ...... 65 MUSIC SENATOR Donna Kay Dye (elected) .... 13 OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY SENATOR Nadine Turner (elected) ... 26 PHYSICAL SCIENCE PRESIDENT Pete Machamer (elected) .... 35 PHYSICAL SCIENCE SENATOR Mary Linda Morrison ........ 34 (elected) PHARMACY PRESIDENT Dan Casey (elected) ....... 159 Bruce Isenburg ............. 62 PHARMACY VICE PRESIDENT John Prince ............... 104 Robert Sakamoto (elected) .. 122 PHARMACY SEC-TREAS. Janet Taniguchi ........... 116* Beverly Wong .............. 116* PHARMACY SENATOR Ernesto Beilina ........... 67* Dennis Hayes .............. 105* Robert Kii k .............. 48* Fred Weissman ............. 11 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PRESIDENT Ben Cortes ................ 5 Bruce Moe (elected) ....... 10 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SENATOR Ronald Dowd (elected) ..... 10 SOCIAL STUDIES PRESIDENT Brian Prentice (elected) .... 394 SOCIAL STUDIES MCE PRESIDENT Richard Sandler (elected) . 391 SOCIAL STUDIES SENATOR Judie Busch (elected) ..... 362 Mark Frazin (elected) .*... 56' Dcnal Haight (elected) .... 23 Larry Ileiser ............. 16 Chuck Marson (elected) .... 22 Corah n Powell (elected) .. 44 William Sharp (elected) ... 21 Ilenry Taylor (electedi ... 34 Ronald Trainer............. 13 Carole Whitson ............ 18 Spring Recess to Bring Travel, Work For Cood-Will Wesley Club Members By KONDELIA WELLS Spring vacation,1 a week of i rest for most USC students, will be a week of work in Baja California for 13 Methodist-sponsored Wesley Foundation members and their two advisers. The group, loaded with construction materials, tools and ! work clothes, will drive to Valle de las Palmas, said Genta Hawkins, Wesley Club president. Valle de las Palmas is located Yale Lecturer To Address Science Meet Can computers think? “Yes,” says Dr. Donald W. Taylor, professor of psychology at Yale University, who will defend his answer to this on Tues- ! day at 7:30 p.m. in the graduate j lounge of Town and Gown. Dr. Taylor, who is on a nationwide lecture tour for ihe Society Sigma Xi, will speak for the combined USC and UCLA chapters of the scientific fraternity j on “Psychological Studies of Thinking.” Lecture on Research His lecture will also concern his research on differences between men and women in their ability to solve problems. R-esults will be described concerning experiments on the effects of group participation i both in solving problems and in production of ideas in tasks requiring creative thinking. Important findings will be cited from one study concerned j with factors related to creativity of physical scientists and engineers in a large research laboratory. The problem of defining “thinking” will be discussed. Consideration will also be given to recent important work of other scientists who suggest that individual thinking be regarded as an information processing system and that computers can be used to stimulate important kinds of human thinking. Harvard Graduate «At Yale, Dr. Taylor teaches in Loth the departments of psychology and industrial administration. He is a graduate of Baker University, the University of Kansas and Harvard University. From 1943 to 1945 he worked on radar counter-measures with the radio research laboratory at Harvard. 130 miles below the California border near Tecate in a remote desert region. In the valley they will live with a Mexican family doing farm work as “good-will mes-j scngers” sent by the Methodist Church of Southern California. The work team will Jo several projects on a small farm owned i by the Juan Juargui family. Juargui works on a hacienda ; near his farm and earns §2.50 a day. He, his wife and five children live in a half-completed one-room house which does not have a roof. The Wesley group will help Juargui finish his adobe home and add a roof, financing the cost of materials. Miss Hawkins says that Juargui was chosen because he is conscientious, willing to work and has a definite goal in life. He is attemtping to clear his land for farming but lacks water. Weil Diggers The team will dig a well for the Juargui family using 5-foot pre formed cement rings as a base. The group will also clear his 10 acres of small trees and brush. In addition, clothing collected j from Wesley drives will be distributed to all the people in the ! \ alley. Miss Hawkins reports that most of the valley families lack such basic necessities of life as adequate housing, sanitation and clothing. This is the second work team sponsored by the Wesley foundation this year. Seventeen members spent three months in Europe last summer working in Hunoldstal, Germany. The Wesley advisers, Jack Shaffer and his wife, said that the group wants to learn to live and work with a people of a different cultural background than their own. Not Become Dependent “The object is not to do so much for them that they will become dependent upon outside help as it is to give them enough financial and material support so that they are able to reach their goals by themselves,” Shaffer said. Miss Hawkins added that the j Wesley group wants to get reactions and thoughts from people who have not had the educational advantages and necessities of life that Americans have. "We would like to tie our experiences in Baja California w ith the Juargui family to the question we have been asking at our Wednesday night meetings here at USC,” she said. The questions posed by Miss Hawkins included a search for man and a self-exploration of the self. , She also said that the work I team would find out more about the dynamics of tbe Christian faith and the meaning of our j morals and values in relations to those of the families they i would visit. Don Tice, Dena Parker, Nor-vene Foster, Penny Hall, Roger ! Sowcrsby, Burt Smith. Ed Van-deventer, Sue Pearson, Phil ! Hammons, Eva Nelo.n, Dick Newby, Doug Coy and Miss Hawkins will make the day-long trip to Valle do las Palmas Saturday and will stay in the area until March 31. While living with the Mexican families, the group plans to become well-acquainted with cultural habits and customs prominent in the area. They will also be treated to many Spanish meaus served by the different groups in the valley. Annual Court Convene Professor to Advise Turkish Government A USC professor of public administration will spend April in Turkey serving as consultant to the Turkish government. At the government's request, Dr. Frank P. Sherwood, coordinator of the graduate program in the USC School of Public Administration. will work with a policy committee on public enterprise. The committee, which will recommend what businesses the government should conduct, will be headed by Dr. Arif Payasiog-lu, who studied public administration at USC from 1953 to 1955 and currently is a professor of political science at the University of Ankara in Turkey. Dr. Sherwood, w ho will arrive in Turkey on Tuesday, will participate as consultant through the International Cooperation Administration of the U.S. Department of State. Turkey will hold an election this fall on a new constitution and these Committees are study- : ing recommendations in many fields affected by the constitution since the overthrow of the Menderes government a year ago. ] The committee with which Dr. I Sherwood will w ork will consider management ancl report to the Turkish cabinet during the first week in May. Dr. Sherwood is a political science graduate of Dartmouth College and has a degree in that j field and public administration ! from USC. He also studied at Oxford University and the American University in Washington. D.C. The USC School of Public Administration formerly taught graduate subjects in this field in Turkey and sponsored a program under which Turkish students could study at USC. Next Monday The Law School’s annual moot court will be called to order by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Clarke Stephens in the moot court room on the third floor of the law building on Monday at 7 p.m. Judge Stephens. USC law pro- ; fessor Dorothy Nelson and Los i Angeles Attorney William Evans a USC graduate, will act as appellate judges for the third round of preliminary moot court competition. Fourteen two-man teams of law students have worked on the mock cases since Feb. 15. Four teams argue each session. Nation-Wide Competition The competition is nationwide. Winners of the preliminary round at USC will meet in September for the finals. The winning team will compete in state trials with Loyola. Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley. The state winner will go to New York in December to compete nationally. Sheldon Sloan and Don Loza- ‘ binck are co-chairmen of this year’s moot court competition. Court clerk Jim Dodds said that "the m |
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